Entertainment Weekly by Chris Nashawaty
Room is more than the title of one of the year’s most powerful movies — it’s a state of mind that’s unbearably tense and as claustrophobic as a straitjacket
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Ireland, Canada, United Kingdom · 2015
Rated R · 1h 57m
Director Lenny Abrahamson
Starring Brie Larson, Jacob Tremblay, Joan Allen, William H. Macy
Genre Drama, Thriller
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Joy, a young mother, raises her 5-year-old son in captivity. When he begins to ask her questions about the world beyond the single room that they know, she struggles to come up with answers. Their escape from the room signifies both a taste of freedom and an overwhelmingly vast reality.
Entertainment Weekly by Chris Nashawaty
Room is more than the title of one of the year’s most powerful movies — it’s a state of mind that’s unbearably tense and as claustrophobic as a straitjacket
If Abrahamson were as gifted with a camera as he was with his cast (he inspires subtlety even from the tiny Tremblay), Room could have been truly worthy of the astonishing performances that provide its foundation.
Slant Magazine by Elise Nakhnikian
The film, never sensational or saccharine, is a tough but tender tribute to the creative power of maternal love.
Director Lenny Abrahamson seamlessly translates Donoghue's work into cinematic terms with his relentlessly compelling adaptation. However, the drama owes just as much to its two stars, Brie Larson and newcomer Jacob Tremblay, whose textured performances turn outrageous circumstances into a tense and surprisingly credible survival tale.
Room is simply a movie about mother and son trying to adapt to the outside world after years of forced captivity. And the surprise is how succinctly it captures this drastic life change from the perspective of five-year-old.
It’s a testament to the story’s underlying integrity that, even when deprived of some of the elements that made Emma Donoghue’s 2010 book so gripping, director Lenny Abrahamson’s inevitably telescoped but beautifully handled adaptation retains considerable emotional impact.
The Guardian by Peter Bradshaw
There are some plausibility issues in Room, but this is a disturbing and absorbing film, shrewdly acted, particularly by Larson. It lets the audience in; it does not just let the nightmare stun them into submission. You make a real emotional engagement.
Room has unforgettable, must-witness performances, and its soulful mother and son narrative is one of the most touching dynamics you’ll see in theaters this year.
It ought to be a triumph. Somehow, though, it lacks the flooding emotional force Donoghue gave it on the page.
The Hollywood Reporter by Todd McCarthy
Overall, it’s a decent shot at a tall target, but real credit is due the lead actors, with Larson expanding beyond the already considerable range she’s previously shown with an exceedingly dimensional performance in a role that calls for running the gamut, and Tremblay always convincing without ever becoming cloying.
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