Unlike certain past ventures of Knightley’s, there’s little or no sense of us being given a Big Performance, and she’s often rather moving as a result.
What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
The Aftermath is simply another period melodrama that knows exactly what it is, and that just isn’t quite enough, especially when one considers the leading star’s career oeuvre.
The film’s threads of personal loss and cultural friction are all but lost amid the tawdry romantic entanglements.
None of the pretty imagery or impassioned lovemaking can break free of a mopey old formula that sits on every scene with the same schematic quality that makes its weary setting so familiar from the start.
Screen Daily by Fionnuala Halligan
The Aftermath works best when looking at the bewildered people who have been left behind, literally, to pick up the pieces. The savage loss of family members still reverberates through empty rooms and ruined landscapes.
The result is attractive and diverting, as any well-appointed film starring these actors in mouthwatering period finery could hardly fail to be — though for a story about people rebuilding their lives through grievous personal loss and moral torment, it’s hard not to wonder if its vast reserves of enviable knitwear are counting for more than they should.
The bones of the story have been played a million times, but a talented and committed cast make this swoonsome rather than samey.
The Hollywood Reporter by John DeFore
Where it might have been an old-fashioned melodrama with credible historical appeal, instead it suggests an old-school celluloid epic whose print has lost a reel or two.
The Guardian by Peter Bradshaw
It is more of a holiday romance and the well-intentioned performances lead nowhere.
Director James Kent’s adaptation of Rhidian Brook’s 2014 novel — about a ghost-like Germany, a broken British marriage, and the healing powers of a passionate thaw — has the unfortunate quality of a hot-blooded soap grafted onto rather than merged with a historical-political drama.
In the midst of war, there is always love. Although The Aftermath may not present the most original storyline, the actors' performances and chemistry were definitely what kept me hooked throughout the film.