Metascore

Universal acclaim - based on 9 Critics What's this?

User Score

Generally favorable reviews- based on 7 Ratings

  • Summary: From the original voice of the great British auteur, Terence Davies, comes a visual poem which draws upon the first 28 years of the director's life in Liverpool until he left in 1973. "Cut it as if it were fiction," Davies says, with "images which speak" and a layered sound track of popular and classical music, voices, radio clips and a powerful, poignant voiceover by Mr. Davies. Of Time and The City is a very personal portrait of Liverpool, beyond its Beatles and its football clubs, the home of the writer’s birth, where youth and inspiration weave his own story into the recent history of the City with fascinating found footage and counterpointed sound. (Strand Releasing) Expand
Score distribution:
  1. Positive: 8 out of 9
  2. Negative: 0 out of 9
  1. ''Documentary'' is too impersonal a word and ''visual poem'' is too mushy a phrase to describe Of Time and the City, a short, beautiful, characteristically sublime memory piece by the great British auteur Terence Davies.
  2. Reviewed by: Duane Byrge
    90
    Poetically composed, with marvelous lumps of wit and perspective, Of Times and The City is a masterwork.
  3. Reviewed by: Leslie Felperin
    80
    Result is by turns moving, droll and charming, and niftily assembled, but not necessarily that profound.
  4. 50
    Terence Davies revisits his youth to decidedly mixed effect.

See all 9 Critic Reviews

Score distribution:
  1. Positive: 1 out of 2
  2. Mixed: 0 out of 2
  3. Negative: 1 out of 2
  1. GeorgeK
    6
    A sentimental, pompous ode to a city and time which are of little importance, not to mention long gone. It's basically an old homsexual romanticizing about his youth and the way things were once upon a time. If you enjoy watching gray paint dry,you'll love this movie. Collapse
  2. JohnM
    3
    Very disappointed given the reviews I'd heard. To me, Terence Davies' delivery didn't work. Liverpool should have been the star of the show and too often was not allowed to be. Expand