DVD / Blu-ray
The movie Wonderstruck is already released on Cinema, VOD, DVD and Blu-ray in the USA.
Based on 18 reviews, Wonderstruck gets an average review score of 74
Todd Haynes is back with his past muse Julianne Moore, but it’s her junior co-stars who hold the spotlight in this enthralling adaptation of Brian Selznick’s illustrated novel for young readers.
2740d ago
'Wonderstruck' embraces so many shimmery, evanescent ideas, it’s a marvel that any one picture—let alone one you can take your kids to—can hold them.
2740d ago
There is so much packed in here; Wonderstruck is simultaneously the densest and loosest film Haynes has made. And, like many stories based on books for children, much of it makes more emotional than logical sense.
2740d ago
Mr. Selznick’s emphasis on wonder...can feel bullying, as if he were demanding delight instead of earning it. Yet even as he follows Mr. Selznick’s narrative lead, Mr. Haynes quietly and touchingly makes Wonderstruck his own because the wonder of the film isn’t in its story but in its telling.
2740d ago
Wonderstruck is another emotional and visually gorgeous outing from director Todd Haynes.
2740d ago
Haynes has made a lovely wish-fulfillment movie, and you do not have to believe it, to be struck by wonder.
2740d ago
Wonderstruck is a tender study of three children yearning to find their place.
2740d ago
You could turn the sound off, I suppose, but, as a guy once noted, you might be left with no idea of what’s going on.
2740d ago
Wonderstruck gorgeously mismatches Todd Haynes to the author behind Hugo.
2740d ago
'Carol' director switches things up with kids' film about two deaf youngsters whose stories intertwine decades apart.
2740d ago
Noah Baumbach’s wry family portrait, and Todd Haynes’s historical study of parallel lives.
2740d ago
In Wonderstruck, two family-friendly period tales with cute kids aren't better than one.
2740d ago
For all the story’s cosmic echoes across the ages, the pacing just feels off. Still, the approach is inventive.
2740d ago
Despite what the title suggests, “Wonderstruck” represents a rare disappointment from master filmmaker Todd Haynes.
2740d ago
His last film was the wholly adult, sweeping lesbian romance “Carol,” but Todd Haynes’ new film “Wonderstruck,” out Friday, seems squarely aimed at thoughtful kids.
2740d ago
The film is a paean to the 20th century's moving image as well the invisible, Oz-like figure of the collector-as-curator.
2740d ago
Todd Haynes' adaptation of a children's novel by Brian Selznick ('The Invention of Hugo Cabret') is a lovingly crafted adventure of innocence that winds up being less than the sum of its parts.
2740d ago
Carol director Todd Haynes latest, set in both 1920s and 1970s New York, has nice details but suffers from a glib tone and some preposterous plotting.
2740d ago