34
Metascore
5 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 70The Hollywood ReporterJustin LoweThe Hollywood ReporterJustin LoweIn tactfully tackling some of the often-sensationalized issues surrounding schizophrenia, Sattler and screenwriter Steve Waverly craft a topical and emotionally accessible film that should easily connect with sympathetic viewers, particularly those familiar with the debilitating effects of chronic mental health issues.
- 50Original-CinLiam LaceyOriginal-CinLiam LaceyNone of this is helped by Platt’s performance, with a petulant eye-roll to every impediment, as if he were the fussbudget Felix of The Odd Couple and Cindy his disaster-prone Oscar.
- 50RogerEbert.comCarlos AguilarRogerEbert.comCarlos AguilarThe tone rarely hits its target for dark levity, often making one wonder, “Was that meant to be funny?”
- 20VarietyNick SchagerVarietyNick SchagerIt strikes not a single authentic chord, and that also goes for the lead performance of Ben Platt, whose overdone theater-kid turn further dooms the material’s stabs at humor and pathos.
- 10The New York TimesTeo BugbeeThe New York TimesTeo BugbeeThe movie treats illness as a series of contrivances, an engine that keeps the plot pistoning forward, and the result of this approach is a film that feels lifeless, or worse, reductive.