The Hollywood Reporter by Frank Scheck
Kingsley delivers such a riveting performance that it becomes easy to overlook the film's less compelling aspects.
✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
Serbia, United States · 2017
Rated R · 1h 30m
Director Brad Silberling
Starring Ben Kingsley, Hera Hilmar, Peter Serafinowicz, Edmund Kingsley
Genre Action, Drama, War
Please login to add films to your watchlist.
A war criminal lives a lonely life --- moving from place to move place in fear of getting caught. Yet, when he hires a new young maid, he begins to form a relationship with her. Suddenly, his isolated, mysterious life concerns the two them.
The Hollywood Reporter by Frank Scheck
Kingsley delivers such a riveting performance that it becomes easy to overlook the film's less compelling aspects.
ReelViews by James Berardinelli
Every time An Ordinary Man seems to be headed into a minefield of clichés, it takes an unexpected detour and the film’s final such excursion comes like a gut-punch.
The Film Stage by Jared Mobarak
This story isn’t working towards a solution or revisionist history. It merely reminds us that the Devil doesn’t commit atrocities. Men and women do. Kingsley and Hilmar ensure we believe this by delivering three-dimensional performances we’re used to seeing on the heroic side.
Slant Magazine by Keith Watson
Yes, deep down, even brutal war criminals like the one played by Ben Kingsley are people too.
The New York Times by Ken Jaworowski
A head-scratcher that ends with a shoulder-shrug, An Ordinary Man feels like a scene-study exercise in which two actors invest full measures in a script that’s only half finished.
RogerEbert.com by Odie Henderson
Nothing in An Ordinary Man rings true; not the location, nor the performances nor the story.
An incredibly precise actor who understands exactly how to play to the camera, conveying volumes via even the slightest microexpressions, Kingsley navigates the tricky mix of humor, horror, and deep-seated regret that make this man, if not exactly ordinary, then relatable, at least.
Los Angeles Times by Robert Abele
Kingsley is certainly committed to the arc of tough guy stripped bare, but his gifts aren't served well by an artificially studious attempt at applying Understanding 101 logic to a perpetrator of atrocities.
In 1919, an Australian farmer searches for his three sons, who were presumed dead in Turkey.
Two Families. One Tree. A Bloody Mess.
Are you ready to survive?