Metacritic Film

Unreasonable Man, An

Starring Ralph Nader, Pat Buchanan, and Howard Zinn

MPAA RATING: Not Rated

IFC Films / Red Envelope Entertainment
Documentary
122 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters January 31, 2007

With the help of exciting graphics, rare archival footage and over forty on-camera interviews conducted over the past two years, An Unreasonable Man traces the life and career of Ralph Nader, one of the most unique, important, and controversial political figures of the past half century. (Two Left Legs, LLC)

DIRECTED BY
Henriette Mantel
Steve Skrovan

Overall Metascore

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

75 / 100

Critic Reviews

100 Entertainment Weekly
Nader became famous as a "consumer advocate," but as the thrilling first hour of An Unreasonable Man makes clear, that humdrum bureaucratic term didn't do justice to his courage, his vision.
100 Chicago Reader
Through it all Nader, as ruefully funny as ever, comments on his adventures.
91 The Onion (A.V. Club)
The film begins like a Frank Capra movie--pure-hearted idealist takes on corporate fat cats against impossible odds and triumphs--but ends like a Shakespearean tragedy.
88 TV Guide
Skrovan swears that during two years of filming, Nader's only demand was, "Make sure you talk to people who oppose me."
80 Village Voice Jim Ridley
If the film shows that few men are as unreasonable as Ralph Nader, it also shows that few have so succeeded in shaping their world: His legacy of progressive legislation will affect generations to come.
80 Film Threat Michael Ferraro
It's a nice refresher course to remind us how hard Nader has fought for everyday citizens, ultimately saving hundreds of lives in the long run.
80 LA Weekly
An entertaining tour of this endearing, infuriating absolutist's life and legacy, guided by talking heads more pro than con, prominent among them the former Nader's Raiders who split over their leader's disastrous insistence that there was no difference worth talking about between Democrats and Republicans, yet retain enormous affection for his wit, integrity and incorruptible sense of mission.
80 Washington Post
Nader haters may not be mollified, but An Unreasonable Man, like its subject itself, is a one-stop civics lesson no one should miss.
75 Chicago Tribune
Mantel and Skrovan's documentary astutely reminds us of why we need the world's Naders. It's a reasonable movie about an often admirably unreasonable man.
75 Portland Oregonian
A worthy and compelling look at a unique and essentially American figure.
75 San Francisco Chronicle
Those who love Nader will appreciate the respect and attention given his career. Yet others, even those for whom the mere sight of Nader's face is enough to cause a spike in blood pressure, will appreciate the film's evenhanded elucidation of Nader's faults.
75 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
States straight off that the man's legacy has been tarnished in most of the liberal world's eyes by his being the spoiler of the 2000 presidential election. "It will be engraved on his tombstone," says his friend Phil Donahue.
75 Boston Globe
The ‘"unreasonable man" himself is interviewed, too, and he comes across as patient, articulate, and maddeningly uncompromising.
75 New York Daily News
Naive or wicked, idealist or egomaniac: Nothing in Ralph Nader's character is agreed upon by everyone in this fascinating biography - with one exception. And the title says it all.
75 New York Post
So why does the Democratic Party hate him so much? The answer, as this valuable (if blatantly pro-Nader) documentary makes clear, is hypocrisy.
75 Premiere
It may most aptly sum up the who the hell Ralph Nader is and why he insists on creating such a ruckus.
70 Los Angeles Times
Though the second half contains the fireworks, it's the film's first hour that is ultimately most memorable. Mantel and Skrovan do a commendable job in covering a lot of territory, mixing pertinent and entertaining archival footage with interviews.
70 New York Magazine
What makes An Unreasonable Man so compelling is its perfectly fluid line. Simply put, the private Nader and the public Nader are the same: There are no contradictions with which to grapple, no byways to explore.
70 The Hollywood Reporter Sura Wood
Editors Alexis Provost and Beth Gallagher cut back and forth between the talking heads so deftly that you have the illusion that Nader is answering his critics in real time in a very lively debate.
70 Variety
A basically admiring if critical portrait, documentary by Henriette Mantel and Stephen Skrovan (strangely, both standup comics and TV comedy writer-producers) finds more than enough absorbing material to hold interest through nearly three-hour runtime.
70 Salon.com
May indeed induce dizziness, sweating and hot-and-cold flashes among politically minded leftists.
67 Austin Chronicle
Irony and unwavering idealism are bound up in this lengthy but instantly engaging and informative documentary.
60 The New York Times
Its ideological leanings are evident and unsurprising, but more screen time for Mr. Nader's pre-2000 (or pre-post-2000) adversaries would have made a richer film.
60 Wall Street Journal
The film contends admiringly, and convincingly, that Ralph Nader's authentic sense of outrage is the reason he persists when he can't prevail.

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