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Stars indicate the most critically-acclaimed movies.
Coraline

Generally favorable reviews
Based on 38 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?
Based on 161 votes
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Movie Info
Genre(s): Animation | Family/Kids | Fantasy
Written by: Henry Selick
Directed by: Henry Selick
Release Date:
Theatrical: February 6, 2009
DVD: July 21, 2009
Running Time: 100 minutes, Color
Origin: USA
Summary
RATING: PG for thematic elements, scary images, some language and suggestive humor
Starring Dakota Fanning, Teri Hatcher, Dawn French, Jennifer Saunders, and Ian McShane
A young girl walks through a secret door in her new home and discovers an alternate version of her life. On the surface, this parallel reality is eerily similar to her real life - only much better. But when this wondrously off-kilter, fantastical adventure turns dangerous, and her counterfeit parents (including Other Mother) try to keep her forever, Coraline must count on her resourcefulness, determination, and bravery to get back home - and save her family.m (Focus Features)
Also On Metacritic
GAMES: Coraline (Wii)
Also On The Web: Internet Movie Database Official Studio Site
What The Critics Said
All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...
Entertainment Weekly Lisa Schwarzbaum
This thrilling stop-motion animated adventure is a high point in Selick's career of creating handcrafted wonderlands of beauty blended with deep, disconcerting creepiness.
Read Full Review >Charlotte Observer Lawrence Toppman
Selick's fantastical adaptation of Neil Gaiman's novel will be too dazzlingly rich for many; it'll be like "caviare to the general," as Hamlet said of a complex play enacted for a public with lazy minds.
Read Full Review >Seattle Post-Intelligencer Sean Axmaker
A classic fairy tale with a contemporary sensibility and a spooky horror under the candy-house fantasy.
Read Full Review >Los Angeles Times Kenneth Turan
A remarkable feat of imagination, a magical tale with a genuinely sinister edge.
Read Full Review >TV Guide Tracie Cooper
Thankfully, Coraline is appropriately dark, and like its inspiration, is only a children's movie by the thinnest of margins.
Read Full Review >San Francisco Chronicle Mick LaSalle
What a shrewd achievement for writer-director Henry Selick ("The Nightmare Before Christmas"), to have made a movie that everyone will acclaim as beautiful, when perhaps the most beautiful thing about it is the sheer ugliness of it all.
Read Full Review >Empire Helen O'Hara
Terrifying and beautiful, believable and fantastical, this is one of the best children's films in years and Selick's finest -- better even than "The Nightmare Before Christmas."
Read Full Review >The New York Times A.O. Scott
Coraline lingers in an atmosphere that is creepy, wonderfully strange and full of feeling.
Read Full Review >The Hollywood Reporter Kirk Honeycutt
This is a marvelous family story, tapping into all sorts of childhood dreams and nightmares involving Mommy, monsters and heroic youngsters. Selick's imaginative sets and puppets are in perfect pitch with Gaiman's fantasy.
Read Full Review >Chicago Tribune Michael Phillips
It pulls audiences into a meticulously detailed universe, familiar in many respects, wacked and menacing in many others.
Read Full Review >Philadelphia Inquirer Carrie Rickey
A macabre mystery for children and a cautionary tale for their folks, Coraline is a yarn - twisty, knotty, taut - about a perennially bored girl whose parents are too preoccupied with work to pay her much mind.
Read Full Review >New York Post Lou Lumenick
This is perhaps the most effective 3-D movie I have ever seen, with a sophisticated, involving story that will appeal to many adults. The only reservation I have is with the PG rating, which seems too lenient for a story that may give very young children - particularly if they are sensitive - nightmares.
Read Full Review >Baltimore Sun Michael Sragow
The combination of 3-D photography and puppet-animation - centered on actual figures designed by hand and manipulated frame by frame - creates a world that's dense, active and fluid: a sensory Jacuzzi.
Read Full Review >Premiere Jenni Miller
The story is creepy fun and 100-percent different than whatever other crap is flooding the February market.
Read Full Review >NPR Bob Mondello
Selick puts his real faith not in the gimmickry that Coraline's audiences will think they've shown up for, but in the stronger virtues that they'd likely view as old-fashioned: character, and story, and handmade figures, handmade milkshakes, handmade blades of grass, each one moving utterly persuasively as he and his animators tweak it, frame by frame.
Read Full Review >Portland Oregonian Shawn Levy
For its sheer visual gusto alone, Coraline is a wonder.
Read Full Review >Salon.com Stephanie Zacharek
Coraline is essentially faithful to the spirit of its source material. But it's also so visually inventive, and so elaborately tactile, that it stands apart as its own creation.
Read Full Review >Film Threat Matthew Sorrento
At the finale of this visual delight, every hired hand and technician also deserve acclaim.
Read Full Review >The New Yorker David Denby
Coraline is a beautifully designed, rather scary answered-prayer story.
Read Full Review >Variety Justin Chang
This eccentric and deliriously inventive fantasy finds stop-motion auteur Henry Selick scaling new heights of ghoulish whimsy, buoyed by a haunting score that works its own macabre magic.
Read Full Review >Village Voice Scott Foundas
Coraline Jones isn't the pluckiest or most ingratiating sprite ever to take center stage in a children's film, and her (mis)adventures aren't especially novel, but Coraline is still a consistent splendor to behold.
Read Full Review >Austin Chronicle Marjorie Baumgarten
Stays remarkably true to a kid's-eye perspective and dormant fears.
Read Full Review >Boston Globe Ty Burr
"The Corpse Bride" with teeth, Bruno Bettelheim retooled for the multiplex, a nightmare of daft and creative consequence. I really liked it.
Read Full Review >Chicago Sun-Times Roger Ebert
This is a gloomy film with weird characters doing nasty things. I've heard of eating chocolate-covered insects, but not when they're alive.
Read Full Review >Rolling Stone Peter Travers
OK, sensitive tykes may be scared shitless. But those who tough it out with this twisted, trippy adventure in impure imagination will only be the better for it.
Read Full Review >Miami Herald Rene Rodriguez
Essentially a horror movie for kids, but it is also gentle and funny and whimsical, and even in its darkest moments, Selick never forgets who his target audience is. Still, some young children might have a nightmare or two after seeing it.
Read Full Review >ReelViews James Berardinelli
The film has been crafted with a consideration that the best family movies appeal not only to a young target audience but to the parents who accompany their offspring to theaters.
Read Full Review >The Globe and Mail (Toronto) Jennie Punter
Presented the usual way, the film would be enchanting. In 3-D, however, Coraline is completely engrossing. Selick uses the technique brilliantly to enhance the comedy and horror that mingle in his more "family-friendly" version of Gaiman's dark story.
Read Full Review >Chicago Reader J.R. Jones
It's the first stop-motion feature filmed entirely in stereoscopic 3-D, and the technique makes Selick's artwork even more wondrously creepy. The problem is Gaiman's story, which keeps accumulating otherworldly mythology but doesn't establish a clear line of action in the home stretch.
Read Full Review >Slate Dana Stevens
Moment by moment, the film is a font of pleasures, yet there's something about it that keeps the audience at an aesthetic remove. Like Coraline in the doppelgänger world, we swoon over all the neat stuff without ever making ourselves at home.
Read Full Review >New York Daily News Elizabeth Weitzman
An extraordinary achievement that nevertheless falls short of its full potential, Coraline is absolutely worth seeing, for older children and adults alike. But the connection will be entirely through your eyes; if you want it to touch your heart, you'll have to go to the book on which it's based.
Read Full Review >Time Richard Corliss
This is the animated film as art film. Coraline doesn't try to ingratiate; it just looms, like a cemetery gate, daring curious souls to tiptoe in and fend for themselves.
Read Full Review >Christian Science Monitor Peter Rainer
Director Henry Selick is all too effective at conjuring grody ghastliness. He's less effective at giving that ghastliness a human dimension, a resonance, a reason for being beyond cheap thrills.
Read Full Review >USA Today Claudia Puig
Coraline is a plucky heroine, and director Selig's imagination is indisputable. But the story falters in parts, and its dark tone could be off-putting for children.
Read Full Review >New York Magazine David Edelstein
Selick has a great fantasy filmmaker's artistry, but he lacks that overflowing Geppetto-esque love that brings puppets to life. In Coraline, he's woozy with his own lyricism.
Read Full Review >Washington Post Desson Thomson
For all its visual delights, however, Coraline remains more an engaging spectacle than a connective drama. That is chiefly because of the writing. Director-writer Henry Selick doesn't reach for the kind of universality that would enrich the movie.
Read Full Review >Wall Street Journal Joe Morgenstern
Coraline is distinguished, if you can call it that, by a creepiness so deep as to seem perverse, and the film finally succumbs to terminal deficits in dramatic energy, narrative coherence and plain old heart.
Read Full Review >What Our Users Said
The average user rating for this movie is 7.8 (out of 10) based on 161 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
Michaela C. gave it a10:
The people that said the movie was boring and dull are really saying that they don't want to watch something different and new but just want to stay in their comfort zone of totally predictable movies at least its a fresh change from all those other movies.
Jam B. gave it an8:
Some extremely harsh comments here! Visually this is utterly stunning - by far the richest images of any kids film so far, surely? We all enjoyed the colourful smoothness of CGI stuff like Finding Nemo and Monsters Inc, but the lower-tech (some of it has to have done on computer I'm sure) skills on display give a real warmth and charm. Not exactly an original story, what with magic doors, evil witches and talking cats, so a mark off for that. Provides enough unsettling imagery to hold the attention without resorting to pointless ugliness in order to shock. Also needs to be commended for it's literary script, clever dialogue and intelligent central theme of familial imperfection - any kids film with a genuine philosophical depth has to be recommended. Bit of a drawn out ending and treads a bit of a fimiliar path overall. My son is 4 and a) didn't find it scary b) sat through it all and said he liked it, although he was getting a bit fidgety towards the end.
Trey D gave it a0:
Somebody asked why the high rating for this incredibly boring and just plain nasty movie, Coraline. Answer... because Neil Gaiman is a scientologist and they have rooms full of sea org slaves writing positive reviews. Beware, Coraline is a depressing misery.
Ben G gave it a0:
Gaiman is truly the most over-rated writer who should be on the D-List for DULL. Coraline was a mediocre book and a crappy, and painfully boring movie. Like any mediocre artist, Gaiman is now going for notoriety by hooking up with the untalented Palmer who in turn strips her clothes off at the slightest provocation. I heard they were Scientologists, which would explain an awful lot since Scientologists act like loons out in public.
Thalia T gave it a10:
This is a coming of age movie. It is original in that it uses puppets not unlike Pinocchio to illustrate what one's real values should be. Not always getting what you want, but living with real life, flawed parents who truly love one. There may be scary bits for children below a 6 or 7, but most other kids and grownups should be able to handle the imagery just fine.
John R gave it a9:
Absolutely stunning. An original plot with a heroic little girl. I wouldn't recommend it for very young children, but age 9 and over should be fine. Adults will love it too.
Elias C gave it a5:
Neil Gaiman has always been an acquired taste. His visions of twisted reality in all of his works has always been more appealing to me as in book form rather than as a visual entertainment. Coraline is no exception. His foray into children's books with the publication of Coraline was a surprise to many but his quirky story was well written and appealing on paper. On film however, it just seems...well, strange. Not exactly a kid's movie and not exactly a film for adult's either. The skill it took to animate using stop action movement should be appreciated. Some stop motion techniques exhibited in this film were simply astonishing. But technique alone does not make a good film. A great film for film students does not make a great film for the average viewer. Consider the twisted universe of the film's reality and the even more twisted vision of the film's alternate reality. Look at the scenes with the almost nude acrobatic sisters. Listen to the awful vocal music, This is not a film for children. Let your kids read the book instead and let them use their own imagination to fill in the blanks. And a final note: The 3D theatrical version must have been something to watch. DO not fall for the DVD's 3D version. It is simply bad. Using red and green cardboard glasses, the film is colorless, dark, eye-aching awfulness. The producers of the DVD's 3D packaging should be ashamed.
