58
Metascore
34 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 88PremierePremiereThe perfect antidote to the post-holiday blues. It's exciting, well-acted, touching, and genuine.
- 75ReelViewsJames BerardinelliReelViewsJames BerardinelliThe battle scenes are well choreographed and contain enough uncertainty to make them genuinely exciting, but one would expect no less from a man who has overseen Civil War engagements (Glory) and Japanese strife (The Last Samurai).
- 63TV Guide MagazineTV Guide MagazineA Holocaust film that's light on sentimentality but high on human drama, Defiance tells one of those remarkable survival stories that's so incredible it must be true.
- 63USA TodayClaudia PuigUSA TodayClaudia PuigThe tale of the resistance movement in Belorussia is undeniably inspiring and ideally suited for a cinematic rendering. But Defiance resists bold, passionate storytelling and delivers something rather conventional.
- 60The Hollywood ReporterMichael RechtshaffenThe Hollywood ReporterMichael RechtshaffenThat butting of heads, as performed by actors as strong and soulful as Craig and Schreiber, lends Defiance an emotional charge, even as the film itself struggles dramatically to find its way out of those woods.
- 60NPRBob MondelloNPRBob MondelloIt's an inspiring story, if one that doesn't need quite as much poetic inspiration as Ed Zwick's movie insists on giving it, with dialogue that's too often ornate and parable-inflected.
- 60Village VoiceVillage VoiceThere are subtitles and vaguely East European accents; there is romance and rebirth, tears and regular pauses for gallows humor (at which we Jews are known to be very good, on account of our long history of persecution).
- 50VarietyTodd McCarthyVarietyTodd McCarthyA potentially exceptional story is told in a flatly unexceptional manner.
- 50The New York TimesA.O. ScottThe New York TimesA.O. ScottDefiance presents itself as an explicit correction of the cultural record, a counterpoint to all those lachrymose World War II tales of helplessness and victimhood. This is a perfectly honorable intention, but the problem is that, in setting out to overturn historical stereotypes of Jewish passivity, Mr. Zwick (who co-wrote the screenplay with Clayton Frohman) ends up affirming them.
- 50Los Angeles TimesKenneth TuranLos Angeles TimesKenneth TuranDefiance has some genuine strengths but also some weaker elements, and these opposing traits battle it out kind of the way the contentious Bielskis fought not only the Germans but each other.