The Daughter | Telescope Film
The Daughter

The Daughter

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In the final days of a dying logging town, Christian returns to his family home for his father Henry’s wedding. While home, Christian reconnects with his childhood friend Oliver. But, as Christian gets to know Oliver’s wife Charlotte, daughter Hedvig, and father Walter, he discovers a secret that could tear Oliver’s family apart.

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What are critics saying?

83

The Playlist by Jessica Kiang

A highly polished film that belies the soap opera melodrama of its plotline by having the twists and turns spring directly from well-observed human behavior, Stone's The Daughter is a quiet, immensely affecting triumph.

80

Time Out London by Cath Clarke

Few films make you care about the characters like this one does.

80

Variety by Eddie Cockrell

Deeply involving and emotionally searing, The Daughter reps a confident and profoundly moving bigscreen debut for established theater director Simon Stone.

70

Screen Daily by Sarah Ward

What The Daughter lacks in narrative surprises, however, it works hard to make up for in its confident approach.

70

Los Angeles Times by Kenneth Turan

Made with taste, skill and discretion, The Daughter demonstrates both the staying power of classic material and the risks inherent in bringing it up to date.

70

Screen International by Sarah Ward

What The Daughter lacks in narrative surprises, however, it works hard to make up for in its confident approach.

63

RogerEbert.com by Susan Wloszczyna

Somehow what comes close to dissolving into heartbreaking tragedy instead offers the merest whiff of hope for the future. As Neill’s seen-it-all Walter says when all hell begins to break loose, “Everyone’s got a story like this … it’s as old as the hills.” If only said tale were told with a bit more consistency.

60

Arizona Republic by Bill Goodykoontz

While the acting draws us into the story; it plays like a daytime soap opera with really good actors and Australian accents.

58

Christian Science Monitor by Peter Rainer

As any kind of introduction to Ibsen, this film is more a turnoff than a turn-on.

50

Observer by Rex Reed

The dreary, chug-along Australian film The Daughter offers a good but sadly wasted cast, obscured in the eye-rubbing mist of a foggy Down Under countryside and struggling to rise above the sludge of a basic soap opera with literary pretensions.

50

The New York Times by Jeannette Catsoulis

The characters don’t have conversations so much as helpfully recite their back stories, and the long-buried secret is soon so obvious that the movie’s last-act hysteria feels forced and a little ridiculous.

50

The Hollywood Reporter

The Daughter spends most of its time following a recessive character who possesses information we’re not privy to, and the whole thing manages to be both remote and unsubtle simultaneously.

50

The Hollywood Reporter by Harry Windsor

The Daughter spends most of its time following a recessive character who possesses information we’re not privy to, and the whole thing manages to be both remote and unsubtle simultaneously.

38

Slant Magazine by Oleg Ivanov

It too often strains for a tragic gravity that its ultimately melodramatic characters never earn.