85
Metascore
34 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 100The Hollywood ReporterJames GreenbergThe Hollywood ReporterJames GreenbergTopped by a fine cast, a first-rate script by Nick Hornby and tight direction by Lone Scherfig, the film is a smart, moving but not inaccessible entry in the coming-of-age canon.
- 100SalonAndrew O'HehirSalonAndrew O'HehirAn Education captures the very limited possibilities for female liberation in early-'60s London -- with massive social change on the distant horizon, but not here yet -- in exquisite detail.
- 91Entertainment WeeklyLisa SchwarzbaumEntertainment WeeklyLisa SchwarzbaumAfterward, you'll want to listen to the Beatles sing ''She's Leaving Home.'' It might be a girl like Jenny the lads had in mind.
- 91The A.V. ClubNathan RabinThe A.V. ClubNathan RabinAn Education shares with Hornby’s best work trenchant insight into the way smart, hyper-verbal young people let the music, films, books, and art they love define themselves as they figure out who they are and what they want to be.
- 88Rolling StonePeter TraversRolling StonePeter TraversAn Education is remarkable for the traps it doesn't fall into. Jenny, for all her naive impulses, isn't a victim.
- 80VarietyTodd McCarthyVarietyTodd McCarthyCarey Mulligan shines in a captivating performance.
- 80Village VoiceScott FoundasVillage VoiceScott FoundasSomething of a deceptively packaged Oscar-season bonbon--a seemingly benign, classily directed year-I-became-a-woman nostalgia trip that conceals a surprisingly tart, morally ambiguous center.
- 70New York Magazine (Vulture)David EdelsteinNew York Magazine (Vulture)David EdelsteinFor all its original touches, though, An Education follows a conventional trajectory.
- 70Chicago ReaderChicago ReaderThis British drama is handsomely textured and beautifully acted, though the script often feels giddily out of touch with the essential creepiness of the scenario.
- 40Time OutKeith UhlichTime OutKeith UhlichLone Scherfig directs it all as if it were a breezy lark, so a third-act tonal shift makes for an incongruous, excessively moralistic fit with everything that’s preceded. Most insulting, though, is the way in which the climactic passages miraculously tidy up every frayed edge of Jenny’s life.