79
Metascore
9 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 100Christian Science MonitorPeter RainerChristian Science MonitorPeter RainerPhotographic Memory is about the permanence and impermanence of what we choose to preserve: on film and in our heads (which is often the same thing). I would like to think that one day Adrian might look at this documentary and see it as a supreme act of paternal love.
- 91The A.V. ClubNoel MurrayThe A.V. ClubNoel MurrayPhotographic Memory is less wry and more melancholy than McElwee's earlier documentaries; it's a lot like his superb 2003 film "Bright Leaves," which was also concerned with family history and the shifting meaning of images.
- 88Slant MagazineJoseph Jon LanthierSlant MagazineJoseph Jon LanthierRoss McElwee is less anxious of death itself than of finally comprehending the vast faultiness of the life he's lived.
- 88New York PostLou LumenickNew York PostLou LumenickUtterly delightful.
- 80Time OutTime OutMcElwee's quietly reassuring voice dominates the film, but that doesn't mean he can't craft a magnificently eloquent image when he wants to, as in the moment when he frames Adrian, seated in a coffee shop, inside his own reflection in the shop's front window.
- 80Village VoiceNick SchagerVillage VoiceNick SchagerAlternating between time periods and geographic locations, all of it connected by McElwee's narrated thoughts, the film proves a bracing and sometimes uncomfortable peek into private fears and regrets about mortality and missed opportunities. It's also, in its portrait of wayward Adrian, further proof that there's nothing more difficult, frustrating, messy, and insufferable than teenagerdom.
- 70The Hollywood ReporterFrank ScheckThe Hollywood ReporterFrank ScheckThe resulting journey of self-discovery is not exactly profound in its revelations, but as usual with McElwee's efforts the proceedings are enlivened by his droll, witty narration, delivered in a sonorous tone.
- 65For all its obsession with the past, Photographic Memory ends in a simple, genuinely moving interaction between father and son that illustrates McElwee's discovery that memories are nice, but can't be touched and embraced as we can the present.
- 60The New York TimesStephen HoldenThe New York TimesStephen HoldenThe connections made in Photographic Memory are more tentative than those found in Mr. McElwee's earlier films, which also seek answers in roundabout ways while maintaining an acute eye for light, color, space and atmosphere.