94
Metascore
55 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 100ConsequenceBrett ArnoldConsequenceBrett ArnoldThe Irishman is a remarkable achievement that proves the best may yet to come from one of the most essential American filmmakers to ever live.
- 100The PlaylistJoe BlessingThe PlaylistJoe BlessingThe Irishman, which feels like the work of an older, wiser, less flashy filmmaker, is much more preoccupied with the soul of Frank Sheeran and reckoning with his choices.
- 100VarietyOwen GleibermanVarietyOwen GleibermanMartin Scorsese’s The Irishman is a coldly enthralling, long-form knockout — a majestic Mob epic with ice in its veins. It’s the film that, I think, a lot us wanted to see from Scorsese: a stately, ominous, suck-in-your-breath summing up, not just a drama but a reckoning, a vision of the criminal underworld that’s rippling with echoes of the director’s previous Mob films, but that also takes us someplace bold and new.
- 95TheWrapAlonso DuraldeTheWrapAlonso DuraldeThis is a movie that’s rife with characters, with incidents, with ideas, with history, and as such, it will benefit from multiple viewings. But even after the first watch, The Irishman hits hard, and it’s a reminder that nearly 30 years after “GoodFellas,” Martin Scorsese still has fascinating mob tales to tell, and fascinating ways to tell them.
- 90Vanity FairRichard LawsonVanity FairRichard LawsonI found myself reluctantly taken by the movie, and the way Scorsese uses it to maybe, just a little bit, atone for some of his own past blitheness about violence. In The Irishman, a merry darkness slowly becomes an elegy, ringed with guilt. And what could be more Irish than that?
- 80Time OutJoshua RothkopfTime OutJoshua RothkopfAfter a while, you adjust, or rather, you get tired of probing the slightly-off evidence of your eyes and the headache it produces. There’s a lot of fun to distract you.
- 80ScreenCrushMatt SingerScreenCrushMatt SingerThe Irishman doesn’t always go by that quickly. But those moments contemplating the end of everything are among the most moving of Scorsese’s career.
- 80The GuardianBenjamin LeeThe GuardianBenjamin LeeThere’s an almost meta-maturity, as if Scorsese is also looking back on his own career, the film leaving us with a haunting reminder not to glamorise violent men and the wreckage they leave behind.
- 80The Hollywood ReporterStephen DaltonThe Hollywood ReporterStephen DaltonScorsese's choice to make this a standalone feature and not a limited series seems mildly perplexing. Anyone hoping for the propulsive dynamism of, say, Goodfellas or Casino may be disappointed. But The Irishman is also on many levels a beautifully crafted piece of deluxe cinema.