78
Metascore
8 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 90Screen DailySarah WardScreen DailySarah WardThis is an unsettling rebuke of government control and ideological manipulation — as well as a sharp cry against compliance with the prevailing status quo.
- 80The New York TimesNatalia WinkelmanThe New York TimesNatalia WinkelmanOstrochovsky often begins shots with characters frozen in place for several seconds before they launch into action, as if they were chess pieces moved by God across the bare lines of the seminary’s crumbling stone architecture.
- 80The GuardianPeter BradshawThe GuardianPeter BradshawPure evil permeates this brief, 80-minute film, whose cold visual brilliance reminds me of the recent movies of Paweł Pawlikowski. It wasn’t until some time after it had finished that I grasped one of the reasons it was so oppressive: there are no women in it at all. There is a chill of political fear.
- 80The Observer (UK)Simran HansThe Observer (UK)Simran HansOstrochovský’s camera emphasises the constricting architecture of both church and state, with its black and white morality and a claustrophobic central courtyard, frequently portrayed via stiff, judgmental God’s-eye shots.
- 80The Irish TimesTara BradyThe Irish TimesTara BradyServants confirms the director as a major talent.
- 80VarietyGuy LodgeVarietyGuy LodgeServants is briskly shaped at just under 80 minutes, yet its alien-historical world-building is effective enough that you emerge from it feeling both out of time and out of breath: Any longer, and all humanity would bleed out of this earthly-but-ethereal conspiracy drama entirely.
- 75Movie NationRoger MooreMovie NationRoger MooreOstrochovský never quite achieves “riveting” with this narrative. But he’s made a chilling reminder of the Bad Old Days, when the Cold War might have given the world moral clarity about who was for freedom and civil liberties and who sought to quash them.
- 70The Hollywood ReporterNeil YoungThe Hollywood ReporterNeil YoungIf nothing else, the period picture represents an impressive change of pace from Ostrochovsky’s hard-knock feature directorial debut.