80
Metascore
7 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 91The PlaylistMarya E. GatesThe PlaylistMarya E. GatesSheldon is a coal miner’s daughter, and her brother is a fourth-generation miner. Coal is intrinsic to her family. This is the story of her people, a celebration of their traditions, a condemnation of an economic system that failed them, and an elegy for a waning way of life.
- 90The New York TimesRobert DanielsThe New York TimesRobert DanielsIn this melancholic, thoughtfully attuned cinematic essay, no mountain is more important than the people who are still confined to the claustrophobic tunnels of the past.
- 80Wall Street JournalKyle SmithWall Street JournalKyle SmithFilmmaker Elaine McMillion Sheldon, a native of the state, has done a breathtakingly expressive job of capturing the strangeness, the beauty and the devastation of her homeland in the poetic, entrancing documentary King Coal.
- 75IndieWireKatie RifeIndieWireKatie RifeKing Coal goes deeper into the cultural roots of the opioid crisis, looking at a region both devastated and nurtured by “the King” and asking what a future without it might look like.
- 75RogerEbert.comMonica CastilloRogerEbert.comMonica CastilloFilmed in Central Appalachia—including the director's home state of West Virginia—King Coal moves beyond shallow impressions of the region with a real love for her neighbors and prodding questions about what it means to identify with an industry that has harmed and exploited generations of families.
- 73Paste MagazineJacob OllerPaste MagazineJacob OllerKing Coal might not be an invigorating, fire-lighting work like Harlan County, USA, but it is still a startling piece of anthropology: An expression of a place and a people, and their local god, ruler and captor.