82
Metascore
11 recensioni · Fornito da Metacritic.com
- 91Original-CinLiam LaceyOriginal-CinLiam LaceyPeck’s fleet approach briskly compresses a great deal of information without clumsy interview setups and joins the dots between Black political and artistic freedom then and now while literally gives an important activist-artist a voice again.
- 90The New York TimesLisa KennedyThe New York TimesLisa KennedyThe result is an elegantly wrought documentary that pulls off the trick of leaving viewers sated yet also craving more.
- 90Screen DailyRobert DanielsScreen DailyRobert DanielsPeck’s film is a rich chronicling of Cole’s unique career, peerless artistry, political strength and moving end.
- 90VarietyOwen GleibermanVarietyOwen GleibermanWatching “Lost and Found,” you’re moved by a life that veered into tragedy, yet the place it lands lifts you up. More than a great photographer, Ernest Cole captured something essential. By the end you feel the ghost is speaking to you.
- 80The Irish TimesTara BradyThe Irish TimesTara BradyStanfield and Peck movingly channel their late subject against the sweep of history: “The total man does not live one experience.”
- 80The GuardianPeter BradshawThe GuardianPeter BradshawPeck’s film, in which LaKeith Stanfield narrates a kind of heightened, fictionalised first-person account from Cole’s own writings and diaries, is devastatingly sad. It is the sadness of an artist who becomes estranged, not merely from his homeland, but from his art and his livelihood.
- Ultimately, the lasting message of Lost and Found is discovered in the heart of its subject’s work, and the undeniable power of his uncompromising camera lens – frames transformed into cinema, an abrasive reckoning with the edifice of the past.
- 75RogerEbert.comMonica CastilloRogerEbert.comMonica CastilloFrom Cole's own words and interviews with his friends and loved ones, Peck writes a thorough narrative through the highs and lows of the photographer's life, including details about his childhood in South Africa and many years of homesickness abroad.
- 63Slant MagazineDerek SmithSlant MagazineDerek SmithThe film paints a vivid portrait of what life was like for Black South Africans under apartheid.
- 58IndieWireVikram MurthiIndieWireVikram MurthiCole clearly deserves as many posthumous tributes as the culture can afford, especially since he received so little in his lifetime, but reverence, particularly as a way of combatting decades of indifference, isn’t necessarily the best solution