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SummaryA choral society's male members enlist in World War I, leaving the demanding Dr. Guthrie to recruit teenagers. Together, they experience the joy of singing while the young boys grapple with their impending conscription into the army.

The Choral

Metascore
60
User score
Generally Favorable
6.7
My Score
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Metascore
39% Positive
9 Reviews
48% Mixed
11 Reviews
13% Negative
3 Reviews
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  • Negative Reviews
Dec 26, 2025
90
The New York Times
A moving account of music as a way of coping with war, as well as keeping it at bay.
Jan 13, 2026
75
Boston Globe
The Brits do this kind of light and dark juggling act better than almost anybody (see “Billy Elliot” or “The Full Monty”), and the filmmakers and their cast deliver a movie that’s perfect for viewing on a lazy Sunday afternoon at the movie theater.
User score
Generally Favorable
70% Positive
7 Ratings
20% Mixed
2 Ratings
10% Negative
1 Rating
  • All Reviews
  • Positive Reviews
  • Mixed Reviews
  • Negative Reviews
Feb 4, 2026
8
msobczak1
When the world is on fire, thank goodness there’s art to temporarily remind us of the beauty of life. This is the heart of The Choral, a WW1 period piece that evokes universal truths about art and the horrors of war. Ralph Fiennes delivers another memorable performance as the arrogant conductor tasked with the impossible. Recommended. detroitcineaste
Jan 14, 2026
7
SandyCameron
An enjoyable if ultimately unsatisfying story, relying too much on music for its climax that most in a general audience will not be familiar with. Unlike the finale of The Kings Speech, where Beethoven's 7th helps create a moving climax, Elgar's The Dream of Gerontius seems to drain it. Curiously, the official trailer prompted tears more readily than the film itself. Of course, it had to be Elgar, as the whole story turns on the anti-German sentiment prevailing at the time. For me, it lost its way with the overdone cameo by Simon Russell-Beale as Elgar, at first sympathetic, but then raging and disapproving. After that, the actual performance of the oratorio seemed flat, and the anti-climax, as we see three of our young singers board a troop train bound for the front, fails to move. But the ensemble is excellent, and the script often witty, and there was just enough bite in the characters and their situations to leaven the tale.
Sep 13, 2025
67
IndieWire
The result is a light, low-key crowdpleaser that occasionally steps into more harrowing territory before neatly spinning right out of it.
Sep 24, 2025
60
Next Best Picture
Anchored by another admirable performance by Fiennes, it mines its milieu effectively enough. Even if the end result doesn’t quite live up to the majesty of Elgar’s opera, or even the truly transformative societal shifts that the Great War wrought on this land, there’s enough to admire about what takes place on screen in this telling to recommend it.
Dec 24, 2025
55
The Daily Beast
A typical provincial British tale about everyday Englishmen and women banding together to accomplish a controversial task against long odds, it’s akin to a warm glass of milk.
Sep 13, 2025
50
The Playlist
It’s a marvel that Bennett crafted this screenplay almost at the age of 90. And his dialogue is often sharp and witty. The scenario is ripe for a captivating and moving drama. And yet, perhaps this was one project that needed a different director at the helm for the material to truly resonate.
Dec 26, 2025
30
Wall Street Journal
Universal conscription for every able-bodied man from 18 to 40 is about to be instituted, and the events of this shallow, cheap and corny story seem unlikely to offer much in the way of comforting memories for those who get sent to the trenches.
See All 23 Critic Reviews
Dec 26, 2025
7
davidlovesfilm
"The Choral" is a moving account of music as a way of coping with war, as well as keeping it at bay that's well-made and compellingly acted, periodically dipping into interesting areas of longing and loss while delivering reliable storytelling. A small Yorkshire town seeks solace from the ravages of the First World War by funneling its pain and anxieties into music in Nicholas Hytner’s poignant drama about community and process. Starring Oscar nominee Ralph Fiennes (The Constant Gardener, Conclave), this heart-stirring period drama from director Nicholas Hytner (The Madness of King George, The Lady in the Van) tells the story of a town grappling with loss, suspicion, and the faint glimmers of hope carried through song during the First World War. Written by Hytner’s longtime collaborator Alan Bennett, the film is less about war’s battlefields and more about its quieter devastations, grief, prejudice, and the small victories of human connection. The year is 1916, and the Great War has bled the town of its men, leaving the once-thriving choral society nearly voiceless. When Dr. Guthrie (Fiennes), a demanding and unconventional choir director, arrives, he scraps their familiar program and insists on staging Edward Elgar’s The Dream of Gerontius. His decision is particularly controversial, given Elgar’s Catholic roots; it unsettles the society’s benefactors, especially the rigidly patriotic mill owner (Alun Armstrong). Guthrie, English but trained in Germany, is immediately perceived as an outsider, distrusted not only for his methods but for the faint whiff of “enemy” culture he represents. To realize his vision, Guthrie begins recruiting the town’s adolescent boys to fill the missing voices, dragging them from factories, fields, and schoolrooms into the echoing halls of the choir loft. Their youth and inexperience clash with his exacting standards, but slowly, under his relentless discipline, they discover not just harmony, but a kind of resilience that prepares them for the darker trials looming over their inevitable conscription into the war itself. The film uses this clash of wills and voices to explore how art can serve as both a unifying force and a dividing line. Many townspeople cling to the safety of tradition, fearful of Guthrie’s foreign-trained techniques and elitist bearing. Class prejudice simmers in every rehearsal, as the sons of mill workers and the privileged few are forced to stand side by side, their voices blending even as their families remain divided by station. In this way, The Choral becomes a parable about suspicion of outsiders, the corrosive effects of rigid hierarchy, and the stubborn resilience of community when music bridges divides. Fiennes, in one of his most restrained and affecting performances, embodies Guthrie with a stiff upper lip, all clipped precision and authority, yet allows glimpses of vulnerability, anxieties, secrets, and even shame to ripple beneath the surface. His Guthrie is as much in search of salvation as his pupils, though he never admits it outright. He is joined by British stage stalwarts Simon Russell Beale and Roger Allam, whose gravitas adds texture to the ensemble. Hytner’s direction is unfussy but elegant, allowing Bennett’s writing to draw out the irony and tragedy of wasted youth being prepared for a stage they may never live to see. There’s a bleakness to the film, yes, but also a transcendent beauty in the choral scenes themselves, where the music briefly drowns out the war drums. These moments, shot with a reverence that makes them feel almost liturgical, remind us that in times of chaos, art becomes both a sanctuary and a form of resistance. If there is a flaw, it lies in the pacing: Hytner occasionally lingers too long on the town’s internecine squabbles, making the middle section drag. Yet even in these slower moments, the tension between patriotism, prejudice, and personal ambition reveals how easily fear can fracture communities. "The Choral" doesn’t reinvent the period drama, but it resonates because of what it reflects to us. Beneath the hymns and the candlelit halls, the story exposes how suspicion of outsiders, rigid class prejudice, and fear of change can divide people just as surely as war itself. And in the end, it is the music, soaring, defiant, and achingly beautiful, that provides the film’s catharsis.
Jan 17, 2026
5
KenR
The Choral – Looking Good Yet Fails To Fully Impress This movie tries to be everything to everyone, a rather impossible benchmark to hold. Its production values are good, the settings, cinematography, performers, and the music are all winners – but what good is it if the script and direction are lacking that necessary something? The youthful characters are young people preparing for life in the early years of the 1st WW, with all experiencing a level of sexual frustration and strained relationships. Maybe the balance between an agnostic homosexual writer and a non-believing Jewish homosexual director perhaps left out some vital character connections along the way? The beautiful young black female Salvation Army street singer with the Angelic voice, seems to bear the brunt of the young (and older) men’s advances, yet appears to be very much a super-strong ‘liberated’ woman for the era she inhabits (maybe that was part of the BBCs woke ‘diversity’ units box- ticking that’s somewhat evident throughout today’s product). The older players are well cast and perform their duties convincingly, but a rather overly ‘colorful’ and pompous Elgar appears to be a caricature of his famous ‘Pomp and Circumstance’. This also childishly resembles a form of ‘subtle Empire bashing’. Elgar, we are told, had somewhat of a solitary and introspective personality with low self-esteem due to his humble family background, and even wished his Pomp and Circumstance had been known for much gentler lyrics to the popular nationalistic ones. He was also man devastated by his wife’s death so maybe not well represented within this script. This had the makings **** modern classic but settles instead for a cheaper form of sensationalistic melodrama.
See All 4 User Reviews
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  • Sony Pictures Classics
  • BBC Film
  • Screen Yorkshire
  • Head Gear Films
  • Metrol Technology
  • London Theatre Company
  • Gerontius Productions
  • DJ Films
  • Free Range Films
Dec 25, 2025
1 h 53 m
R
They were divided by war. He united them in song.
British Film Designers Guild Awards
• 1 Win & 1 Nomination
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