SummarySpringsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere chronicles the making of Bruce Springsteen’s 1982 album Nebraska when he was a young musician on the cusp of global superstardom, struggling to reconcile the pressures of success with the ghosts of his past. Recorded on a 4-track recorder in Springsteen’s New Jersey bedroom, the album marked a pivotal time in ... Read More
Directed By:Scott Cooper
Written By:Scott Cooper, Warren Zanes
Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere
Metascore
Mixed or Average
59
User score
Mixed or Average
6.0
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Metascore
Mixed or Average
49% Positive
25 Reviews
25 Reviews
51% Mixed
26 Reviews
26 Reviews
0% Negative
0 Reviews
0 Reviews
Aug 30, 2025
90
For a film at least partly about music, Deliver Me From Nowhere makes effective use of silence, especially in the moments when Springsteen finds himself adrift rather than inspired.
Oct 22, 2025
75
It’s a committed portrait of an artist, with White’s devotion to capturing Bruce’s soul almost overcoming the lack of physical resemblance… And you do eventually get used to that. For he’s not trying to be the definitive Bruce Springsteen, either — just a ghost of a man who was lost, and found what he was looking for in his music.
User score
Mixed or Average
50% Positive
36 Ratings
36 Ratings
31% Mixed
22 Ratings
22 Ratings
19% Negative
14 Ratings
14 Ratings
Dec 9, 2025
10
It's incredible to read certain reviews from critics, incredible... This film is profound, moving, with extraordinary actors. It's about how a work of art is born. The best movie I've seen in the last 10 years.
Oct 30, 2025
10
The movie is truly intense and touching, of a much different level than the usual celebratory biopics. Jeremy Allen superlative, but all the other actors are also very good, starting with Jeremy Strong. The photography is very beautiful, the direction is excellent. Finally a film with a rhythm that gives you time to reflect and be moved.
Oct 22, 2025
70
What Cooper has given audiences here is way more compelling than a live-action greatest-hits compilation.
Oct 28, 2025
60
The Bear’s Jeremy Allen White plays Springsteen in a performance that hits all the right beats, including some enjoyably sweaty, raspy musical set pieces (White sings the numbers himself), without ever elevating the role to anything greater.
Oct 16, 2025
60
If you want American gothic with a side of pancakes, you’ve come to the right place.
Oct 22, 2025
50
Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere has enough good material to make you wish it were better. Unfortunately, it owes debts to the biopic genre that no honest film can pay.
Oct 22, 2025
40
Jeremy Allen White, Jeremy Strong, and especially Stephen Graham do their level best, but they're let down by a bafflingly inept script and unimaginative filmmaking from Scott Cooper.
Oct 26, 2025
10
I am a diligent film freak and a maniacal music lover. I could find nothing wrong with this movie. I judge how good music and movies are by how they move me - emotionally, intellectually, physically. While experiencing this, I felt excitement, fear, longing, sadness, happiness, exhileration, camaraderie, relief. I laughed out loud, I wept, I punched my fist in the air (cause tramps like us, baby we were born to run).
Feb 16, 2026
6
Musicalmente nem é tudo isso, mas a relação entre produção artística e a vida pessoal ficou muito interessante, e a realação com o pai faz tudo valer a pena. Poderia ter mais ênfase nas músicas prontas do que na produção em si, mas não deixa de ser um filme bem interessante, para fãs ou não.
Dec 13, 2025
6
When movie fans sit down to watch a film, they generally have certain expectations in mind, especially when it comes to subjects and individuals whom they think they already know. That’s particularly true when it comes to releases about high-profile public figures, like celebrities and rock stars. However, when those expectations go unmet, audience members may react with surprise, confusion or disappointment. Such is the case for many with the new film biography of rock icon Bruce Springsteen (Jeremy Allen White). This is not the prototypical celebrity hearty-partying, glitzy, glamorous biopic that many viewers have come to expect out of titles in this genre. Rather, it’s a mostly somber, introspective look at the musician during a troubling period in his life and career, a time in the early 1980s when he was learning to cope with success, establish himself as an artist and deal with the ghosts of his past, particularly his relationship with his abusive, neglectful and often-distant father (Stephen Graham). It was a time when he was working on the album Nebraska, a dark and sobering collection of songs that marked a radical departure from the high-energy pop sound he had established on previous LPs. It was also an album that reflected his inner self and the emotional struggles he was going through at the time, one that he wanted to capture those feelings, in part as a work of art and in part as a form of therapy to express himself. And, in creating this album, he wanted it to be raw and unembellished, both in the music, in the way it was recorded and in the way it would be marketed, with no singles, no tour and no press, concerns that troubled his label and his manager (Jeremy Strong). This process also strained relations with his budding romantic interest at the time (Odessa Young), a woman he adored but for whom he was uncertain he could bring to their partnership what he believed was needed to make it work, a reflection of the self-image issues with which he was wrestling. In essence, then, this is more of a movie about depression and mental health matters than it is about the music per se, a noble undertaking, to be sure. But, to a great extent, that’s also where the picture comes up short due to its inability to wrap its arms around that topic as clearly and effectively as it might have, thereby underwhelming the expectations of those hoping that this film would shed valuable light on this subject. To that end, then, “Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere” fails to fulfill the expectations of both those looking for a rock icon biopic and those looking for an insightful take on serious mental health issues, particularly in terms of how they can even affect someone who might otherwise be seen as having it made in life. Granted, the film features fine performances from its cast members, including in the re-created musical sequences, but, thematically speaking, it never quite reaches the depths for which it strives and by becoming somewhat repetitive in its inability to achieve its hoped-for level of profound introspection. Writer-director Scott Cooper appears to have good intentions behind what he’s trying to do here but doesn’t seem up to the challenge of actually pulling it off. One could more aptly title this film as “Darkness on the Edge of Bruce,” but, regrettably, it tends to hover on the edge of things and never gets past the boundaries that this story seeks to strip away.
Dec 22, 2025
3
This film is a very narrow snapshot of Springsteen's life and artistry, specific to a particular time and a few particular moments. Even with such a reduced scope, it somehow feels like not much is happening here.
Nov 8, 2025
2
Wow, what a depressing movie. It wallows in Bruce's Struggles, gives no realm insights into why he struggles and fails to redeem the greatness of the artist. The movie should have finished with his live concert where he plays Born in the USA. His struggles are important to who he is as an artist, but focussed on way too much and made it a very negative experience for the audience and notable no standing applause.
Production Company:
- 20th Century Studios
- Gotham Group
- Night Exterior
- Bluegrass Films
- TSG Entertainment
Release Date:Oct 24, 2025
Duration:1 h 59 m
Rating:PG-13
Awards
Golden Globes, USA
• 1 Nomination
AARP Movies for Grownups Awards
• 1 Win & 2 Nominations
New Jersey Film Critics Circle Awards
• 1 Win & 1 Nomination




























