47
Metascore
8 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 70Screen DailyLee MarshallScreen DailyLee MarshallMoretti has once again found a way to make a picture that creates edgy comedy out of a process of self-therapy. Some will find the exercise wearyingly self-centred, but that’s to miss the point of a film which turns one man’s obsessions into a comedie humaine.
- 60VarietyPeter DebrugeVarietyPeter DebrugeGiovanni may be the main character of A Brighter Tomorrow — a conceit shamelessly lifted from Fellini’s “8 1/2” — but Moretti pokes fun at himself, privileging other characters’ points of view as well.
- 60The Film VerdictDeborah YoungThe Film VerdictDeborah YoungIt’s not very clear if the director-actor-writer-producer has anything vitally important to add to his filmography in this narratively complex, generally downbeat work. What comes through most strongly is a striking sense of loss and disappointment in the character he plays, an aging man whose despair seems very personal and tinges the whole film (which is theoretically a Morettian comedy) with sadness and bitter farewells.
- 58IndieWireChristina NewlandIndieWireChristina NewlandFor every engaging character-driven moment or bit of warm humor (Giovanni angrily shouting “I’m going to call Martin Scorsese” certainly got the audience in Cannes laughing), there’s unearned, even irritating quirkiness.
- 58The PlaylistJihane BousfihaThe PlaylistJihane BousfihaThere is a little bit of everything in A Brighter Tomorrow as it maneuvers through different narratives, jumping from the film production to Giovanni’s film to his domestic life. There are even moments when characters randomly break into song and dance, transforming it into a quasi-musical that doesn’t quite flow well.
- 50The Hollywood ReporterDavid RooneyThe Hollywood ReporterDavid RooneyThe film’s wistful hope for the future of cinema and its healing power ends up being too self-satisfied to register as an expression of collective faith.
- 42The Film StageLeonardo GoiThe Film StageLeonardo GoiA Brighter Tomorrow may be soaked in nostalgia, but it’s a nostalgia with a reactionary twang. Its title, in retrospect, feels oddly ironic. This is a screed from a director unwilling to look at the future with more than just contempt, where the “tomorrow” is really just a rose-tinted fantasia of long gone past.
- 20The GuardianPeter BradshawThe GuardianPeter BradshawEverything about it is heavy-handed and dull: the non-comedy, the ersatz-pathos, the anti-drama.