72
Metascore
8 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 90The New York TimesManohla DargisThe New York TimesManohla DargisIt's a modest film, if only in scale and apparent budget, about some of the greatest questions in life, like the existence of God, our capacity to see beyond our own vanity and the legacies of fathers, both blood and state.
- 80Time OutDavid FearTime OutDavid FearA collective sense of psychological turmoil seems to weigh heavily on the entire country as much as Champ, reaching critical mass once chaos creeps into the city-leading to a quiet, climactic walk into darkness that earns the right to be called haunting.
- 80VarietyRobert KoehlerVarietyRobert KoehlerHaroun’s tender but unsentimental regard for his characters allows his storytelling a natural gravitas thoroughly suited to the simultaneously unfolding private and national tragedies.
- Haroun is uninterested in big war scenes and is best at evoking the little details of life.
- 60New York Daily NewsJoe NeumaierNew York Daily NewsJoe NeumaierHaroun is achingly conscious of day-to-day decisions that seem small when they're made but can suddenly loom large.
- The first half-hour is as evocative as (and more specific than) Claire Denis' "White Material," a similarly broad treatment of post-colonial chaos. The rest, sadly, falls apart, but Haroun's formal skill confirms his continual promise.
- 50Village VoiceNick PinkertonVillage VoiceNick PinkertonThe characterizations never comfortably accommodate Haroun's pat metaphor, though his stoic visual storytelling has an oblique gravity.