Critics Scoreboard
All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...
Average Critic Score:




51
(32 sources)




51
(32 sources)
-
91




Entertainment Weekly
Shrewd, tough, and lively -- a junior-league "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest." Read Full Review » -
80




TNT RoughCut
Despite uneven pacing -- Girl, Interrupted deftly collapses then and now to create a very personal film filled with heart-tugs and surprisingly funny moments. Read Full Review » -
75




Charlotte Observer
They have turned a brief, appealing, honest autobiography by Susanna Kaysen into a long, appealing, rather dishonest film. Read Full Review » -
75




Miami Herald
A rare movie, one that manages to be both quiet and electrifying, touching and unnerving. But it is not a great movie, even though its stars deserve for it to be. Read Full Review » -
75





-
75




San Francisco Examiner
In Winona Ryder's case, Girl Interrupted is a showcase in which her brittle, angry portrait shows she has graduated from ingenue to actress. Read Full Review » -
75




Philadelphia Inquirer
The performances in Girl, Interrupted resonate, but the movie does not. Read Full Review » -
70




Los Angeles Times
Top performances keep true-life mental ward tale Girl, Interrupted soaring, despite a script that frequently drifts into genre clichés. Read Full Review » -
67




Austin Chronicle
Jolie's explosive performance surpasses all expectations and renders the film a veritable must-see. Read Full Review » -
67




Seattle Post-Intelligencer
For all its somber heaviness and reverential gravity, it never quite pulls all the elements and themes together. Read Full Review » -
63




Chicago Tribune
The movie -- even though it's based on real events -- seems unsatisfying and unconvincing. Read Full Review » -
63




New York Post
It's an odd mixture of an unsentimental, darkly humorous take on mental illness with the usual Hollywood loony-bin cliches. Read Full Review » -
63





-
63




Chicago Sun-Times
The story, having failed to provide itself with character conflicts that can be resolved with drama, turns to melodrama instead. Read Full Review » -
60




TV Guide
There's very little plot, and director Mangold's attempts to make a connection between the social confusion of the '60s and Susanna's inner turmoil don't really work. Read Full Review » -
60




Variety
A solid central performance by Winona Ryder and a captivating wild turn by Angelina Jolie in the yarn's flashiest role. Read Full Review » -
60




Newsweek
Barring one dreadfully trumped-up climactic scene, they've managed to avoid the usual asylum-movie cliches. Read Full Review » -
50




Village Voice
Contains some nicely restrained turns, like Clea Duval as Kaysen's Oz-obsessed roommate, but mainly it's a showcase for Ryder's winsome victim Read Full Review » -
50




New York Daily News
Unusual in that it spotlights a common but largely unsung variety of teenage female angst. Read Full Review » -
50




The New York Times
A small, intense period piece with a tough-love attitude toward lazy, self-indulgent little girls flirting with madness. Read Full Review » -
50




Film.com
An excellent coming-of-age story that is, for once, and very happily, focussed on a teenage girl. Read Full Review » -
50




San Francisco Chronicle
A sappy, muddled production that misses the jarring tone of the autobiographical book by Susanna Kaysen on which it is based. Read Full Review » -
50




Salon.com
Always worth watching when Angelina Jolie steps to the fore. Somehow, she takes a thuddingly ill-conceived role and turns it into gold Read Full Review » -
50





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48




Mr. Showbiz
Mangold ultimately delivers the same film any number of other Hollywood journeyman could've made from this material, and the results are predictable and stale. Read Full Review » -
40





-
40




Dallas Observer
Doesn't come close to matching the emotional depth and power of Frank Perry's 1962 "David and Lisa," the most involving and affecting film I've ever seen about teenagers and mental illness. Read Full Review » -
40




LA Weekly
Mangold can't escape the fact that instead of someone in the throes of a genuine existential crisis, his star comes off as -- to paraphrase nurse Whoopi Goldberg -- a spoiled, lazy girl who's afraid to face life. Read Full Review » -
30




Film.com
Mangold ultimately can't displace memories of "An Angel at My Table," "Lilith," "The Snake Pit," "I Never Promised You a Rose Garden" and other, stronger accounts of young women placed in mental institutions. Read Full Review » -
30




Film.com
Ends up suffering from the classic diseases of book-to-film adaptation: triteness, overreliance of narration, and a general "need" to impose classic dramatic structure on what is not a particularly dramatic narrative. Read Full Review » -
25




Baltimore Sun
It's as if the book itself has been locked up and institutionalized, forced to conform to a system that all but obliterates its own unique personality. Read Full Review » -
25




Christian Science Monitor
For a movie about people with hugely complicated inner lives, this sadly unconvincing drama stays resolutely on the surface, rarely hinting at anything like an insight or idea. Read Full Review »
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