61
Metascore
10 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 80The Hollywood ReporterLeslie FelperinThe Hollywood ReporterLeslie FelperinAlthough Coup! has a small cast and unfolds mostly in a secluded mansion during the 1918 influenza pandemic, it packs a lot of flavor, suspense and droll comedy into its slim 97-minute running time, making it fun enough to deserve an exclamation point in its title.
- 75St. Louis Post-DispatchKatie WalshSt. Louis Post-DispatchKatie WalshAnchored by its leads, Coup! is a tasty morsel of social commentary about problems that continue to plague our world.
- 70Arizona RepublicBill GoodykoontzArizona RepublicBill GoodykoontzIt’s a dark comedy about class warfare, government overreach and infectious disease. It’s a lot more fun than that sounds.
- 60The GuardianXan BrooksThe GuardianXan BrooksThe film is fun, broad and exuberant, like a primetime Marxist sitcom, although it does feel indebted to a number of recent, better films around the same theme.
- 50Slant MagazineWilliam RepassSlant MagazineWilliam RepassThe film has little to add on the subject of the interplay of politics and infectious disease, then or now.
- 50RogerEbert.comGlenn KennyRogerEbert.comGlenn KennyAlthough the milieu of “Coup!” speaks allegorically to the pandemic of our own century, it does so softly; the movie is ultimately more a tale of class warfare than public health.
- 42IndieWireChristian BlauveltIndieWireChristian BlauveltCoup! isn’t objectionable for its politics, it’s objectionable for trying to deny them. Unless its politics are just that muddled, and then Stark and Schuman have no idea at all how to express whatever it is they’re trying to say.
- 40The New York TimesNatalia WinkelmanThe New York TimesNatalia WinkelmanThis implication that virility trumps effeteness is, amid an otherwise straightforward comedy, an uncomfortably regressive way to tell the story of how people vie for power in hard times.