51
Metascore
10 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- The film’s absurdly strong performances, music, and aesthetics all bring to life a wonderful film you won’t want to miss.
- 75Movie NationRoger MooreMovie NationRoger MooreBit actor and sometime director Ari Gold and his co-writer/collaborator Elizabeth Bull conjure up a warm, wistful movie about nostalgia itself — its traps, and its rewards.
- 70The New York TimesBen KenigsbergThe New York TimesBen KenigsbergThe film seems unclear on how to unpack all its baggage, but the sense of detail and place carry the day.
- 63ReelViewsJames BerardinelliReelViewsJames BerardinelliNarratively, The Song of Sway Lake doesn’t have much going for it but when it comes to capturing the tone of a specific locale, the approach of director Ari Gold is without peer.
- 50Slant MagazineDerek SmithSlant MagazineDerek SmithDespite Ari Gold’s knack for visual flourishes that capture a sense of place seemingly outside of time, The Song of Sway Lake plays like several disparate melodies overlapping one another.
- 50Austin ChronicleMarjorie BaumgartenAustin ChronicleMarjorie BaumgartenWhile not always dramatically successful, The Song of Sway Lake earns big points for originality. The film has a distinctive tone, look, and setting, which are supported by strong performances (one of them by the greatly missed Elizabeth Peña, who died in 2014, making this her final film appearance – somehow appropriate to this movie about how the past can impinge on the present).
- 50San Francisco ChronicleWalter AddiegoSan Francisco ChronicleWalter AddiegoAri Gold’s The Song of Sway Lake is saturated with a kind of melancholy nostalgia, and viewers who can accept that will find other virtues as well in this flawed film. It’s a story of familial unhappiness passing down through generations, impressive before it begins to lose focus.
- 50Los Angeles TimesNoel MurrayLos Angeles TimesNoel MurrayGold does an excellent job of evoking the past. But there’s nothing really holding the film’s most poignant moments together: no narrative drive, and no sense of a larger world. This song has a catchy melody, but the arrangement is a mess.
- 50RogerEbert.comGlenn KennyRogerEbert.comGlenn KennyThe attractiveness of the scenery, and a quiet, dignified performance by Ms. Peña in what could now be her last movie appearance, wind up being the main redeeming values here.
- 40VarietyNick SchagerVarietyNick SchagerThe Song of Sway Lake never finds a thematic center around which to pivot its action.