Unsatisfying on a musical level, it’s nonetheless a well-acted, sporadically impressive piece of filmmaking.
What are people saying?
What are critics saying?
Entertainment Weekly by Chris Nashawaty
The film's lack of such signature Hendrix tunes as ''Purple Haze'' may put off some — the filmmakers couldn't get the rights — but I'd argue that this obstacle forced Ridley to zig where most biopics zag. Which, when you think about it, is fitting for the story of a lefty who played his guitar upside down.
The result is an unpredictable film, a difficult approximation of a biopic. But it delivers a Jimi Hendrix experience somehow the richer for sidelining the man and subverting his music.
A closer, richer examination of a slice of time as specific as it is short.
The Hollywood Reporter by John DeFore
What moviegoers do get is a film both thoughtful and convincing, sympathetic but not flattering to a man who had just three years after this period's end to make himself immortal.
The Playlist by Kevin Jagernauth
The film is not only one dimensional when it comes to its subject, but also of the time and place where Hendrix arrived.
McClatchy-Tribune News Service by Roger Moore
Maybe Jimi: All is By My Side is as good a Jimi Hendrix bio-pic as we’ll ever get, at least so long as there are legal entanglements strangling the late guitar god’s legacy.
Perhaps faithful to the spirit of the man, but frustrating if you’re actually curious about the facts.
Village Voice by Stephanie Zacharek
Whatever its flaws may be — and there are many — John Ridley's Jimi: All Is By My Side is compelling for one specific reason: It's more attuned to the women in Hendrix's life than it is to Hendrix himself.
Slant Magazine by Steve Macfarlane
Opting for scenes that tend to be fragmented, flawed snippets from a much bigger story, the film exudes a bizarre confidence in not trying to encapsulate the singer's whole life in 120 minutes.