The New York Times by A.O. Scott
Part of the pleasure of this film, directed by Ritesh Batra (“The Lunchbox”), lies in the rediscovery of what wonderful actors they can be, and how good they are together.
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United States · 2017
1h 41m
Director Ritesh Batra
Starring Robert Redford, Jane Fonda, Matthias Schoenaerts, Iain Armitage
Genre Drama, Romance
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Addie Moore and Louis Waters, a widow and widower, have lived next to each other for years. Hoping to alleviate her loneliness, Addie reaches out to make a connection, asking Louis if he wants to platonically share a bed with Addie at night.
The New York Times by A.O. Scott
Part of the pleasure of this film, directed by Ritesh Batra (“The Lunchbox”), lies in the rediscovery of what wonderful actors they can be, and how good they are together.
There’s nothing particularly world-shaking about Our Souls at Night, but it’s a nice movie about nice people finding love.
The ending may be strained, but it works its way to just the right sentiment.
The Hollywood Reporter by Deborah Young
Both Redford and Fonda are charming, delicate and convincing as Addie Moore and Louis Waters, the couple who find each other at the tail end of their lives. They are directed with sophistication and without a drop of melodrama or sentimentality by Ritesh Batra
It’s hard to deny that the small screen may be the most natural fit for Batra’s film, given its pleasantly mollified storytelling and blandly unassuming visual style.
Los Angeles Times by Kenneth Turan
Made with care and conviction as it explores this unexpected relationship, "Our Souls at Night" understands both what changes in people as they age and what remains the same. It covers quite a bit of emotional territory, and it covers it well.
There’s an air of well-oiled, made-for-TV efficiency about the exercise that extends from Lunchbox director Ritesh Batra’s safe hand on the tiller to Stephen Goldblatt’s golden-light photography.
Chicago Sun-Times by Richard Roeper
About half the scenes in Our Souls at Night consist of Jane Fonda and Robert Redford simply talking to one another. Those scenes are more exhilarating, more intoxicating and more memorable than many if not most gigantic action sequences in big-budget movies.
The Telegraph by Robbie Collin
The whole package is still charming on its own cosy terms – the film equivalent of a loveable old hound that fetches your favourite slippers, rolls over for a tickle, curls up on your feet, contentedly passes wind, then nods off.
Our Souls at Night is your classic Hollywood weepie, so immaculately played that it confounds crass preconceptions.
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