Metacritic Film

Jakob the Liar

Starring Robin Williams, Alan Arkin, and Liev Schreiber

MPAA RATING: PG-13 for violence and disturbing images

Sony Pictures Entertainment
Drama
114 minutes | Color
France / Hungary / USA
Released In Theaters September 24, 1999

A story about the astonishing things that happen when despair turns to hope among the residents of this small village in Nazi-occupied Poland. (Columbia Tristar)

WRITTEN BY
Jurek Becker (novel)
Peter Kassovitz
Didier Decoin

DIRECTED BY
Peter Kassovitz

Overall Metascore

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

40 / 100

Critic Reviews

90 Variety
A markedly better picture than Roberto Benigni's far more sentimental Oscar collector.
75 Boston Globe
Deserves a place alongside "Life Is Beautiful" and, yes, even "Schindler's List."
67 Entertainment Weekly
Of course, there's still the Williams schmaltz factor.
67 Portland Oregonian
Soggy.
63 Baltimore Sun
As earnest as the performances are, something seems to be lost in the translation.
60 Washington Post
But the best thing about Jakob the Liar is that it's not "Patch Adams at Auschwitz."
50 Chicago Sun-Times
I prefer "Life Is Beautiful," which is clearly a fantasy, to Jakob the Liar, which is just as contrived and manipulative but pretends it is not.
50 Miami Herald
Flat and forced, Jakob the Liar aspires to be a poignant parable about the power of hope but instead uses one of humanity's greatest tragedies for trite melodrama.
50 San Francisco Examiner
More altruistic would be if Williams stopped torturing us with weepy endearments so he could look for that complex clown who used to mug just for laughs.
50 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Williams' self-conscious and rather bland performance never comes close to bringing his character to life.
50 Chicago Tribune Marc Caro
I never lost awareness that I was watching actors speaking lines, not real people --a problem I didn't have in the more unreal "Life Is Beautiful."
50 USA Today
What it isn't ... is a particularly compelling contribution to the impressive and by now enormous collection of Holocaust movies.
50 Film.com
The audience is ready for an unhappy ending -- and Hollywood should have the courage to provide it.
50 Chicago Reader
Pales in comparison to the controversial "Life Is Beautiful"--a more provocative fiction, if only because it's even less realist.
40 The New York Times Janet Maslin
Alternates between bumbling group antics and strained poignancy...anticipates all laughter and emotion in ways that make it its own worst enemy.
40 Dallas Observer
The supposedly funny quips and shrugs that fill Jakob the Liar are tepid at best and embarrassingly shticky at worst. Some are simply in bad taste.
40 Film.com
Even on its own terms, it stays sluggish.
40 TV Guide
It begins with a stale Hitler joke and ends with a miraculous quick-save that demonstrates just how poorly the Holocaust is served by the life-affirming requirements of Hollywood features.
40 Austin Chronicle
Feels sterile and chilly; the humor -- Yiddish and otherwise -- falls flat, and sadly so does the film.
38 New York Daily News
An awkwardly executed, tedious and -- a near impossibility for a Holocaust movie -- emotionally uninvolving bore.
38 New York Post
A particularly gross exploitation of the Holocaust for financial gain.
30 Rolling Stone
The self-congratulatory histrionics of Williams, lower lip trembling as he triumphs over torture in the name of the human spirit, represents a trend in Hollywood to make accessible melodrama out of unspeakable tragedy.
20 Los Angeles Times
The latest in what feels like an endless string of movies ... in which the actor's parts have ruinously overdosed on sentimentality and schmaltz at the expense of humor and even sanity.
19 Mr. Showbiz
A trial of cliche, strained optimism, and dire quasi-comedy.
10 LA Weekly
Just avoid this ghastly, insulting farrago at all costs.

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