61
Metascore
4 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 83The Film StageRory O'ConnorThe Film StageRory O'ConnorIt is a film of two contrasting halves: Solange’s warm and fuzzy naivety and her cold coming of age.
- 80The New YorkerRichard BrodyThe New YorkerRichard BrodyThe exemplary figure of Ropert’s film is Solange’s retreat into a sharply expressive silence, captured in poised and precisely composed images, that resounds as clearly as a cry of agony.
- 80The New York TimesNatalia WinkelmanThe New York TimesNatalia WinkelmanAs Solange’s teenage woes bubble up and then cool to a simmer, Ropert reveals a knack for calibrating emotion. It can be agony to accept one’s parents as people with needs and faults all their own, and Ropert observes Solange’s coming-of-age lucidly and without judgment.
- 30VarietyJay WeissbergVarietyJay WeissbergRopert’s understanding of how children furtively watch the adults around them, soaking up the friction, is well-observed and the best thing in this otherwise insipid film that perversely discards any shred of naturalism for an outdated and phony ingenuousness. Even the performances are airless, and consequently there’s no emotional investment in a family whose rapport is so clunkily established.