Parenthood Critic Reviews

Metascore®:

80 =
Based upon 10 Critic Reviews
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Chicago Sun-Times | Roger EbertAdd Critic to Favorites

Ron Howard's Parenthood is a delicate balancing act between comedy and truth, a movie that contains a lot of laughter and yet is more concerned with character than punch lines.Read the full review

Los Angeles Times | Sheila BensonAdd Critic to Favorites

Ron Howard reaches real maturity here, as he pulls together the script's tendency to skitter between sociology and sitcom, making it into one perceptive, delicious whole. [2 Aug 1989, p.1]Read the full review

Boston Globe | Jay CarrAdd Critic to Favorites

Funny, gritty, filled with surprising stabs of feeling, Parenthood is a stretch for Ron Howard, its director. This new adult comedy has the generosity of "Cocoon" and "Splash," but it takes Howard into deeper, darker, messier territory. [2 Aug 1989, p.57]Read the full review

Washington Post | Desson HoweAdd Critic to Favorites

Perhaps Parenthood works so well because Howard and Co. dabble in the dark side of family happiness and the lighter side of family darkness.Read the full review

Washington Post | Rita KempleyAdd Critic to Favorites

Weaned on the homilies of "Happy Days" and the hominy grits of Mayberry, Ron Howard brings sitcom aphorisms to bear on the sticky-fingered realities of the beamish Parenthood.Read the full review

Wall Street Journal | Julie SalamonAdd Critic to Favorites

The picture sets up high expectations for itself with its wonderful casting, and the actors don't disappoint. [1 Aug 1989, p.1]Read the full review

The New York Times | Stephen HoldenAdd Critic to Favorites

Ron Howard's bittersweet adult comedy, Parenthood, lays out an entire catalogue of psychological stresses afflicting family life in white middle-class America, then asks if the rewards of being a parent are worth all the agony.Read the full review

Variety | Staff (Not Credited)Add Critic to Favorites

An ambitious, keenly observed, and often very funny look at one of life's most daunting passages, Parenthood's masterstroke is that it covers the range of the family experience, offering the points of view of everyone in an extended and wildly diverse middle-class family.Read the full review

San Francisco Chronicle | Peter StackAdd Critic to Favorites

The new film Parenthood is a challenging, funny, affecting and mostly rewarding effort - like parenthood itself. It makes good use of a large ensemble cast led by Steve Martin as a man striving to be a good dad. [2 Aug 1989, p.E1]Read the full review

USA Today | Mike ClarkAdd Critic to Favorites

The borderline Parenthood is either an iffy comedy with lots of compensations, or a good comedy with more irritating flaws than most movies manage to survive. Whichever, the "feel good'' infantry of summer-film escapists will probably love it. [2 Aug 1989, p.5D]Read the full review

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