Metascore
73 out of 100

Generally favorable reviews - based on 21 Critics

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 17 out of 21
  2. Negative: 0 out of 21
  1. This is a movie for all cultures and all people, for families and especially for those who have lost them.
  2. It's a masterful little film, and, thanks to Zhang's seasoned hands, it's subtly heartfelt but never manipulative.
  3. Ken Takakura, a great rain-creased oak of an actor, delivers a quietly massive performance.
  4. 83
    Zhang Yimou is a master of intimate character pieces.
  5. Turning away from his highly entertaining epics "Hero" and "House of Flying Daggers," Zhang Yimou goes for utter simplicity in Riding Alone for Thousands of Miles, a film of much distilled wit and wisdom.
  6. 80
    This new picture will reach only a few devoted American spectators. That's too bad, because once you get used to the apparent flatness and emotional reserve of this picture, it's a sad, slyly comic tale of family trauma and reconciliation that packs a wallop.
  7. 75
    Cynics may not fall for its melodrama, but Riding Alone is good for everyone else, including children.
  8. Reviewed by: G. Allen Johnson
    75
    Although "Riding" is a small-scale movie as opposed to a big-scale epic, it is just as ambitious.
  9. Reviewed by: Ken Fox
    75
    Zhang's film is sweet and sentimental nearly to a fault; luckily, he's such a master, you'll hardly notice how shamelessly you're being manipulated.
  10. 75
    It's a film that can leave you on the fence. There's great facility with non-pro actors, with unusual locations, with both intimate and epic-scale scenes. Yet at the same time, Takata's reserve overwhelms the picture and makes its efforts to elicit emotions seem clumsy.
  11. Zhang is a master of detail and spectacle. There is also plenty of comedy, particularly in the scenes with linguistically challenged translators.
  12. Unlikely to be ranked as one of Zhang's greatest accomplishments but is clearly the work of a major filmmaker. It is best seen as a heartfelt tribute to Takakura, as heroic and enduring a star as John Wayne.
  13. Reviewed by: Nathan Lee
    70
    A little uncanny (has it been digitally manipulated?) and a whole lot clichéd, the tableau speaks of melancholy graced by a pale sliver of hope. You'd roll your eyes if they weren't so dazzled.
  14. Reviewed by: Russell Edwards
    70
    A simple, low-budget, contempo dramedy -- with plenty of clever plot reversals.
  15. Embedded here in a culture of formalities, with some of the arcs and gestures of that culture, it almost becomes an opera of its own.
  16. It's the kind of story that shows more than it tells, a story that's forged in the spaces that exist in between characters and spaces.
  17. My mood kept fluctuating, as did my reaction when the end credits rolled: This is seriously lovely; this is fluff; this is seriously lovely fluff.
  18. Reviewed by: Ella Taylor
    60
    Slow and pretty and duller than you'd hope for from an art-house sophisticate like Zhang.
  19. 50
    Riding Alone features a moving performance by Takakura (often called the Asian Clint Eastwood), as well as pretty cinematography. But the mushy script, co-written by Zhang, never rises above that of a TV soap opera.
  20. Reviewed by: Robert Koehler
    50
    This is not storytelling by a confident artist. Even Zhang's former mastery of visual form has become shaky, with a pedestrian handling of dramatic scenes and a surfeit of picture-postcard landscape shots.
  21. Reviewed by: Phil Hall
    40
    Chinese filmmaker Zhang Yimou has created so many memorable films (most recently the wuxia double-play "Hero" and "House of Flying Daggers") that one can easily excuse his new clinker Riding Alone for Thousands of Miles.
User Score

Universal acclaim- based on 10 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 6 out of 6
  2. Mixed: 0 out of 6
  3. Negative: 0 out of 6
  1. Anonymous
    10
    First hour one wonders how long this movie will be. But, then, masterfully you find yourself absorbed in a poignant, layered film grieving with magnificant actors. Visually impressive. Full Review »
  2. gambo
    10
    Best film I've seen this year. The cinematography is an amazing achievement. The traditions of the picturesque Lijiang created in me a need to learn more about their culture. Ken Takakura stoicism permeates to show the human side that we all hold deer. It's rhythm (slow for most Hollywood goers) kept me interested throughout the film -except when Jang-Jang scapes. Full Review »
  3. IanK
    10
    It's heartwarming...