Séraphine's dependence on her patron--a cultivated but emotionally detached homosexual, who knew a fellow outsider when he saw one but came and went in her life without warning--is almost as unbearably moving as her inevitable unraveling--when money and fame cut the artist off from her creative wellsprings and drove her over the edge.
What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
The New York Times by A.O. Scott
The mystery of Séraphine de Senlis -- who died in a mental hospital in 1942 and whose work survives in some of the world’s leading museums -- is left intact at the end of Séraphine. Rather than trying to explain Séraphine, the film accepts her.
Writer-director Martin Provost tells much of Seraphine's true-life story without words, lingering here on the process by which she makes paints, there on the obsessive single-mindedness she brings to her art.
New York Magazine (Vulture) by David Edelstein
Séraphine is one of the most evocative films about an artist I've ever seen--and in its treatment of madness one of the least condescending.
An extraordinary performance by vet thesp Yolande Moreau in the title role.
The Hollywood Reporter by Frank Scheck
Moving historical drama brings a fascinating chapter of art history to life.
Los Angeles Times by Kenneth Turan
What makes Seraphine, directed and co-written by Martin Provost, so exceptional is that it neither condescends to nor romanticizes its subject.
Séraphine is far more powerful when it lingers on Louis at work.
Christian Science Monitor by Peter Rainer
The scene is so emotionally ravishing that it breaks you apart. The peacefulness that finally descends on Séraphine in the film's final moments is more than a balm. It's a benediction.