100
Metascore
12 Rezensionen · Bereitgestellt von Metacritic.com
- 100Chicago ReaderDave KehrChicago ReaderDave KehrThe film's superb first two hours, which weave social and historical themes into rich personal drama, turn out to be only a prelude to the magnificent final hour--an extended ballroom sequence that leaves history behind to become one of the most moving meditations on individual mortality in the history of the cinema. (Review of 1983 Release)
- 100Chicago Sun-TimesRoger EbertChicago Sun-TimesRoger EbertThe Leopard was written by the only man who could have written it, directed by the only man who could have directed it, and stars the only man who could have played its title character.
- 100The A.V. ClubScott TobiasThe A.V. ClubScott TobiasVirtually every Super Technirama frame of Luchino Visconti's 1963 masterpiece The Leopard could be described as "painterly" in its ornate details and exquisitely balanced color compositions. (Review of DVD Release)
- 100Village VoiceJ. HobermanVillage VoiceJ. HobermanThe Leopard is the greatest film of its kind made since World War II—its only rivals are Kubrick's "Barry Lyndon" and Visconti's own "Senso."
- 100San Francisco ChronicleSan Francisco ChronicleOne of the greatest of all epics.
- 100Chicago TribuneMichael WilmingtonChicago TribuneMichael WilmingtonSumptuous and beautiful, suffused with a serene melancholy and deeply ambivalent love for a long-vanished past, Luchino Visconti's 1963 The Leopard is one of the greatest of all historical costume epics.
- 100Christian Science MonitorDavid SterrittChristian Science MonitorDavid SterrittSmart and sumptuous.
- 90TV Guide MagazineTV Guide MagazineThis is a gorgeous, fascinating account of the interplay between the personal and the social, directed with the kind of insight that only an aristocrat turned Marxist like Visconti could afford. (Review of Original Release)
- 90The New York TimesThe New York TimesFor the most part, Nino Rota's music provides a rich melodic surrounding for the pictorial magnificence, and a heretofore unknown Verdi waltz that is played at the ball at the finish appropriately supplements this remarkably vivid, panoramic, and eventually morbid show. (Review of Original Release)