Orlando | Telescope Film
Orlando

Orlando

Critic Rating

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  • United Kingdom,
  • Russia,
  • Italy,
  • France,
  • Netherlands
  • 1992
  • · 90m

Director Sally Potter
Cast Tilda Swinton, Billy Zane, Lothaire Bluteau, John Wood, Charlotte Valandrey, Heathcote Williams
Genre Drama, Fantasy

In this adaption of Virginia Woolf's novel, Orlando, a gender bending aristocrat, travels through more than 400 years of English history as a man and then a woman. Through this passage of time, Orlando attempts to navigate rigid gender expectations.

Stream Orlando

What are critics saying?

90

The New York Times by Vincent Canby

This ravishing and witty spectacle invades the mind through eyes that are dazzled without ever being anesthetized

90

Variety by Staff (Not Credited)

Orlando provides exciting, wonderfully witty entertainment with glorious settings and costumes and Tilda Swinton’s sock performance in the title role.

88

Slant Magazine

Rarely have source material, director, and leading actress been more in alignment than in Orlando.

88

Chicago Sun-Times by Roger Ebert

Directed with sly grace and quiet elegance by Sally Potter, it is not about a story or a plot, but about a vision of human existence.

88

Slant Magazine by Matthew Connolly

Rarely have source material, director, and leading actress been more in alignment than in Orlando.

80

Washington Post by Rita Kempley

Swinton is elegantly comic, but also strangely cartoonish.... A funny and forthright screen presence, she is the foil for the stately pace and the opulent sets -- the most ravishing since "Bram Stoker's Dracula." There is only one conclusion: Potter, the little smarty-pants, is pulling our cross-gartered gams. She's having us on with this spoof of the prissy masterpiece theatricality.

80

Slate by Dan Kois

It's not just Swinton's performances—first as a nobleman, then as a woman, then as a lover, then as a mother—that drive the film. Orlando is a movie deeply fascinated by performance, and so over and over again, we see characters putting on shows.

80

The Guardian by Peter Bradshaw

I’ve never been sure exactly how profound this movie is, and it sometimes teeters on the edge of complacency, but it has a trance-inducing strangeness and Swinton is insouciantly magnetic at all times.

75

Chicago Tribune

What it lacks in coherence it makes up for in sheer spectacle.

75

Baltimore Sun by Stephen Hunter

Generally, Orlando is too busy having witty fun to turn into a cautionary tale against one sex in favor of the other. It's more like an extremely vivid drawing-room comedy imposed on the background of a historical epic.

75

Chicago Tribune by Johanna Steinmetz

What it lacks in coherence it makes up for in sheer spectacle.

67

Austin Chronicle by Marjorie Baumgarten

Holding this highly mannered but incredibly beautiful work together is lead actress Swinton who appears in nearly every shot. Also a favorite of director Derek Jarman, Swinton conveys such an intelligence and grace that it penetrates and expands whatever material she is handling. Let's hope that the arthouse success of Orlando makes Swinton a more frequent visitor to our shores.

60

Empire

Continually clearing its throat to utter something profound about sexuality, this never quite delivers the speech, though its failure to fully engage the mind is made up for by its captivation of the eye.

60

CineVue by Daniel Green

Swinton's intoxicating lead turn and Potter's aesthetic eye make up for the majority of the film's failings and flaws.

50

TV Guide Magazine

It's visually intoxicating, with its lavish ruffs and furbelows, stately homes and manicured gardens, jewels and silks and elaborately curled hair, but there's less to ORLANDO than meets the eye.

50

Entertainment Weekly by Owen Gleiberman

As a fantasy, Orlando has been spun out of a rather glib idea: that the mere assertion of Androgyny As Destiny is automatically a brave, emotionally triumphant stance for our time. The truth is, when androgyny is shrouded in this much deadening ”art,” it becomes little more than a haughty exercise in academic chic.