85
Metascore
30 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 90Paste MagazinePaste MagazineEO seems to be getting at the rhythm of life—up, down, happy, sad, joyous, torturous, cyclical, always changing, never fully understood. That’s how we see ourselves most preciously in EO. We’re never in control, even when we think we are.
- 83The Film StageDavid KatzThe Film StageDavid KatzSkolimowski uses cinema to create a non-headset-required virtual-reality experience of another creature’s life—an empathy machine, if you will.
- 83IndieWireAdam SolomonsIndieWireAdam SolomonsIn Bresson’s version, it’s the humans around the donkey who are the true center of the story. Not so in EO. This is Donkeyvision, and we’re better off for it.
- 80The Hollywood ReporterJordan MintzerThe Hollywood ReporterJordan MintzerDespite a shred of story that’s told episodically, EO, which clocks in at a concise 86 minutes, can be an engrossing experience.
- 80Screen DailyJonathan RomneyScreen DailyJonathan RomneyA potent emotional charge, very contemporary eco-consciousness, and film-making that at its best fairly sizzles in its strangeness mark out EO as an animal film that stands defiantly on its own hooves.
- 80VarietyPeter DebrugeVarietyPeter DebrugeEO is a damning polemic on our relationship to other intelligent species — as free labor, food and companions — as seen through the dewy, wide eyes of a donkey whom we come to adore.
- Eo is a joyful, experimental, and strangely moving piece of filmmaking that doesn’t always take itself seriously—yet it is nothing if not sincere.
- 75Slant MagazineChuck BowenSlant MagazineChuck BowenEO feels freed of plot, free of expectation, driven only by the need to honor its own internal, poetic drive.
- 70SlashfilmRyan LestonSlashfilmRyan LestonSkolimowski's close camera work and gripping story keep us alongside EO every step of the way. We're all rooting for him. And even when scenes veer ever more into the surreal side of things, we can't help but feel connected to the little donkey that could.
- 60The GuardianPeter BradshawThe GuardianPeter BradshawI’m not sure this is my favourite Skolimowski film, but it is engaging in many ways: beautifully photographed, sentimental and surreal in equal measure; and also stubborn – as stubborn as its hero – in its symbolism and stark pessimism.