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:




57
(39 sources)




57
(39 sources)
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88




Chicago Tribune
The Human Stain has those qualities we often want but rarely see in our films: intelligence and ambition, decency and humanity, poetry and pity, fire and ice. Watch it and weep. Read Full Review » -
88




Chicago Sun-Times
Most movie characters are like Greek gods and comic book heroes: We learn their roles and powers at the beginning of the story, and they never change. Here are complex, troubled, flawed people, brave enough to breathe deeply and take one more risk with their lives. Read Full Review » -
80




Film Threat
Each scene is enticing, draws you in, and tackles the verbal foreplay from the book nicely. Read Full Review » -
80




Dallas Observer
Hopkins' beautifully detailed, deeply felt acting remains a joy to watch...But an even greater pleasure, at least for my money, is Kidman's dark turn as Faunia Farley. Read Full Review » -
80





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80





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75




Rolling Stone
The Human Stain is heavy going. It's the flashes of dramatic lightning that make it a trip worth taking. Read Full Review » -
75




Philadelphia Inquirer
The sequences with the melancholy Faunia are monochromatic and those with Lester perfunctory. Benton too neatly -- and too hastily -- wraps up a story that would surely exert more power if it were messy and unrushed. Read Full Review » -
75




Baltimore Sun
Benton's version of The Human Stain feels under-energized and modest to a fault. Yet it still delivers a genuine sad sting. Read Full Review » -
75




Seattle Post-Intelligencer
The best thing the movie has going for it is Kidman's performance. Read Full Review » -
75




New York Post
Though Human Stain is sometimes too chaotic and sometimes too neat, it boasts some of the best acting of the year. Read Full Review » -
70




Chicago Reader
Director Robert Benton allows the cast... to shine, but I was left wondering why such a very literary construction as this needed to be made into a movie. Read Full Review » -
70




Washington Post
You feel as though you're watching a filmed play rather than a movie. Nothing wrong with that. But The Human Stain, directed more than well enough by Robert Benton, doesn't reach the emotional pitch it's shooting for. Read Full Review » -
70




The New York Times
The film's powerful individual scenes seem like excerpts from a missing whole, well-appointed rooms in a house whose beams and girders have been cut away. Read Full Review » -
70




The Hollywood Reporter
The thriller aspects of the story and the overall solid level of acting -- including a sexy performance from a red-hot Nicole Kidman -- keep the audience interested but never fully emotionally involved. Read Full Review » -
70




The Onion (A.V. Club)
Roth's novel was at heart a howl of rage against a corrupt, hypocritical, judgmental world, but Benton's austere adaptation--stunningly shot by the late Jean-Yves Escoffier--speaks largely in muted tones. Read Full Review » -
67




Portland Oregonian
A suffocating quality stifles it, a sense that we're watching artistic excellence and important ideas being enacted rather than realized. Read Full Review » -
67




Austin Chronicle
The darker stuff begs to be handled less delicately than this dance, and in that respect the director stumbles. Read Full Review » -
63




ReelViews
The film's two big flaws are readily apparent: a clunky screenplay and the miscasting of the lead character. Read Full Review » -
60




Newsweek
For all its shortcomings, The Human Stain is an honorable, sometimes moving attempt, better at evoking the poignancy of Silk's autumnal affair than exploring the moral ambiguities of his deception. Read Full Review » -
60




Salon.com
It's melodrama that rises to the complexity of art. The Human Stain takes a complex work of literary art and reduces it to tasteful melodrama. Its smallness is simply crushing. Read Full Review » -
60





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58




Entertainment Weekly
The Human Stain is, contradictorily, drained of color by the spotlight turned on its charismatic leads. Between the labors of simplifying the story for the screen and accommodating the stardust of world-class actors, an essentially, uniquely American tragic hero and heroine are bleached of real American tragedy. Read Full Review » -
50




Miami Herald
Lives or dies by your ability to buy the sight of Anthony Hopkins and Nicole Kidman snuggling in bed and enjoying hot, torrid sex. This may seem like a superficial approach to such a lofty, serious movie, but it is an insurmountable problem. Read Full Review » -
50




LA Weekly
As both book and film, The Human Stain comes to vividest life in its extended flashbacks, which offer the most compelling exploration of Roth's perennial themes of self-loathing and reinvention. Read Full Review » -
50




Christian Science Monitor
The movie is a disappointment -- not a stain on Benton's career as a serious and literate director, but only half the powerful drama it might have been. Read Full Review » -
50




The New Yorker
All we are left with, in essence, is an unlikely love affair, performed by two actors so remorselessly skilled that, by the end, you can't see the love for the skill. [3 November 2003, p. 104] Read Full Review » -
50




New York Magazine
Roth's deep-dish introspection would be difficult for any movie to achieve, but with the right cast and more passion, we might have been pulled right into Coleman's psychic prison. The Human Stain isn't a movie of ideas, and it's too inert to be a probing character study. No stain is left behind, just a wan watermark. Read Full Review » -
50




Slate
The movie coalesces into nothing: It's one of those films that makes you say, "That was powerful. Now what the hell was it about?" Read Full Review » -
50




The New Republic
Meyer's screenplay has been called unsuccessful, and I agree; but, without glossing some bumps that are his doing, I'd say that in this case the trouble with the screen adaptation is the novel. Read Full Review » -
50




Boston Globe
Benton has laid bare a great author's creaky plotting only to deliver a melodrama with bookish pretensions. Read Full Review » -
50




San Francisco Chronicle
Falls victim to a fatal lack of narrative drive, suspense and drama. Kidman and Hopkins are wrong for their roles, and that, combined with a pervading inevitability, cuts the film off from any sustained vitality. The result is something admirable but lifeless. Read Full Review » -
50




New York Daily News
The mordant humor and far-reaching observations of the book don't come across in Robert Benton's "Masterpiece Theatre"-style direction. Read Full Review » -
40




Los Angeles Times
Etched in acid, stoked by wrath, it is one of those big-ideas novels that fits perfectly in human hands, where it can be savored over time or wrestled with page by page. But big ideas don't always size down for movie screens. Read Full Review » -
40




TV Guide
There's so much less to the film than the novel: Nicholas Meyer's screenplay fails to capture the intricate subtleties of its subject and replaces Roth's moral scope with a moralizing tone. Read Full Review » -
40




Village Voice
Playing the young Coleman with the requisite intelligence and ambiguity, Wentworth Miller contributes the sole viable characterization. Read Full Review » -
40




Wall Street Journal
The book presented several special, perhaps even insuperable, problems for adaptation to the screen, and the movie, which was directed by Robert Benton from a screenplay by Nicholas Meyer, hasn't solved them. Read Full Review » -
38




USA Today
It's problematic enough that the movie's lead characters are unlikable. But worse is the blackening of The Human Stain with a trite and forced plot, uninteresting digressions and clunky direction. Read Full Review » -
30





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