Where'd You Go, Bernadette

    Where'd You Go, Bernadette
    2019

    Synopsis

    When architect-turned-recluse Bernadette Fox goes missing prior to a family trip to Antarctica, her 15-year-old daughter Bee goes on a quest with Bernadette's husband to find her.

    Votre Filmothèque

    Cast

    • Cate BlanchettBernadette
    • Billy CrudupElgie
    • Kristen WiigAudrey
    • Judy GreerDr. Kurtz
    • Laurence FishburnePaul Jellinek
    • Emma NelsonBee
    • Zoë ChaoSoo-Lin
    • James UrbaniakAgent Marcus Strang
    • Troian BellisarioBecky
    • Richard RobichauxFloyd the Pharmacist

    Recommandations

    • 67

      Entertainment Weekly

      Linklater, who brought such subtle, generous feeling to films like Boyhood and the Sunset trilogy, feels somehow miscast as the steward of Bernadette‘s willful eccentricities.
    • 60

      The New York Times

      Amusing and sleepy pretty much describe this movie.
    • 60

      TheWrap

      Those who arrive without any preconceptions — or are willing to stray from the novel’s style — will appreciate the assets of a modestly engaging and gently touching dramedy.
    • 58

      IndieWire

      The more engaging question is where Bernadette disappeared to for the two decades before the movie begins. It may not be much of a mystery, but where Bernadette went is far more believable and broadly real a story than where she ends up. It’s a story that’s too complicated for Linklater to tell here.
    • 50

      Rolling Stone

      It’s the human devastation that gets short shrift in a movie that turns the hot, hilarious, out-for-blood Bernadette into the thing she hates most: conventional.
    • 50

      The Hollywood Reporter

      Richard Linklater's 19th feature becomes compelling in its final act, but before that too often appears tonally addled and dramatically dawdling.
    • 50

      Variety

      Linklater, as brilliant a filmmaker as he is, is a kind of Zen rationalist; his shot language and essential humanity invite us to look at Bernadette and think, “You need help.” But that stops the character, even in her baroquely witty lashing out, from becoming a projection of a larger passion.
    • 40

      The Guardian

      It’s the kind of adaptation that is so misjudged that you end up struggling to see why anyone thought it a good idea to adapt in the first place.