.
Box office The Lost City of Z grossed $8.6 million in the United States and Canada, and $10.7 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $19.3 million, against a production budget of $30 million. This was followed by the United Kingdom and Ireland on March 24, earning £270,139 from 282 theatres. It debuted at number seven on the box office chart. In the United States, the film grossed $110,175 from four theaters in its opening weekend. It expanded to 614 theaters the following weekend and made $2.2 million, finishing 10th at the box office. In its third weekend, the film added 252 theaters, and made $1.8 million.
Critical response According to the
review aggregator website
Rotten Tomatoes, 86% of critics have given the film a positive review based on 250 reviews, with an average rating of 7.3/10. The site's critics consensus reads, "
The Lost City of Zs stately pace and visual grandeur hearken back to classic exploration epics, and Charlie Hunnam turns in a masterful performance as its complex protagonist." At
Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 78 out of 100 based on 44 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".
Todd McCarthy of
The Hollywood Reporter described the film as "a rare piece of contemporary classical cinema." Dan Callahan in his review for
TheWrap said that "
The Lost City of Z feels like a clear artistic advance for Gray, who proves himself here as one of our finest and most distinctive living filmmakers."
Owen Gleiberman, writing for
Variety, called the film "a finely crafted, elegantly shot, sharply sincere movie that is more absorbing than powerful." Joshua Rothkopf in his review for
Time Out wrote that "the grandeur of this movie is off the charts ..."
Mark Kermode of
Kermode and Mayo's Film Review stated that while the film had numerous flaws, such as ineffective
elliptical storytelling and Hunnam's uncharismatic performance, "it is a film which is haunting me more than I thought. ... it did feel like it was trying [to] break out of being just that narrative into something else". Explorer
John Hemming criticized the movie's publicity for claiming that Fawcett was one of Britain's greatest explorers, arguing that this was an insult to the many true explorers, and that Fawcett was a
racist, a "nutter", and a dangerous incompetent who "never discovered anything", but caused the loss of many lives.
Joe Morgenstern, a movie critic from
The Wall Street Journal, compares the book to the movie by stating "Mr. Hunnam's Fawcett is attractive, and animated when circumstances demand it, but thanks to a clumsy script, not very interesting." In contrast to the book being more interested in the facts along with David Grann's findings.
Peter Travers, a film critic for
Rolling Stone, rates
The Lost City of Z three and a half stars out of four stars and describes the movie as "haunting and visionary, a potent provocation that gets under your skin." He then notes the complementary elements of
The Lost City of Z being "exotic adventure, and the psychological terror that brushes Gray's metaphorical heart of darkness." Dan Jolin, a freelance journalist, rates
The Lost City of Z a four out of five stars on
Empire. He states that though Fawcett's story is "a difficult story to end. ... Gray excels, going out on an oblique but elegant note." However he does note that
The Lost City of Z may "test your patience" because of the scenes being prolonged to enhance the main character, Percy Fawcett. Neil Soan, a reviewer, rates
The Lost City of Z a three and a half stars out of five stars for
The Times of India. In accordance to the role of the main character, Percy Fawcett, Soan believes "Charlie Hunnam adds ample substance to Fawcett" but he also points out that some main personality traits were lackluster. He concludes in his review that though the movie falls short on important scenes, "
The lost City of Z an unbalanced but fascinating watch."
Manohla Dargis, a writer from
The New York Times, writes that Charlie Hunnam was "mesmerizing" upon his main role of British explorer, Percy Fawcett. She believes Mr. Gray "Effortlessly expands his reach as he moves across time and continents and in the process turns the past into a singular life." She also notes the "lapidary details" that have helped polish
The Lost City of Z into something more.
Anthony Lane, a film critic for the
New Yorker, believes that the "right person for the role" is actually Robert Pattinson. The way he presents himself in the film as an "Unlikely figure, yet you still follow his every move" which is similar to how someone could think about Percy Fawcett. Despite this, Lane believes
The Lost City of Z to be "beautiful, mournful, and measured."
Robbie Collin, a film critic from
The Daily Telegraph, describes 'The Lost City of Z' as "a film transporting, profound, and staggering in its emotional power as anything I've seen in the cinema in years. He believes Charlie Hunnam suitably carries the role of Percy Fawcett with his "persuasiveness" demonstrated in roles prior to 'The Lost City of Z'. David Sims, a staff writer at
The Atlantic, writes that "
The Lost City of Z is a miraculous movie at once moving, intimidating, and gorgeous to behold."
Accolades ==Notes==