Ilo Ilo | Telescope Film
Ilo Ilo

Ilo Ilo

Critic Rating

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  • Singapore,
  • Japan,
  • Taiwan,
  • France
  • 2013
  • · 99m

Director Anthony Chen
Cast Yann Yann Yeo, Tian Wen Chen, Angeli Bayani, Koh Jia Ler, Jo Kukathas, Peter Wee
Genre Drama

Struggling to stay both financially and emotionally comfortable, the Lim family hires Teresa, a nursemaid, to care for their unruly son, Jiale. Initially, Teresa's presence only exacerbates the situation. However, after some time, Teresa becomes acclimated with the family, forging a unique bond with her young charge.

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What are critics saying?

100

Los Angeles Times by Kenneth Turan

Ilo Ilo is writer-director Anthony Chen's first film, but breathtaking intimacy in storytelling is already second nature to him.

100

The New York Times by Stephen Holden

This remarkably terse movie doesn’t waste a word or an image. It refuses to linger over each little crisis its characters endure. And its detachment lends a perspective that widens the film’s vision of people reacting to events beyond their control.

91

Portland Oregonian by Marc Mohan

With evocative performances, especially from the two women, and a nicely modulated sense of nostalgia, Ilo Ilo marks the emergence of a promising new cinematic voice.

90

Arizona Republic by Bill Goodykoontz

Chen captures with both humor and heartbreaking realism the complicated mechanics of the family dynamic and how outside forces work to shape it.

80

Total Film by James Mottram

As their early fights give way to growing respect, it’s a beautifully calibrated relationship, with small moments gradually building into something much bigger. A gem.

80

Empire

Not all magically benevolent nannies fly on talking umbrellas, as we learn in this beautifully formed little heart-tugger.

80

Variety by Maggie Lee

Anthony Chen is remarkably astute in his depiction of the class and racial tensions within such a household, his accessible style enabling the characters’ underlying decency and warmth to emerge unforced.

80

Time Out by Joshua Rothkopf

None of this is pushed into comic relief—the filmmaker lets his drama play out with gentleness — and you smile at the many evolutions.

80

Empire by Guy Lodge

Not all magically benevolent nannies fly on talking umbrellas, as we learn in this beautifully formed little heart-tugger.

75

Washington Post by Mark Jenkins

Sensitive performances by the four main players suit the tone, which is naturalistic and even earthy — most of the characters are shown going to the bathroom — yet ultimately poignant.

70

The Hollywood Reporter by Stephen Dalton

Finely acted and minutely observed, Ilo Ilo certainly has the texture of real life. The performances feel authentic, the emotional shadings agreeably nuanced.

70

Village Voice by Chris Packham

Small details and incidents accrete into a pointillist rendering of despair.

60

CineVue by Ben Nicholson

Throughout, each of Ilo Ilo's performers give wonderfully naturalistic turns, providing the entire film with a heartening authenticity.