The New York Times by A.O. Scott
The desert landscapes are gorgeously shot by Yves Cape, but Two Men in Town never seems to fully inhabit its setting. Nor does the schematic, occasionally clumsy story do justice to the skills of the cast.
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France, Belgium, Algeria · 2014
Rated PG-13 · 2h 0m
Director Rachid Bouchareb
Starring Forest Whitaker, Harvey Keitel, Brenda Blethyn, Luis Guzmán
Genre Crime, Drama
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A convict is released from prison, where he has converted to Islam, and tries to get his life on track after 18 years. He gets a job, a bank account, and a good woman. But, what landed him in prison was the murder of a deputy, which the sheriff in town still seeks to avenge.
The New York Times by A.O. Scott
The desert landscapes are gorgeously shot by Yves Cape, but Two Men in Town never seems to fully inhabit its setting. Nor does the schematic, occasionally clumsy story do justice to the skills of the cast.
As exceptional as the acting in the picture is, and it is wonderful — Whitaker and Keitel are as inventive and surprising as they’ve been in years, and the supporting roles played by the likes of Ellen Burstyn and Stan Carp are well-sketched — it can’t entirely lift the movie from the rut it has all but plowed into by the end credits.
The A.V. Club by Ignatiy Vishnevetsky
The result is a movie of complicated interpersonal and cross-cultural tensions.
Bouchareb gets fine performances from several wonderful, under-utilized actors, including Ellen Burstyn and Tim Guinee in smaller roles. But his morality play is too muted to work, too muzzled to have any bite.
Los Angeles Times by Sheri Linden
The setting is striking, the cast impressive. But Two Men in Town, a drama that's built on dread and circles the question of redemption for a newly released prisoner, falls short of the mythic territory it aspires to.
Village Voice by Sherilyn Connelly
Blethyn is wonderful as an all-too-rare character, a middle-aged woman who holds her own in a position of authority over violent men.
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