75
Metascore
33 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 80Film ThreatFilm ThreatLike all good films, it raises these types of questions, answering some, and leaving some for you to answer yourself.
- 80The Hollywood ReporterMichael RechtshaffenThe Hollywood ReporterMichael RechtshaffenIn the wonderfully droll Kitchen Stories, Norwegian filmmaker Bent Hamer takes an already inspired premise and weaves it into a spry absurdist comedy that also manages to find some considerable warmth.
- 80New York Magazine (Vulture)Peter RainerNew York Magazine (Vulture)Peter RainerThe film is saying that, left to their own devices, all men would devolve into a morass of monastic grouches. Kitchen Stories is a prime piece of comic anthropology.
- 80NewsweekDavid AnsenNewsweekDavid AnsenHamer, a meticulous observer himself, is a minimalist with heart.
- 80L.A. WeeklyScott FoundasL.A. WeeklyScott FoundasIn the landscape of contemporary movie comedies, Kitchen Stories is like a rejuvenating blast of crisp Nordic air.
- 70TimeRichard SchickelTimeRichard SchickelWhat a pleasure it is not to be hectored by a director as we laugh our own little laughs, watching a profound story unfold.
- 70VarietyDavid RooneyVarietyDavid RooneyThe film appears consistently poised to go deeper but instead hangs back, making it less substantial than it might have been. Yet the sweet-natured story's gentle humor and poignancy should draw appreciative audiences.
- 70The A.V. ClubNoel MurrayThe A.V. ClubNoel MurraySeems too subtle at times and too obvious at others, but Hamer strings together pieces of conversation and layers of voyeurism (everybody in the movie is watching somebody) into a moving study of the perils of presumption.
- 67Entertainment WeeklyOwen GleibermanEntertainment WeeklyOwen GleibermanThe icy whimsy of Kitchen Stories is certainly well sustained, but you don't laugh at the movie so much as wait for the joke to thaw.
- 60Village VoiceJ. HobermanVillage VoiceJ. HobermanSlight but sardonic, Norwegian director Bent Hamer's deadpan Kitchen Stories makes a taciturn comedy of nothingness out of color-coordinated '50s coziness and Scandinavian social planning.