Slant Magazine by Andrew Schenker
Ralph Fiennes's film feels not so much rooted in the past as it is mired in conventions about how to portray that past.
✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
United Kingdom · 2013
Rated R · 1h 51m
Director Ralph Fiennes
Starring Ralph Fiennes, Felicity Jones, Joanna Scanlan, Kristin Scott Thomas
Genre Drama, History, Romance
Please login to add films to your watchlist.
In 1857, at the height of his fame and fortune, novelist and social critic Charles Dickens meets and falls in love with teenage stage actress Nelly Ternan. As she becomes the focus of his heart and mind, painful secrecy is the price that both must pay.
Slant Magazine by Andrew Schenker
Ralph Fiennes's film feels not so much rooted in the past as it is mired in conventions about how to portray that past.
The Guardian by Catherine Shoard
The Invisible Woman shies from propaganda just as Nelly shies from impropriety. Fiennes has done the right and proper thing here. He has, at 50, made a mature movie, prudent in the best possible sense.
[Fiennes] has rarely been better than he is as the 19th century’s most celebrated novelist, with his chops on screen just about matched by what he’s done behind.
Though suffering from dry patches and a fairly mannered approach, The Invisible Woman eventually makes its way to a powerful final third documenting an ultimately tragic romance in deeply felt terms.
The movie deepens as Nelly, destined for the gossip columns and a peripheral attachment, becomes painfully aware of her own fragility (Jones’s performance is devastating).
Mr. Fiennes admirably humanizes the characters while exploring their contradictions and emphasizing their feelings. But his no-frills direction is a bit stodgy for my taste, and although this is not the Dickens you’d ever pay to hear read "Little Dorrit," there’s more vitality in his performance than the film itself.
So tastefully mounted and brilliantly acted that it wears down even the corset-phobic’s innate resistance to such things.
Abi Morgan's script – better, for my money, than her work on either Shameor The Iron Lady – elegantly straddles two timelines to illuminate a deliberately obscured life
The Hollywood Reporter by Todd McCarthy
A career high point for Ralph Fiennes as both an actor and director, this unfussy and emotionally penetrating work also provides lead actress Felicity Jones with the prime role in which she abundantly fulfills the promise suggested in some of her earlier small films.
Fiennes and writer Abi Morgan mercifully forsake the gee-golly traditions of similar fame-minded fare...in constructing a narrative as emotionally repressed as its subjects must have been, with each character existing within their own arena of personal and social compromise.
An aspiring director is given 48 hours by a producer to record an Oscar-worthy groan of pain.
After losing her virginity, a teenage girl begins a secret life as a sex work for a year.
A young novitiate discovers a family secret dating back to World War II and must follow her history — wherever it takes her.
A long-married British couple attempts to enliven their marriage by traveling to Paris for the first time since their honeymoon.