A career-best performance
Every actor brings something to 1917, but the lead performance is genuinely extraordinary. The subtlety involved, the way the character changes without announcing it — it's a masterclass.
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Every actor brings something to 1917, but the lead performance is genuinely extraordinary. The subtlety involved, the way the character changes without announcing it — it's a masterclass.
Read full review →I've seen 1917 multiple times now and it just keeps getting better. the emotional stakes of the letter is something rarely matched in cinema. If you haven't watched it yet, clear your evening.
Read full review →Whatever you think of the story, 1917 is one of the most visually extraordinary films ever shot. There are frames here that belong in a gallery. Worth seeing on the biggest screen possible.
Read full review →I first watched 1917 as a teenager and thought it was fine. Rewatched at 30 and it hit completely differently. The sacrifice and duty undercurrent makes total sense now in a way it didn't before.
Read full review →I went into 1917 knowing nothing — no trailer, no plot summary. I strongly recommend that approach. The sacrifice and duty hits much harder when you haven't been primed for it. Go in cold.
Read full review →Everyone focuses on the lead in 1917 but the supporting cast is extraordinary. Every scene partner brings something real. It makes the world feel fully inhabited rather than staged.
Read full review →1917 deals with sacrifice and duty in a way that's genuinely uncomfortable at times. But that discomfort is the point. Sam Mendes never lets you look away, and the film is better for it.
Read full review →There are scenes in cinema you never forget. For me, the river sequence in 1917 is one of them. Sam Mendes constructs it with total precision and it lands exactly as intended. Pure craft.
Read full review →Every choice in 1917 feels deliberate. The framing, the pacing, the river sequence — Sam Mendes is operating at a level most filmmakers never reach. It's the kind of film you study rather than just watch.
Read full review →1917 is not background viewing. Every scene requires you. Put your phone down, dim the lights. Sam Mendes is doing too much to be half-watched. Give it the attention it deserves.
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