Although it stumbles a bit at the end with a self-aware redemption that isn’t entirely earned or particularly in character, Diamond Tongues is still a brilliant and realistic portrait of the young artist as a bitter borderline failure.
Diamond Tongues is a witheringly funny but still sympathetic portrait of a show business “type.”
75
The PlaylistKevin Jagernauth
The PlaylistKevin Jagernauth
Diamond Tongues is refreshing because it isn't an indictment of a demographic, or even of Edith, but is a portrait of a young woman whose ambition has curdled into something more nasty along the way.
75
Slant MagazineNick Prigge
Slant MagazineNick Prigge
Throughout, Pavan Moondi and Brian Robertson purposely indulge Hollywood formula only to subvert it.
The prickly tone is a difficult balancing act, and Diamond Tongues may settle for being a softer-hearted film than its most cynical scenes portend. But it has a palpable affection for Toronto’s cultural scene and for Ms. Goldstein.