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Métascore
53 commentaires · Fourni par Metacritic.com
- 100The TelegraphRobbie CollinThe TelegraphRobbie CollinMcQueen’s film is big-picture British cinema, of a scale and depth which hasn’t been seen since Christopher Nolan’s Dunkirk. Both London and the countryside are shot with a classical elegance that calls to mind David Lean, while the sequences portraying the bombings themselves flare with panic and horror.
- 95TheWrapWilliam BibbianiTheWrapWilliam BibbianiI’ve been to whole film festivals with less cinema than Steve McQueen packs into just two hours.
- 91The PlaylistTomris LafflyThe PlaylistTomris LafflyOn the whole, there is an old-fashioned grandness to Blitz, charged by a cumulative sense of civic toughness and rebellious spirit that always spreads itself over a people, a city, or a country when they are collectively faced with unspeakable tragedies they have to endure.
- 80ColliderEmma KielyColliderEmma KielyWith immersive action set pieces, heartfelt snippets of character-driven stories, and fantastic performances all around, Steve McQueen shows again his adept ability at bringing such enormous scope to deeply personal human stories.
- 80Total FilmJamie GrahamTotal FilmJamie GrahamAn impressively cinematic drama that fully immerses viewers in a time and place but offers links to our divided present.
- 70VarietyOwen GleibermanVarietyOwen GleibermanMcQueen, who wrote and directed Blitz, has an effortless technique that whisks you along. Yet I can’t say that Blitz ever enters terrain that’s morally fascinating or dramatically complex.
- 60The GuardianPeter BradshawThe GuardianPeter BradshawSteve McQueen finds the key of C major for this well made and unashamedly old-fashioned wartime adventure, heartfelt and rousing and – yes – a bit trad overall, sometimes even channelling the spirit of Lionel Jeffries’s The Railway Children, although for me that’s no put-down.
- 60The film is interesting and informative, but all those bomb blasts don't leave you as shaken as they should.
- 60The Hollywood ReporterLeslie FelperinThe Hollywood ReporterLeslie FelperinWhile there’s much to admire here . . . the drama too often lacks the subtlety that distinguishes the British writer-director’s work at its best. Two hours long, practically to the second, this feels like a project that’s been excessively trimmed, snipped and tapered to fit an arbitrary running time.
- 60Screen DailyFionnuala HalliganScreen DailyFionnuala HalliganOddly enough, in trying to capture a time that was wracked by scarcity, by the idea of make-do-and-mend, by the plucky spirit of the men and women under the might of the machines, Blitz just fires far too much heavy artillery.