Your Company
 

The Childhood of a Leader

✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

United Kingdom, France, Hungary · 2016
1h 55m
Director Brady Corbet
Starring Bérénice Bejo, Liam Cunningham, Robert Pattinson, Stacy Martin
Genre Drama

In 1919, Prescott and his parents retreat to the French countryside in order for Prescott's father to help negotiate the Treaty of Versailles. The film follows Prescott's childhood in the countryside and the events that later shaped his future as the military leader of a fascist state.

Stream The Childhood of a Leader

What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

83

IndieWire by David Ehrlich

With his unusually accomplished directorial debut Childhood of a Leader, Corbet delivers a strange and startling film that reflects the unique trajectory of his career, as well as the influence of the iconoclastic directors with whom he’s already worked.

50

Variety by Guy Lodge

A overweening, maddening but not inconsiderable directorial debut for actor Brady Corbet

58

The Playlist by Jessica Kiang

Alternating immense bombast with long stretches of longueur in its psychologically questionable evocation of the formative years of a future despot, the film is formally confident, stylistically inventive and intensely irritating.

100

CineVue by John Bleasdale

The Childhood of a Leader is a dark, enigmatic piece of work that hovers between visionary greatness and petty domestic triviality. Corbet's inaugural stint behind the camera marks a stunning debut.

90

Screen International by Lee Marshall

The Childhood Of A Leader is as relentlessly sombre and compelling as the film’s remarkable, full-volume orchestral soundtrack by musician’s musician Scott Walker.

70

The New York Times by Manohla Dargis

It’s a persuasive portrait of a monster-to-be, one etched in thrown tantrums and rocks, and heavily supported by an excellent cast that includes Robert Pattinson and Yolande Moreau as well as a driving score that occasionally threatens to upstage the movie.

63

Observer by Rex Reed

A debut feature by American writer-actor Brady Corbet, the film is sketchy, confused and too self-consciously aimed at arthouse audiences to thrive commercially, but it has a chilling impact.

Users who liked this film also liked