Critical reception An emotional
Béla Tarr, when presenting the film to an international audience, said that he felt he had done too little to prevent the suicide of his protégé, that the great film will be remembered forever, and that people should look after individuals like Hu.
An Elephant Sitting Still was acclaimed by critics. On
Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 94%, with an average rating of 8.40/10, based on 52 critics, the critic consensus says "A remarkable debut that sadly serves as its creator's epitaph,
An Elephant Sitting Still offers an uncompromisingly grim yet poignant portrait of life in modern China." On
Metacritic, the film has a score (using a
weighted average) of 86 out of 100, indicating "universal acclaim".
Justin Chang of the
Los Angeles Times wrote that although the film has "a soap opera season's worth of romantic indiscretions, sudden deaths, unfortunate accidents, provoked and unprovoked attacks", the story "somehow never loses its sense of balance and modulation." Chang argued that the work had a consoling insight that the characters are all worth knowing despite their flaws, and lauded it as "a triumph of bold sociopolitical critique and intimate human portraiture, and a reminder that you rarely encounter the one without the other." David Ehrlich, who assigned the film an "A−" rating in
IndieWire, argued that
An Elephant Sitting Still "has little interest in the conventional drama of cause and effect, and its fractured structure is used to emphasize the distance between these people rather than the ties that bind them together." He characterized it as a searching film that avoids "[contriving] an empty solution for the demoralized". Justine Smith, who awarded the film 3.5/4 stars, praised the film's portrayal of love in a system of inequality and oppression. She argued that Hu simultaneously suggests that love in a devastated system "means tethering yourself to people who have long been broken by mistreatment and inequality and who no longer have the capacity to return it", but also that love and beauty are "a constant source of minute, if not fleeting, pleasure." Smith referred to this as a "realistic" portrayal of love in such a system and billed the film's ending as "one of the greatest in contemporary film history", though also referred to the film as "overwhelmingly grey". In
The New Yorker,
Richard Brody lauded
An Elephant Sitting Still as one of the greatest recent films, writing that Hu "builds an intricate grid of conflict-riddled connections among the movie's main characters" and that the "volatile, roving long takes pursue the characters to the deepest corners of their explosive despair". Brody argued that Hu's "vision conveys a mighty, universal human despair." Matthew Thrift of
Little White Lies praised the film as "without question one of the strongest debuts in recent memory", arguing that "the remarkable surety of Hu's direction provides a restless momentum. It's a film constantly in motion, tracking cat and mouse alike through the city streets. [...] Conflict is born out of character and circumstance, rather than narrative contrivance or traditional dramatic structure."
Best lists An Elephant Sitting Still has been ranked by numerous critics and publications as one of the best films of 2018/2019. • 1st –
Cinema Scope • 2nd –
Lawrence Garcia,
The A.V. Club • 3rd –
K. Austin Collins,
Vanity Fair • 6th –
Philip Concannon,
Gay City News • 6th –
Jordan Cronk • 9th –
Nick Linden,
The Hollywood Reporter • 9th – David Hudson • 9th –
Hyperallergic • Top 9 (unranked)–
The Quietus • 10th – Dennis Dermody,
Paper • Top 10 (unranked)–
Sheila O'Mailey,
RogerEbert.com • 12th –
Justin Chang,
The Los Angeles Times • 12th –
Fernando F. Croce,
CinePassion • 13th –
Slant • 13th –
Film Comment • 13th –
Charles Bramesco,
The A.V. Club • 14th –
Nick Schager,
Esquire • Top 20 (outside top 10, 11-20 unranked)–
Ed Gonzalez,
Slant • 24th –
Michael Glover Smith,
White City Cinema • 25th –
Slant • Top 26 (outside top 10, 11-26 unranked)–
A.O. Scott,
The New York Times • 32nd –
Film Stage • Top 46 (unranked)–
Richard Brody,
The New Yorker. Brody also ranked it as one of the 27 best movies of the 2010s. == Awards and nominations ==