72
Metapuntuación
20 reseñas · Proporcionado por Metacritic.com
- 88Boston GlobeTy BurrBoston GlobeTy BurrThe movie’s pretty great — not quite “Fargo” with lobsters but close enough, and about as good as regional filmmaking gets. Filmed in Harpswell, Maine and environs — the cobwork of Bailey Island Bridge curves through one scene — Blow the Man Down delves cleverly and suspensefully beneath the surface of a small, well-appointed fishing town in winter. There are bodies and there is blood. There are also a lot of quietly furious women.
- 83IndieWireKate ErblandIndieWireKate ErblandThe film is smartly assembled, making the most of a limited indie budget and building a compelling world to boot.
- 83The PlaylistAlly JohnsonThe PlaylistAlly JohnsonInventive and original ... Juggling dark, situational comedy with genuine thrills is awkward, but “Blow the Man Down” manages to walk that tone well.
- 80TheWrapSteve PondTheWrapSteve PondFrom “Body Heat” to “Fargo,” women have driven the action in noir films before — but the way this one plays out, with AARP-age women holding all the cards in a setting we usually associate with rugged men, feels like a genuinely fresh take on a time-honored genre. And the ending, all cagey glances and serene indifference hiding some seriously twisted stuff, is downright delicious.
- 80The Hollywood ReporterCaryn JamesThe Hollywood ReporterCaryn JamesThis atmospheric, expertly crafted little New England noir has droll dialogue, a female empowerment theme and a sly use of crime elements.
- 75Slant MagazineChris BarsantiSlant MagazineChris BarsantiWithout Margo Martindale, the film would be a sharp and tightly constructed nautical noir. With her, it becomes a memorable one.
- 75Washington PostAnn HornadayWashington PostAnn HornadayA clever slice of regional noir that carries a gale-force punch beneath its modest, soft-spoken trappings.
- 70Screen DailyStephen WhittyScreen DailyStephen WhittyA refreshingly offbeat noir, one that spices its murder-mystery thrills with a good bit of feminist empowerment.
- 70VarietyOwen GleibermanVarietyOwen Gleiberman“Blow the Man Down” has a few contrivances ... Yet Morgan Saylor and Sophie Lowe invest the embattled but loyal Connolly sisters with a desperate resonance, and the movie is clever enough to hold you, even when you wish it had taken the extra step and gone full Patricia Highsmith.
- 67Austin ChronicleAustin ChronicleAs small town crime stories go, Blow the Man Down is intriguingly low-key, but it's in the filmmakers' quietly bold decisions that it swells above most of its ilk.