SummaryAngelina Jolie stars as Mariane Pearl, wife of slain journalist Daniel Pearl, in director Michael Winterbottom's adaptation of Mariane's memoir "A Mighty Heart: The Brave Life and Death of My Husband Danny Pearl," recounting the abduction and murder of her husband by Pakistani militants.
Directed By:Michael Winterbottom
Written By:John Orloff, Mariane Pearl
A Mighty Heart
Metascore
Generally Favorable
74
User score
Generally Favorable
6.4
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Metascore
Generally Favorable
89% Positive
34 Reviews
34 Reviews
11% Mixed
4 Reviews
4 Reviews
0% Negative
0 Reviews
0 Reviews
100
The title comes from the memoir by Mariane Pearl, wife of kidnapped Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl. It applies equally to Winterbottom, who has made the rarest movie among this summer's releases: a taut police procedural that examines all sides of an issue and forces us to re-think our own.
88
Emotionally and viscerally compelling and retains a suspenseful, edge-of-the-seat quality.
80
Effectively fashioned, as jolting as it is polished, as well as a surprising, insistently political work of commercial art.
75
Jolie simply exercises Mariane's persistent will, and honors her in the process.
70
A taut, meticulously crafted police procedural.
63
For the most part, Michael Winterbottom's well-intended film, the true story of an idealistic journalist and his gallant wife disinvites emotion by focusing on process at the expense of passion.
50
Angelina Jolie is the major alienation effect in A Mighty Heart, although she's not the only one. The hectic pizzazz with which hired gun Michael Winterbottom directs this tale of terrifying terrorism is another distraction.
User score
Generally Favorable
59% Positive
17 Ratings
17 Ratings
31% Mixed
9 Ratings
9 Ratings
10% Negative
3 Ratings
3 Ratings
Aug 4, 2019
6
Surf whatever channel you wish to, the day you see this film you are going to hear only one news. A Mighty Heart Winterbottom has a daunting task, to make an unfathomable true case into a compelling drama. And the primary reason why it doesn't speak to the larger audience, is that it focuses on the aspects of the world that people often tend to ignore. Addition to that, as an excuse for drama, it is obliged to and does focuses on the reminiscing emotions along with guilt, unknown terror and lack of opportunity. And packed hastily with these horrifying elements the adapted screenplay of John Orloff from a book by Mariane Pearl, threads this sobering journey with formal paperwork and vital social rigmarole that it has cornered itself to go through. The director Michael Winterbottom against these many odds is still delivering a gritty political drama that befriends the humanitarian nature in the workplace. And that very brief period, that comes late in the film remains my favorite part and the gist of the film. Despite being dipped in a series of pathos information revealed subsequently, the troops in the middle of this cold war manages to find some quality time to share and endear. A film of such rigid posture and it feels good to see it dance absentminded; a slow dance but I'll take anything. And supporting cast is a major boost in this film. There are plenty of guest appearances in here and each of them casts quite an impression on us and Angelina Jolie in lead. Her part, to be fair, is difficult to portray. Consistently and entirely covering the film with a reserved depressed emotional ride, Jolie gets very few moments to fully exaggerate and express her emotions. A Mighty Heart has a big upbeating and surprisingly even optimistic heart, but all of that remains to be the aftermath that is to and does come after the storm leaves the sea.
Production Company:
- Paramount Vantage
- Plan B Entertainment
- Revolution Films
Release Date:Jun 22, 2007
Duration:1 h 48 m
Rating:R
Tagline:It was an event that shocked the world. This is the story you haven't heard.
Awards
Golden Globes, USA
• 1 Nomination
Film Independent Spirit Awards
• 3 Nominations
Image Awards (NAACP)
• 2 Nominations




























