47
Metascore
33 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 75ReelViewsJames BerardinelliReelViewsJames BerardinelliGorgeous photography and strong acting keep the formula from becoming stale. For those who don't mind pictures that fall into predictable rhythms, A Good Year represents a pleasant diversion.
- 50VarietyTodd McCarthyVarietyTodd McCarthyA simple repast consisting of sometimes strained slapsticky comedy, a sweet romance and a life lesson learned, this little picnic doesn't amount to much but goes down easily enough.
- 50The New YorkerDavid DenbyThe New YorkerDavid DenbyEven judged by the not excessively demanding standards of middle-aged renovation fantasies, A Good Year isn’t much.
- 50TimeRichard CorlissTimeRichard CorlissCrowe, despite his loutish rep, is forever surprising viewers by slipping snugly into the disparate characters he plays. This time he surprises by failing. Oh, he can do engaging as smartly as he does stalwart or tortured, but he gets sabotaged by the cloying script.
- 50Village VoiceVillage VoiceScott can do mayhem, dystopia, and the rampaging alien (extraterrestrial, android, Somali, Demi Moore) with the best of them, but the breezy touch is not his forte.
- 50PremiereScott WarrenPremiereScott WarrenFinney, only seen in these flashbacks, is pitch perfect.
- 42Entertainment WeeklyLisa SchwarzbaumEntertainment WeeklyLisa SchwarzbaumNothing more than a bad harvest.
- 40EmpireDan JolinEmpireDan JolinThe Merlot to "Sideways" Pinot, this is one of those middling movies that, while never terrible, also never really impresses.
- 40The Hollywood ReporterKirk HoneycuttThe Hollywood ReporterKirk HoneycuttYou sense in every frame the strain to be lighthearted. Consequently, A Good Year is at times downright clumsy. You know what the filmmakers are trying to achieve and see the labor going into the attempt, but for them to fall so short is unsettling.
- 40Austin ChronicleMarc SavlovAustin ChronicleMarc SavlovIf nothing else, this adaptation of Peter Mayle's umpteenth ode to livin' la vie en Provence will make you wonder about Ridley Scott and the directorial aging process.