- Studio: Miramax Films
- Release Date: Nov 6, 1998
- Critic Score
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50It wants to be a movie in search of a truth, but it's more like a movie in search of itself.
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50Director Todd Haynes' (Safe) much-anticipated look at the "glam rock" scene of two decades ago, is like a jigsaw puzzle with half of the pieces missing.
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83Velvet Goldmine is no masterpiece, but, at its best, it's a ravishing rock dream.
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80It's a shimmering, thorny, and consummately self-aware valentine to a paradise, however illusory, lost.
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75The plot only slows a film that works best as a feast of sight and sound.
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75The music and camera work are dazzling, and the story has solid sociological insights into a fascinating pop-culture period.
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70Dazzling and dizzying, confusing and even annoying, Velvet Goldmine is a feverish dream of a film, a riot of color and attitude that is all pop decadence, all night long.
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70Conceptual to a fault, writer-director Todd Haynes (Poison, Safe) realizes one of his oldest and most cherished projects -- a celebration of the glam-rock era and the bisexuality it turned into an opulent circus -- with wit, glitter, and energy, but with such a scant sense of character or period that it leaves one feeling relatively empty as soon as it's over.
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70A constantly imaginative, stylistically lively but dramatically inert chronicle of cultural and sexual rebellion.
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63The movie is dramatically limp, running out of narrative steam long before the set decorator runs out of colours.
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70Weighed down with self-important messages, but it's also splashily opulent.
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60After a most promising beginning, Velvet Goldmine's progress grows increasingly labored, stumbling around the structural roadblocks Haynes has erected in its path.
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90There are moments when Velvet Goldmine threatens to collapse under the weight of writer/director Todd Haynes' (Poison, Safe) ambition. But, sometimes amazingly, it doesn't, becoming in the process one of the year's freshest, most exciting films.
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60In trying to compose a poetic love letter to a time of liberation and freedom, Haynes has merely conjured up memories of druggy excess, egotism and tight trousers. The only mementos worth saving from the experience are available on the soundtrack.
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70Haynes sets out to demonstrate the power of popular music to change people's lives--to tell them it's OK to fashion themselves into anything they please.
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70A brainy three-ring circus.
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30Quite an achievement: the American director Todd Haynes revisits the world of London glam rock and manages to make it look dull.
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50One can admire it, but it's hard to get caught up in it.
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90Brilliantly reimagines the glam-rock 70's as a brave new world of electrifying theatricality and sexual possibility, to the point where identifying precise figures in this neo-psychedelic landscape is almost beside the point.
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60Writer-director Todd Haynes (Safe, Poison) still makes movies like a first-time filmmaker afraid he won't get another chance; he crams every idea, every image ever dreamed, onscreen.
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60Now the big question: Does this whole thing actually work? Some of the time.
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89In terms of sheer, unrelenting visual invention, Velvet Goldmine is a wonder.
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On the one hand, you want to praise it for its stylishness and originality in tackling some fascinating subject matter. On the other hand, it's frustrating because it could have been so much better.
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20On paper, fine; on celluloid, a Rocky Horror Show of nightmarish proportions.
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The film is a visually beautiful but clumsily plotted mishmash of "Citizen Kane," "Eddie and the Cruisers" and England's last overblown movie musical, "Absolute Beginners."
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SarahM.7Amazing soundtrack, great actors!