Your Company
 

The Woman Who Loves Giraffes

✭ ✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

Canada · 2018
1h 21m
Director Alison Reid
Starring Tatiana Maslany, Victor Garber
Genre Documentary

Dr. Anne Innis Dagg re-traces the steps of her groundbreaking 1956 journey to South Africa to study giraffes in the wild. Now, at 85 years old, Anne sees a startling contrast between the world of giraffes--and the world of scientists--that she once knew, and what those two worlds have become.

Stream The Woman Who Loves Giraffes

What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

80

Film Threat by Bobby LePire

While director Alison Reid tries to be a bit more engaging than a simple talking-head documentary, with varying success, the movie has earnestness and heart. So, even with its issues, it is still a solid good time.

70

TheWrap by Elizabeth Weitzman

Despite some grim ecological statistics and a conservationist message, the movie is so inspirational it feels like the sort of old-fashioned family film that can now be excavated on Disney+.

70

The New York Times by Jeannette Catsoulis

Blessed with a trove of 16-millimeter film footage captured during this yearlong adventure, the director, Alison Reid, uses it as the foundation for a far-ranging story of scientific discovery, sexual discrimination and environmental alarm.

80

Los Angeles Times by Kenneth Turan

“Giraffes” benefits not only from Dagg’s charismatic presence but also from excerpts of letters she wrote during her first trip to Africa (read by Tatiana Maslany) and 16-millimeter color film she shot back in the day.

63

Boston Globe by Mark Feeney

The documentary loses a bit when Dagg returns home, and an alarmingly perky score doesn’t help. Late in life, after her tenure struggles, she published a new edition of her dissertation and found herself rediscovered.

63

Washington Post by Michael O'Sullivan

The first story “Giraffes” tells is one of endangered animals. The second — and equally powerful one — is a narrative of not just one woman’s struggle to be taken seriously, but the struggle of all women to do so.

80

Variety by Tomris Laffly

Reid meticulously investigates why Dr. Dagg’s groundbreaking work didn’t quite collect the widespread acclaim that it deserved. Underneath it all lies a heartbreaking tale of a driven woman stifled by institutional misogyny — a fascinating story stunt coordinator-turned-filmmaker Reid patiently approaches from various captivating angles.

Users who liked this film also liked