Metacritic Film

Dead Man Walking

Starring Susan Sarandon, Sean Penn, Robert Prosky, Raymond J. Barry, and R. Lee Ermey

MPAA RATING: R for a depiction of a rape and murder

Paramount Pictures
Drama
122 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters December 29, 1995

Follows the relationship between a death-row inmate (Penn) and local nun (Sarandon) to whom he turns for spiritual guidance in the days leading up to his scheduled execution.

WRITTEN BY
Helen Prejean (book)
Tim Robbins

DIRECTED BY
Tim Robbins

Overall Metascore

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

80 / 100

Critic Reviews

100 ReelViews
It's ironic that a film with this title should be among the most vital, alive, and challenging cinema experiences of the year.
100 San Francisco Chronicle
Acting rarely gets better than this.
100 Chicago Tribune
Sarandon delivers one of her very best performances; her shock at encountering the wrath of the victim's family is registered beautifully. And Sean Penn, who for too long has suffered with the label of being a "bad boy," gives an Oscar-caliber performance.[12 January 1996, Friday, p.B]
100 Entertainment Weekly
A bold, searching, wrenching experience. It may be the most complexly impassioned message movie Hollywood has ever made.
100 Chicago Sun-Times
This film ennobles filmmaking.
100 USA Today
Happily, there's nothing to misconstrue about the film: It's fabulous.
90 Variety
An intimate chamber piece for two, superbly acted by Susan Sarandon and Sean Penn, this is a mature, well-crafted movie.
90 Film.com Jonathan Richards
A complex, myriad-faceted work of art.
90 Washington Post Hal Hinson
What this intelligent, balanced, devastating movie puts before us is nothing less than a contest between good and evil.
90 Salon.com Gary Kamiya
Possesses that rarest of qualities: moral humility.
90 Film.com
Their (Sarandon, Penn) performances and Robbins' drive to ask questions without offering easy answers make Dead Man Walking a thought-provoking drama not to be missed or dismissed.
90 Time
It is a measure of its complexity--and of the forces Penn and Sarandon have held in reserve during their hypnotic struggle for his soul--that its final moments leave us awash in emotion.
90 Washington Post
An extremely affecting experience, down to the last agonizing moment.
90 Film.com
Sean Penn gives the most riveting, selfless performance of his career.
90 The New York Times
Quietly courageous drama .
90 Dallas Observer Jimmy Fowler
Dead Man Walking drops a massive, writhing knot of sorrow in your lap and then doesn't tell you what to do with it. If that doesn't sound like entertainment to you, you're right. It does something far more profound: It finds the tragic universal core of a contentious issue.
89 Austin Chronicle Alison Macor
Robbins' direction and script are nearly flawlessly rich. There are no easy answers on death row, and Dead Man Walking makes this painfully, powerfully clear.
80 Los Angeles Times
Unusual in both its subject matter and its approach, this film guides us on a pair of intertwined paths American movies rarely venture down.
80 Mr. Showbiz Anne Harris
This isn't a crowd-pleaser in terms of subject matter -- you've got a convict and a nun, with no love scenes -- but Robbins keeps it interesting.
80 Film.com Bruce Reid
Hollywood's two most prominent left-wingers, Tim Robbins and Susan Sarandon, have crafted a film that transcends its own political message by a scrupulous attention to detail.
80 Newsweek
No simple diatribe against capital punishment, it's a strong film, made stronger by two terrific performances.
75 Christian Science Monitor
The movie is often preachy and self-conscious, especially in long dialogue scenes, where Robbins's inexpert scriptwriting makes people talk at instead of with each other. Yet the picture's solid assets enable it to soar above such problems, both intellectually and emotionally. [29 December 1995, Film, p.13]
70 Film.com Keith Simanton
Outstanding supporting performances, and a climactic aria of images take the film a step beyond dramatic impact; at key moments, the whole picture resonates with sorrow.
63 San Francisco Examiner
Troubling and troubled.
50 TV Guide
Sarandon is terrific and Penn is in top form, but the film is an achingly earnest message movie with a curiously muddled message.
50 Chicago Reader
Has its awkward and square moments directorially, but it's also uncommonly honest and serious.
30 Film.com
Overpraised, intellectually soft, narratively unfocused, and thematically ambivalent.
30 The New Republic
The picture is cloudy in intent. That cloudiness is deepened by Susan Sarandon's performance as Sister Helen. If she were giving the role what it seems to demand, a glow of true religious light, the film would have some organic cohesion, a strong spiritual cord running through it. But Sarandon does little more than present her face. [Feb. 5, 1996]

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