Village Voice by Alan Scherstuhl
For all its piteousness, [it's] often moving, always well acted, and distinguished by rare stillness and beauty.
✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
Sweden, United States · 2014
1h 30m
Director Lance Edmands
Starring Adam Driver, Margo Martindale, John Slattery, Louisa Krause
Genre Drama
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On a freezing January evening, school bus driver Lesley completes her route, but her final inspection abruptly ends when a bluebird comes into view. What happens next shakes her small Maine logging town, proving that even the slightest actions have enormous consequences.
Village Voice by Alan Scherstuhl
For all its piteousness, [it's] often moving, always well acted, and distinguished by rare stillness and beauty.
A delicate and affecting drama with grace notes of mystery and redemption.
The Hollywood Reporter by David Rooney
Keeping exposition spare, Edmands’ storytelling displays a pleasing economy of means, and an empathetic handle on characters all flawed in one way or another, existing in self-imposed solitude.
Bluebird is undoubtedly a remarkable achievement, especially for a first-time filmmaker.
Shooting on 35mm, Jody Lee Lipes makes the harshness look beautiful and unforgiving, and in a film filled with strong performances, Morton’s work stands out.
The A.V. Club by Mike D'Angelo
Earnestly well-intentioned and doggedly uncommercial, this is the kind of film that’s worth rooting for in principle, but a solid cast and evocative 35 mm photography can’t compensate for its slightly stultifying familiarity.
Slant Magazine by Nick McCarthy
Unable to reconcile plot with poetry, Bluebird is knitted-together by its sense of place and lived-in performances, yet unraveled by anemic false melodrama and overbearing music.
Edmands maintains too measured a pace as he cycles through the various lives affected, to the extent that one begins to wonder when things will start kick in.
A terrifically solid and sturdy effort across the board, Bluebird is the real deal and a true package of strong collaborators coalescing to make a wonderful debut film.
Bluebird never rises to the heights of grief, guilt and regret of the film it most closely resembles, Atom Egoyan’s “The Sweet Hereafter,” achieved. But Morton gives us a wonderful take on silent suffering.
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