Metacritic Film

All the Pretty Horses

Starring Matt Damon, Henry Thomas, Lucas Black, Rubén Blades, and Penélope Cruz

MPAA RATING: PG-13 for violence and some sexuality

Miramax Films / Sony Pictures Entertainment
Western
117 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters December 25, 2000

A sweeping odyssey about a young man's (Damon) encounters with responsibility, love, revenge and survival. (Miramax Films)

WRITTEN BY
Cormac McCarthy (novel)
Ted Tally

DIRECTED BY
Billy Bob Thornton

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

55 / 100

Critic Reviews

88 Chicago Sun-Times
You can see how this movie could have been jacked up into a one-level action picture, but what makes it special is how Thornton modulates the material.
88 Chicago Tribune
Thornton and his excellent company summon up for us the long rides, dangerous companions, rites of passage, the mad love and, most of all, the special relationship between the man/boys that rode over the border and the horses that carried them there.
80 Time
A perfectly coherent, handsomely rendered couple of hours, animated in particular by Damon's good performance -- shrewd, innocent, angry, wistful and, above all, likable.
75 New York Daily News
Thornton, directing his first film since the minimalist "Sling Blade" (1996), has a much better grip on the material when he's focused on the scruffy desert landscape and the adventures of the two Texans.
75 San Francisco Chronicle
An elegiac, visually hypnotic film about love, honor, reverence for nature and the loss of tradition.
70 Chicago Reader
The landscapes--which come close to outshining the worthy actors in the opening and closing stretches--are beautiful, and the plot, which is basically a grim coming-of-age story, holds one's interest throughout.
70 The New York Times
The movie, for all its prettiness, manages to be shallow and portentous at the same time.
70 Washington Post
Thornton, writer-director of the superb "Slingblade," has a gift for depicting down-and-dirty scenes among men. And when our three principal characters go riding from Texas to Mexico, this is the best part of the movie.
70 Los Angeles Times
In an odd way Pretty Horses has been too faithful to the spirit of this somber, fatalistic, melancholy romance, too much a stubborn ode to stoicism, to light any emotional fires.
67 Austin Chronicle
The film's elegiac tone and honest heart come through.
63 Baltimore Sun
Even a full week after seeing it, I'm still influenced enough by the film's many enchantments not to be overly concerned with its flaws.
63 Boston Globe
To paraphrase Andre Malraux, it invokes but it doesn't always supply, doesn't course strongly enough with the book's themes of blood and earth and dislocation.
63 Philadelphia Inquirer
Lacks an essential sense of purpose.
60 TV Guide
The movie's greatest liability is the familiarity of the material, much parodied since the glory days of John Ford. Unfortunately, Thornton's love for its iconography doesn't quite bring it to life.
60 Film.com
All the Pretty Horses may end up being a good movie to watch on DVD, when all the footage is restored and we can see the subtle shadings Thornton jettisoned.
60 Newsweek
A movie of arresting pieces that don't harmonize into a satisfying whole.
50 Charlotte Observer
Remains as flat as the Texas plains.
50 Village Voice
The film is too eager to please and falls short of the novel's tragic dimension.
50 New York Post
Never really gets out of the starting gate.
50 Variety
A half-broken adaptation of Cormac McCarthy's great modern Western novel. Neither dull nor exciting.
50 USA Today
As this year's literary adaptations go, Horses comes a lot closer to being a truly bad movie than "The Perfect Storm" did, yet it would be hard to argue that the two are not the year's most disappointing in terms of trampled hopes.
50 Miami Herald
It's like a tantalizing CliffsNotes version of what could have been.
50 Rolling Stone
It doesn't help that Damon and Cruz fail to generate sparks or that the second half of the film, in which John and Lacey face hell in a Mexican prison, feels bluntly edited to fit a two-hour running time.
50 Mr. Showbiz
A botched effort. Not necessarily bad, but hardly compelling either.
40 Dallas Observer M. V. Moorhead
It all feels disorienting and truncated, as if the script, by Ted Tally, who also adapted "Silence of the Lambs," was a harried summary of the book.
40 Film.com
It limps, not gallops, across the screen for what seems an interminable stretch of time and leaves the viewer with precious little to show for the experience.
33 Entertainment Weekly
McCarthy's rawhide has become movie Naugahyde, a substance unknown in literature or in nature.
20 New York Magazine
Most movies take a while to slip you into a stupor. All the Pretty Horses makes you groggy right away. Set in 1949, it's a lackadaisical series of vignettes apparently culled from a much longer movie that never made it to the screen. Be thankful for that.
20 Salon.com
At under two hours, the movie crawls by; at four, people would become fossilized to their seats.

CLOSE THIS WINDOW

©2006 CNET Networks Inc. All rights reserved.