69
Metascore
13 recensioni · Fornito da Metacritic.com
- 80SlashfilmJeremy MathaiSlashfilmJeremy MathaiSacramento is film that knows exactly how to transcend the sum of its parts.
- 80ColliderAidan KelleyColliderAidan KelleyIts relatable story is what really makes Sacramento a film that's worth revisiting again and again for its charming fable about the price of friendship and fatherhood.
- 75IndieWireDavid EhrlichIndieWireDavid EhrlichRunning eightysomething minutes with credits, “Sacramento” never aspires to be much more than an incisively rendered sketch, but its casual nature and outward lack of ambition belie how well it manages to convey the terror that change brings into our lives, the mania of trying to deny it, and the relief that comes from recognizing that someone else in your world is changing with you.
- 75Original-CinChris KnightOriginal-CinChris KnightSacramento is a well-made, well-acted comedy drama that does just about everything right and almost nothing unexpected.
- 70The Hollywood ReporterLovia GyarkyeThe Hollywood ReporterLovia GyarkyeThe standout moments in Sacramento highlight behavioral and conversational quirks of old friendships, in scenes that recall the drollness of Joanna Arnow’s recent The Feeling That the Time for Doing Something Has Passed.
- 70Paste MagazineJesse HassengerPaste MagazineJesse HassengerStewart and Erskine, on the other hand, are doing work so lived-in, so much more shaded than the nagging wife/girlfriend figures that typically orbit male immaturity narratives, that it’s hard not to wish the movie were about them instead.
- 67The PlaylistMarshall ShafferThe PlaylistMarshall ShafferIt’s a perceptive film about the way men of a certain age act around each other. (Which, is to say, like boys.)
- 63Slant MagazineRoss McIndoeSlant MagazineRoss McIndoeThe film’s strength is that it knows how to keep things moving.
- 63Washington PostTy BurrWashington PostTy BurrIt takes its sweet and sour time getting there, but eventually “Sacramento” finds a satisfying seriocomic groove in the plight of men facing the prospect of fatherhood and realizing adulthood has to come along for the ride.
- 60TheWrapElizabeth WeitzmanTheWrapElizabeth WeitzmanThough his slim script (co-written with Chris Smith) holds few surprises, Angarano’s direction is consistently confident. He paces this minor tale wisely, getting in and out of the characters’ small stories in a perfectly-timed 84 minutes.