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Youth

✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

Italy, France, United Kingdom · 2015
Rated PG-13 · 2h 5m
Director Paolo Sorrentino
Starring Michael Caine, Harvey Keitel, Rachel Weisz, Paul Dano
Genre Comedy, Drama

Fred and Mick, two old friends, are on vacation in an elegant hotel at the foot of the Alps. Fred, a composer, is now retired. Mick, a movie director, is still working. They look with curiosity and tenderness at their children's chaotic lives, Mick's enthusiastic young writers, and the other hotel guests.

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What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

83

IndieWire by Eric Kohn

With each new twist, Sorrentino is always one step ahead of his audience, building a narrative that skips along at an enthralling pace.

91

Hitfix by Gregory Ellwood

Youth has some significant points on frustration of fame, ageism and our natural inclination to lose perspective, but it’s primarily about finding peace and happiness in your life. That may sound painfully obvious. It may even sound cliché. But somehow Sorrentino is able to fashion the film's diverse elements into an emotional narrative that makes it all feel fresh and new. And that’s truly worth celebrating.

38

Slant Magazine by Jake Cole

As ever, Paolo Sorrentino ironically cuts the legs out from under his protagonists' wistfulness with grotesquerie.

100

Variety by Jay Weissberg

Paolo Sorrentino, with Youth, delivers his most tender film to date, an emotionally rich contemplation of life’s wisdom gained, lost and remembered — with cynicism harping from the sidelines, but as a wearied chord rather than a major motif.

58

The Playlist by Jessica Kiang

There is no shading, there is no ambiguity, and while there are observations and stilted epithets aplenty, there is precious little wisdom.

60

CineVue by John Bleasdale

The film is often remarkable, gorgeous even - many of the shots in Youth would make excellent closing shots, including the opening shot - and funny. It's a work of wonderful moments, but it's less than momentous and, significantly, you'll never believe a single word of it. This is a pity as the performances are excellent.

60

The Guardian by Peter Bradshaw

Youth has a wan eloquence and elegance, though freighted with sentimentality and a strangely unearned and uninteresting macho-geriatric regret for lost time, lost film projects, lost love and all those beautiful women that you never got to sleep with.

60

The Telegraph by Robbie Collin

There are lightning-flashes of pure, ornamental brilliance throughout Paolo Sorrentino’s Youth, although there’s not much happening on the landscape they illuminate.

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