Metacritic Film

Shrek

Starring Mike Myers, Eddie Murphy, Cameron Diaz, John Lithgow, and Linda Hunt

MPAA RATING: PG for mild language and some crude humor

DreamWorks Distribution L.L.C.
Fantasy
89 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters May 18, 2001

Once upon a time in a far away swamp, there lived an ornery ogre named Shrek (Myers) whose precious solitude is suddenly shattered by an invasion of annoying fairy-tale characters. (Dreamworks SKG)

WRITTEN BY
William Steig (book)
Ted Elliott
Terry Rossio
Joe Stillman and Roger S.H. Schulman

DIRECTED BY
Andrew Adamson
Vicky Jenson

Overall Metascore

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

84 / 100

Critic Reviews

100 Washington Post
It's wondrous, it's fabulous, it's -- all but unprecedented.
100 Chicago Sun-Times
This is not your average family cartoon. Shrek is jolly and wicked, filled with sly in-jokes and yet somehow possessing a heart.
100 Washington Post
A movie that appeals to the eye, mind, heart and funny bone; that's a pretty good quadruple for any movie.
100 USA Today
A riotous and wee bit PG-racy computer-animated family fable, is the most thoroughly enjoyable cartoon feature since "Toy Story" burst out of its box.
100 New York Daily News
An adorable, infectious work of true sophistication.
100 Variety
This spirited and often very funny lark accomplishes something that most films in the bygone Hollywood studio era used to do but is remarkably rare in today's world of niche markets: It offers entertainment equally to viewers from 4 to 104.
100 Newsweek
Hilarious and captivating.
100 New York Post
An unqualified triumph.
100 Philadelphia Inquirer
The humor of the script constantly confounds expectations, and yet Shrek still manages to say all the right things to children.
100 Mr. Showbiz
What sells Shrek is ultimately the full-bodied personality of its characters.
91 Portland Oregonian
Funny, irreverent and moving, the unconventional Shrek may mock fairy tales, but in the process, creates its own.
91 Entertainment Weekly
Lives happily ever after because it's such a feisty but good natured embrace of the inner ogre in everyone.
90 Wall Street Journal
This beguiling fable, with its darkly distinctive look, does DreamWorks proud.
90 Rolling Stone
A world-class charmer that could even seduce the Academy when it hands out the first official animation Oscar next year.
90 New York Magazine
The script, instead of being what we tolerate in order to savor the visuals, is a delight all by itself.
90 Chicago Reader
A movie whose story may be even more innovative than the superreal solidity of the animated characters.
90 Time
It is the hilarious business of Shrek, a delightful new animated feature based on the William Steig book, to subvert all the well-worn expectations of its genre.
90 Los Angeles Times
This fractured fairy tale not only knows there's no substitute for clever writing, it also has the confidence to take that information straight to the bank.
88 Baltimore Sun
A computer-animated burlesque fairy tale that generates more belly laughs than any live-action comedy since "Best in Show."
88 Charlotte Observer
It's possible to groan, chuckle, wince and be moist-eyed, sometimes in a span of seven or eight minutes.
80 Film.com
The textures are detailed, the movements are realistic and the three-dimensional feel even improves on the humor -- you may think you've seen every good "Matrix" parody, but you haven't until you see this.
80 LA Weekly
Shrek's first 20 minutes are so devilishly funny that letting go of pure belief doesn't seem like such a bad thing.
80 TV Guide
Colossally entertaining.
80 The New York Times
A giggly cocktail, though it's more foam than drink.
78 Austin Chronicle
Charmingly subversive animation like this is a rare thing indeed, and the fact that you don't have to be under 10 years of age to thoroughly enjoy Mr. Shrek's wild ride is an added bonus.
75 Boston Globe
Suggests a summit meeting between ''The Princess Bride'' and ''Bridget Jones's Diary,'' it has a decided charm of its own.
75 Christian Science Monitor
The visuals are amazingly realistic, filling the screen with authentic effects.
75 Miami Herald
The first of this summer's would-be blockbusters that deserves to be a hit.
75 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
While Shrek may trek into that dark territory and has some questionable values simmering beneath the surface, its characters are delightful enough and the film is just sweet-natured and visually sophiscated enough to avoid sinking into the swamp.
75 San Francisco Chronicle
As innocent as a Disney movie -- and a lot more entertaining.
63 Chicago Tribune
Alternately sweet and mean, sophisticated and vulgar, witty and base, dazzling and ugly, charming and charmless.
60 Salon.com
Am I alone in thinking that computer animation is the work of the antichrist?
40 New Times (L.A.)
Shrek isn't clever or smart. It just wants you to think it is, through wink after wink after wink.
40 Village Voice
Desperately avoiding the risk of even a half-second of boredom, the movie is wall-to-window-to-door noise, babbling, and jokes.

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