Land of the Blind | Telescope Film
Land of the Blind

Land of the Blind

Critic Rating

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A soldier recounts his relationship with a famous political prisoner attempting to overthrow their country's authoritarian government.

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What are critics saying?

58

Entertainment Weekly by Lisa Schwarzbaum

There's nothing particularly revolutionary about writer-director Robert Edwards' grimly satiric political fable.

40

The Hollywood Reporter by Frank Scheck

About as subtle as its all too obvious title would suggest.

40

The New Republic by Stanley Kauffmann

The dialogue creaks, all the more so since we know better than it does what it is going to say.

40

Village Voice by Michael Atkinson

It's an easy movie to loathe, but it's designed imaginatively and enjoys the committed attention of its cast.

38

New York Post

Though Fiennes has done (far) better work, the blurry story seems almost profound when seen through his eyes. To the extent the movie works at all, it works best when it's just the camera and Fiennes in a bleak white room.

38

TV Guide Magazine by Maitland McDonagh

First-time writer-director Robert Edwards is nothing if not ambitious, attempting to encapsulate the history of totalitarian oppression and misguided revolutionary zeal into a broad, blunt, black comedy.

38

New York Daily News by Jack Mathews

Dark, grim, and cliched Orwellian satire.

38

Rolling Stone by Peter Travers

Political satire is so rare that it's a shame to watch the reliable Ralph Fiennes and Donald Sutherland lend their talents to one that is blind to its own incompetence.

30

Variety

One of the more spectacular misfires of recent years, Land of the Blind's lack of originality is only slightly exceeded by its failure to work as political satire.

20

The New York Times by Stephen Holden

Mr. Edwards, who wrote and directed Land of the Blind (it's his debut film), might counter that the movie is a Brechtian comedy that's not supposed to make literal sense: the big picture is what matters. But the big picture is a mess.