If there's any ambiguity to be found in the film's prolonged last gasps, which reach for tragedy, but only sow more epistemic confusion, it's of a mawkish and unpalatable variety.
What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
Jones' alternately skillful and irreverent approach results in a mixed bag of possibilities, with many terrifically entertaining on their own even as the overall picture remains muddled.
With The Homesman, Jones has produced an original and cantankerously offbeat western which becomes increasingly beguiling as the road stretches on.
The Homesman certainly wins a few points for trying a different type of Western. There are no greedy land barons and no gunslingers drawin’ at high noon. But being unique isn’t enough if the story remains uneven and the characters don’t feel real.
The script—which Jones, Kieran Fitzgerald and Wesley Oliver adapted from Glendon Swarthout's 1988 novel—shifts uneasily between tragedy and comedy.
The Playlist by Oliver Lyttelton
While it’s an awkward, uneven picture, that doesn’t mean that it isn’t a fascinating one.
The Guardian by Peter Bradshaw
Tommy Lee Jones shows some true storytelling grit in this superbly watchable frontier western; he has a muscular and confident command of narrative, driving the plot onward with a real whip-crack, and easily handles the tonal swings between brutal shock, black comedy and sentimentality.
Unlike other actor-directors, Jones never seems to indulge excess on the part of his cast. Though the characters are strong, the performances are understated.
The Telegraph by Robbie Collin
The mood flits between solemn and rascally, and the pacing is measured: this is storytelling at a mosey rather than a trot.
The Hollywood Reporter by Todd McCarthy
This beautifully crafted film intrigues as a story never told before and ratchets up dramatic interest through a succession of unexpected turns.