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John Cusack, Julianne Moore, Robert Pattinson, and Mia Wasikowska in Maps to the Stars (2014)

Metacritic reviews

Maps to the Stars

68

Metascore

39 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
  • 100
    The TelegraphRobbie Collin
    The TelegraphRobbie Collin
    There’s so much in this seething cauldron of a film, so many film-industry neuroses exposed and horrors nested within horrors, that one viewing is too much, and not nearly enough. Cronenberg has made a film that you want to unsee – and then see and unsee again.
  • 90
    VarietyPeter Debruge
    VarietyPeter Debruge
    “Maps” is the most overtly comedic screenplay Cronenberg has ever directed, but he hasn’t tailored his lensing or editing style to fit. The laughs come anyway.
  • 83
    IndieWireEric Kohn
    IndieWireEric Kohn
    While not the director's canniest piece of filmmaking, it's unquestionably his angriest, politically motivated achievement. Every missive hits its target hard with a comedy-horror combo aimed squarely at the kind of commercial stupidity that Cronenberg has avoided throughout his 45-year career.
  • 83
    The PlaylistOliver Lyttelton
    The PlaylistOliver Lyttelton
    The film is a sickly enjoyable wallow in the scandalous, fucked-up side of showbusiness, and a real return to form for the filmmaker.
  • 80
    CineVueJohn Bleasdale
    CineVueJohn Bleasdale
    A brutal, crackling and savage Hollywood satire Maps to the Stars knows exactly where it's going, carefully breaking every rule in the book. After carefully constructing his crystal kingdom, Cronenberg launches his stones with dark, mischievous joy.
  • 80
    The GuardianPeter Bradshaw
    The GuardianPeter Bradshaw
    The status-anxiety, fame-vertigo, sexual satiety and that all-encompassing fear of failure which poisons every triumph are displayed here with an icy new connoisseurship, a kind of extremism which faces down the traditional objection that films like this are secretly infatuated with their subject.
  • 70
    Film.comJordan Hoffman
    Film.comJordan Hoffman
    Cronenberg’s map doesn’t lead to a satisfying destination in a typical story sense, but it is a remarkable quest. For a movie that has so many problems, it is one of the more watchable ones.
  • 60
    The Hollywood ReporterTodd McCarthy
    The Hollywood ReporterTodd McCarthy
    Cronenberg assumes a distinctly clinical approach to the emotional, social and business shenanigans on display here, a perspective that has brilliantly served some of his overtly psychological, horror and sci-fi pieces but gives this one a brittle and airless feel.
  • 60
    Time Out LondonDave Calhoun
    Time Out LondonDave Calhoun
    What stops David Cronenberg’s grotesque noir Maps to the Stars, written by LA insider Bruce Wagner, from feeling tired is that it’s deliciously odd.
  • 50
    HitfixDrew McWeeny
    HitfixDrew McWeeny
    Julianne Moore seems to be the one person in the film that truly gets the tone right, playing Havana like a person walking a tightrope over a yawning pit of psychosis, her every emotion bubbling up and threatening to knock her off.
  • See all 39 reviews on Metacritic.com
  • See all external reviews for Maps to the Stars

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