SummaryAi Weiwei: Never Sorry is the first feature-length film about the internationally renowned Chinese artist and activist, Ai Weiwei. In recent years, Ai has garnered international attention as much for his ambitious artwork as his political provocations. AI WEIWEI: NEVER SORRY examines this complex intersection of artistic practice and social activ... Read More
Directed By:Alison Klayman
Written By:Alison Klayman
Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry
Metascore
Universal Acclaim
81
User score
Generally Favorable
7.8
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Metascore
Universal Acclaim
81
86% Positive
24 Reviews
24 Reviews
14% Mixed
4 Reviews
4 Reviews
0% Negative
0 Reviews
0 Reviews
Aug 2, 2012
100
Alison Klayman's documentary is one of the most engagingly powerful movies of the year almost completely on the strength of Ai's rumpled charisma and the confusion it creates in the bureaucratic mindset of the Chinese Communist Party.
Jul 28, 2012
90
Klayman's riveting, vérité-style film captures this burly, bigger-than-life figure over the past three years, as his activism has heightened, his art has grown increasingly confrontational and he has deliberately blurred the distinction between aesthetics and politics.
User score
Generally Favorable
7.8
73% Positive
11 Ratings
11 Ratings
27% Mixed
4 Ratings
4 Ratings
0% Negative
0 Ratings
0 Ratings
Feb 14, 2017
7
The direction, cinematography, music, and editing in this movie are very boring, cliché, and clearly uninspired. However, like a lot of these types of documentaries, what they are shooting and recording just happens to be incredibly interesting and, in contrast to the style of the documentary, inspiring.
Jan 1, 2013
6
It's a pretty standard documentary that gives you all the necessary information about Weiwei's past, why he's important, what his methods are, how he functions in China, and so on. But that's all you get here: facts, explanations and the artist's inscrutable, bearded face. At one point we learn that even though Weiwei is married, he has a son with another woman. "It happens," he explains reluctantly. We never get to hear the women talk about that. The film always maintains a respectful distance from its subject, and while it tells a story that absolutely had to be told, this neutral style makes the experience much less engaging than it could have been.
Aug 2, 2012
83
You come away with an appreciation of the abstraction, scale and daring of Ai's art and, even more, a sense of the living man in his courage, humor and restlessness. It's an invigorating experience.
Jul 28, 2012
80
Journalist and director Allison Klayman doesn't mask her awe of the man, who comes off as a cross between a wise Buddha-figure and Santa Claus - he's made for history, and he's making it.
Aug 16, 2012
75
The best artists - the ones whose work endures and matters and changes the world - are often troublemakers who challenge the status quo. Out of their defiance comes art. Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry, director Alison Klayman's riveting documentary of the esteemed Chinese sculptor/painter/iconoclast, is practically a handbook on social rebellion.
Jul 23, 2012
75
The director's clear-minded approach allows her subject's more challenging aesthetic-political mix to shine through, even if it's at the inevitable expense of her own filmmaking proclivities.
Jul 23, 2012
50
The film is a good start, but such an important artist deserves a more rigorous portrait.
Nov 20, 2012
6
Ai Weiwei is an internationally acclaimed Chinese artist-activist who is provocatively condemning his motherland government for grave social underbellies (in light of an unbalanced economy acceleration) as corruption nonfeasance and misfeasance among officials, systematic injustice, moral languor and freedom repression (a focal point is the aftermath of Wenchuan earthquake in 2008, whose casualties are over 80,000, among which are many children stayed inside shoddily-built school buildings) and valiantly spearheading (not the least in the artist field) a new wave of self-awakening among his fellow compatriots, which has promptly wrought government
Sep 27, 2015
5
Never Sorry is not bad as a documentary, but it seems to be more about showcasing the persona of Ai Wei Wei than it is informative about his art or the issues. If you have heard about this man in the news and want to know more about the controversy, then this is an interesting view, though I would not say it is compelling. Fans of the reality TV style of documentary should enjoy it.
Production Company:
- Expressions United Media
- MUSE Film and Television
- Never Sorry
Release Date:Jul 27, 2012
Duration:1 h 31 m
Rating:R
Tagline:Can an artist change China?
Awards
Sundance Film Festival
• 1 Win & 2 Nominations
News & Documentary Emmy Awards
• 2 Nominations
Cinema Eye Honors Awards, US
• 2 Nominations




























