It's all interspersed with strange attempts at comedy that fail on two levels: They're not funny, and they puncture what little drama there is.
What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
So radiantly awful that, given the egghead credentials of the director and his screenwriter and star Sam Shepard, I initially took the charitable route and assumed I was in the presence of parody.
New York Daily News by Jack Mathews
In what is more a cry of regret than a coherent story, Shepard's character mopes his way through meetings with an old girlfriend (Jessica Lange) and the grown children he sired, the only apparent lesson being that bad behavior has a way of circling back on you.
Los Angeles Times by Kevin Crust
Despite a fine cast, the film feels as lost as Howard, unsure of its direction or tone.
The Hollywood Reporter by Kirk Honeycutt
Don't Come Knocking expresses itself with deadpan humor, striking imagery, Western iconography and outbursts of strong emotions.
Village Voice by Michael Atkinson
It's "Broken Flowers" with bourbon and ten-gallons and meta-country soundtrack warbles.
Entertainment Weekly by Owen Gleiberman
Shepard's charisma has always reached back to an earlier time, so it's easy to accept him as a kind of pre-counterculture hero - Eastwood without the sneer - who aged into the era of tabloid scandal.
Christian Science Monitor by Peter Rainer
Judged on any kind of rational level, this film is a mess, and Fairuza Balk, as a punky friend of Howard's son, gives the single most annoying performance I have ever seen. But Franz Lustig's cinematography has a Walker Evans-like power.
The New York Times by Stephen Holden
Filled with haunting visual panoramas. One of the most resonant is a nighttime shot of the Elko skyline dominated by a glittering casino. Evoking a once and future gold rush, it says more about the Old West and the New West than all of Mr. Shepard's elliptical, stagy dialogue can muster. Such powerful images make Don't Come Knocking well worth contemplating.
Strikes some resonant chords but also hits notes that simply don't ring true and are borderline risible at times