47
Metascore
47 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 70The picture is sometimes wayward and unwieldy, its dialogue creaky and awkward, like an amateur’s attempt at scrimshaw.... But in a movie climate rife with superhero reboots and rehashings of childhood favorites, it’s a small marvel that In the Heart of the Sea exists at all.
- 60The GuardianJordan HoffmanThe GuardianJordan HoffmanDirector Ron Howard does a solid job of getting the smell of salt off the page and into the picture. The first half works quite well simply as a procedural, but when the action comes we run into trouble. The well-earned seriousness is washed away as we’re broadsided by B-movie tropes.
- There’s so much incident crammed into this tale of misfortune that there’s never quite enough time to truly tangle with the sheets and sails of its meaning.
- 60Total FilmMatt MaytumTotal FilmMatt MaytumGiven the weighty themes of Moby Dick, In The Heart Of The Sea doesn't have a lot going on behind the outward action. The composite parts are in fine working order; it's the sum that's slightly lacking.
- 60Screen DailyFionnuala HalliganScreen DailyFionnuala HalliganFluid, shifting and tense, the action here easily outstrips the film’s basic set-up (man tests himself against nature, is humbled), which can feel like unconvincing filler between surges of effects work.
- 60Village VoiceAmy NicholsonVillage VoiceAmy NicholsonHoward is great at capturing the timbre of the ship, the creaks and snaps and the whir of the hemp lines, and the sonar clicks of the whales strategizing below. All his sound and fury has a befuddling purpose. His emotional climax is about, well, disaster insurance.
- 50The Hollywood ReporterTodd McCarthyThe Hollywood ReporterTodd McCarthyA sort of maritime Donner Party, In the Heart of the Sea is a rugged but underwhelming true-life drama of a cursed 19th century whaling voyage.
- 50The PlaylistRodrigo PerezThe PlaylistRodrigo PerezVisual daring is nice, but it means little in the end when the ultimately safe and harmless story never rocks the boat.
- 45TheWrapAlonso DuraldeTheWrapAlonso DuraldeLovers of spectacle for spectacle’s sake will come away from the film with many discrete sequences to admire, but there’s not enough of a human element to bridge them together. In terms of its lasting power, In the Heart of the Sea roars in like a great tide, but then just as quickly dissipates.
- 40VarietyJustin ChangVarietyJustin ChangIn the Heart of the Sea feels stiff and unconvincing, weirdly devoid of texture, and populated by ciphers who speak primarily in the leaden language of exposition.