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Euphoria

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United Kingdom, Sweden, Germany · 2018
Rated R · 1h 44m
Director Lisa Langseth
Starring Alicia Vikander, Eva Green, Charlotte Rampling, Charles Dance
Genre Drama

Ines and Emilie are two estranged sisters traveling through Europe toward a mysterious destination. Gradually, it becomes clear to Ines why she has been asked to accompany her sister. Horrified at first, she tries to understand Emilie’s intentions as the two women confront their unsettled past and, more importantly, their future.

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What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

30

Variety by Alissa Simon

The catharsis feels fake and unearned. Moreover, the film lacks the warmth and respect for all of of its characters displayed in Langseth’s previous work.

42

The Film Stage by Christopher Schobert

Euphoria is undeniably a missed opportunity at creating a drama of frayed sisterhood that feels fresh and unique. The film is also too restrained and unambitious to make a grand statement on mortality.

60

Screen Daily by David D'Arcy

Ines and Emilie have tensions between them which are uncomfortably alive, and Langseth’s script is a gnawing reminder that, even when the date of death is set, family quarrels and resentments can still be corrosive.

30

The New York Times by Jeannette Catsoulis

Notwithstanding a lively turn from Charles Dance as a chatty brain-tumor sufferer and a perfect Charlotte Rampling as a tranquil guide to oblivion, Euphoria gives up the ghost well before either of its unhappy heroines.

25

The Globe and Mail (Toronto) by Kate Taylor

It is not simply that this film is utterly unrealistic – perhaps that can be overlooked; it’s a fable of sorts, set in a scrupulously neutral pan-European setting. What is unforgiveable is that Langseth’s approach to complex emotional issues is unsubtle at best and untruthful at worst.

50

The Playlist by Kevin Jagernauth

For a film that literally isolates its characters from the rest of the world to confront each other head-on, the drama plays more conventional than challenging.

40

Los Angeles Times by Noel Murray

Alicia Vikander, Eva Green and Charlotte Rampling pump some energy into writer-director Lisa Langseth’s overly static, chatty drama, but are let down by a movie that keeps promising — and failing — to blossom into something more.

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