69
Metascore
18 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 100San Francisco ChronicleDavid LewisSan Francisco ChronicleDavid LewisNothing about Of an Age seems forced. The film delicately embraces grand sentiments without ever being sentimental. And throughout the journey, we can’t help but be enthralled.
- 100The Seattle TimesKatie WalshThe Seattle TimesKatie WalshImpeccably written and beautifully performed by Anton and Green, Of an Age is a profoundly moving film about the beauty and the horror of what it means to be seen for the first time, to love for the first time, and how the past and future are constantly informing each other.
- 90VarietyManuel BetancourtVarietyManuel BetancourtEqual parts wistful and sensual, vivid and gentle, Stolevski has gifted us with a swoon-worthy romantic drama that looks at that first blushing crush not as an ephemera in need of being remembered but as a living memory that can pulsate and ache precisely because it’s never left you.
- In other hands, Of an Age could have been gimmicky or indulgent but Stolevski imbues his characters with such lived-in specificity that we can’t help but be swept away.
- 75Boston GlobeOdie HendersonBoston GlobeOdie HendersonOf an Age successfully captures the fear that the object of one’s queer affection may be straight and unwilling to reciprocate.
- 67Austin ChronicleSteve DavisAustin ChronicleSteve DavisMissed opportunity and bad timing inform the romantic interlude in Of an Age in a way many of us have experienced at least once.
- 63Washington PostMichael O'SullivanWashington PostMichael O'SullivanAnton conveys a deep well of unrequited longing that is so powerful, it doesn’t really need storytelling gimmicks.
- 50The New York TimesManohla DargisThe New York TimesManohla DargisThe movie’s greater, intractable problem, though, is that Stolevski has burdened his characters with such obvious narrative instrumentality — Kol is the sensitive naïf while Adam is the appealing, gentle exemplar of an authentic life — that the two simply never come to life as people, either as individuals or as a couple.
- To be fair, both Anton and Green do a fair job of giving Kol and Adam believability. But do we really need another tragic period gay love story? How about yes, but do it better.