78
Metascore
5 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 90Film ThreatJosiah TealFilm ThreatJosiah TealThe characters feel real, the performances are personal, and you really know each character by the closing credits. It’s not the most rewatchable film, but Under the Fig Trees will capture your curiosity and more than satisfy a need for an excellent character-focused drama.
- 88RogerEbert.comCarlos AguilarRogerEbert.comCarlos AguilarThough Sehiri’s third feature offers a seemingly minor concept, it’s certainly bountiful in its power to unearth the unspoken codes that reign over this community, where some men demand reverence from women solely for their gender-based status in the social hierarchy, where the notion of absolute loyalty to one’s extended family guides every decision, and where romantic companionship remains mostly transactional.
- 80New York Magazine (Vulture)Roxana HadadiNew York Magazine (Vulture)Roxana HadadiUnder the Fig Trees is a big-minded film that grounds its ideas about labor, sexism, faith, and modernity in the zippy rhythms of its characters’ negotiations around friendship, romance, and work. Most of the film’s runtime is people talking, but with evocative dialogue and lived-in performances from mostly first-time actors, it’s an unapologetic slice of life.
- 60The Irish TimesDonald ClarkeThe Irish TimesDonald ClarkeA lovely, pastoral pleasure that admits its share of blood-drawing barbs.