Tangerines | Telescope Film
Tangerines

Tangerines (Mandariinid)

Critic Rating

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User Rating

War in Abkhazia 1990. An Estonian man Ivo has stayed behind to harvest his crops of tangerines. In a bloody conflict at his door, a wounded man is left behind, and Ivo is forced to take him in.

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What are critics saying?

88

New York Post by Farran Smith Nehme

Ivo’s farmhouse looks leftover from another century, which gives a timeless feeling, as does the regal bearing of Ulfsak and the dry humor of the script. The film telegraphs its pacifist message early on, but it’s still deeply affecting.

80

Screen Daily

Its impact sealed by across-the-board strong performances from its all-male cast, Tangerines is a film about loss and belonging, about rootedness and departure.

80

Variety by Dennis Harvey

With nearly five-decade screen veteran Ulfsak setting the wry, soulful tenor, Tangerines balances humor and seriousness in deft fashion, its delicacy abetted by all thesps and design contributions.

80

The Hollywood Reporter by Stephen Farber

The film turns out to be highly effective, thanks to the skills of the actors and director Zaza Urushadze.

75

Movie Nation by Roger Moore

A simple tale, sharply drawn and smartly told, a portrait of a people, a place and a centuries-old conflict that this wise yet myopic citrus farmer cannot get his mind around any more than we can.

70

Village Voice by Marsha McCreadie

Interior scenes focus theater-like on the dining room table-as-vortex: Threats and insults whip about, but, finally, so do forays of friendship.

60

Time Out by David Ehrlich

Urushadze’s excellent cast imbues their thinly drawn characters with a great deal of life, but the roles are so transparent that the film feels like more of an advertisement for peace than it does an argument for it.

60

The Dissolve by Mike D'Angelo

Too blunt and didactic to convey the futility of war with the complexity the subject demands, Tangerines works primarily as a showcase for its trio of lead actors, who work hard to make their characters’ gradual yet quick thaw seem not just credible, but inevitable.

58

The A.V. Club

The shift from philosophical parrying to actual combat doesn’t make Tangerines more compelling; on the contrary, it suggests that the filmmakers didn’t have the confidence to tell their story without falling back on genre tropes.

50

Slant Magazine by Clayton Dillard

For all of the potential, historically specific revelations regarding nation and religion, Tangerines elects to become bathetic hokum.