All cast and crew do an impressive job in making this unlikely proposition such an engaging, thought-provoking and darkly funny watch.
What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
Time Out London by Dave Calhoun
It’s enthralling and haunting.
Screen International by Fionnuala Halligan
It can feel as if London Road is making the same point throughout, and in the same way – some thematic depth might have added bolster to the film’s dazzling artistic heft.
London Road, on stage and celluloid, is an experiment likely to fall flat outside of the most devoted of cinephiles (and theatergoers), but an exciting one nonetheless, even if only for its boldness.
There’s an over-compensatory fussiness to its most elaborate formal conceits, with the gradual shifting of the pic’s palette from desaturated December grays to iridescent oil-pastel tones a crude symbolic device.
The film doesn't simply work, it trumps expectation and lingers long in the mind.
The A.V. Club by Mike D'Angelo
As pop sociology, London Road doesn’t delve terribly deep, repeating the same simple observations (principally: people are self-interested) over and over. As a nearly avant-garde musical, however, it’s a constant grin-conjuring marvel.
The Guardian by Peter Bradshaw
London Road was a mighty success on stage. Now it is a unique triumph on the movie screen.
The Hollywood Reporter by Stephen Dalton
As gripping onscreen as it was onstage, London Road remains a work of great finesse and originality.
An artistic spin on tragedy that’s deft, witty, very well-acted, and more diverting than it is profound.