Fans of director Lynne Ramsay's first movie, the bleak “Ratcatcher,” won't be surprised that this little existential exercise makes “The Strangef” look like a funwagon.
What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
Christian Science Monitor by David Sterritt
Morton acts up a storm, and Ramsay continues her rise as England's hottest young female filmmaker.
Washington Post by Desson Thomson
As Morvern, Morton is disconcertingly enigmatic, often bordering on catatonic. But she carries the movie effortlessly. And even though we're on the outside looking in, she carries us along, too.
A strange and beautiful film.
More engrossing than convincing.
Ramsay's second feature is an extraordinary adaptation of fellow-Scot Alan Warner's acclaimed novel.
Los Angeles Times by Kevin Thomas
Ramsay reaches out boldly with a film that is as unsettling as it is minimalist.
Austin Chronicle by Kimberley Jones
Ramsay is experimental, unconventional, and forever reaching at the gorgeousness in grief and despair. Her film moves slow as molasses, slow as paint drying -– and all the better to see the colors and the complexities.
Portland Oregonian by Marc Mohan
In Morvern Callar, the subject matter may be morbid and unappealing, but the director handles it with a visual poetry and an eye for hidden beauty that marks a filmmaker of the first order.
The Globe and Mail (Toronto) by Rick Groen
With little dialogue to assist her -- just the strains of that wonderfully organic music -- she still manages to suggest the internal struggle, and to slowly reveal a fierce toughness that flies in the face of conventional morality.