Metacritic Film

Elephant

Starring Alex Frost, Eric Deulen, John Robinson, Elias McConnell, Jordan Taylor, Carrie Finklea, Nicole George, and Larry Laverty

MPAA RATING: R for disturbing violent content, language, brief sexuality and drug use - all involving teens

Fine Line Features / HBO Films
Drama  |  Suspense/Thriller
81 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters October 24, 2003

An inside look at an American high school on what appears to be an ordinary day.

WRITTEN BY
Gus Van Sant

DIRECTED BY
Gus Van Sant

Overall Metascore

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

70 / 100

Critic Reviews

100 Premiere
I haven't been crazy about a lot of Van Sant's recent work, but what he does here is simply astonishing. [November 2003, p. 25]
100 Christian Science Monitor
Van Sant gives no pat or easy answers. Instead he makes us squirm, worry, and think. That's why Elephant is a must-see movie.
100 Chicago Reader
The effect is riveting and telling--not always realistic (none of the characters carry cell phones) but often enlightening.
100 Chicago Sun-Times
It simply looks at the day as it unfolds, and that is a brave and radical act; it refuses to supply reasons and assign cures, so that we can close the case and move on.
100 Boston Globe
The atmosphere is hypo-stylized, vividly generic and worse than real, like a doomy Frederick Wiseman documentary.
100 Miami Herald
Makes the Columbine shootings seem both abstract yet more painful and vivid. It also gets you excited all over again about the things movies can do.
91 Portland Oregonian
The exquisitely exact photography and sound design represent the highest level of craft of Van Sant's career.
90 Washington Post
A movie that throws out the rules with audacity, assurance and admirable moral seriousness.
90 Washington Post
An understated, hypnotic stroke of brilliance.
90 Los Angeles Times
Working with cinematographer Harris Savides and serving as the film's editor, he (Van Sant) has fashioned a visual style and a narrative shape that has the quality of a waking dream, then a nightmare. Rarely do form and content add up with such harmonious grace and power.
90 Wall Street Journal
Calmly, almost serenely, Mr. Van Sant and his superb cinematographer, Harris Savides, reveal a vision of contemporary American youth quite unlike any other.
89 Austin Chronicle
Wisely, a lot like the real event. No answers are given, barely any questions are asked, and the film unfolds at a leisurely, inexorable pace that stymies the traditional filmmaking tropes of tension and release.
88 The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
Is it, the debate asks, a truly substantial work or just a stylish cop-out? Well, for once, I'm voting with the French.
88 Rolling Stone
To those who see no purpose to this film, I say the purpose is learning not to turn a blind eye. The unique and unforgettable Elephant keeps its eyes wide open.
80 The Onion (A.V. Club)
Has a gentle, hypnotic tone that's insistently sweet and elegiac, in spite of the horrors that overwhelm the frame. In its juxtaposition of the serene and the violent, the beautiful and the brutal, the film achieves a balance that's exquisitely judged, tiptoeing artfully through a cultural minefield.
80 TV Guide
Like the violence in Alan Clarke's Elephant, the BBC documentary about Northern Ireland from which the film takes its name, Van Sant offers no straightforward reasons for what happens at this particular school. The explosion of violence is far from unmotivated, but its roots are presented as deeply personal and, even more troubling, ultimately inexplicable.
80 The New York Times
By making the camera an observer, we get a perspective that often comes out of horror movies, a choice that whips the ordinary with the terrifying, an unforgettable mix.
75 Entertainment Weekly
Beauty competes with vacuity in Elephant, and for a good stretch of writer-director Gus Van Sant's maddeningly passive ode to high school innocence and Columbine-age youthful evil, beauty wins.
75 San Francisco Chronicle Ruthe Stein
A haunting elegy on the unpredictability of life. Never knowing what the next minute might bring is the elephant in all our lives.
75 Philadelphia Inquirer
The film equivalent of Maya Lin's Vietnam monument, that collective gravestone to the fallen, in the way it employs abstract means to quantify the loss of life and elicit a profound sense of grief.
75 New York Post
Van Sant's audacious, poetic and emotionally distanced film doesn't even have a plot. It's just a random series of incidents one day at a suburban high school.
75 Chicago Tribune
The characters need more exploration, especially the killers. Yet this look at teen life and death chills you anyway.
75 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
What the film does extremely well is take us deep into the crime scene, and give faces to the victims so we can experience this epic, incomprehensible and somehow prototypically American act of violence on a more personal and intimate level.
70 Newsweek
There’s much to argue with, but this unconventional, oddly beautiful film resonates in unexpected ways.
70 Village Voice
Flagrantly artistic and transfixed by its own enigma, Elephant is strongest on evoking a succession of specific, "empty" moments and weakest on motivation.
60 The New Yorker
In the end, this odd, beautiful movie is remote and more suggestive than satisfying--a coolly impassive film about catastrophe made at a time when some of us might prefer an attempt at explanation. And yet Elephant is something to see. [27 October 2003, p. 112]
60 Slate
It's a daring and original effort, yet so noncommittal--so purposely vague--that it's apt to leave you flummoxed: at once stricken and etherized.
60 Dallas Observer
This is a deeply disturbing (if not very satisfying) view of what happened at Columbine and in other school shootings.
50 New York Daily News
A ­movie that takes impartiality to new places artistically. The film is infuriating.
50 New York Magazine
It’s just another example of art-house hokey-pokey. Amazingly, this film won both the Palme d’Or and Best Director Award at Cannes, beating out, among others, "Mystic River."
50 LA Weekly
As lead Columbine investigator Kate Battan has herself put it, “Everybody wants a quick answer. They want an easy answer so that they can sleep at night and know this is not going to happen tomorrow.” And now they have Gus Van Sant's Elephant.
50 Film Threat
Given their lack of training, nearly all the young performers do a commendable job. It's the director who slips up by, among other things, dividing his cast into such predictable phyla.
40 Variety
Achieves some glancing poetic effects during its first hour, but becomes gross and exploitative during the shooting rampage of the final act.
40 Salon.com
Elephant is not as bad as the National Rifle Association's decision to hold a pro-gun rally near Columbine High School shortly after the killings. Unlike the NRA, Van Sant doesn't have blood on his hands. But he shares something of its callousness.
40 Film Threat Don R. Lewis
A pointless rehashing of a horrible event.
25 Baltimore Sun
The film itself is an exercise in frustration.
10 The New Republic
A braggart piece of empty exhibitionism.

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