80
Metascore
30 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 100EmpireEmpireRoom 237 captures the true nature of viewing, talking about and dissecting movies to the nth degree and it is infectious.
- 100The PlaylistKevin JagernauthThe PlaylistKevin JagernauthUnique and at times profound, it's a reminder of how much Kubrick left for us to appreciate in his work, and how the greatest films always leave something more to be discovered with each viewing.
- 100VarietyRob NelsonVarietyRob NelsonHandsomely produced and never less than hugely entertaining, Ascher's film is catnip for Kubrickians and critics both professional and otherwise.
- 100Slant MagazineSlant MagazineThe doc positions The Shining as a comparably coiled, thematically overflowing microcosm--standing in for cinema, for history, for obsession, for postmodern theory buckling under the film's heft.
- 90The Hollywood ReporterTodd McCarthyThe Hollywood ReporterTodd McCarthyNutty, arcane and jaw-dropping in equal measure, this is a head-first plunge down the rabbit hole of Kubrickiana from which, for some, there is evidently no return.
- 90Village VoiceVillage VoiceEven if the theories don't persuade you, the film fascinates. It's revelatory about the nature of spectatorship in an era when technology allows audiences to watch films frame by frame.
- 80The GuardianPeter BradshawThe GuardianPeter Bradshaw[Room 237] raises very interesting ideas about how we view a film, about what happens if we take the act of viewing down to a deeper, molecular level, and about how a movie's significance and effect need not be those intentionally willed by the director.
- 80Time OutJoshua RothkopfTime OutJoshua RothkopfRoom 237 asks that you bring your own noodles; as docs go, it leaves you with questions, some worry and rib-sticking satiation.
- 75McClatchy-Tribune News ServiceRoger MooreMcClatchy-Tribune News ServiceRoger MooreThe documentary Room 237 is an ostensibly thoughtful deep reading, a deconstruction of Stanley Kubrick’s film of Stephen King’s 1980 novel “The Shining.” What it really is, is a bunch of obsessives obsessing about an obsessive movie maker’s obsessive movie.
- 70Los Angeles TimesKenneth TuranLos Angeles TimesKenneth TuranRoom 237 becomes not a film about "The Shining" or even a film about film. Rather, it is an examination of the nature of obsession, about how we are capable of convincing ourselves — and possibly others — that just about anything might be true.