| 90 |
The Hollywood Reporter
Duane Byrge
Like a good pitcher, Trevor Morgan varies his emotions and perfectly grooves his role as the high-school star. Huffing and puffing, Nolte plops around with brilliant finesse, smartly exposing this frustrated old ballplayer's inside strength and fears.
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| 83 |
Entertainment Weekly
Gregory Kirshling
Sucking at the top of many a can, and greedily slurping the sides of an overflowing bottle, Nolte gives a master class in how to drink a beer on screen. The rest of his work here is sad, understated, and worth seeking out.
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| 75 |
New York Daily News
As good as Nolte is, the relatively unknown Morgan matches him scene for scene. And he's not the only impressive newcomer. Remarkably, this confident indie is the first feature from writer-director Ponsoldt, who shuns any slickness to embrace the rough edges of his low-budget, bare-bones story.
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| 75 |
TV Guide
Writer-director James Ponsoldt's first feature is a small, modest movie structured around a fairly simple situation that leaves plenty of room for some fine performances.
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| 75 |
Chicago Tribune
There's something very right with Off the Black in terms of pure emotion and performance craft.
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| 75 |
San Francisco Chronicle
There's nothing too small about Nolte's performance. He's the perfect companion for a rookie feature film director looking to make a good first impression.
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| 75 |
Boston Globe
Off the Black is a small, dry, emotionally loaded short story that has been carried to film like baked fish to a platter.
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| 70 |
Los Angeles Times
Off the Black is a modest, bittersweet character study that hits its mark.
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| 70 |
The New York Times
Off the Black is so much Mr. Nolte’s movie that it couldn’t exist without him. His character is the latest in a long line of Hemingway-esque ruins, marinated in beer and testosterone, who have become Mr. Nolte’s specialty.
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| 70 |
Variety
Anchored by a terrific performance from Nick Nolte as a grizzled umpire who gets an unexpected second chance at fatherhood, this easygoing comedy-drama plays out slowly but assuredly, infusing a conventional story about a blossoming relationship with welcome reserves of honesty and humor.
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| 70 |
Village Voice
Rob Nelson
A disarmingly droll and insightful indie.
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| 70 |
Film Threat
It's a touching story of father and son type male bonding -- male bonding with Nick Nolte no less -- that's bound to find some audience members blubbering by film's end.
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| 63 |
ReelViews
I appreciate that Ponsoldt doesn't go for cheap tears through over-sentimentality, but his detached, low-key approach distances viewers from the characters. I watched the drama unfold from afar but was never involved on an emotional level.
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| 60 |
LA Weekly
Tim Grierson
Off the Black gradually establishes its own peculiar cranky rhythm, fighting to resist the usual male-bonding sentimentality. But despite some nice touches, this is the sort of too-precious indie film that gives its characters unnecessary quirks.
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| 60 |
Salon.com
I think the movie is so restrained, and holds back so much on conventional plot and characterization, that its emotional impact is severely blunted. Nolte is excellent, I suppose, but we've seen this damaged-American-dude shtick from him before.
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| 60 |
Chicago Reader
The leads are good, and Timothy Hutton is memorably off-putting as the pitcher's disengaged dad. But having created the aching umpire, Ponsoldt occupies him with some fairly shopworn situations.
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| 58 |
Christian Science Monitor
Playing a cantankerous, beer-swigging human wreck of a man for the umpteenth time, Nolte is very good but very familiar.
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| 50 |
Washington Post
Writer-director James Ponsoldt's film treats big subjects -- loneliness, coming-of-age and father-son relationships -- with such half-baked conviction, it's a wonder the screen doesn't redden with embarrassment. Which makes it all the more gratifying to watch Nolte pulverize the dramatic banality around him.
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| 50 |
The Onion (A.V. Club)
Nolte almost makes it work.
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| 25 |
New York Post
If your film is as downbeat and deflated as this one, you had better be leading up to a more interesting insight than, "The older I get, the more I know that I don't know anyone."
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