86
Metascore
16 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 100The Observer (UK)Simran HansThe Observer (UK)Simran HansAt times, it feels as though we’re watching something we’re not supposed to be seeing, such is the detail of the emotional degradation on show; in this sense, it’s impossible not to read it as something of a nihilistic suicide note.
- 91The Film StageZhuo-Ning SuThe Film StageZhuo-Ning SuUnmissable for anyone craving the gritty realism and independent spirit of pre-00’s Chinese cinema. Fair warning: this is decidedly not the feel-good movie of the year.
- 90Screen DailySarah WardScreen DailySarah WardUnrelenting as its tone may be, the feature proves a delicately layered, deftly shot work that makes an incisive statement about the prevalence of apathy, arrogance and egotism in contemporary China and beyond.
- 90The New York TimesA.O. ScottThe New York TimesA.O. ScottUnsparing as Hu’s anatomy of moral drift may be, there is something graceful in his sympathetic attention to lives defined almost entirely by disappointment and diminished hope. Unlike the titular elephant, the film never stops moving, and by the end, instead of feeling beaten down, the viewer is likely to feel moved as well.
- 80CineVuePatrick GambleCineVuePatrick GamblePowerfully conveying a longing for escape from ordinary life, Hu Bo’s An Elephant Sitting Still is a strangely alluring, four-hour portrait of the disillusionment and hollow sense of emptiness experienced by those living in a society marked by violent individualism.
- 80The Hollywood ReporterClarence TsuiThe Hollywood ReporterClarence TsuiAdmittedly, Elephant is a heavy affair, but it’s not all doom and gloom. Hu's characters remain very real, and they are never shown as indulgent to the point of being above the banalities of everyday life. Barbed humor abounds, too, in matter-of-fact dialogue.
- 75Slant MagazineChristopher GraySlant MagazineChristopher GrayThe film’s gritty, mundane agonies come to feel like a series of moral tests with genuinely unpredictable outcomes.
- 60Time OutHanna FlintTime OutHanna FlintThrough tracking shots, close-ups and minimal dialogue director Hu Bo paints a bleak portrait of China, bolstered by a lead cast delivering understated and nuanced performances.
- 58The A.V. ClubMike D'AngeloThe A.V. ClubMike D'AngeloStill, the respectful thing to do, it seems, is to treat An Elephant Sitting Still like any other film, imagining how it would look were Hu already hard at work on his next project. A lot depends on just how much sustained misery one likes to endure.