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Anthony Mackie, Will Poulter, John Boyega, and Algee Smith in Detroit (2017)

Metacritic reviews

Detroit

77

Metascore

49 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
  • 100
    VarietyOwen Gleiberman
    VarietyOwen Gleiberman
    Bigelow, working from a script by her regular collaborator Mark Boal (it’s their first film since “Zero Dark Thirty”), has created a turbulent, live-wire panorama of race in America that feels like it’s all unfolding in the moment, and that’s its power. We’re not watching tidy, well-meaning lessons — we’re watching people driven, by an impossible situation, to act out who they really are.
  • 100
    Chicago Sun-TimesRichard Roeper
    Chicago Sun-TimesRichard Roeper
    Arriving in theaters almost exactly 50 years since the Detroit riots of late July 1967, Kathryn Bigelow’s Detroit is a searing, pulse-pounding, shocking and deeply effective dramatic interpretation of events in and around the Algiers Motel.
  • 98
    TheWrapClaudia Puig
    TheWrapClaudia Puig
    Detroit has a vital sense of authenticity, rooted as it is in history, conveyed via Bigelow’s meticulously crafted cinema vérité style that, essentially, thrusts the viewer into the tense events. She is an expert at managing suspense and deftly blending sensitivity with a journalistic sense of details.
  • 91
    Entertainment WeeklyLeah Greenblatt
    Entertainment WeeklyLeah Greenblatt
    A sincere effort to illuminate a singularly dark chapter in history — and a stark reminder of exactly what gets lost when human beings fail to take care of their own.
  • 90
    New York Daily NewsJordan Hoffman
    New York Daily NewsJordan Hoffman
    This movie will spark debate, even with an end title card that reminds audiences of the concept of dramatic license. But as a movie, and not a court document, it is extraordinary.
  • 88
    Rolling StonePeter Travers
    Rolling StonePeter Travers
    It's a hardcore masterpiece that digs into our violent past to hold up a dark mirror to the systemic racism that still rages in the here and now.
  • 80
    Screen DailyTim Grierson
    Screen DailyTim Grierson
    This gritty, gripping movie starts slowly but builds in intensity, culminating in sorrow and raw nerves.
  • 75
    IndieWireDavid Ehrlich
    IndieWireDavid Ehrlich
    Detroit is extremely powerful when its wandering eye is trained on the moment at hand, when it’s performing a bracingly direct meditation on white violence and black fear. The film only runs into trouble when it clumsily attempts to contextualize the events of its horrific second act.
  • 70
    The Hollywood ReporterTodd McCarthy
    The Hollywood ReporterTodd McCarthy
    Intense and physically powerful in the way it conveys its atrocious events, the film nonetheless remains short on complexity, as if it were enough simply to provoke and outrage the audience. It's a grim tale with no catharsis.
  • 63
    Chicago TribuneMichael Phillips
    Chicago TribuneMichael Phillips
    A handful of films, from "The Battle of Algiers" to Paul Greengrass' splendid "Bloody Sunday," have met the challenge of dramatizing civil unrest and law enforcement outrages, memorably. Detroit comes close.
  • See all 49 reviews on Metacritic.com
  • See all external reviews for Detroit

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