An affectionate portrait, not only of Nomi, but also of the long-gone days when downtown Manhattan was an affordable enclave for creative misfits.
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New York Daily News by Elizabeth Weitzman
Occasionally exhilarating documentary.
Dazzles with rare performance footage.
Made with considerable wit and style, Horn's thoughtful celebration of the era and its most uncanny diva could function as the show's ("East Village USA") supplement.
Wall Street Journal by Joe Morgenstern
Intriguing and affecting documentary.
Without coming out and saying it, The Nomi Song creates the sense that its subject might simply have been a few hundred years ahead of his time.
Los Angeles Times by Kevin Crust
Horn, who knew Nomi, does an excellent job of evoking the exhilaratingly hedonistic period the film covers as well as the long shadow that the coming of AIDS casts over it.
TV Guide Magazine by Maitland McDonagh
And if you never learn much about the man behind the mask, well, that's as Nomi would have wanted it.