80
Metascore
35 recensioni · Fornito da Metacritic.com
- 100The GuardianPeter BradshawThe GuardianPeter BradshawThe Beast may not add up to a cogent or thoroughgoing critique of all the ideas it invokes, but it’s such a luxurious cinematic experience; it’s created with such elan and attack, and the musical score amplifies its throb of fear.
- 100Slant MagazineKeith UhlichSlant MagazineKeith UhlichBertrand Bonello uncannily utilizes burdensome signs and wonders for maximum insight and agitation.
- 91The Film StageDavid KatzThe Film StageDavid KatzFor what a discomforting and despairing experience much of The Beast is, when I’ve thought back to it, its moments of real, uncomplicated cinematic pleasure, its verve and sense of joyousness, are what mark my memories. It’s romantic, without a capital-R.
- 91IndieWireDavid EhrlichIndieWireDavid EhrlichThe film’s true power stems from and speaks to our specifically present condition as people beset on all sides by the fears of our own imagination. By the trauma of something that already happened, or the terror of something that might.
- 83The PlaylistRafaela Sales RossThe PlaylistRafaela Sales RossAlthough it is true that The Beast would greatly benefit from a gentle trimming in its first hour, it is easy to forgive the indulgence when the result is such a remarkable commentary on the looming threats of artificial intelligence and the dangers of glorified emotional numbness.
- 80Screen DailyJonathan RomneyScreen DailyJonathan RomneyEach of the film’s three strands has its own dramatic flaws and virtues. But what is most intriguing is the way that the stories are braided, both in editor Anita Roth’s intercutting and in the establishing of visual parallels.
- 80The TelegraphRobbie CollinThe TelegraphRobbie CollinOn a first viewing, I wasn’t quite convinced by some of the glitchy japes Bonello deploys here and there . . . But perhaps he wants us to think of the film itself like its torn heroine: a strange machine whose ghost refuses to give up.
- The Beast is a bold, creative, and heady dystopian film that clocks in way too long at 145 minutes.
- 70The Hollywood ReporterJordan MintzerThe Hollywood ReporterJordan MintzerThe film maintains a certain level of suspense as it leaps between various epochs, often without warning. But, like many of Bonello’s movies, it lacks forward momentum and a sharp edit, lumbering along as it reaches into a grab bag of thematic and aesthetic concepts.
- 60VarietyGuy LodgeVarietyGuy LodgeLaden with enticing ideas and images that never quite activate each other, “The Beast” instead coagulates into a thick 146-minute triptych of general, fidgeting malaise, and strands a hard-working Léa Seydoux and George MacKay in a cross-time, cross-purposes relationship that keeps shape-shifting without getting us terribly involved.