Metacritic Film

Finding Forrester

Starring Sean Connery, Rob Brown, F. Murray Abraham, Michael Pitt, Anna Paquin, and Michael Nouri

MPAA RATING: PG-13 for brief strong language and some sexual references

Sony Pictures Entertainment
Drama
135 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters December 20, 2000

An uplifting story about the unusual dynamic between an isolated author (Connery) and the confident teenager (Brown) who changes his life. (Sony Pictures Entertainment)

WRITTEN BY
Mike Rich

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).

62 / 100

Critic Reviews

91 Portland Oregonian
Finding Forrester achieves a distinct success few Hollywood movies can even dream of: It overwhelms and inspires with understatement.
90 Mr. Showbiz
The execution is crisp and the fundamentals are solid. Like its protagonist, Finding Forrester got game.
88 New York Daily News
Written, acted and directed so intelligently that it stands out from the pack, and is guaranteed to give you the warm glow of holiday movies past -- the kind that celebrated faith in human potential and the value of hard work.
80 Variety
Provides a platform for Sean Connery to deliver a definitive, career-summation performance.
80 Washington Post
Manages to take the cerebral act of literary creation and make it exciting, sexy even.
80 Rolling Stone
The ending leans to soap opera, but Van Sant, revisiting the closet-genius theme of "Good Will Hunting" is too keen an observer of character to let this funny and touching film go soft.
75 Chicago Sun-Times
The scenes between the old man and the teenager are at the heart of the movie, and it's a pleasure to watch the rapport between Connery, in his 50th year of acting, and Brown, in his first role.
75 Chicago Tribune
It's rare to see a movie that takes such joy in the power of words, not to create lofty works of art but to effect the simple, necessary translation of what's in one's heart and mind.
75 Boston Globe
A juicy and gratifying teacher movie (a genre to which I'm partial). The joy in performance shared by Connery and Brown is the big reason.
75 Miami Herald
The movie is not without its pleasures. Chief among them is Sean Connery's robust performance.
75 Charlotte Observer
If it were 10 minutes shorter, it would've been just the right length and almost wholly honest.
75 USA Today
One can't underestimate the appeal of any movie constructed around Sean Connery's charm.
75 Baltimore Sun Cheryl Lu-Lien Tan
Connery and Brown absolutely shine in their roles.
75 Philadelphia Inquirer
A rewarding exploration of the knotty and often contentious relationship between teacher and protege.
70 Film.com
One of those hybrid projects: a major studio film, big star, homely storyline, but tempered by an indie director working in his own idiosyncratic style.
67 Austin Chronicle
A nice-looking, nice-feeling exercise in conventionalism that sure could use a couple of transvestites and maybe a house falling from the sky.
67 Entertainment Weekly
Highly unoriginal but nevertheless stirring drama.
63 New York Post
It feels less predictable and derivative than it is, thanks to Gus Van Sant's deft direction and two fine central performances.
60 Los Angeles Times
Even fairy tales could use a bit more substance than this.
60 Village Voice
At times you can feel Van Sant trying to loosen the movie's windpipe-folding collar, but he doesn't get far, except with Busta Rhymes, as Jamal's gone-nowhere big brother.
50 Salon.com Laura Miller
A farrago, with a few morsels of deft social observation and likable performances floating around in a conventional stew of overblown, bogus emotion and rigged catharsis.
50 TV Guide
Well acted (notably by newcomer Brown), warm hearted and utterly predictable, this film is aimed squarely at everyone who loved "Good Will Hunting."
50 Time
Something more surprising might have been made of this odd couple, but Van Sant, emptily employing the realist manner of his early films, is goodwill hunting in all the wrong places.
50 The New York Times
The screenplay by Mike Rich is so far-fetched and riddled with holes that Mr. Van Sant's urban realist touches only underscore the falseness of what's on the screen.
50 San Francisco Chronicle
Rich supplies some eloquent grace notes, and Van Sant uses them to make understated music.
50 Christian Science Monitor
The premise is more interesting than the movie, which takes several wrong turns on its way to an unconvincing conclusion.
10 Chicago Reader
Not even D.W. Griffith, Steven Spielberg, and Stanley Kubrick working together could succeed in making this pandering piece of nonsense work dramatically on any level except the most egregiously phony.

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