Pearl Harbor (2001) Critic Reviews

Metascore®:

53 =
Based upon 13 Critic Reviews
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Los Angeles Times | Kevin ThomasAdd Critic to Favorites

The film's immense cast and crew, headed by director Michael Bay, writer Randall Wallace and stars Ben Affleck, Josh Hartnett and Kate Beckinsale, blend artistry and technology to create a blockbuster entertainment that has passion, valor and tremendous action.Read the full review

Boston Globe | Jay CarrAdd Critic to Favorites

The film never quite hits a sure-footed stride. The fictional love story stays fictional. But ''Pearl Harbor'' delivers the main event.Read the full review

San Francisco Chronicle | Mick LaSalleAdd Critic to Favorites

It expertly capitalizes on the emotional associations Americans have with Pearl Harbor and renders the battle scenes with an excellence that goes beyond proficiency and into the realm of art.Read the full review

Washington Post | Stephen HunterAdd Critic to Favorites

Until a disappointing tailspin in the last hour, Pearl Harbor is the best piece of popular entertainment to come along in years.Read the full review

Entertainment Weekly | Owen GleibermanAdd Critic to Favorites

The picture is nearly painstaking in its traditionalism, a tale of love, war, and valor in which nostalgia for ''simpler times'' gets mashed together, almost fetishistically, with nostalgia for old movies and for the spirit of knightly self sacrifice during World War II.Read the full review

The New York Times | Dana StevensAdd Critic to Favorites

Works best as a bang-and- boom action picture, a loud symphony of bombardment and explosion juiced up with frantic editing and shiny computer-generated imagery.Read the full review

USA Today | Mike ClarkAdd Critic to Favorites

It's an extravaganza worth seeing once -- and maybe later on DVD.Read the full review

Rolling Stone | Peter TraversAdd Critic to Favorites

The film has no soul. An epic about this day of infamy should shake you to the core. But the real infamy about Pearl Harbor is that when you exit, you don't feel a thing.Read the full review

Slate | David EdelsteinAdd Critic to Favorites

I found "Pearl Harbor" annoying but not excruciating—even at three hours, it's less assaultive than either "The Mummy Returns" or "Moulin Rouge."Read the full review

Chicago Sun-Times | Roger EbertAdd Critic to Favorites

Its centerpiece is 40 minutes of redundant special effects, surrounded by a love story of stunning banality.Read the full review

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