Metacritic Film

Invisible Circus, The

Starring Cameron Diaz, Jordana Brewster, Christopher Eccleston, Blythe Danner, and Patrick Bergin

MPAA RATING: R for sexuality, language and drug content

New Line Cinema
Drama
112 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters February 2, 2001

Feeling disconnected from the world around her, a young girl (Brewster) decides to follow her dead sister Faith's (Diaz) path through Europe and discover the truth of what happened to her. (New Line Cinema)

WRITTEN BY
Jennifer Egan (novel)
Adam Brooks

DIRECTED BY
Adam Brooks

Overall Metascore

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

41 / 100

Critic Reviews

75 San Francisco Chronicle Carla Meyer
Even at her most nihilistic, Cameron Diaz is about as menacing as a boozy college cheerleader.
63 Philadelphia Inquirer
It's a shameless don't-hate-me-because-I'm-beautiful-and-impulsive performance (Diaz), and it throws the entire movie out of balance.
60 Rolling Stone
The script hits rough patches, especially when Phoebe and Wolf get it on, but the sisters cut to the heart.
60 Dallas Observer
This modest project is all about atmosphere and reflection, and, as such, it is successful.
59 Mr. Showbiz
In its attempts to chart a young girl's journey from innocence to experience, The Invisible Circus ends up having all the heft of a Nancy Drew mystery decked out in a tie-dyed T-shirt and peasant skirt.
58 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Diaz is quite believable in the part, and gets solid support from Brewster, who is even more appealing as the adoring, wounded and somewhat vacuous younger sister.
50 The New York Times
Unfortunately, The Invisible Circus, which follows Phoebe as she retraces her dead sibling's steps from Paris to Berlin to the coast of Portugal, doesn't so much illuminate Phoebe's confusion as share it.
50 The New York Times
The director Adam Brooks adapted The Invisible Circus from Jennifer Egan's subtle, evocative novel of the same name. But Brooks has been unable to replicate Egan's skill in keeping a clear eye on her story.
50 Slate
The film is overnarrated and in spots overwritten, but Brooks, who's primarily a screenwriter, does well with actors, and he has coaxed an extraordinary performance out of the young Jordana Brewster.
50 USA Today
This joyless coming-of-age travelogue is such a downer that not even breathtaking locales can provide a lift.
50 New York Post
Yet another murky film about the 1970s that's watchable mostly for its cast rather than the story.
50 TV Guide
It's a far more interesting film; unfortunately, it's locked inside a maudlin coming-of-age story that barely registers.
40 Salon.com
The Invisible Circus isn't junk. It's carefully, competently made, though with no particular feeling for technique or rhythm.
40 Wall Street Journal
The revelations of The Invisible Circus don't justify the quest.
40 LA Weekly
Something there is about the '60s that undoes the most intelligent of filmmakers.
40 Film.com
It's not bad; it's just completely inconsequential.
38 Chicago Sun-Times
When flashbacks tease us with bits of information, it has to be done well, or we feel toyed with. Here the mystery is solved by stomping in thick-soled narrative boots through the squishy marsh of contrivance.
38 New York Daily News
Director and screenwriter Adam Brooks, adapting Jennifer Egan's novel, doesn't seem to understand what makes a movie relevant.
38 Boston Globe
A fatally insubstantial film.
38 Chicago Tribune
When a movie is structured around the unveiling of secrets, you ought to care what the answers are. But writer-director Adam Brooks (Almost You), never offers any compelling reason to do so.
30 Village Voice
A more intuitive writer-director could have extracted a credible study of time-warped bereavement from Jennifer Egan's extensively praised novel, but Adam Brooks's turgid adaptation merely emphasizes the book's stiff contrivances and wobbly characterizations.
30 Los Angeles Times John Anderson
There are any number of aspects to The Invisible Circus that simply don't ring true.
30 Chicago Reader
In nearly every scene of her dangerously underwritten role, Diaz has a mouthful of cliches.

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