77
Metascore
18 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 100The New York TimesVincent CanbyThe New York TimesVincent CanbyThe film itself is invigorating - written, directed, and acted with enormous insight and comic elan. [27 Sept 1991]
- 100Washington PostDesson ThomsonWashington PostDesson ThomsonIt gets you below the emotional belt in a searing, delicate way. No movie this year approaches such magnificent imagery, such delectable poetry.
- 90Chicago ReaderJonathan RosenbaumChicago ReaderJonathan RosenbaumThe style is so eclectic that it may take some getting used to, but Van Sant, working from his own story for the first time, brings such lyrical focus to his characters and his poetry that almost everything works.
- Van Sant's sensibility is wholly original, wholly fresh. "My Own Private Idaho" adds a new ingredient: a kind of boho sweetness. I loved it.
- 88The Globe and Mail (Toronto)The Globe and Mail (Toronto)My Own Private Idaho achieves more than most movies dream of attempting. The Shakespearian allusions aside, Van Sant has essentially remade "Of Mice and Men" for the nineties, with Mike as the "mouse," Scott as the "man." It is the mouse who roars.
- 78Austin ChronicleMarjorie BaumgartenAustin ChronicleMarjorie BaumgartenIt's a daredevil's ride that keeps you glued with fascination.
- 75Entertainment WeeklyEntertainment WeeklyBut Van Sant, whose vision is otherwise sharp, pushes the connection to Shakespeare's Henry IV too far, having Reeves at one point declaim in rhyming couplets, which severely tests even the most forgiving viewer.
- 70Los Angeles TimesKenneth TuranLos Angeles TimesKenneth TuranNo matter what you've been used to, Idaho is something completely different, a film that manages to confound all expectations, even the ones it sets up itself. [18 Oct 1991]
- 63USA TodayMike ClarkUSA TodayMike ClarkTruth is, Idaho is nothing but set pieces; tossed into a mix whose meaning is almost certainly private. [27 Sept 1991]
- 50TimeRichard SchickelTimeRichard SchickelWhat plot it has is borrowed, improbably, from Henry IV, and whenever anyone manages to speak an entire paragraph, it is usually a Shakespearean paraphrase. But this is a desperate imposition on an essentially inert film. [28 Oct 1991]