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:




69
(33 sources)




69
(33 sources)
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100





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90




Salon.com
Curran, his actors and screenwriter Ron Nyswaner have made an old-fashioned melodramatic epic that, as steeped as it is in the language and tradition of old movies, is never less than thrummingly alive. Read Full Review » -
89





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88




Philadelphia Inquirer
The Painted Veil is rich with history and heartbreak. It's stirring stuff. Read Full Review » -
88




Premiere
If The Painted Veil ultimately lacks some of the novelty and ambition of the year's best pictures, it still ranks as one of 2006's quiet gems. Read Full Review » -
88




USA Today
The Painted Veil is a welcome addition to the slate of holiday movies, particularly for those drawn to intriguing tales of multi-dimensional characters in exotic settings. Read Full Review » -
83




Baltimore Sun
No one has caught the pride, remorse and pain of an unloved and possibly unlovable husband better than Edward Norton in The Painted Veil. Read Full Review » -
83




Entertainment Weekly
The always surprising Watts creates a woman at once contemporary and retro. And Norton, as a producer as well as star, concedes enough space for Schreiber and the effortlessly fascinating Jones to earn their own spotlights. Read Full Review » -
75




Christian Science Monitor
The movie has a lush mysteriousness that represents a bygone, almost antique style of romanticism. It bears almost no resemblance to the current crop of mostly rat-a-tat movies. To view it is to enter a time warp, and there is some pleasure in stepping back into the languor. Read Full Review » -
75




Miami Herald
Norton isn't the first guy who comes to mind when you think ''period piece,'' but he's starred in two such films this year (in addition to The Painted Veil, he stars in "The Illusionist"), and he is terrific in both. Read Full Review » -
75




TV Guide
John Curran's pretty melodrama rubs off a few of the barbed edges from W. Somerset Maugham's 1925 novel about love and infidelity in a time of cholera, but no matter: the centerpiece is Naomi Watts' outstanding portrayal of an adulteress redeemed. Read Full Review » -
75




Rolling Stone
The Painted Veil has the power and intimacy of a timeless love story. By all means, let it sweep you away. Read Full Review » -
75




ReelViews
A lot takes place during The Painted Veil's two-hour running length, but most of what happens occurs within the hearts and minds of the leads. Read Full Review » -
75




New York Daily News
The Painted Veil may begin too slowly, but it also ends too soon. Read Full Review » -
75




Chicago Tribune
The Chinese locations ache with beauty. And when Watts and Norton focus, intently, on Maugham's often dazzlingly vindictive characters, The Painted Veil really does feel like a story worth filming a third time. Read Full Review » -
75




Seattle Post-Intelligencer
It's by far the most faithful of the three versions, and beyond this integrity it also offers an ensemble of graceful performances and an epic evocation of 1920s China -- though, like its predecessors, it's far from a perfect crystallization of the novel. Read Full Review » -
70




Chicago Reader
This handsome period drama is a big step up for director John Curran (We Don't Live Here Anymore), who shot in China with predominantly Chinese crews. Norton and Schreiber seem too American to be English colonials, but Watts navigates a challenging transformation (in a role first played by Greta Garbo in 1934. Read Full Review » -
70




Village Voice
Bolstered by a strong ensemble-- "Infamous's" Toby Jones as a deputy commissioner gone native, and a wonderfully wrinkled Diana Rigg as a Mother Superior, speaking up for disillusioned decency--and by the ecstatic cinematography of Stuart Dryburgh, The Painted Veil lifts Maugham's story clear of its prissy, attenuated spirituality, and into genuine passion. Read Full Review » -
70




The Hollywood Reporter
The film is unusual in that it is a co-production with the Chinese. Whatever difficulties this imposed on the Western filmmakers, the reward is a period film that feel authentic to its time and place. Read Full Review » -
70




The New York Times
Whether through craft or constitution, Mr. Norton invests Walter with a petty cruelty that makes his character's emotional thaw and Kitty's predicament all the more poignant. Read Full Review » -
70




New York Magazine
The movie makes for a good old-fashioned wide-screen wallow. Norton isn't remotely credible, but Toby Jones is dandy as a sleazeball with a core of decency, and Watts is so open, so soulfully petulant, so transcendentally pretty, that even Maugham might reconsider the pleasures of the flesh. Read Full Review » -
67




Portland Oregonian
Despite the rich, atmospheric textures, Norton's artificiality, Watts' unlikability, and a plot comprised of one melodramatic wrinkle after another all contrive to frustrate our empathy. Read Full Review » -
67




The Onion (A.V. Club)
While the film remains intelligent and transporting, a gorgeous travelogue into another time and place, it nonetheless feels like it's going through the motions, applying period gloss to a story that needs to be more tactile. Read Full Review » -
63




New York Post
Despite a fierce lead performance by Naomi Watts, The Painted Veil is a quaintly bloodless, picture-postcard adaptation of W. Somerset Maugham's 1925 China-set novel - more Merchant Ivory than David Lean. Read Full Review » -
63




The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
The whole affair seems curiously bloodless and often more torpid than torrid. Read Full Review » -
63




Boston Globe
Curran is a talented director, especially where his actors are concerned. His previous movie, "We Don't Live Here Anymore," an adaptation of two Andre Dubus stories, was another literary adultery drama featuring Watts. The Painted Veil doesn't achieve the fire that characterized that film. Read Full Review » -
63




Charlotte Observer
The result is a beautiful painting come to stately, intermittent life. Read Full Review » -
60




Empire
Handsomely crafted, with meticulous performances, yet it plays out drily and in monotone. Read Full Review » -
60




Los Angeles Times
The Painted Veil has all the elements in place to be a great epic, but it fails to connect, to paraphrase Maugham's contemporary E.M. Forster, the prose with the passion. It's impeccable, but leaves you cold. Read Full Review » -
60




Variety
Intelligent scripting, solid thesping and eye-catching location shooting aren't enough to make a compelling modern film of The Painted Veil. Read Full Review » -
50





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50




Washington Post
The result is a movie that feels weirdly disconnected from reality. Read Full Review » -
50




Film Threat
Overall, Norton's effect and Watts' able portrayal are not enough to move the misogyny of the narrative. Read Full Review »
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