91
Metascore
15 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 100Chicago ReaderJonathan RosenbaumChicago ReaderJonathan RosenbaumOrson Welles was so taken with this film that after seeing it he declared Kubrick could do no wrong; not to be missed.
- 100Entertainment WeeklyChris NashawatyEntertainment WeeklyChris NashawatyThe kind of Swiss-watch precision and attention to detail that would eventually get Kubrick labeled Hollywood's most notorious perfectionist.
- 100Austin ChronicleAustin ChronicleAs good as the story and direction are, though, the true strength of The Killing lies in the characters and characterizations.
- Stanley Kubrick was always infatuated with human clockwork, both in terms of what makes each of us tick and how we choreograph our lives, deaths, and sins. The Killing, his big heist movie, suits this obsession perfectly. It is often considered, and rightly, his first masterpiece.
- 100EmpireKim NewmanEmpireKim NewmanEven though he was just staring out, Kubrick instantly mastered the crime genre. A stunning film.
- 88Slant MagazineGlenn Heath Jr.Slant MagazineGlenn Heath Jr.One of the great devils of 1950s American cinema.
- 88Chicago TribuneMichael WilmingtonChicago TribuneMichael WilmingtonForty years later, The Killing has lost little of its punch. It's both vintage '50s noir and a stunning introduction to a killer director. [22 Jul 1998, p.L]
- 80Time OutTime OutCharacteristically Kubrick in both its mechanistic coldness and its vision of human endeavour undone by greed and deceit, this noir-ish heist movie is nevertheless far more satisfying than most of his later work, due both to a lack of bombastic pretensions and to the style fitting the subject matter.
- Thematically, The Killing anticipates themes, motifs and incidents to come in Kubrick’s oeuvre, most famously the notion of master plans undone by human fallibility, that are also to be found in the tales of fate and life’s absurdity of by his mentors Lang and Huston.
- Though The Killing is composed of familiar ingredients and it calls for fuller explanations, it evolves as a fairly diverting melodrama.