- Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
- Release Date: Jul 30, 2010
- Critic Score
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90Like its stars, the film's not particularly flashy, it's just good, and it's hard to find fault in that.
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78You need only see Get Low for absolute proof that, while Hollywood may be in decline even as bad actors' salaries climb ever higher, there remain at least three very exemplary reasons – Duvall, Spacek, and Murray – to switch off your home theatre and get out into a real one.
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63A charming, spiky period piece that might be called "Boo Radley: The Final Years."
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90Will appeal strongly to a mature audience drawn to robust characters, dry wit, and great performances.
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75Its main pleasure lies in watching Bush thaw under gentle emotional heat applied by the few people who haven't given up on him.
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70This handsome period drama is the sort of quiet, homespun story that Duvall, who served as executive producer, has always loved.
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75All of this is just plain enjoyable. I liked it, but please don't make me say it's deeply moving or redemptive and uplifting. It's a genre piece for character actors is what it is, and that's an honorable thing for it to be.
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88This film, calm but full of feeling, relays an intriguing story brought to life by some beautiful actors.
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83Not only Duvall shines. Murray, in case anybody still doubted it, is one of the finest character actors in America.
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67Duvall's acting turns magical: scary, touching, and full of grace. But Get Low, as directed by Aaron Schneider, forces you to sit through a lot of poky setup to reach that touching epiphany.
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In lesser hands this Southern saga might have collapsed into whimsical corn, but cinematographer-turned-director Aaron Schneider has fashioned a measured fable, witty and deeply felt, if at times tipping into melodrama.
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63Tender and sentimental, a little schmaltzy, and ultimately too slight.
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80The pleasures Get Low offers lie in the process of simply getting there, in watching performers take material that has some limitations (the script, inspired by a true story, is by Chris Provenzano and C. Gaby Mitchell) and turn it into something that has the rough-hewn, no-nonsense veracity of folk music.
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88A movie with a message, but the subtle kind; it's whispered wisdom, wrapped up in a story of mystery, of love, of regret, of repentance and redemption.
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100Resonating with warmth and sardonic wit and containing a majestic performance by Robert Duvall.
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88Duvall and Spacek are so in tune with each other's rhythms -- despite their 20-year age difference -- that it's hard to believe they've never acted together before.
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80Handsomely and vividly mounted, in a palette of period chocolates and golds, Get Low opens with an image of a burning man running from a house on fire -- an enticing promise of Southern Gothic that the movie never quite fulfills.
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100Duvall, an American Lear not going gently into that good night, reminds us that it will be a sad day indeed for movie fans when it's about time for him to Get Low.
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75The period details - the cars, the clothes, the old storefronts along Main Street - are attentively described. But it's Duvall, spooky, sly, and sad, who makes all the props and the plot twists seem real.
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83A winning, grown-up film that benefits from fine, homey performances, a steady directorial hand, and the sense that everyone involved was invested in the story and not just the job.
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88Funny, touching and acutely observed film.
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50The movie's pleasures are acting pleasures, but the movie doesn't compel attention and never seems like more than the frame for a performance.
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50Duvall is a powerful actor, and this folksy fable could have been a career-capping feat, but the movie is toothless and slow.
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75Get Low is a pleasant yarn, well-acted and dutifully mounted with period designs. There isn't a false note among the actors.
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75Get Low is meant to be funny, heartwarming, and wise, and it is, for the most part--but in an overly familiar way.
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75It's Duvall and Murray who make Get Low a small, wonderful thing.
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70The results are entertaining -- up to a point.
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80Though the story sometimes wanders into hazy, corny sentiment, its protagonist (called Felix Bush, which was apparently a nickname or alias of Breazeale's) is vivid, enigmatic and unpredictable.
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80Get Low is deftly played, and it rarely mislays its ambling charm, but what a forbidding fable it could have been if the truth about Felix Bush, rather than emerging into sunlight, had slunk back into the woods.
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70Without Duvall's rich, supremely skilled performance, this slim period piece wouldn't amount to much.
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40This is the kind of autumnal sentimentality that the Academy goes wild for-a (rightly) venerated performer acknowledging his own mortality by pandering to cheap-seat emotions.
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80With a mix of sly humor, homespun grace and affecting poignancy, Get Low casts a well-nigh irresistible spell.
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Despite that maddening third-act stumble, Get Low is a pleasure to watch.
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100Felix (Duvall) simply wants to host his own goodbye, maybe have a band, and the reasons why are the reasons Get Low is essential viewing. That, and the acting.
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88It's as soothing and pure as the sweetest water from the deepest well.
User score distribution:
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Positive: 16 out of 20
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Mixed: 2 out of 20
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Negative: 2 out of 20
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5This review contains spoilers, click full review link to view.
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