A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting on Existence currently has an average rating of 7 out of 10 and has been rated by 42 users on our platform.
The world of A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting on Existence is, in that sense, fragile, but not really moribund... That kind of mulishly stubborn resilience is very human, and also very funny.
Read full review at Roger Ebert...a brilliantly distinctive film that no one else could have made...
Read full review at The Guardian...may be Andersson’s masterpiece, but like any challenging work by an important artist, it’s not for everyone...
Read full review at Empire...Andersson has taken this particular mode of filmmaking about as far as it can probably go [...]. But that mode remains so unique, so powerfully unprecedented, that it’s impossible not to get hits of pleasure...
Read full review at The A.V. ClubThe spirits of Samuel Beckett and Spike Milligan waltz through this beige-green purgatory, a series of arresting static-camera vignettes, pasty of face, deadpan of composition.
Read full review at The GuardianSweden’s Roy Andersson offers a singular take on the human condition in this triumphant trilogy-closer.
Read full review at Little White Lies...[Andersson skaber] en række tableauer, som er blandt hans suverænt bedste.
Read full review at SoundvenueDet er meditativt, beroligende, ofte morsomt på en næsten trodsig måde – og frem for alt så konsekvent udført, at man kun kan begejstres.
Read full review at CinemazoneRoy Andersson har gjort en ovanligt varm och humoristisk film om skam – från 1700-talet fram till våra dagar.
Read full review at Dagens NyheterAnderssons trilogi er et unikt værk og en af de store bedrifter i moderne europæisk artfilm.
Read full review at Filmmagasinet EkkoEtt potentiellt mycket mer kraftfullt budskap än vad det vid första anblick ser ut som.
Read full review at Nöjesguiden