Share

Watch It

On DVD: Now | On Blu-ray: Now

Le Havre Review

Other Critics provided by Metacritic.com

Critics scores range from 0 to 100, with higher scores indicating more favorable reviews.

  • 5.0
    82

    out of 100

    Metascore®
    Universal acclaim
    based on a weighted average of all
    critic review scores.

  • 100

    out of 100

    Chicago Sun-Times Roger Ebert

    This movie is as lovable as a silent comedy, which it could have been.

    Read Full Review

  • 100

    out of 100

    Entertainment Weekly Lisa Schwarzbaum

    The setting is somewhere between a post-WWII Brigadoon and the environs of Marcel Carn classic "Children of Paradise," but the story is as timely as this morning's news from Europe.

    Read Full Review

  • 80

    out of 100

    Wall Street Journal Joe Morgenstern

    Le Havre stands on its own fragile but considerable merits.

    Read Full Review

  • 88

    out of 100

    Chicago Tribune Michael Phillips

    Does Kaurismaki believe in his own fairy tale? The movie, a humble delight, suggests the answer is yes.

    Read Full Review

  • See all Le Havre reviews at Metacritic.com

Fan Reviews provided by

4

Sounds like SoCal to me by Jake_Gittes
I don't want to spoil anything, but I've got to quibble with the descriptions that say "Marcel stands up to officials...." Yes, "Le Harve" tells a story like "The Visitor" or "Frozen River" in which immigration officials are part of the plot, but one of the pleasing complications in "Le Harve" is that the officials are not predictable. I liked Inspector Monet (Jean-Pierre Darroussin) who distinguishes between "crimes" and "immigration." Were it not for Monet ordering a 2005 vintage of wine (the people in this port town love their wine & cigarettes), I would've thought the movie was set in the 70s. The town of Le Harve looks as if it comes from another time. The prevailing values of human rights also seem to come from a different time. Marcel, a bohemian philosopher and shoeshine, does his work the way Jesus washed feet. While "Le Harve" does not get at the root neo-colonial problems, it asks what is human and transcends language, totally justifying a U.S. release.

5

by irenvlai

3

by vettes

5

by jayvray

Advertisement