New York Daily News by Jack Mathews
A small movie that plays like a Western epic.
✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
France, United States · 2005
Rated R · 2h 1m
Director Tommy Lee Jones
Starring Tommy Lee Jones, Barry Pepper, Dwight Yoakam, January Jones
Genre Adventure, Crime, Drama, Mystery, Western
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An audacious border patrol officer mistakenly murders Melquiades Estrada, who was working as a ranch-hand for Pete Perkins. Remembering a promise he made to Estrada, Perkins kidnaps the officer, exhumes Estrada’s corpse, and sets out on a journey to Jiménez, Mexico, to bury Estrada in his hometown.
New York Daily News by Jack Mathews
A small movie that plays like a Western epic.
Los Angeles Times by Kevin Thomas
Incisive yet supple, wrenching yet deeply pleasurable, The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada easily ranks among the year's best pictures.
The Hollywood Reporter by Kirk Honeycutt
Jones displays a firm hand at the helm -- you sense that he is well within his comfort zone in this environment -- and performances including his own are lively and convincing.
The New York Times by Manohla Dargis
In a film filled with plaintively expressive faces, characters say as much when they don't talk as when they speak Mr. Arriaga's dialogue, which sometimes sounds like hardscrabble poetry, sometimes sounds real as dirt and is, rather surprisingly, often darkly funny.
Village Voice by Michael Atkinson
Arriaga's script (a prize at Cannes) has a lovely, fascinating shape to it, even if his crushing portrayal of white Americans--all of them, even Jones, suffering from a zombified affect and crippling shortsightedness--is somewhat counterset against his Mexicans, who are all morally balanced, if not always happy or nice.
Entertainment Weekly by Owen Gleiberman
An unabashed descendant of "Bring Me the Head." This time, though, it's an entire corpse that gets hauled through the desert, and that's not all that's being toted. So is a hefty parcel of racial correctness.
Rolling Stone by Peter Travers
Sam Peckinpah lives! The rampaging spirit of the late filmmaker, known as Bloody Sam for films such as "The Wild Bunch" and "Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia," is all over this blistering modern Western from first-time director Tommy Lee Jones.
The film comes uncomfortably close to risible. But it also achieves moments of real power. It's worth a wary look before it attains midnight cult-movie status.
Jones directs with all the grit that's associated with his onscreen persona, but Peckinpah would never allow this degree of sentimentality to slip into one of his Westerns. A better comparison might be to Clint Eastwood, another tough-guy actor whose work as a director is often a little soft at the center.
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