Metacritic Film

Jesus' Son

Starring Billy Crudup, Samantha Morton, Denis Leary, Holly Hunter, and Dennis Hopper

MPAA RATING: R for graphic drug use, strong language, sexuality and some violent images

Lions Gate Films Inc.
Drama
107 minutes | Color
USA / Canada
Released In Theaters June 16, 2000

Stumbling across America in the 1970's, a young junkie (Crudup) searches for meaning in everything from sex and drugs to meetings with strangers.

WRITTEN BY
Elizabeth Cuthrell
Oren Moverman
David Urrutia
Denis Johnson (book)

DIRECTED BY
Alison Maclean

Overall Metascore

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

76 / 100

Critic Reviews

100 Christian Science Monitor
The latter element joins with Crudup's excellent acting to make this deliberately scruffy tale a worthwhile experience if you can handle its explicitly sordid subplots.
90 Film.com
An especially compassionate look at human frailty that also never loses sight of the inherent ridiculousness of "the human condition." Jesus' Son is one of this summer's best movies.
90 LA Weekly Paul Cullum
Wildly funny bum's rush through the existentially absurd, self-engendered peaks and valleys of the junkie's lament.
90 Rolling Stone
A mesmerizing film spinning from hilarity to heartbreak.
90 Los Angeles Times
In a sea of one-note symphonies, this touching feature is bleak and comic, heartbreaking and affirmative, romantic and tragic, gimlet-eyed and sympathetic, all at the same time.
88 Philadelphia Inquirer
Floats before your eyes like pieces of a jigsaw puzzle. The surprise is that, fitted together, these pieces make a completed picture.
88 Chicago Tribune
A story of faith and redemption, as viewed through the blurry and bloodshot eyes of a young man.
88 Chicago Sun-Times
Jesus' Son surprises me with moments of wry humor, poignancy, sorrow and wildness. It has a sequence as funny as any I've seen this year.
85 Mr. Showbiz
If you haven't seen his (Crudup's) work before, Jesus' Son could be the one that makes you his biggest disciple.
83 Entertainment Weekly
Another grotty drama about junkie love? Well, yes...I make an exception for Jesus' Son.
83 Portland Oregonian
If the result doesn't make dazzling watching, it nonetheless has the power to haunt.
80 Salon.com
It has a nobility and modesty, along with a refreshing lack of cynical attitude, that you rarely find in independent films these days.
80 Variety
An intermittently compelling and occasionally hilarious road movie.
80 Time
It's best to see this as a drug buffet. Graze through the vignettes... and you'll find three or four tasty bits to snack on.
80 Washington Post
Crudup gives a performance that is by turns scary, heartbreaking, grotesque and funny as hell.
80 The New York Times A. O. Scott
One of the pleasures of Jesus' Son is watching a filmmaker take risks and discover new resources of style.
80 Chicago Reader
I don't much like movies about junkies...but this is easily the liveliest and most inventive I've seen since "Drugstore Cowboy" (1989).
80 Film.com Other (Specify)
Has the edge of black comedy that defines Maclean's sensibility, but it also has a mature new sweetness. And it's certainly one of the best films about the life of an addict since "Drugstore Cowboy."
78 Austin Chronicle
The movie will not be for all tastes. Its seedy lifestyles, nonjudgmental attitudes, nonlinear narrative, and central character whose problem is his lack of emotions is definitely nonstandard fare.
75 San Francisco Examiner
A dashing fusion of the literary and the cinematic.
75 San Francisco Chronicle
It's so wonderfully silly, coarse and down-to-Earth that its radiance sneaks up only over time.
70 TV Guide
But for all the divine touches, FH is no Jesus, or even his son: He's just another wide-eyed American Adam on the road again, a dazed and confused Huck Finn of the highways.
70 Dallas Observer
Makes good use of its actors.
63 Miami Herald
Grim stuff, filled with great sorrow and tragedy, but it's never maudlin or weepy.
63 New York Daily News
Movies about junkies are often brutal to watch, but Jesus' Son has such a light touch, you have little to fear. Little to gain, too.
63 New York Post
Transcends ironic grunge-glamour and achieves a beguiling combination of dark comedy and genuine sweetness.
63 Boston Globe
It's often a downer, with a sweet but largely passive protagonist.
58 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Meanders as aimlessly as its drugged-out characters.
50 Baltimore Sun
Does it make it as a movie? Only in fits and starts.
50 Village Voice
Though Maclean uses every trick available to make up for the missing inner voice, we never get into Crudup's mellow loser like we should. Maclean's got an incisive eye, but it's poised on the outside of the terrarium looking in.

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