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Wagner Moura and Ana de Armas in Sergio (2020)

Metacritic reviews

Sergio

55

Metascore

16 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
  • 80
    The Hollywood ReporterJohn DeFore
    The Hollywood ReporterJohn DeFore
    This portrait of influential U.N. diplomat Sergio Vieira de Mello benefits immensely from two magnetic leads, Wagner Moura and Ana de Armas, whose onscreen chemistry is undeniable; but its deft sense of structure is of equal importance, making it an engrossing picture even for those who know next to nothing about its subject or settings.
  • 70
    Rolling StonePeter Travers
    Rolling StonePeter Travers
    Sergio is not a film about a saint or a sinner, but an attempt that succeeds more often than not to create a portrait of a man in full. Yes, it also occasionally puts him on a pedestal — but in these dark days, advocating for hope and idealism feels exactly right.
  • 63
    The Associated PressLindsey Bahr
    The Associated PressLindsey Bahr
    You’re always waiting for the movie to really get going. It’s shot like a political thriller without the thrills.
  • 60
    TimeStephanie Zacharek
    TimeStephanie Zacharek
    Sergio’s intentions are pure, and the movie is pleasingly old-school in the way it merges political drama — and tragedy — with romance. Sometimes, though, the burden of playing a dedicated servant of the people appears to be too much for Moura: the performance feels stiff and stately, as if he’s considered every breath. Moura makes us see the gleaming role model, but it’s much harder to see the man underneath — and you can’t leave a legacy without first having had a heartbeat.
  • 60
    Screen RantSandy Schaefer
    Screen RantSandy Schaefer
    Uneven yet sincere in its execution, Sergio combines simplified political melodrama with a tragic love story powered by its leads' performances.
  • 60
    The GuardianBenjamin Lee
    The GuardianBenjamin Lee
    The sweeping, full-throated romance of the last act might not work for some, who could conceivably argue its dominance leaves gaps in Sérgio’s professional life, but it makes for an emotionally satisfying ending.
  • 50
    The Globe and Mail (Toronto)Barry Hertz
    The Globe and Mail (Toronto)Barry Hertz
    Wagner Moura (Narcos’s Pablo Escobar himself) does what he can as the sturdy Sergio, and the actor has strong, near-instant chemistry with a love interest played by Ana de Armas.
  • 50
    VarietyJessica Kiang
    VarietyJessica Kiang
    Sergio Vieira de Mello was, by all accounts, not a man who let fear of making the wrong decision stop him from acting decisively, and it’s a shame that the soft-edged romantic prevarications of Sergio prevent the film from embodying that same dynamism.
  • 50
    The PlaylistRobert Daniels
    The PlaylistRobert Daniels
    Barker takes his initially enthralling documentary and dilutes the story with this new feature, creating melodramatic lightness without an affectingly heavy touch due to the tepid tone and wheezing tempo. In short, it snoozes.
  • 40
    Wall Street JournalJoe Morgenstern
    Wall Street JournalJoe Morgenstern
    Sergio, a Netflix docudrama directed by Greg Barker from a banal screenplay by Craig Borten, catches flashes of his brilliance from time to time but scatters and dims them through a mosaic structure that’s ultimately no structure at all.
  • See all 16 reviews on Metacritic.com
  • See all external reviews for Sergio

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