This patient, perceptive, nonjudgmental love story about age difference is the first to convincingly explain the temporal physics of May-December romances.Read Full Review »
90
ROLLING STONE: Peter Travers
Offers something magical in the haunting and hypnotic performance of Sarah Polley...(the film) cuts deep.Read Full Review »
At the heart of the film, Polley - with her wary, unsure stares, her open smile and beguiling intelligence - is terrific.Read Full Review »
63
Boston Globe: Jay Carr
While the appeal of Guinevere is decidedly intermittent, it's there, and the acting is right on the money.Read Full Review »
63
USA Today: Mike Clark
The cumbersome wrap-up, which follows a four-year narrative gap, seems too fanciful and bogs down what has been a stronger second hour.Read Full Review »
60
LOS ANGELES TIMES: Kenneth Turan
We have a right to yawn, but we don't, and Sarah Polley is the reason.Read Full Review »
50
Salon.com: Charles Taylor
It doesn't take Rea long to decide that he's more interested in extending his record for Longest Acting Career Sustained on One Expression, and he's back to his baggy-eyed, hangdog look.Read Full Review »