Box office The film grossed £6.3 million.
Critical reception On
Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of based on reviews, with an average rating of . The site's critical consensus reads "
Sorry We Missed You may strike some as tending toward the righteously didactic, but director Ken Loach's passionate approach remains effective."
Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 82 out of 100, based on 26 critics, indicating "universal acclaim". David Rooney in
The Hollywood Reporter wrote that the film "is an expertly judged and profoundly humane movie, made without frills or fuss but startlingly direct in its emotional depiction of the tough stuff that is the fiber of so many ordinary lives."
Peter Bradshaw in
The Guardian believed it was superior to Loach's previous film
I, Daniel Blake (2016), which won the
Palme d'Or at Cannes. Bradshaw wrote: "it is more dramatically varied and digested, with more light and shade in its narrative progress and more for the cast to do collectively. I was hit in the
solar plexus by this movie, wiped out by the simple honesty and integrity of the performances." Geoffrey Macnab wrote in
The Independent that Loach's film "captures brilliantly the alienation and existential anguish that its main characters feel. There is nothing they can do to help themselves. The more they fight to change their circumstances, the worse those circumstances become." Macnab commented that Loach and his screenwriter Laverty "pursue their story to its logical conclusion, ending the film in a way that is both ingenious and devastating." Trevor Johnston of British film publication
Sight & Sound wrote "While
Sorry We Missed You may not be as sentimentally affecting as
I, Daniel Blake, it delivers a more nuanced, troubling and provocative state-of-the-nation address. As such, it’s surely among Loach and Laverty’s most sinewy efforts." ==References==