92
Metascore
7 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 100Village VoiceMichael AtkinsonVillage VoiceMichael AtkinsonIconic in its very grain, the film toggles effortlessly between toast-dry farce and vogueing postwar hipitude, and like the balletic swimmers performing mid-pool state executions, it's a thing of insensible beauty.
- 100Los Angeles TimesKenneth TuranLos Angeles TimesKenneth TuranAlphaville is more than quintessential Godard. Despite its age it's that rare science fiction film that doesn't seem to have dated at all.
- 100New York Magazine (Vulture)Bilge EbiriNew York Magazine (Vulture)Bilge EbiriEvery decade or so, Godard’s film is revered all over again for everything it got right about the future. But for all its influence, Alphaville still looks and feels like no other movie. More than a prophecy, it is poetry.
- 100The New York TimesJ. HobermanThe New York TimesJ. HobermanThe “intellectual banalities” that bored Crowther are so insistently contemporary that “Alphaville” could have been made in 2023. If by some time-traveling Borgesian twist of fate it were, Godard’s film would have been my candidate for the year’s best.
- 91Portland OregonianMarc MohanPortland OregonianMarc MohanDespite the fact that its pace turns somnolent at times, and some of its themes feel somewhat clichéd nearly a half-century on, this revival offers a fantastic entry-point opportunity to one of cinema's singular figures.
- 88RogerEbert.comMatt Zoller SeitzRogerEbert.comMatt Zoller SeitzOne of the most influential science fiction films that most people haven't seen, Jean-Luc Godard's 1965 Alphaville is a combination film noir, social satire and riff on tough-guy movies, set in a world of nearly nonstop night.
- 50The New York TimesBosley CrowtherThe New York TimesBosley CrowtherWhat it comes to is simply that the dazzle of Mr. Godard's cinematic style is not matched by the hackneyed idea of a robot society that is expounded in the script.