24
Metascore
7 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 40The Hollywood ReporterSheri LindenThe Hollywood ReporterSheri LindenBreaking News in Yuba County features a pitch-perfect Janney at the center of a game cast of well-knowns. Yet as it fumbles through its unwieldy mix of crime-caper farce, social commentary and black comedy, the genre it most solidly nails is the one that poses the burning question "Why did so many accomplished actors sign on to this?"
- 40Screen DailyTim GriersonScreen DailyTim GriersonTaylor can’t juggle the different tones, and as Sue tries to stay a step ahead of the crooks and the cops as her lies threaten to unravel, the film’s attempts at societal critique feel facile.
- 33The A.V. ClubAllison ShoemakerThe A.V. ClubAllison ShoemakerNone of the curious friction of its story, nor in its cast, results in any sort of frisson of excitement, dread, or even shock. The best Yuba can inspire is indignation. You get all these folks together, Tate Taylor, and the end result is this?
- 33IndieWireRyan LattanzioIndieWireRyan LattanzioIt’s the kind of movie that seems to suck your soul out while you’re watching it, variably crass and slapstick humor landing with a bloody thud.
- 30Los Angeles TimesMichael OrdoñaLos Angeles TimesMichael OrdoñaBreaking News in Yuba County lacks both the form and substance to cash in on its acting assets.
- 25Original-CinLiam LaceyOriginal-CinLiam LaceyA farce that fizzles, a satire that sags, and a dead-end for its gifted cast, Breaking News In Yuba County at least starts well.
- 10The New York TimesGlenn KennyThe New York TimesGlenn KennyOne may wonder how Tate Taylor, who has overseen high-profile, conventional, ostensibly respectable Hollywood product like “The Girl on the Train” and “The Help,” came to direct this amoral, repellent bag of sick, a movie whose biggest ambition in life is to start a bidding war at a late 1990s Sundance Film Festival and then bomb at the box office. Call it water finding its own level, maybe.