"Deliciously, blackly entertaining."
— Jay Weissberg, Variety
"Riders of Justice is a unique blend that charms and captivates."
— Matt Fowler, IGN
"Imagine a Liam Neeson revenge thriller with an early Coen brothers oddball vibe."
— G. Allen Johnson, San Francisco Chronicle
"From the first frame to the last, Jensen's 'Riders' is a wild-ass ride that cements Mikkelsen as a cinematic treasure."
— Randy Myers, San Jose Mercury News
"A dynamic, unexpectedly touching ode to the difficulties of baring your vulnerabilities to genuinely overcome them."
— Beatrice Loayza, New York Times
"Two decades in, Jensen, Mikkelsen and their game, frequent collaborators are the defiantly irreverent gift that keeps on giving."
— Michael Rechtshaffen, Los Angeles Times
"Brutal, sad, funny, and disarmingly sweet-natured, Riders of Justice is not so much a revenge movie as a movie about revenge."
— Matt Zoller Seitz, RogerEbert.com
"A kind of popcorn movie that doesn't just let wit and storytelling serve as the garnish for big-bang action, but makes that its actual priority."
— Leah Greenblatt, Entertainment Weekly
"A deliciously absurdist, fundamentally serious, even philosophical enterprise that uses a superheated revenge plot to address our common need for making sense out of life."
— Joe Morgenstern, Wall Street Journal
"Riders of Justice is a film of contradictions, but that's its purpose. With gentle, sensitive humor and pathos dominating the story, it's really about self-justification, as the scientists and the soldier form an unlikely team."
— Richard Whittaker, Austin Chronicle
"The film’s significant humor comes from amusingly implausible situations coupled with rapid-paced droll dialogue; its equally sizable heart derives from the script’s respect for society’s outcasts and Jensen’s way of nimbly endowing every character with their own emotional backstory, all in need of healing."
— Jay Weissberg, Variety
"An expertly handled plot, interweaving lives, coincidence, past trauma and circumstance, is concerned with far more than mere bloody vengeance. Five years since the delirious oddity that was Men & Chicken, Jensen gets members of the old band back together for a thrilling, poignant film which sees writer-director and cast on top form."
— Matthew Anderson, CineVue