
Critic Reviews
69
Metascore
Generally Favorable
positive
7(78%)
mixed
2(22%)
negative
0(0%)
Showing 9 Critic Reviews
All Reviews
All Reviews
Metascore
Metascore
Aug 18, 2012
83
The Matchmaker is at heart an unexpectedly complex film about love, but also an examination of Israel in flux, a country with one foot in the past and another in the future – a weight that may never fully vacate Israeli shoulders.
Aug 13, 2012
80
It sounds like a throwback to an earlier, more traditional style of Israeli filmmaking but it instead provides a view of that country that's as satisfyingly eccentric and unexpected as anything we've seen.
Aug 13, 2012
80
This look back at late-'60s Haifa makes for strong, accessible, character-driven drama.
Aug 14, 2012
80
An old-fashioned Mediterranean coming-of-age story set in the young heart of the Levant, The Matchmaker combines the tender tone of a film like "Cinema Paradiso" with a clear-eyed, street-level vantage on Israel's summer of the Six-Day War.
Aug 13, 2012
75
How does a filmmaker tell a Holocaust story that hasn't been told before? The Matchmaker does it by weaving fable with realism, coming-of-age innocence with adult grief, and guilt with romanticism.
Dec 12, 2012
75
This is a sweet, bittersweet comedy, well-executed if perhaps a little heavy on anecdotage. You know who might have made it in the old days? I kept thinking of Woody Allen. You don't know what you want. Woody knows what you want.
Aug 16, 2012
70
The efficient approach and tendency toward broad strokes prevent the movie from taking a deep hold, and Mr. Shafir is a hesitant young actor to have at the center. But, like the title character, Mr. Nesher demonstrates a practical intelligence for making basic connections.
Aug 13, 2012
50
The film ultimately fails to treat history as anything but a string of melodramatic reference points for moody characters haplessly trying to find love.
Aug 14, 2012
40
A former stand-up comic, Miller lends a sense of puckish mischief to his tenderhearted, troubled Cupid, yet everything else about this drama - even the cultural and spirit-of-'68 historical touches - feels like Nesher is simply mashing several stock elements together and gracelessly parading them around.