One of the most complex and powerful literary scripts in recent times.
What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
Psychologically thin, artistically flabby, and symbolically opaque.
Doesnt always convince, particularly in the last lap. But its an engrossing, unusual, imaginatively executed bit of psychological gamesmanship nonetheless.
ReelViews by James Berardinelli
A rich, multi- layered portrait of a director from Hollywood's Golden Age whose own life was as interesting as any of his movies.
While McKellen's sharp performance provides the main attraction, the film wouldn't work without both Fraser, who brings something extra to a character who could easily have been a mere lunk, and director Bill Condon's careful integration of larger themes.
The Globe and Mail (Toronto) by Liam Lacey
As a portrait of a deliciously eccentric individual, Gods and Monsters features a vivid performance from Ian McKellen that makes you think not of James Whale but of Ian McKellen.
Curiously, one of the film's stranger effects is that it's more convincing as a meditation on desire and Hollywood than as a biographical exploration.
Chicago Sun-Times by Roger Ebert
Gods and Monsters is not a deep or powerful film, but it is a good-hearted one.
The New Republic by Stanley Kauffmann
Lynn Redgrave is nearly incomprehensible as the housekeeper with some sort of housekeeperly accent. [Dec. 14, 1998]
Beyond the fantastic contrivances of Gods and Monsters, these performances are startlingly human.