Auto Focus Critic Reviews

Metascore®:

72 =
Based upon 14 Critic Reviews
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Chicago Sun-Times | Roger EbertAdd Critic to Favorites

The film is pitch-perfect in its decor, music, clothes, cars, language and values. It takes place during those heady years between the introduction of the Pill and the specter of AIDS, when men shaped as adolescents by Playboy in the 1950s now found some of their fantasies within reach.Read the full review

Rolling Stone | Peter TraversAdd Critic to Favorites

Michael Gerbosi's script might have reduced Crane to a clueless cliche were it not for the bruised humanity that Greg Kinnear brings to the role. Kinnear is dynamite.Read the full review

Washington Post | Desson ThomsonAdd Critic to Favorites

In this admirably unconventional film, director Paul Schrader is interested in just about everything BUT traditional biopic business.Read the full review

Los Angeles Times | Manohla DargisAdd Critic to Favorites

In Auto Focus, the strangely wonderful and weirdly touching new film from Paul Schrader, the comedy and the tragedy keep getting mixed up.Read the full review

Entertainment Weekly | Lisa SchwarzbaumAdd Critic to Favorites

The performances are vividly alive.Read the full review

San Francisco Chronicle | Edward GuthmannAdd Critic to Favorites

A compelling, sympathetic portrait.Read the full review

ReelViews | James BerardinelliAdd Critic to Favorites

A compelling motion picture that illustrates an American tragedy and shows the transformation of a decent family man into someone whose struggles with addiction and association with the wrong man bring him to an untimely end, with no hope of retribution.Read the full review

The New York Times | Dana StevensAdd Critic to Favorites

Gets to you like a low-grade fever, a malaise with no known antidote. When it was over, I wasn't sure if I needed a drink, a shower or a lifelong vow of chastity.Read the full review

Variety | Todd McCarthyAdd Critic to Favorites

Schrader directs with a very smooth hand, providing a good-natured and frequently amusing spin to eventually grim material that aptly reflects the protagonist's almost unfailing good humor.Read the full review

Boston Globe | Ty BurrAdd Critic to Favorites

Uplifting? Not bloody likely. Mesmerizing? Very, thanks to Greg Kinnear's eerie performance as Crane and director Paul Schrader's lucid depiction of the character's happy-go-lucky descent into hell.Read the full review

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