Married Life (2008) Critic Reviews

Metascore®:

71 =
Based upon 11 Critic Reviews
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Chicago Sun-Times | Roger EbertAdd Critic to Favorites

Is the movie about marriage, or sex, or murder, or the murder plot, or what? I'm not sure. It deals all those cards, and fate shuffles them. You may not like it if you insist on counting the deck after the game and coming up with 52. But if you get 51 and are amused by how the missing card was made to vanish, this may be a movie to your liking.Read the full review

San Francisco Chronicle | Mick LaSalleAdd Critic to Favorites

It's a drama with elements of black comedy and suspense, European in feeling but American in attitude. Just for fun, it's set in 1949, an era of glamour, of Hitchcock and of husbands even more clueless than they are today.Read the full review

The Onion (A.V. Club) | Scott TobiasAdd Critic to Favorites

To a degree, the dynamic between Brosnan and Cooper resembles Aaron Eckhart and Matt Malloy's relationship from "In The Company Of Men."Read the full review

Entertainment Weekly | Lisa SchwarzbaumAdd Critic to Favorites

Married Life congratulates its audience on a sophisticated, humorous complicity in the obvious immorality of Harry's murder plans, as well as in Richard's own ungentlemanly designs on his pal's gorgeous girl. Every adult, the movie suggests, has got a secret.Read the full review

ReelViews | James BerardinelliAdd Critic to Favorites

Chris Cooper, the consummate professional, has no trouble making viewers feel sympathy for a potential killer.Read the full review

Slate | Dana StevensAdd Critic to Favorites

Married Life is a tony, well-upholstered vehicle that glides smoothly toward its destination—but despite an unnecessary and overly sentimental coda, that destination isn't necessarily where you thought you were going all along.Read the full review

Variety | Todd McCarthyAdd Critic to Favorites

The tone, casting and material form a less-than-perfect match in Married Life, a period domestic drama that never quite decides if it wants to be a credible marital study, a noirish meller or a sly comedy.Read the full review

Washington Post | Desson ThomsonAdd Critic to Favorites

An engaging romance noir, a sort of updated "The Postman Always Rings Twice" that packs its surprises into four characters, none of them predictable.Read the full review

The New York Times | Stephen HoldenAdd Critic to Favorites

This is the sort of gallows humor that Hitchcock relished drawing out in cruelly amusing cat-and-mouse games, not to be taken too seriously. The same is true of Married Life. The murder plot is not to be taken any more literally than the lethal games of “Mr. and Mrs. Smith.”Read the full review

Boston Globe | Ty BurrAdd Critic to Favorites

Albeit slumming with style and a fairly sharp scalpel. Married Life delights in peeling back the bright postwar social veneer to expose the characters' hidden agendas, and if this is a mystery movie, the mystery is other people.Read the full review

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