The Wife is Close’s film from start to finish, and several of the supporting performances fail to rise to her level, with Pryce and Slater the only ones who manage to impress in her orbit.
What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
It has a couple of nice reversals, two or three good laugh lines, and a caustic but not too acid skewering of cultural institutions. It goes down easy, it’s relatively unmemorable and it’s fine. Close, on the other hand, is exquisite.
Slant Magazine by Diego Semerene
Glenn Close's perennial look of astonishment and resilience commands the action to the point of turning every other screen element into a gratuitous prop.
The Hollywood Reporter by Jon Frosch
Like a bomb ticking away toward detonation, Glenn Close commands the center of The Wife: still, formidable and impossible to look away from.
The Film Stage by Jordan Ruimy
As fraught with drama as this powder keg of heightened circumstances may be, make no mistake, The Wife is more than an actor’s showcase. The film itself is superb, a ticking time-bomb of simmering tension which benefits from the audience knowing as little as possible in advance.
The Guardian by Peter Bradshaw
It is a smart, supremely watchable and entertaining film, and Close gives a wonderful star turn.
Rolling Stone by Peter Travers
Close plays this ignored, pushed-aside woman like a gathering storm, drawing us into the mind and heart of a heroine who’s not going to take it any more. The actress has received six acting nominations without ever winning an Oscar. The Wife, a funny and fierce showcase for her prodigious talents, might just end the drought. You can’t take your eyes off her.
Soars above the ordinary with a timely narrative and a magnetic performance by Glenn Close that is nothing short of miraculous.
What ultimately works most profoundly for the film is that its intimacy, its specificity, feels less like the culmination of Joan’s life experiences and more like an epiphany, or maybe an origin story, for what’s yet to come from her.
Screen International by Wendy Ide
Despite high quality performances from Close and Pryce, the film leaves us with question marks over the credibility of the central scenario.