84
Metascore
24 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 90The Hollywood ReporterLovia GyarkyeThe Hollywood ReporterLovia GyarkyeSavanah Leaf’s Earth Mama is a melancholic story transformed into a precious portrait by the director’s generous and nurturing eye. She digs into the familiar landscape of a Black mother facing an oppressive legal system and pulls from it the most unexpected and humanizing details. She observes them with a loving curiosity, and then asks viewers to do the same.
- 89TheWrapRonda Racha PenriceTheWrapRonda Racha PenriceBy putting a mirror to Gia and placing us in her feet, shoes or not, Leaf beckons viewers to contemplate how contemporary society fails its Gias every single day, to face how this cycle of poverty continues, and to understand that Gia and women like her can’t conquer it alone.
- 88Slant MagazineGreg NussenSlant MagazineGreg NussenDespite Earth Mama’s bleak subject matter, it exudes a beatific warmth, in large part because Leaf takes remarkable pains to dramatize a web of solidarity between a group of Black women alongside her depiction of the very system that disenfranchises them.
- 85Paste MagazineNatalia KeoganPaste MagazineNatalia KeoganThere’s still an element of unshakable realism embedded in the film’s core, owed greatly to the largely non-professional Bay Area actors that form Gia’s immediate social circle and Nomore’s resonant performance. But Earth Mama is strongest when it indulges in Leaf’s sharp cinematic sensibility.
- 83The Film StageJordan RaupThe Film StageJordan RaupBrimming with an inner life and an authenticity that shouldn’t be undervalued due to its tough subject matter, Leaf’s debut is a film without a single false note.
- 83IndieWireRyan LattanzioIndieWireRyan LattanzioWhat sounds, on paper, like a challenging sit is actually a wondrous 97-minute feature, whose director and star are obviously poised for greatness.
- 80Screen DailyTim GriersonScreen DailyTim GriersonEarth Mama offers no falsely encouraging happy ending, but its clear-eyed humanity nonetheless feels like a balm. In a society that often tries to sweep the poor away so that they’re out of sight, this film encourages us to see — and to care.
- 80VarietyPeter DebrugeVarietyPeter DebrugeLeaf recognizes that whatever happens to Gia, the problem remains. Her portrait is intended to illuminate, and Nomore makes for a wonderful collaborator in this.
- 75San Francisco ChronicleMick LaSalleSan Francisco ChronicleMick LaSalleLeaf applies a documentarian’s dispassion to the telling of this fictional story, and to a large extent that works. One of the virtues of documentaries is also a virtue of this narrative feature — it depicts a kind of person who usually doesn’t get movies made about her and tells the world her story with respect and empathy.
- 67The PlaylistRobert DanielsThe PlaylistRobert DanielsSometimes Leaf asks us to see too much. But Earth Mama is grounded enough and empathetic enough to be worth the bleak toll it exacts.