71
Metascore
7 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 100The New York TimesStephen HoldenThe New York TimesStephen HoldenThis consistently gripping, visually intoxicating film stands as a landmark of contemporary Turkish cinema.
- 90Los Angeles TimesBetsy SharkeyLos Angeles TimesBetsy SharkeySelf-discovery always comes with a cost, and in Bliss the price is a great one. It is mesmerizing to watch it unfold in the lives of these two young people.
- 75New Orleans Times-PicayuneMike ScottNew Orleans Times-PicayuneMike ScottJust as key to the movie's impact are its well-acted scenes of heart-wrenching emotion, although some stray perilously close to melodrama.
- 50Village VoiceMelissa AndersonVillage VoiceMelissa AndersonThough calling out the abominable oppression of women, even in a vehicle as didactic as Bliss, serves at least some redeemable purpose.
- 50San Francisco ChronicleWalter AddiegoSan Francisco ChronicleWalter AddiegoDirector Abdullah Oguz gives us lots of nice scenery, but the simplistic story and characters strain credibility. What's more, the climactic plot turn is as hokey as it gets.
- 50The Globe and Mail (Toronto)Rick GroenThe Globe and Mail (Toronto)Rick GroenThe result is infotainment dressed up as an art flick. Turkish society is fascinatingly complex and its East/West tensions give rise not to easy allegories but to hard ambiguities. To explore that truth, read any novel by Orhan Pamuk. To escape it, watch Bliss.