Metacritic Film

City of Lost Children, The

Starring Ron Perlman, Daniel Emilfork, Judith Vittet, Dominique Pinon, and Jean-Claude Dreyfus

MPAA RATING: R for disturbing and grotesque images of violence and menace

Sony Pictures Classics
Art/Independent  |  Drama  |  Fantasy  |  Foreign
112 minutes | Color
France / Germany/ Spain
Released In Theaters December 15, 1995

One (Perlman) seeks for his twin brother, who was kidnapped by a scientist (Emilfork) who wants to steal children's dreams in an effort to stop aging.

WRITTEN BY
Gilles Adrien
Jean-Pierre Jeunet & Marc Caro (also story)

DIRECTED BY
Marc Caro
Jean-Pierre Jeunet

Overall Metascore

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

73 / 100

Critic Reviews

100 Empire
The City Of Lost Children is as great a film as you thought "Chitty Chitty Bang Bang" was when you were five years old.
100 Chicago Tribune
This remarkable movie is really one-of-a-kind. [15 Dec 1995]
100 Los Angeles Times
The City of Lost Children is a stunningly surreal fantasy, a fable of longing and danger, of heroic deeds and bravery, set in a brilliantly realized world of its own. It is one of the most audacious, original films of the year. [22 Dec 1995]
100 Portland Oregonian
As a fable, The City of Lost Children may not have a resonantly significant moral, but as a film, it is without a doubt the most incredible thing that the cinema has brought us this year. [22 Dec 1995]
88 TV Guide Staff (Not Credited)
You may end up wishing for a little less show and a lot more substance.
88 ReelViews
For those who enjoy the offbeat, The City of Lost Children is worth taking the time and effort to find.
78 Austin Chronicle Joey O'Bryan
With its fine performances, gorgeous sets, incredible special effects, imaginative story line, beautiful score (by frequent David Lynch collaborator Angelo Badalamenti), and knockout cinematography, The City of Lost Children is very much worth seeing.
75 Chicago Sun-Times
I am not one of you. But I have enough of you in me to pass along the word. Far out.
75 San Francisco Chronicle
Children, and adults with adventurous taste in movies, will find this among the most eye-popping big-screen experiences in ages.
70 Variety Staff (Not Credited)
A vibrant, bubbling cauldron of breathtaking f/x, gross-out humor and in-your-face imagery.
70 The New York Times
The movie is best appreciated as a collection of whimsical toys drawn from a fantasy grab bag that encompasses everything from Grimm's fairy tales to "Star Wars."
63 USA Today
At its best, the movie is coldly clever with a few brilliant warmer moments - as when someone drops an Alka Seltzer into the tank to soothe the Brain. [14 Dec 1995]
60 Village Voice Georgia Brown
City of Lost Children is so extravagantly cluttered, so packed to the portholes, it's hard to sort out, or even see, what's there. Under the overload, however, it has some perfectly lovely elements. [19 Dec 1995]
50 San Francisco Examiner
I'm not really sure who would enjoy this movie.
50 Christian Science Monitor
This delirious film is overflowing with energy and effects, but it lacks the heart and soul that would have made it important as well as impressive.
50 Chicago Reader
Sadly, the technical logistics seem to have impeded the dreamlike flow a movie like this requires.

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