49
Metascore
7 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 67Original-CinLiam LaceyOriginal-CinLiam LaceyA good-natured and well-acted small-town drama about midlife renewal, Gary Lundgren’s Phoenix, Oregon is the opposite of topical or urgent. That’s why it can be recommended as a distraction and a slice of comfort food.
- 63Movie NationRoger MooreMovie NationRoger MoorePhoenix, Oregon is “Big Night” in a bowling alley.
- 60VarietyJoe LeydonVarietyJoe LeydonThe sort of movie a lot of us need right now. It’s an undemandingly enjoyable and reassuringly predictable dramedy in which nothing, not even the sourball attitudes of its comically unpleasant malcontents, ever is allowed to get out of hand or unduly strain credibility. But it also is too playfully spiky and unaffectedly down-to-earth to come across as bland pablum.
- 60The New York TimesDevika GirishThe New York TimesDevika GirishIt’s all a bit uneventful, but it works as an endearing portrait of average life: sometimes up, sometimes down, but moving steadily along.
- 50RogerEbert.comMatt Zoller SeitzRogerEbert.comMatt Zoller SeitzIt has a goofy grin on its face from frame one. But it never quite figures out how to pass its good vibrations to the audience.
- 50The Hollywood ReporterJohn DeForeThe Hollywood ReporterJohn DeForeWell cast with actors who help the film overcome an obviously meager budget, Phoenix is as rough at the edges as its protagonist, and will inspire a similar kind of sympathetic response — especially among viewers who've been through a few reversals and know not every rebound has to take the form of a glorious firebird to be worthwhile.
- 30Los Angeles TimesMichael RechtshaffenLos Angeles TimesMichael RechtshaffenAlthough the production establishes the requisite lived-in, small town feel, it has also chosen to take its dramatic cue from the seemingly sedated gaze of its lugubrious, aliens-obsessed protagonist, whom Le Gros portrays with a remarkable economy of expended energy.