80
Metascore
5 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 100The Hollywood ReporterRobyn BahrThe Hollywood ReporterRobyn BahrUltimately, Sabbath Queen isn’t interested in the headline-grabbing macro conflicts that embroil Jews globally, but the internal culture wars within Judaism itself: fascistic fundamentalism versus reformist progressivism; dominant cishet masculinity versus burgeoning feminine and gender nonconforming voices; hallowed bloodlines versus chosen family. It is one of the best films I’ve seen this year.
- 90The New York TimesElisabeth VincentelliThe New York TimesElisabeth Vincentelli[A] fascinating look at the act of questioning yourself and your family, your surroundings and your decisions.
- 75IndieWireRyan LattanzioIndieWireRyan LattanzioDuBowski’s activist portrait Sabbath Queen is overwhelmingly ambitious in its time-spanning, as searching and curious as its primary subject. We don’t leave the movie with a firm sense of who Amichai is beyond his religious backdrop, but I think that’s the point: Who he is as a person has become muddled and tangled up with the one he’s supposed to represent.
- 70VarietyDennis HarveyVarietyDennis HarveyThis fast-paced, well-shot doc does place its finger on the quickening pulse of an ever-wider gap between liberalizing Western social values and the Orthodox sphere that believes they are antithetical to Judaism. It’s a painful divide, but one that Sabbath Queen helps keep at least partly in the realm of civil argument.
- 67The PlaylistBrian FarvourThe PlaylistBrian FarvourThere’s too much good here that doesn’t deserve to be overlooked, and this is where the film misses the mark.