Critical response The film has received universal acclaim from critics. Review aggregation website
Rotten Tomatoes gives it a 96% approval rating, based on 145 reviews, with an average score of 8.3/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "As rich visually as it is thematically,
Embrace of the Serpent offers a feast of the senses for film fans seeking a dose of bracing originality". On
Metacritic, which assigns a normalised rating, the film has a score of 82 out of 100 based on 31 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".
Indiewire's Jessica Kiang awarded the film an A rating, calling it "a soulful, strange and stunning discovery". She also described the character of Karamakate as "an immaculate portrait of the unfathomable loneliness and crushing survivor's guilt that comes with being the last of one's kind". Jordan Mintzer of
The Hollywood Reporter described the film as "a visually mesmerizing exploration of man, nature and the destructive powers of colonialism" and compared it to
Miguel Gomes'
Tabu (2012). He also praised the black-and-white cinematography and the sound design which he said "makes the jungle truly come alive".
Justin Chang of
Variety gave a positive review of the film. He wrote: "At once blistering and poetic, not just an ethnographic study but also a striking act of cinematic witness...". About the parallel narrative he wrote it "delivers a fairly comprehensive critique of the destruction of indigenous cultures at the hands of white invaders". Will Lawrence of
Empire awarded the film four stars out of five and said that "though inspired by real-life journals, Guerra's film transports us into the realm of the mystical and surreal". Video essayist
Kogonada voted for the film on
Sight & Sound magazine's poll for best film of 2015, stating that "
Embrace of the Serpent is a mesmerizing feat of cinema. Guerra had me at frame one."
Response from the indigenous community The film was well received by the Amazonian community featured in the film. A special screening was held in the jungles of Colombia, in a makeshift cinema. With tribal people from all over the area showing up, not everyone could be seated. After the film finished, they asked for it to be shown again. Although the film was celebrated, director Ciro Guerra did stress that the film should not be used as an attempt to share traditional knowledge of the tribes, as what you see in the film "is an imagined Amazon because the real Amazon doesn't fit in one film".
Accolades The film was screened in the
Directors' Fortnight section at the
2015 Cannes Film Festival where it won the Art Cinema Award. The film won the Golden Apricot at the 2015
Yerevan International Film Festival,
Armenia, for Best Feature Film; the Special Jury Award at the Odesa Film Festival, and the Spondylus Trophy at the Lima Film Festival. The Governor of the
Guainía Department decorated Ciro Guerra with the Order of the Inírida Flower for "exalting the respect and value of the indigenous populations, likewise giving the Department recognition for tourism and culture". The film was announced as Colombia's
submission for the 2016
Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film, and was selected among the final five contenders, being the first Colombian film to be nominated for the award.
Top ten lists In
The Observer Mark Kermode included
Embrace of the Serpent in his top ten list of best films of 2016.
Embrace of the Serpent is ranked 2nd in
Rotten Tomatoes'
Best-Reviewed Foreign Language Movies 2016, and 23rd in the
Top 100 Movies of 2016 list. It also was named the 12th best film of 2016 by
Esquire.
Sight & Sound ranked it 21st with seven votes. Some other top ten lists in which
Embrace of the Serpent was listed are: • 1st – J. R. Jones,
Chicago Reader • 2nd –
Lincoln Journal Star • 2nd – Randy Myers,
San Jose Mercury News • 3rd –
Little White Lies • 4th –
Stephen Holden,
The New York Times • 4th –
The Irish Times • 7th –
Time Out London • 8th – Brian Formo,
Collider • 10th – Simon Abrams,
RogerEbert.com ==See also==