Washington Post by Alan Zilberman
A slight, yet inoffensive tale, inspiring little more than a shrug, thereby making it hard to either wholeheartedly endorse or strongly criticize.
✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
United Kingdom · 2019
Rated PG-13 · 1h 40m
Director William Nicholson
Starring Annette Bening, Bill Nighy, Josh O'Connor, Aiysha Hart
Genre Drama, Romance
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Grace and Edward have been married for almost 30 years. Everything changes on a seaside vacation with their son, Jamie, when Edward reveals he is planning on leaving Grace. With help from Jamie, Grace must pick up the pieces, eventually learning how to be happy on her own.
Washington Post by Alan Zilberman
A slight, yet inoffensive tale, inspiring little more than a shrug, thereby making it hard to either wholeheartedly endorse or strongly criticize.
Nicholson fails to give his film the specificity and emotional depth required to make it seem necessary. We’ve been here before and nothing in the film’s 100-minute length truly justifies why we’re back here again.
The Playlist by Gregory Ellwood
The problem, unfortunately, is that Hope Gap is based on Nicholson’s play “The Retreat from Moscow” and the proceedings never really leaves the theater. Despite the director’s attempts to throw in [a few] drone shots to break up the drama and make the affairs inherently more cinematic, there are few scenes that don’t seem as though they would be more intriguing played out in front of a live audience.
The Film Stage by Jared Mobarak
While things do ultimately get heavy-handed at times (Grace comparing Edward’s act to murder is one thing, him comparing it to the utilitarian sacrifice of war is another), it never gets boring.
Entertainment Weekly by Leah Greenblatt
If Bening’s genteel British accent sometimes feels a little wobbly, her character is by far the most vivid force in the film.
Slow and stuffy, like a filmed play, but also considerably more nuanced and mature than your typical relationship drama.
Chicago Sun-Times by Richard Roeper
To Annette Bening’s credit, she finds just the right notes to illustrate Grace’s capacity for love, as well as her special gift for never letting up and driving you a little bit crazy.
Well-acted, understanding, and literate ... But when the emotional honesty still doesn’t make for compelling drama, you’re left wondering why, even with all the lights on, there’s a conspicuous lack of galvanizing human detail in the contours of this story.
A modest, tasteful family drama ... None of this is terribly original, of course, but the leads consistently mine the complexity in Nicholson’s script.
The Hollywood Reporter by Todd McCarthy
Hope Gap may engage the mind up to a point with its pithy dialogue and resourceful players, but it offers little insight into the complexities and wages of wedlock.
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