Washington Post by Desson Thomson
Manages to be innocent, physically passionate, earnestly romantic and self-deprecatingly funny, all at once.
Critic Rating
(read reviews)User Rating
Director
Harry Sinclair
Cast
Danielle Cormack,
Karl Urban,
Willa O'Neill,
Michael Lawrence,
Rangi Motu,
Lawrence Makoare
Genre
Comedy,
Drama,
Romance,
Fantasy
New Zealand milk farmer Rob gives his lover Lucinda a ring. Trying to spark up her relationship with Rob, she takes her friend Drosophila's advice and starts to try and make Rob angry. But she tends to go too far. Admiring her ring while driving a lonely road, she has a run-in with an older woman that sets off a chain of events that begins with her quilt being stolen
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Washington Post by Desson Thomson
Manages to be innocent, physically passionate, earnestly romantic and self-deprecatingly funny, all at once.
Village Voice by Edward Crouse
A shaggy, appealing parable involving two lovers, some gorgeous heifers, gentle Maori gangster-golfers, and a dilapidated suitcase packed with used baby shoes, The Price of Milk throws itself onto the magic-realist sword with aplomb.
New York Post by Lou Lumenick
The Price of Milk, which boasts a lush classical score recorded by the Moscow Symphony Orchestra, has a few more twists that make this a Valentine's Day delight.
Variety by David Rooney
Full of surreal occurrences and bizarre, sometimes overly precious humor that may make it too rarefied an exercise for wide acceptance.
Seattle Post-Intelligencer by Paula Nechak
This journey is clunkily rendered, clouded by an avalanche of murky symbolism.
Chicago Sun-Times by Roger Ebert
There is a place for whimsy and magic realism, and that place may not be on a cow farm in New Zealand.
Chicago Tribune by Michael Wilmington
This rich, gorgeous music and the wistful pastoral scenes create a rhapsodic mood that the rest of the film doesn't really sustain.
Philadelphia Inquirer by Steven Rea
Fairy-tale-like musing on true love in cynical times.
The New York Times by Stephen Holden
The guiding philosophy of The Price of Milk seems to be that if you throw something on the screen and call it a fairy tale, it has to mean something. But it doesn't.
San Francisco Chronicle by Mick LaSalle
A whimsical modern fairy tale.
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