92
Metascore
44 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 100The GuardianJordan HoffmanThe GuardianJordan HoffmanWhile minimal on plot, the film digs in its nails on the day-to-day struggles of poor people in America.
- 100The PlaylistJessica KiangThe PlaylistJessica KiangThe infectious joy of a long childhood summer is brilliantly and boldly brought to life, unfolding, like Baker’s vital last film “Tangerine,” in a vivid present tense.
- 100New York Magazine (Vulture)Emily YoshidaNew York Magazine (Vulture)Emily YoshidaThis is a near-perfect film, and a heightening in every way of everything that was great about Baker’s last movie.
- 100The Florida Project won’t let us look away. Nor, given its brilliance, would we want to. Instead, we laugh, we watch silently, and we’re challenged to stop simplifying people's lives so we can offer easy theoretical answers.
- 90Screen DailyTim GriersonScreen DailyTim GriersonA remarkable study of poverty, family and personal responsibility, The Florida Project meticulously illustrates how life on the margins affects one impressionable six-year-old.
- 90ScreenCrushE. Oliver WhitneyScreenCrushE. Oliver WhitneyThe Florida Project immerses us in more stories that too often get excluded from movies. It finds magic in the mundane, and reminds audiences how to look at the world through fresh, untainted eyes.
- 80VarietyOwen GleibermanVarietyOwen GleibermanAs a filmmaker, Baker is a graceful neorealist voyeur who thrives on improvisation, and his storytelling, in The Florida Project, is mostly just a series of anecdotes. But that turns out to be enough.
- 70The Hollywood ReporterDavid RooneyThe Hollywood ReporterDavid RooneyWhat saves the movie's sobering latter developments, giving it an emotional wallop that overrides the flaws, is partly the sadness playing across Dafoe's face as Bobby watches from the sidelines.
- 67The Film StageRory O'ConnorThe Film StageRory O'ConnorBaker indulges just a little too much time shooting his young hyperactive actors in off-key locations and perhaps not enough on their character development or narrative arcs.