Pilgrimage has all of the parts of a strong, engaging film. It just never learns how best to fit those pieces together.
What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
The film remains too uncompromisingly black and white as a character study and a story of the conflicts of faith.
The Hollywood Reporter by Frank Scheck
Pilgrimage alternates long stretches of tedium with ultra-violent sequences that have the feel of medieval torture porn.
Pilgrimage is the kind of movie one fears is going out of style forever. A historical action drama, serious in tone and intent but also invested in delivering movie-movie thrills.
Pilgrimage travels quite far on the momentum provided by a series of reveals. Each shifts the film’s stakes significantly enough that we look forward to the next divulgence as much as the succeeding battle scene. It ultimately stumbles when it reaches for depth, arriving at a hollow conclusion that mistakes cynicism for profundity.
Los Angeles Times by Katie Walsh
For all its bloody and violent genre trappings, Pilgrimage — directed by Brendan Muldowney and written by Jamie Hannigan — is a gorgeously shot film that carefully renders the details of this fascinating historical period.
The New York Times by Ken Jaworowski
Pilgrimage raises a question or two about unexamined beliefs and religious zeal. Those questions, as well as all that blood, won’t appeal to everyone. But those who can stomach them will receive some dark rewards.
Chicago Sun-Times by Richard Roeper
Holland does fine work as the novice, but it’s Bernthal who owns the screen as The Mute, who will protect the relic and his brothers at all costs. It’s fiercely effective work.
Bernthal’s resolute, fearsome and touching performance make this Pilgrimage well worth the journey.