63
Metascore
24 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 80VarietyScott FoundasVarietyScott FoundasA minor-key but eminently enjoyable work by a master craftsman.
- 80Time Out LondonDave CalhounTime Out LondonDave CalhounPolitics and entertainment are never an easy mix, and Jimmy’s Hall is a familiar, slightly unsurprising coming together of the two from Loach and his writer Paul Laverty. Sometimes you can see the joins, but there’s also great warmth, charm and humour among the ideas, and the sense of time and place is especially strong.
- 63Slant MagazineChuck BowenSlant MagazineChuck BowenKen Loach's staging is so calm and sober that it turns his story into an expertly photographed yet weirdly remote rebellion tale.
- 63New York PostFarran Smith NehmeNew York PostFarran Smith NehmeAs lovely as Jimmy’s Hall is, Paul Laverty’s script is not so much talky as speech-y. Some conversations play like bullet points about Irish politics and the iron grip of the Catholic Church.
- 60Los Angeles TimesSheri LindenLos Angeles TimesSheri LindenA story that might have been alive with messy complexity is instead genial and polite.
- 50The Hollywood ReporterNeil YoungThe Hollywood ReporterNeil YoungFor the first time his ongoing collaboration with scriptwriter Paul Laverty, Loach's studiously safe-hands approach -- typified by regular collaborator George Fenton's near-incessant score -- can't counterbalance fundamental screenplay flaws.
- 50The PlaylistJessica KiangThe PlaylistJessica KiangIt’s a twee and tweedy period “Footloose,” into which Loach’s trademark left wing sympathies are not so much woven as photocopied and stapled onto alternate pages of the script.
- 40CineVueJohn BleasdaleCineVueJohn BleasdaleThe characters of Jimmy's Hall aren't really characters as much as archetypes: the saintly mother, the sweetheart, the hero, the villain. This is the kind of film where people don't argue - they debate - speaking in lines from manifestos and creating an incongruity.
- 40The TelegraphRobbie CollinThe TelegraphRobbie CollinThis is exasperatingly thin stuff from Loach and Laverty, who have in the past built far more textured narratives, peopled by far richer characters, even while maintaining the fierce, politicised charge they aim for here.