Buffalo 66 Critic Reviews
Metascore®:
Based upon 10 Critic Reviews- Highest Rated
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Publications (A-Z)
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- Critics (A-Z)
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- Favorite Critics
Plays like a collision between a lot of half-baked visual ideas and a deep and urgent need. That makes it interesting and the film contains an astonishing performance by Christina Ricci, who seems to have been assigned a portion of the screen where she can do whatever she wants.Read the full review
It's all somehow both familiar and dazzling, just as Ricci's kidnapped tap student, forced to pose as the protagonist's wife for his horrifically indifferent parents, is somehow both nondescript and heartbreaking.Read the full review
Alternately satirical and romantic, full of pain and humor, Buffalo '66 is a winner.Read the full review
Gallo's script is quirky and filled with a number of hilariously strange comic moments. Read the full review
All bets are off. For my money, Vincent Gallo wins the Triple Crown of indie filmmaking -- for writing, directing and starring in Buffalo '66.Read the full review
Gallos movie is terrific, an original and disarming vision of a life that's all skids.Read the full review
Cool, stark compositions and the occasional audacious visual trick give Buffalo '66 a memorable look even when its narrative enters the occasional uneventful stretch.Read the full review
While watching Gazzara, Huston, Kevin Corrigan, Rosanna Arquette, and others take things two steps beyond over-the-top is inherently compelling, it becomes embarrassing before long.Read the full review
Alive to cinematic ideas, generous to its actors and peppered with unexpected humor, this ultimately sweet-natured low-budgeter is nonetheless riddled with enough off-putting and digressive material.Read the full review
Personal and private almost to the point of self-absorption, the film is ultimately saved from neurotic narcissism by the director's self-deprecating humor and unapologetic honesty about his own dysfunction.Read the full review