Filmmaker Ivan Sen is a quadruple threat as writer, director, composer and cinematographer of this wily Australian thriller.
What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
Goldstone is nothing if not a focused, unified piece.
The Film Stage by Jared Mobarak
The pace might be slow, but it allows some great performances to breathe.
The New York Times by Jeannette Catsoulis
Its sociopolitical concerns — primarily around indigenous land rights — are muted and muddled by a script that favors manly grunting and moody looks over clarifying dialogue. Riven with racism and sharp bursts of violence, Goldstone nevertheless has a rough, desolate beauty.
Arizona Republic by Kerry Lengel
As a cinematic diatribe set in a stark moral universe, Goldstone comes in loud and clear.
Washington Post by Michael O'Sullivan
It is not a story of justice, but of a kind of standoff between good and evil. Initially, there seems precious little of the former.
Los Angeles Times by Robert Abele
This is Pedersen's second movie for Sen in the same role (after "Mystery Road," with a reported Australian television series in the works), and his Jay is the kind of compellingly gloomy, intelligent and tough justice-seeker easily worth a whole series of politically thorny, culturally resonant crime sagas.
Screen International by Sarah Ward
Even when the lines uttered sound more like a statement than an actual conversation, Sen remains a master of everything he controls as Goldstone slowly inches towards its bullet-riddled finale.
Village Voice by Serena Donadoni
When the violence comes, as it must, Sen stages his shoot-outs with the physical and emotional wallop of the best westerns, but he’s more interested in restoring the faith of law enforcement officers whose belief in justice has eroded.