49
Metascore
15 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 60TheWrapKristen LopezTheWrapKristen LopezFreud’s Last Session will certainly find its fans, and the actors are all superlative. But the whole affair feels a bit too dense to enthrall and the script never dives deep enough into these characters’ psyche to tell us something new or particularly unique.
- 60The Hollywood ReporterStephen FarberThe Hollywood ReporterStephen FarberEven acknowledging and regretting the conceptual misjudgments that mar the film, there are moments to enjoy. The conversations between the doctor and the don remain stimulating, and the two central performances add to the electricity.
- 60Screen DailyTim GriersonScreen DailyTim GriersonDespite its thoughtful ruminations and supple performances, this period drama fails to produce the expected intellectual fireworks.
- 60VarietyPeter DebrugeVarietyPeter DebrugeSo many movies are either mindless or completely disinterested with engaging the intellect of their audiences that Freud’s Last Session offers a welcome bit of brain stimulation — but does far less for the soul.
- 60The Daily BeastNick SchagerThe Daily BeastNick SchagerA stately affair that’s never particularly intellectually incisive or revealing, and its stolid execution fails to transcend the material’s inherent staginess.
- 58Paste MagazineAndrew CrumpPaste MagazineAndrew CrumpThe film’s observations, as filtered through the duo, feel utterly simplistic, and gain gravity only by the enthusiasm in Goode and Hopkins’ performances.
- 50Los Angeles TimesRobert AbeleLos Angeles TimesRobert AbeleThe leads give it their all — Hopkins’ vinegary parrying is especially lively — but the overall takeaway is of historical puppets playing philosophical gotcha, when we yearn for three-dimensional humans filling up a room with their lives, learnings and flaws.
- 50Washington PostMichael O'SullivanWashington PostMichael O'SullivanViewers of “Session” may find it harder to take solace from (or to find entertainment in) this stagy jar of slightly pickled discord, directed by Matt Brown, based on the 2011 play by Mark St. Germain (itself inspired by Armand Nicholi’s 2002 book “The Question of God”).
- 40The New York TimesBen KenigsbergThe New York TimesBen KenigsbergThe look of Freud’s Last Session could make one doubt the presence of a cinematographer.
- 35PolygonSiddhant AdlakhaPolygonSiddhant AdlakhaNothing comes of anything either man says. It’s all noise — all passionless anger going in circles, captured by a camera that seems averse to lingering on the tremendous talents of Hopkins and Goode, who try their best to rescue Freud’s Last Session from itself.