87
Metascore
57 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 100Entertainment WeeklyLeah GreenblattEntertainment WeeklyLeah GreenblattIt's hard, too, to picture any actress other than McDormand (who also has a producer credit) in the part. She doesn't just become Fern, she creates her: melding Zhao's screenplay to her own fierce character in a way that feels almost uncannily real. Together, they've managed to make that rare thing: a film that feels both necessary and sublime.
- 100RogerEbert.comBrian TallericoRogerEbert.comBrian TallericoA movie that finds poetry in the story of a seemingly average woman. It is a gorgeous film that’s alternately dreamlike in the way it captures the beauty of this country and grounded in its story about the kind of person we don’t usually see in movies. I love everything about it.
- 100The GuardianPeter BradshawThe GuardianPeter BradshawChloé Zhao’s Nomadland is an utterly inspired docu-fictional hybrid, like her previous feature The Rider. It is a gentle, compassionate, questioning film about the American soul.
- 100Los Angeles TimesJustin ChangLos Angeles TimesJustin ChangThere is no transcendence at the end of her long, harrowing journey, but there are unexpected gifts, guardian angels and places of refuge. It would be hard to overlook the spiritual presence — a good word for it would be “grace” — that hovers over every frame of this movie and the spare, wrenching story it has to tell.
- 91The PlaylistJessica KiangThe PlaylistJessica KiangA wise, beautiful film summoned up entirely from things authentically seen, felt, and thought.
- 80The Hollywood ReporterDavid RooneyThe Hollywood ReporterDavid RooneyZhao collaborates with a major-name actor for the first time in Nomadland, guiding Frances McDormand to a remarkable performance of melancholy gravitas, so rigorously unmannered she's indistinguishable from the real-life nomads with whom she shares the screen.
- 80Screen DailyFionnuala HalliganScreen DailyFionnuala HalliganIt’s extraordinary how a work like Nomadland can hold a mirror to society and refract back to the audience the light of their own lives.
- 70Nomadland isn’t a manifesto — there’s nothing dutifully somber about it. And although it doesn’t romanticize life on the road — for one thing, it shows that you need to be comfortable defecating in a bucket — joyousness is its chief characteristic. Like "The Rider," it’s a window into a specific world, with one key character as a guide.
- 67The Film StageDavid KatzThe Film StageDavid KatzNomadland is initially stirring with its imaginative utilization of a Hollywood star as Zhao places McDormand, sometimes jarringly, right in the real world. But it ultimately reverts to homilies, offering a flinty, exciting character a bland third-act volte-face.