Just about every scene in Lean On Pete, the sensitive, unvarnished, at times powerfully sad new drama from writer-director Andrew Haigh (Weekend, 45 Years), reveals something small but important about the hardscrabble lives it chronicles.
What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
Each scene is so quietly compelling because Haigh doesn’t focus on cruelty, but helplessness.
The Hollywood Reporter by David Rooney
This is a compassionately observed story told with unimpeachable naturalism and without a grain of sentimentality, propelled by a remarkable performance from Charlie Plummer that's both internalized and emotionally raw.
It’s saved from all-out depressiveness by Haigh’s compassion, which cradles the characters within their often desperate situations.
Sadly, the intriguing set up - along with Del and Bonnie - is left behind for a too nakedly state-of-America musing, with everyone Charley happens across having some social ill to portray.
The Telegraph by Robbie Collin
[Haigh] hasn’t sacrificed a shred of the understated, observational style, lace-like emotional intricacy and lung-filling feel for landscape that all made his previous film, the Norfolk-set marital drama 45 Years, such a force to be reckoned with.
The Film Stage by Rory O'Connor
Lean on Pete is certainly not a film without qualities (credit to the supporting cast and Magnus Nordenhof Jønck’s cinematography in particular), but viewers might just feel the gnawing sense of a director losing his grip on the reins.
Consequence of Sound by Sarah Kurchak
While Lean on Pete risks turning gratuitous in terms of narrative flourishes and excess, it’s never gratuitous in its characterizations. Each individual encounter is rendered with compassion and respect.
Screen International by Wendy Ide
There’s a wistful quality to the storytelling which softens some of the sharper edges of tragedy and hardship in this undeniably affecting picture.
Lean on Pete is at its potent, stirring best during the opening furlough, when it focuses on this makeshift hobo family as it criss-crosses the Pacific Northwest from one racetrack to the next.
A great performance from Charlie Plummer who acts alone for large segments of the film. It is an interesting take on the 'journeying across America' trope with Andrew Haigh's distinct visual style. True to this style, the film is sparse on dialogue. However, the dialogue that is there is poignant.