62
Metascore
22 Rezensionen · Bereitgestellt von Metacritic.com
- 88The Seattle TimesMoira MacdonaldThe Seattle TimesMoira MacdonaldThose who love books, picturesque English villages and getting lost in actors’ faces should be very happy
- 80The Hollywood ReporterJonathan HollandThe Hollywood ReporterJonathan HollandIts subversive undercurrent, embodied in fine performances by Emily Mortimer and Bill Nighy, is what makes it really interesting.
- 70Village VoiceApril WolfeVillage VoiceApril WolfeThough nearly nothing happens in this movie besides a woman opening a shop and beginning a standoffish friendship with a reclusive man, I still found myself drawn in, just as I was drawn to Iain’s discreet disaster of a baked Alaska (please check it out if you haven’t seen this TGBBS episode); sometimes the quiet is enticing.
- 63Movie NationRoger MooreMovie NationRoger MooreMessage and metaphor are all and The Bookshop, with its terrific cast and lovely setting, barely overcomes that burden.
- 60The GuardianPeter BradshawThe GuardianPeter BradshawIt is a strange, subdued, rather miserable film, interestingly perceptive on conformism and philistinism as a way of life, and on the disconcerting wiles the inhabitants use in order to thwart Florence’s entirely reasonable plans.
- In theory there’s plenty here to engage: a critique of Little England philistinism, the arrival of provocative literature into a sleepy backwater that barely reads, the revolt of a courageous woman against the establishment. Yet none of that comes to life.
- 50VarietyGuy LodgeVarietyGuy LodgeThis is a frustratingly patchy adaptation, in which some of Fitzgerald’s shrewdest observations on the savage politics and politesse of supposedly tranquil English village life get a little bit lost in the Europudding. A fine, sensitive leading turn from Emily Mortimer helps shore up these quiet, lightly dust-covered proceedings, but can’t quite put The Bookshop in the black.
- 40The Observer (UK)Wendy IdeThe Observer (UK)Wendy IdeFor all the real-estate machinations and nefarious scheming, there are too many inert scenes that drain the energy from this already plodding story.
- 40The TelegraphTim RobeyThe TelegraphTim RobeyNighy and Mortimer have just a couple of scenes together, but they’re easily the film’s best: both actors sink gratifyingly into the nuances of this incipient friendship, bond over books you actually believe they’ve read, and give the film its best hope of doing Fitzgerald justice.
- 38Slant MagazineDerek SmithSlant MagazineDerek SmithThe Bookshop is steadfast in avoiding drama at all costs.