The Sisters Brothers currently has an average rating of 6.7 out of 10 and has been rated by 160 users on our platform.
Audiard frames picture perfect shots in this awesome hangout movie. His four leads are all on excellent form, and the story about the adventures of their highly memorable characters is engaging and, for a western, surprisingly unpredictable.
Audiard’s storytelling has an easy swing to it, his dialogue is garrulous and unsentimental, and the narrative is exotically offbeat.
Read full review at The GuardianSometimes violent, often hilarious, and always unpredictable, Jacques Audiard’s dark Western is a terrific yarn about two uncivilised men grappling with the onset of civilisation.
Read full review at Empire...enjoyable revisionist Western...
Read full review at Common Sense Media...it’s Audiard’s gift for showing how pain shapes a person – first glimpsed, albeit mawkishly, in Rust and Bone – that elevates the film from entertaining yarn into a bittersweet tale of brotherly love.
Read full review at Little White LiesJohn C. Reilly and Joaquin Phoenix shine as wild west hitmen who are just smart enough to know they should be smarter, whose quest leads them in unexpected, funny, and surprisingly emotional directions.
Read full review at IgnThe best moments of this rambling, minor-key frontier story... ...are the ones that find vulnerability in rakes and rogues, pulled away from their baser instincts by their consciences, and by the bonds of friendship and family.
Read full review at The A.V. ClubEn bra film om mänsklig ensamhet...
Read full review at Svt KulturnyheternaSærligt forrygende er samspillet mellem John C. Reilly og Joaquin Phoenix som brødrene Sisters, to dusørjægere, der ordner dem, deres chef kommandøren peger på.
Read full review at SoundvenueAudiard nöjer sig fördelaktigt nog med ett mer avskalat formspråk, vilket bidrar till att denna mycket nedblodade och skitiga film doftar förvånansvärt fräscht.
Read full review at Nöjesguiden...en barsk og underholdende gavtyve-western, som slutter i mildt sollys.
Read full review at Filmmagasinet Ekko