The Magdalene Sisters Critic Reviews

Metascore®:

85 =
Based upon 15 Critic Reviews
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Boston Globe | Ty BurrAdd Critic to Favorites

Blistering and brilliant work. Read the full review

Entertainment Weekly | Owen GleibermanAdd Critic to Favorites

The rare movie that turns cruelty into art.Read the full review

Washington Post | Ann HornadayAdd Critic to Favorites

A stirring, emotionally galvanizing film, not only due to its shattering subject matter but thanks to Mullan's spot-on eye for casting and fluid, uncoercive style. Read the full review

Los Angeles Times | Kenneth TuranAdd Critic to Favorites

Graced with performers who bring a purity of emotion to their work, the film is always dramatically convincing. There is a fundamental air of truth about it, a sense that, horrific though things seem, this is how it must have been. Read the full review

Washington Post | Desson ThomsonAdd Critic to Favorites

Mullan's movie is admiringly uncompromising. He refuses to augment the horrors with relief. Read the full review

Slate | David EdelsteinAdd Critic to Favorites

Both a masterpiece and a holy hell: Watching it, you feel you're being punished for a crime you didn't commit. Which puts you, come to think of it, in the same frame of mind as those poor Magdalene girls. Read the full review

Wall Street Journal | Joe MorgensternAdd Critic to Favorites

See The Magdalene Sisters for its own sake; the performances alone are inspirational. But see it too as an example of how powerful a feature film still can be in the hands of an impassioned filmmaker.Read the full review

Chicago Sun-Times | Roger EbertAdd Critic to Favorites

A harrowing look at institutional cruelty, perpetrated by the Catholic Church in Ireland, and justified by a perverted hysteria about sex.Read the full review

USA Today | Claudia PuigAdd Critic to Favorites

It is an unsettling tale told simply and chillingly by director Peter Mullan, with stand-out performances, an evocative soundtrack and spare, haunting visuals. Read the full review

Variety | David RooneyAdd Critic to Favorites

Mullan's increased maturity as a director is evident in his skill at manipulating light and dark dramatic tones, and shifting between moods of anger and plaintive melancholy.Read the full review

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