Metacritic Film

Hours, The

Starring Meryl Streep, Julianne Moore, Nicole Kidman, Toni Collette, Claire Danes, Ed Harris, Allison Janney, and Miranda Richardson

MPAA RATING: PG-13 for mature thematic elements, some disturbing images and brief language

Paramount Pictures
Romance
114 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters December 27, 2002

The story of three women searching for more potent, meaningful lives. Each is alive at a different time and place; all are linked by their yearnings and their fears. (Paramount)

WRITTEN BY
David Hare
Michael Cunningham (novel)

DIRECTED BY
Stephen Daldry

Overall Metascore

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

81 / 100

Critic Reviews

100 Los Angeles Times
A splendid film. It uses all the resources of cinema -- masterful writing, superb acting, directorial intelligence, an enveloping score, top-of-the-line production design, costumes, cinematography and editing -- to make a film whose cumulative emotional power takes viewers by surprise, capturing us unawares in its ability to move us as deeply as it does.
100 San Francisco Chronicle
The result is something rare, especially considering how fine the novel is, a film that's fuller and deeper than the book.
100 The New Yorker
The twin themes of The Hours are the variety of human bonds, especially the bond of love, and the gift that the dying make to the living. The miracle is that such sombre notions fit together as surely and lightly as the dancers in a Balanchine ballet. [23 & 30 December 2002, p. 166]
100 The New York Times
Ms. Kidman, in a performance of astounding bravery, evokes the savage inner war waged by a brilliant mind against a system of faulty wiring that transmits a searing, crazy static into her brain.
100 Washington Post
It never disconnects from two values: its honesty and its intensity.
100 Salon.com
Meryl Streep, Nicole Kidman and Julianne Moore bring dignity and Oscar-worthy performances to The Hours, a lovingly crafted meditation on death, loss and literature.
100 Austin Chronicle
Near-perfect in every way, The Hours is a compelling meditation on making the most of what we're given in life. For some, it may be too cerebral a film experience, but for those who blissfully fall into its finely tuned modulations, The Hours is timeless.
100 Portland Oregonian
There are levels of complexity and nuance and intellectual rigor in The Hours -- it's clearly a film into which you could gain continued insight after several viewings.
100 Christian Science Monitor
Kidman, Moore, and Streep do some of their best work, backed by a first-rank supporting cast.
100 Washington Post
With its deft intercutting of place and time, the film creates a powerful sense of mysticism and fate.
90 Variety
Considerable intelligence and strategic finesse have been brought to bear on this handsomely mounted adaptation of Michael Cunningham's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, which was hardly a natural for the bigscreen.
90 Wall Street Journal
The links and resonances remain largely abstract -- to understand them isn't necessarily to be moved by them -- while the individual dramas of those three lives are often stirring, and the three starring performances are unforgettable.
90 Village Voice
It's an astonishing Kidman who contributes the film's -- and maybe the year's -- most inspired turn.
88 Chicago Sun-Times
For a movie audience, The Hours doesn't connect in a neat way, but introduces characters who illuminate mysteries of sex, duty and love.
88 Miami Herald
The film actually improves on Cunningham's novel, thanks to gorgeous cinematography, a deft script by playwright David Hare, a mournful, melodious but never intrusive score by Philip Glass and a superb cast that brings the delicately formed characters to full, raging, sorrowful life.
88 Charlotte Observer
Brilliantly interweaves stories that take place decades apart, and features stellar work by three of the best English-speaking actresses: Nicole Kidman, Julianne Moore and Meryl Streep.
83 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Kidman's Virginia Woolf is already controversial -- Yet there's something fierce, noble and deeply affecting in her work that mirrors Woolf's prose style, and her turbulent presence is the soul of the movie.
80 The New Republic
Cunningham's novel was helped by his prose, which curves gracefully in the historical present to unify the book in some degree. Stripped of that tegument, the film depends more blatantly on Woolf's fate to give it organism and depth.
80 Film Threat Darrin Keene
Much ado has been made about the Oscar-caliber cast that’s been assembled for The Hours. The film’s true star, however, is its script.
80 Film Threat
Proved that cheerless, existentially unflinching literature can provide the basis for exhilarating cinema.
80 New York Magazine
If all three of the women’s lives had come across with equal weight and artistry, the film, which glides back and forth among them, might have approached the symphonic. But only the Streep section truly inspires the kind of awe and terror that the film as a whole strives for.
75 ReelViews
I'm sure mainstream audiences will be baffled, but, for those with at least a minimal appreciation of Woolf and Clarissa Dalloway, The Hours represents two of those well spent.
75 The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
This ranks among the highest concentrations of acting talent brought to any screen. But let's spare no praise for David Hare, whose superb script draws heavily on his playwrighting skills.
75 Boston Globe
Still: The Hours is a book about people writing, reading, and living another book, and that literariness makes the movie resist itself.
75 New York Post
Will no doubt figure prominently in the awards season. But be warned, you can cut the gloom with a knife.
75 Chicago Tribune
Cunningham's and Woolf's novels are dedicated to capturing a person's essence through the events of a single day, and Daldry's film is faithful to that aim. But the range of life presented here feels constricted; the movie misses the sublime for all of the despair.
75 Rolling Stone
These three unimprovable actresses make The Hours a thing of beauty.
75 USA Today
Richly layered, deliberately paced, dealing with difficult emotions and life decisions, it feels like a moody wintry afternoon.
70 The Onion (A.V. Club)
That makes it hard to watch "Billy Elliot" director Stephen Daldry's adaptation without thinking of the one Almodóvar might have made -- which surely would have been warmer, less self-consciously tony, and less relentlessly arid than the one that did get made.
70 Dallas Observer
It's a noble work, an elegant work, a compassionate work -- and a somewhat tedious and glaringly self-important work.
70 Chicago Reader
The result is somewhat better than a Masterpiece Theatre gloss job, but it's far from the essence of Woolf.
67 Entertainment Weekly
While we can admire their attractive exteriors, we don't know anything about the interior lives of the three women so vibrantly miserable in their unhappiness.
63 Philadelphia Inquirer
Though Daldry elicits brilliant performances, particularly from Meryl Streep and Claire Danes, on balance The Hours is more pretentious than penetrating about existential despair.
63 New York Daily News
A meticulous, elaborate stunt, a movie two degrees of separation from its source, and maybe another degree from viewers' hearts.
60 Slate
I found the film -- excruciatingly flat-footed, with one of the most exasperating scores (by Philip Glass) ever written. The most fascinating thing in the movie is a nose.
60 LA Weekly
You can only cram so much of this stuff into a movie without putting your audience to sleep -- The movie sags badly in the middle, swirling around itself without making headway.
60 TV Guide
It's sometimes hard to breath for the sheer volume of acting sucking the air out of the room, and keeping three narratives movie without muddling them all is a hugely ambitious undertaking for any director, let alone one on his second film.
50 Baltimore Sun
You have to grasp at straws to make even "poetic" sense of the narrative.
40 Time
A grim and uninvolving film, for which Philip Glass unwittingly provides the perfect score -- tuneless, oppressive, droning, painfully self-important.

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