Your Company
 

Manifesto

✭ ✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

Germany · 2015
1h 38m
Director Julian Rosefeldt
Starring Cate Blanchett, Erika Bauer, Ruby Bustamante, Carl Dietrich Carls
Genre Drama

An outstanding tribute to various (art) manifestos of the nineteenth and twentieth century, ranging from Communism to Dogme, in connection with thirteen different characters, including a homeless man, a factory worker and a corporate CEO, who are all played by Cate Blanchett. A striking humorous audio-visual experience.

Stream Manifesto

What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

90

TheWrap by Dan Callahan

The surprise here is that Rosefeldt has managed to deliver an intellectually-charged, cheeky, and very funny film that feels unruly and expansive in spite of its tight 12-day shooting schedule and its focus on just one performer.

50

The Film Stage by Daniel Schindel

The film is more of a clip show, awkwardly cutting together elements once presented in a drastically different manner. In doing so, it obfuscates the power of a manifesto, allegedly what it means to pay tribute to.

80

ScreenCrush by E. Oliver Whitney

Even if you’re unfamiliar with the movements in the film, Manifesto is still a brilliant display of Blanchett’s unstoppable talent and Rosefeldt’s ability to use one art form – filmmaking – to explore so many others.

75

The A.V. Club by Esther Zuckerman

Each of Blanchett’s characters exists in a complete environment, and Rosefeldt’s camera is keen to reveal the gags and treasures contained within each.

80

We Got This Covered by Lauren Humphries-Brooks

As a work of cinematic art, it defies codification. It begs for multiple viewings, if only to pick apart the concepts that it introduces, changes, and interacts with over the course of its run time.

83

The Playlist by Noel Murray

Rosefeldt’s visual panache and Blanchett’s astonishing versatility bring cinematic verve to something that could’ve easily come off as too dryly conceptual.

80

Variety by Peter Debruge

Audiences needn’t be intimidated: Manifesto may not adhere to any conventional narrative structure, but it’s compulsively watchable all the same

Users who liked this film also liked