The Last Black Man in San Francisco currently has an average rating of 6.4 out of 10 and has been rated by 98 users on our platform.
It’s a tribute to the notion of home that we all carry. This is one of the year’s best films.
Read full review at Roger EbertThere’s a lot of love in Adam Newport-Berra’s handsome, almost painterly camerawork.
Read full review at EmpireA quirky approach gives Joe Talbot’s fact-based drama the feel of a fable.
Read full review at The Guardian...one of the most original movies of the year (...) a wide-reaching story that confines itself to a specific time and place.
Read full review at The Austin Chronicle...t’s not a movie for admiring in freeze frame; it’s the kind you fall into with your whole heart and emerge from feeling, for two hours at least, what it is to fully be transported by the magic of film.
Read full review at Entertainment WeeklySome movies you can shake off by the time you exit the multiplex and you’re back to your life, thinking about the rest of your day or evening. This is not one of those movies.
Read full review at Chicago Sun TimesIt’s a film that’s as sad for its city as it is for all of the people who can no longer afford to live there. San Francisco may have a short memory, but it’s just produced another movie that will be hard to forget.
Read full review at Indie Wire...this tale of an ordinary man crushed by extraordinary pressures may be the best movie about San Francisco ever made.
Read full review at Common Sense MediaIt’s an absolute stunner and one of the year’s very best films.
Read full review at Ready Steady Cut...det kan være [svært] at sætte de helt rigtige ord på et værk, der er så helt igennem sit eget.
Read full review at SoundvenueSlående vacker film med en poetisk ådra.
Read full review at AftonbladetDer er tunge emner som svigt, længsel, racisme og gentrificering på spil, men alligevel formår Joe Talbot at indgyde en underliggende tone af håb.
Read full review at Filmmagasinet Ekko