76
Metascore
34 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 90Rolling StonePeter TraversRolling StonePeter TraversAnderson offers no phony uplift for the Tenenbaums or for audiences. But he does know how to take a sad song and make it better. In these troubled times, that's a gift.
- 88New York Daily NewsJack MathewsNew York Daily NewsJack MathewsThe performances are all terrific, but Gene Hackman is close to a career best as the family patriarch Royal, the most useless man you can't help loving.
- 80Washington PostDesson ThomsonWashington PostDesson ThomsonIt's a B+, not an A. This would be enough for most filmmakers. But Anderson must contend with a higher standard. It's his fault for being original.
- 80Chicago ReaderJonathan RosenbaumChicago ReaderJonathan RosenbaumFar and away the funniest comedy in town.
- 80VarietyTodd McCarthyVarietyTodd McCarthyUnderachieves in its own way by trapping an expansive, probing story in a brittle, highly artificial style that constricts character and emotional development.
- 75Seattle Post-IntelligencerWilliam ArnoldSeattle Post-IntelligencerWilliam ArnoldIt makes for chuckling entertainment and it's fun to watch as it's happening. But its New York characters are not a bit believable, there's no real bite to the humor, and the film never adds up to be more than the sum of its parts.
- 63Charlotte ObserverLawrence ToppmanCharlotte ObserverLawrence ToppmanOver the course of 108 minutes, The Royal Tenenbaums drops downward on the humor scale from hilarious to funny to quirky to pretentiously bizarre to chaotic.
- 63Boston GlobeJay CarrBoston GlobeJay CarrThere are laughs in it. But mostly you sit around waiting for it to be funnier, or at least funny more often. The problem is that it hasn't figured out a way to be funny while satisfyingly accommodating the pain in these characters.
- 60New York Magazine (Vulture)Peter RainerNew York Magazine (Vulture)Peter RainerAnderson is something of a prodigy himself, and he's riddled with talent, but he hasn't figured out how to be askew and heartfelt at the same time. When he does, he'll probably make the movie The Royal Tenenbaums was meant to be, and it'll be a sight to see.
- 60NewsweekDavid AnsenNewsweekDavid AnsenIn the antic, melancholy comedy The Royal Tenenbaums, the singular Wes Anderson (“Rushmore”) abandons his native Texas for a storybook vision of New York.