Towelhead Critic Reviews

Metascore®:

56 =
Based upon 14 Critic Reviews
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Boston Globe | Ty BurrAdd Critic to Favorites

Ball's trying to be honest about adolescent coming of age, but since he's dishonest about everything else, the movie collapses in on itself.Read the full review

Entertainment Weekly | Owen GleibermanAdd Critic to Favorites

As it becomes clear that Ball, in essence, has just restaged American Beauty with a socially conscious paint job, the sensationalism of Towelhead looks more and more like a dramatic tic.Read the full review

Los Angeles Times | Gary GoldsteinAdd Critic to Favorites

On the upside, newcomer Summer Bishil turns in a gutsy, quietly riveting performance as Jasira.Read the full review

ReelViews | James BerardinelliAdd Critic to Favorites

Ball may not have the answers but he eloquently and forcefully explores some of the potential ramifications. The ending may be too pat, but the journey to get there - bitter, spicy, and poignant - more than compensates for any last-minute fumbles.Read the full review

Rolling Stone | Peter TraversAdd Critic to Favorites

The heart of the movie is really in Jasira's moments with her father, a mass of contradictions that Macdissi plays with comic ferocity and genuine feeling.Read the full review

San Francisco Chronicle | Ruthe SteinAdd Critic to Favorites

So disturbing it makes you uncomfortable watching it.Read the full review

Slate | Dana StevensAdd Critic to Favorites

The 19-year-old actress Summer Bishil captures the terrifying combination of lubricity and innocence that is being 13. Her performance is the truest thing in a movie that, for all its good intentions, feels thoroughly phony and mildly embarrassing.Read the full review

The Hollywood Reporter | Michael RechtshaffenAdd Critic to Favorites

Alternately disturbing, laceratingly satirical and affectingly poignant, the film, which he adapted from the novel, Towelhead, by Alicia Erian, is very much a companion piece to the Ball-penned "American Beauty" in its unwavering examination of the dirty little secrets and raging hypocrisies lurking just beyond all those manicured suburban lawns.Read the full review

The New York Times | Stephen HoldenAdd Critic to Favorites

A crude but scathing portrait of suburban life.Read the full review

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

From its title on down, Towelhead alarms and manipulates, and succeeds in goading the audience like a schoolyard bully, but apart from Bishil's harrowing attempts to find herself, the strings stay too visible.Read the full review

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