Atonement | Telescope Film
Atonement

Atonement

Critic Rating

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User Rating

  • United Kingdom,
  • France,
  • United States
  • 2007
  • · 123m

Director Joe Wright
Cast Keira Knightley, James McAvoy, Romola Garai, Saoirse Ronan, Brenda Blethyn, Vanessa Redgrave
Genre Drama, Romance

As a 13-year-old, fledgling writer Briony Tallis irrevocably changes the course of several lives when she accuses her older sister's lover of a crime he did not commit. Once Briony is older, she must accept what she did as a child and try to heal her relationships.

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What are users saying?

Nina Gallagher

Atonement is a film that grips you the moment Dario Marianelli's incredible typewriter score begins. From the music to the performances to Joe Wright's gorgeous camerawork, Atonement is rather unforgettable in both its beauty and tragedy.

Kelsey Thomas

An emotional watch that really immerses you in the world of the characters and the many consequences of their actions, beginning and ending — rightly so — with Briony’s perspective. The weight that our words carry, even as children, follows us into adulthood, as this film makes tragically clear. How can you right a wrong when you don’t even realize it’s a wrong until it’s too late? Statements, especially of the accusatory sort, cannot be retracted so easily, a powerful realization that stuck with me as it stuck to Briony.

Hannah Benson

I remember rewatching this film after reading the book for a class in high school. Saoirse Ronan's Performance is great as young Briony. Keira Knightley and James McAvoy are both great too. The film represents the book well by keeping the first part from Young Briony's point of view. Keira Knightley's green dress still stands out in my memory of favorite costume choices.

Meagen Tajalle

Atonement is one of those rare novel adaptations that is extraordinarily cinematic. The richness of the characters and the depth of the world they inhabit both signal a weighty source material, but the film is expertly adapted in that it emulates the spirit of the book and evokes the same emotions through a different narrative medium without employing a novelistic approach.

What are critics saying?

100

Empire

Gorgeous cinematography, a lilting score and near-faultless performances, under Wright’s assured direction, make this the first contender for next year’s Best Picture Oscar.

100

Variety by Derek Elley

Rarely has a book sprung so vividly to life, but also worked so enthrallingly in pure movie terms, as with Atonement, Brit helmer Joe Wright’s smart, dazzlingly upholstered adaptation of Ian McEwan’s celebrated 2001 novel.

100

Rolling Stone by Peter Travers

Nothing in Joe Wright's screen version of Ian McEwan's dense, internalized 2001 novel of secrets and lies should really work, but damn near everything does. It's some kind of miracle. Written, directed and acted to perfection, Atonement sweeps you up on waves of humor, heartbreak and ravishing romance.

100

Newsweek by David Ansen

No two-hour film could ever capture all the riches of McEwan's masterly novel. But Wright and Hampton's Atonement comes tantalizingly close, while adding sensual delights all its own.

100

Empire by Helen O'Hara

Gorgeous cinematography, a lilting score and near-faultless performances, under Wright’s assured direction, make this the first contender for next year’s Best Picture Oscar.

100

Washington Post by Ann Hornaday

Nothing comes easily in Atonement, especially its ending, which, both happy and tragic, is as wrenching as it is genuinely satisfying. How fitting, somehow, that a novel so devoted to the precision and passionate love of language be captured in a film that is simply too exquisite for words.

100

Wall Street Journal by Joe Morgenstern

A singular achievement -- romantic, sensuous, intelligent and finally shattering in its sweep and thematic complexity.

100

Chicago Reader by J.R. Jones

Atonement is that rare combo: a good movie based on a good book.

100

Chicago Sun-Times by Roger Ebert

This is one of the year's best films, a certain best picture nominee.

100

New York Post by Lou Lumenick

What might seem like showing off in another movie is dazzling storytelling here, packing in an hour's worth of human misery.

100

Los Angeles Times by Kenneth Turan

This is one of the few adaptations that gives a splendid novel the film it deserves.

88

Chicago Tribune by Michael Phillips

Hampton and Wright have been more than sensible when it comes to Atonement. They’ve responded intuitively to a tale that is half art and half potboiler, like so many stories worth telling.

88

ReelViews by James Berardinelli

Atonement is effective at getting under the skin, and some audience members won't like that.

75

Entertainment Weekly by Lisa Schwarzbaum

In the end -- an ending of such power and narrative originality (in both book and movie) that those who know it ought never breathe a word to those who don't.

70

Village Voice

Wright wouldn't recognize unobtrusive if it tapped him on the nose--he's cross- pollinated the first half of Atonement into an Oscar-buzzy brew of Masterpiece Theatre and "Upstairs, Downstairs," with the wild English countryside tamed into an artfully lit fairy glade, and into just enough of a bodice-ripper to reel in the youth market. And not a bad one at that.

70

New York Magazine (Vulture) by David Edelstein

Atonement works reasonably well as a tragic romance, but that sting is dulled. As a book, it was a blow to the head; as a movie, it’s an adaptation of a book.

60

The New Yorker by Anthony Lane

You have to admire it, when so much of the competition seems inane and slack, but you can’t help wondering, with some impatience, what happened to its heart.