Metacritic Film

Jonestown: The Life and Death of Peoples Temple

MPAA RATING: Not Rated

Seventh Art Releasing
Documentary
86 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters October 20, 2006

This documentary tells the story of the people who followed Jim Jones from Indiana, to California, and finally to the remote jungles of Guyana, South America, in a misbegotten quest to build an ideal society. (Seventh Art Releasing)

WRITTEN BY
Marcia Smith

DIRECTED BY
Stanley Nelson

Overall Metascore

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

79 / 100

Critic Reviews

100 San Francisco Chronicle G. Allen Johnson
One of the year's most important documentaries, a real must-see.
91 Portland Oregonian
A riveting and impeccably researched documentary.
90 Los Angeles Times
This calm and thorough film has just the right attitude and tone to deal with a most incendiary story.
90 Salon.com
I can't imagine anyone not being both horrified and fascinated by Stanley Nelson's Jonestown: The Life and Death of People's Temple.
88 TV Guide
Nelson's film eschews sensationalism, and knowing how the story ends in no way diminishes its visceral impact.
88 New York Post
Five people did escape, and they contribute their stories to the spellbinding documentary.
88 Premiere
A conventional but genuinely heartrending exposé of the Indiana boy who grew to be a powerful religious cult leader, director Stanley Nelson's thoroughly researched doc is not a posthumous character assassination, which would be all too easy and unnecessary.
83 The Onion (A.V. Club)
While Jonestown lacks the power of revelation, it's a first-rate piece of journalism, as fascinating and thorough as any magazine article.
80 LA Weekly
An excellent documentary by MacArthur fellow Stanley Nelson (The Murder of Emmett Till), offers no grand theories for the Jonestown phenomenon.
80 Village Voice
Nelson has fashioned a compelling movie around an unfathomable mystery. To see Jones's face, eyes hidden behind trademark aviator shades, is to experience the last shock in Psycho. His is the blank stare of living death.
80 The Hollywood Reporter
Through interviews with Jonestown survivors and rare footage of Jones himself, this sober documentary presents an unforgettable historical portrait.
80 The New York Times
As this powerful, minutely documented film reveals, the tragedy wasn’t caused by the failure of the Peoples Temple to realize its goals. In many ways, it was succeeding as a self-sufficient community.
75 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Stanley Nelson's documentary shows how a religion becomes a cult, and how people are deceived by an ideal.
75 New York Daily News
Meticulously researched documentary.
75 Baltimore Sun
Chilling doesn't begin to describe Jonestown: The Life and Death of Peoples Temple...But the film never gets behind the chill.
75 Boston Globe
Harrowing and inexorable, the film recaptures the progressive insanity of Jim Jones and the hundreds of worshipers in his thrall, and it certainly gives you willies to last for days.
70 Washington Post
It would be nice to report that director Stanley Nelson comes up with something new, some illumination, some revelation, some heretofore unglimpsed irony, but he doesn't.
70 Film Threat
Provides lethal evidence of what becomes of those who deposit their sincerity into the command of a religious lunatic.
70 Variety
PBS-bound docu constitutes a revealing look at a poorly understood chapter in American history.
58 Entertainment Weekly
The Peoples Temple congregation was sizably African-American. But when it comes to how those followers turned into a zombie Kool-Aid death cult, Jonestown: The Life and Death of Peoples Temple leaves you with more questions than you went in with.

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