Being the Ricardos

    Being the Ricardos
    2021

    Synopsis

    Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz face a crisis that could end their careers and another that could end their marriage.

    Your Movie Library

    Cast

    • Nicole KidmanLucille Ball
    • Javier BardemDesi Arnaz
    • J.K. SimmonsWilliam Frawley
    • Nina AriandaVivian Vance
    • Tony HaleJess Oppenheimer
    • Alia ShawkatMadelyn Pugh
    • Jake LacyBob Carroll Jr.
    • Linda LavinOlder Madelyn Pugh
    • Ronny CoxOlder Bob Carroll
    • John RubinsteinOlder Jess Oppenheimer

    Recommendations

    • 88

      New York Post

      I’ve always had my reservations about Sorkin as a director. His scripts tend to be better than his final products. Those druthers started to fade with the moving “Trial of the Chicago 7” and are now completely gone after “Being the Ricardos.” His vision of ‘50s TV production is spot-on — nostalgic, quick, boozy, but without the glamor of Hollywood movie-making.
    • 80

      Empire

      The things Sorkin is criticised for — grand speeches, an earnest streak — are the things that make his work sing when the context is right. The drama of this legendary TV couple gives him plenty of material to do some of his best work.
    • 75

      USA Today

      While it lacks a strong overall narrative focus, "Ricardos" makes the most of a strong supporting cast and Sorkin’s excellent, banter-filled script.
    • 70

      The Hollywood Reporter

      Anyone curious about the mechanics of a pioneering sitcom will be entertained by Being the Ricardos, and there’s no denying that the performances offer much to savor. I just wish there was more of a sense of the director serving the subject rather than making the subject serve him.
    • 50

      Consequence

      It’s just one symptom of the disease afflicting Being the Ricardos, which tries too hard to pack too much in, and ends up incapable of saying much at all as a result, which is baffling, because it’s such a talky movie. There’s a great film to be made about these two iconic television talents and their respective egos. Unfortunately, Sorkin’s own ego casts too large a shadow here for us to be able to see it.
    • 50

      IndieWire

      While the filmmaker’s affection for full circle moments can be charming, within the context of “Being the Ricardos,” it all feels like a cheat. The film might not opt to get as obvious as Lucy muttering to herself, “Yes, I do love Lucy!,” but it gets damn well close, and that’s sillier than anything Ball ever dreamed up.
    • 50

      Slant Magazine

      Like all Aaron Sorkin-penned characters, this film’s version of Lucille Ball is a mouthpiece for his brand of smarmy, know-it-all sarcasm.
    • 40

      IGN

      A film about so many different things that it ends up about none of them, Aaron Sorkin’s Being the Ricardos is visually inert, and features an emotionally stifled performance from Nicole Kidman as the lively Lucille Ball. Javier Bardem brings energy to Desi Arnaz, but it isn’t enough to pick the disjointed pieces up off the floor.

    Lists