58
Metascore
15 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 80The New York TimesNeil GenzlingerThe New York TimesNeil GenzlingerThe film genre that might be called Old People Behaving Hilariously gets an appealing new entry with The 100-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out the Window and Disappeared, a sometimes daffy, often droll Swedish movie.
- 70Wall Street JournalJohn AndersonWall Street JournalJohn AndersonConsistently daffy, consistently amusing.
- 70Los Angeles TimesBetsy SharkeyLos Angeles TimesBetsy SharkeyThere is a great deal of silliness about Allan's journey from start to finish and no real message other than to never stop taking life as it comes. But there is also a great deal of fun in watching a 100-year-old man climb out a window and disappear.
- 67The A.V. ClubMike D'AngeloThe A.V. ClubMike D'AngeloThe 100-Year-Old Man surely won’t conquer the U.S. box office, but it’s a nice change of pace to see a foreign film that isn’t deadly serious. We could use more subtitled belly laughs.
- 63RogerEbert.comGlenn KennyRogerEbert.comGlenn KennyThis movie, as it happens, is a comedy, but it’s a frequently grisly one, and one that makes rollicking fun of a lot of dark Swedish preoccupations.
- 60The DissolveCharles BramescoThe DissolveCharles Bramesco100-Year-Old sometimes feels like a rote biopic of a famous figure who never was, congratulating viewers on whatever recognition has rolled over from grade-school history class, then moving on to what comes next.
- Despite the heavy themes, "100-Year-Old Man" keeps the tone light. It is a comedy, after all. The laugh-o-meter needle hovers fairly consistently on "amused grin."
- 60VarietyPeter DebrugeVarietyPeter DebrugeThe script never quite succeeds in making us care about Allan as a character (despite dubbing its quavering narration into English for the ease of American auds), but it finds an interesting balance for a personality who leaves a trail of disaster in his wake.
- 50Village VoiceMichael NordineVillage VoiceMichael NordineThe 100-Year-Old Man's equal-opportunity irreverence doesn't often translate to cleverness.
- 50San Francisco ChronicleSan Francisco ChroniclePerhaps most of the humor just doesn’t translate (the film was a smash hit in Sweden). Whatever the case, the script needed to mine more comedy from the characters, not the clownish plot machinations.