It keeps the gag quotient lower than Reds but has a similar effect: more urgent in its desire to make us care about the events it depicts, it nonetheless reduces the war in Bosnia to mere scenery for the hackneyed journey of a world-weary journalist from cynicism to caring activism.
What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
San Francisco Examiner by Barbara Shulgasser
The movie is well made by director Michael Winterbottom ("Jude"), with a minimum of overdramatics.
Winterbottom's film is openly a polemic. Messy and visceral, with an articulate, pointed anger that's recognizably British, Welcome to Sarajevo hits with an impact that's not diminished by the fact that Sarajevo's uneasy peace has held.
Christian Science Monitor by David Sterritt
In keeping with this background, the movie boldly incorporates actual newsreel footage - with authentic images of human suffering, some of them seen in TV reports on the war - into its conventionally scripted and acted story.
San Francisco Chronicle by Edward Guthmann
The result is startling and repellent -- a challenge to filmgoers accustomed to fake gunfire, fake wounds and cosmeticized death.
The New York Times by Elvis Mitchell
Yet this film, for all its apparent immediacy, winds up less affecting than a more poetic or roundabout approach might be.
ReelViews by James Berardinelli
And, while there's nothing revolutionary or extraordinary about the dramatic narrative, the subtext gives Winterbottom's movie its force.
Austin Chronicle by Marc Savlov
Tomei looks far too fresh-scrubbed to be anywhere near a bloody, messy hell like this, but the rest of the cast is grimly realistic, particularly Harrelson, who manages to bring some goofball credibility to what is essentially a very small role.
Chicago Sun-Times by Roger Ebert
The problem is that Winterbottom has imagined both stories and several others, and tells them in a style designed to feel as if reality has been caught on the fly.
The result is crisp, brutal and utterly inspirational.