100
The Playlist by Carlos Aguilar
A masterwork of self-introspection through the canvas of cinema, The Souvenir: Part II is a meta epic of delicate proportions that constantly folds into itself and reveals the murky waters that border fiction and the reality that inspires it, sometimes, like in this case, more directly than others.
100
Time Out by Dave Calhoun
This is a story about the importance of making mistakes, of learning, of pulling yourself up and trying again – whether in love, sex, art or friendship. It’s a delirious ‘making of’ film: the making of an artist and the making of a life in all its messy glory.
100
IndieWire by David Ehrlich
As vulnerable as its predecessor and textured with the same velvet sense of becoming, “Part II” adds new layers of depth and distance to the looking glass of Hogg’s self-reflection.
100
The Hollywood Reporter by David Rooney
The distinctive British filmmaker is at the height of her powers in this semiautobiographical work.
100
Screen Daily by Fionnuala Halligan
The Souvenir: Part II is a film to savour, visually and sensorily.
100
Variety by Guy Lodge
Though fully distinct in its thematic and aesthetic fixations, The Souvenir Part II abuts its predecessor to form one of the medium’s most intimate, expressive portraits of the artist as a young woman — a mirror tilted just enough away from the filmmaker that the audience, too, can catch itself in the glass.
92
TheWrap by Jason Solomons
This second part is lighter, more playful, growing in confidence along with its protagonist, in a terrific performance from Byrne. But it’s also full of gentle, cherished acts of memory . . . that build up powerful reminders of the past.
100
CineVue by John Bleasdale
The two-part The Souvenir can be seen very much as one whole, and as such is one of the very best achievements in recent British cinema.
100
The Guardian by Peter Bradshaw
This rich and mysterious film is a real achievement.
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The Telegraph by Tim Robey
Where Part I had a shimmering poignancy as a tragic love story, this is busy and dazzling: Hogg has never made a funnier piece of work or come to us with such fresh provocations.
I enjoyed this second part more than I did the first; it's an easier emotional journey, though no less rewarding. Part II focuses much more on the creative act of becoming an artist and how to process the things that happened to you, once the looming daily dread of "what could happen" in a difficult relationship is (terribly, horrifically) removed. It is messy, funny, healing, and bravely vulnerable. I liked the naturalistic performances and the emphasis on the collaborative nature of filmmaking.