35 Shots of Rum | Telescope Film
35 Shots of Rum

35 Shots of Rum (35 rhums)

Critic Rating

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User Rating

  • France,
  • Germany
  • 2009
  • · 100m

Director Claire Denis
Cast Mati Diop, Nicole Dogue, Grégoire Colin, Alex Descas, Ingrid Caven
Genre Drama

A widowed metro conductor approaching retirement lives with his grown daughter — the object of a neighbor’s romantic interest. The man’s former girlfriend also lives in their building and plays a role in their closely-knit lives. 35 Shots of Rum considers the mysterious complexity of evolving relationships, whether romantic or familial.

Stream 35 Shots of Rum

What are users saying?

Kelsey Thomas

A modest and measured film that manages to convey many intricate emotions in few — very few — words.

What are critics saying?

100

The Hollywood Reporter

Claire Denis, not always an easy director, is in top form here directing an almost all-black cast with grace and delicacy. For the happy few, this is French art house cinema at its unpretentious best.

100

Los Angeles Times by Kevin Thomas

For 20 years, Claire Denis has been among France's foremost filmmakers with her acute yet subtle observations of the ebbs and flows within relationships. Her perception and understanding seem to grow only richer over the years, and her newest film, 35 Shots of Rum, is surely one of her finest -- and thereby one of the best films of the year.

100

The A.V. Club by Scott Tobias

The film evolves into a simple, intimate, acutely emotional portrait of a family reaching a painful crossroads.

100

Time Out by David Fear

To fall in love with it, viewers only have to be receptive to a movie that examines the ties that bind with grace, wit and depth.

100

The New York Times by A.O. Scott

In its modest scope and mellow tone, 35 Shots of Rum resembles Olivier Assayas’s "Summer Hours," another recent film by a French director who has sometimes trafficked in provocation and extremity. Both movies embed extraordinary thematic richness within a simple, almost anecdotal narrative framework, and both achieve a rare eloquence about the state of the world by means of tact and reticence.

100

The Hollywood Reporter by Deborah Young

Claire Denis, not always an easy director, is in top form here directing an almost all-black cast with grace and delicacy. For the happy few, this is French art house cinema at its unpretentious best.

100

Philadelphia Inquirer by Steven Rea

35 Shots of Rum is visual poetry, but poetry that examines the human condition with insight and illumination.

100

Chicago Sun-Times by Roger Ebert

You can live in a movie like this.

100

St. Louis Post-Dispatch by Calvin Wilson

Involves the gradual revelation of the hopes, fears and insecurities of well-observed characters.

90

Village Voice by Melissa Anderson

35 Shots is Denis's warmest, most radiant work, honoring a family of two's extreme closeness while suggesting its potential for suffocation.

90

Variety

Claire Denis’ latest may appear whisper-thin on the surface, yet it’s marvelously profound, illuminating the love between a father and daughter but also highlighting the difficulty of relinquishing what most people spend a lifetime putting into place.

90

Variety by Jay Weissberg

Claire Denis’ latest may appear whisper-thin on the surface, yet it’s marvelously profound, illuminating the love between a father and daughter but also highlighting the difficulty of relinquishing what most people spend a lifetime putting into place.

88

New York Post by V.A. Musetto

Denis -- who has called the film a tribute to the great Japanese director Yasujiro Ozu -- keeps dialogue to a minimum as she delicately examines how immigration is changing the face of France.

80

New York Daily News by Elizabeth Weitzman

There is never a shortage of options if you're looking for an intimate foreign drama about family bonds. But the eloquent insights of director Claire Denis stand alone.

80

Empire by David Parkinson

Superbly played and realised, this stays with you.