A Real Pain currently has an average rating of 7 out of 10 and has been rated by 576 users on our platform.
...disparate relatives bring their resentments and their humor as they tour Poland.
Read full review at Chicago Sun Times“We shouldn’t have to pay for train tickets in Poland. This is our country.”
Kieran Culkin proves why he was Succession’s MVP in Jesse Eisenberg’s latest.
Read full review at GamesradarKieran Culkin is heartbreaking and hilarious in Jesse Eisenberg’s A Real Pain.
Read full review at Entertainment WeeklyA beautiful, witty, warm and funny story about pain inherited through generations. Culkin and Eisenberg make one of the best comedy duos in years.
Jesse Eisenberg’s devastating tragicomedy is a must see.
Read full review at NmeJesse Eisenberg’s empathetic comedy about facing the abyss.
Read full review at Slant MagazineWhile Benji and David are versions of characters we've seen Culkin and Eiseneberg play before, it's hard to imagine anyone else inhabiting the two characters better.
Read full review at Common Sense Media...a brilliant portrayal of shifting family dynamics in all its complicated, relatable messiness.
Read full review at Empire...an amusing and compelling inquiry into human pain and suffering.
Read full review at Little White Lies...a combustion of performance styles: Culkin and Eisenberg play extremely to their types.
Read full review at The Guardian...a whip-sharp comedy driven by the rattling verbal sparring between uptight, neurotic David (Eisenberg) and his outgoing, unpredictable cousin Benji (Kieran Culkin).
Read full review at The Guardian...an endearing dramedy written and directed by Eisenberg.
Read full review at The Austin ChronicleIt’s a powerful feeling to witness art that reminds us that all aspects of our existence are valuable, especially our pain.
Read full review at Roger EbertAt times wryly funny, in other moments profoundly sad, it’s a competent but occasionally sedate dramedy that demonstrates Eisenberg’s willingness to buck narrative convention and leave his characters still questing for deeper meaning.
Read full review at Paste MagazineJesse Eisenberg's sophomore film finds balance between its sensitive Holocaust tour narrative and odd-couple comedy with Kieran Culkin.
Read full review at The A.V. Club