64
Métascore
10 commentaires · Fourni par Metacritic.com
- 91IndieWireAlison ForemanIndieWireAlison ForemanFearlessly specific in its comedy and just as attentive with its character arcs, this algebraic study in adventure might have a metaphoric typo or two (insert obligatory comment about CGI), but it’s mostly a triumph.
- 90VarietyTomris LafflyVarietyTomris LafflyAs expansive and inviting as its picturesque New Zealand landscapes, a joyous sense of adventure shines through in Ant Timpson’s Bookworm, a delightfully quirky father-daughter adventure with the perfect blend of childlike wonder and grown-up bite.
- 83The A.V. ClubJason GorberThe A.V. ClubJason GorberIf you go into Bookworm expecting more of the same chills and thrills from Timpson and his collaborators, you may be put off by this far more accessible tale. Yet, peering closer, you can see reflections of the same rich emotional and character beats that have always been lingering within the more sordid genre trappings of Timpson’s previous work.
- 75Slant MagazineRocco T. ThompsonSlant MagazineRocco T. ThompsonAnt Timpson’s heartwarming Bookworm is an effulgent love letter to ’80s kid cinema laced with a distinctly quirky, Kiwi dryness.
- 63Movie NationRoger MooreMovie NationRoger MooreShifts in tone aside, you’d still have to call “Bookworm” a winner — or I would — with Wood at his most vulnerable and winning and Fisher justifying her chattering pedant paycheck serving up equal parts adorable and insufferable.
- 63RogerEbert.comMatt Zoller SeitzRogerEbert.comMatt Zoller SeitzIt feels a wee bit padded even at a brisk 96 minutes (it’s tough to do “deadpan” in a comedy and not have it come off as merely slow) and has trouble staying on the right side of too-cutesy. But it sustains an innocent storybook tone throughout, thanks mainly to strong performances from its lead actors, Elijah Wood and Nell Fisher, and lush images of the New Zealand countryside.
- 60ColliderChase HutchinsonColliderChase HutchinsonThere is just enough magic that it discovers by the end to give it a closing spark, but there is a mighty long road to get there, ensuring it all just remains merely okay as opposed to comprehensively good.
- 60The GuardianCath ClarkeThe GuardianCath ClarkeThis is a shameless heartstring plucker. But it’s charming and sometimes very funny.
- 50Screen DailyTim GriersonScreen DailyTim GriersonThe New Zealand landscapes could not be more enchanting, although the story lacks a similar magic.
- 50The Film StageC.J. PrinceThe Film StageC.J. PrinceTimpson, along with co-writer Toby Harvard, prefer to take the easy way for achieving their goals, the film leaning into dated comedy and a relentless charm offensive that makes its efforts too strained to fully embrace.