Critical response On the
review aggregator website
Rotten Tomatoes,
Honeyland has
an approval rating of based on reviews. According to the website's critical consensus, "
Honeyland uses life in a remote village to offer an eye-opening perspective on experiences that should resonate even for audiences halfway around the world".
A.O. Scott from
The New York Times praised the directors for "render[ing] the thick complexity of experience with poignant clarity" and called the film "quiet, intimate and intense, but touched with a breath of epic grandeur. It's a poem including history" In a separate year-end review, Scott and Manohla Dargis of the same newspaper named
Honeyland the best film of 2019, and called it "nothing less than a found epic". Bob Verini of
Variety deemed it a "rare film that would be a strong contender in either [Academy Awards] category, in any year" due to its "strong geopolitical resonance and visual splendor". Guy Lodge, another
Variety journalist, wrote in a positive review that in the "painstaking observational documentary, everything from the honey upwards is organic". Grading
Honeyland with four stars out of five, Ty Burr from
The Boston Globe said the film's strongest point is that it serves as "both allegory and example, a symbolic tale about the importance of nature's balance and a specific story about these specific lives", and called Hatidže "a figure for the ages".
Los Angeles Times journalist Justin Chang described it as one of the rare films that serve as an "intimately infuriating, methodically detailed allegory of the earth's wonders being ravaged by the consequences of human greed". Writing for
The Hollywood Reporter, Sheri Linden called it an "unforgettable vérité character study and an intimate look at an endangered tradition". Ed Potton of
The Times, who gave the film four stars out of five, said "[a]lthough it starts as a meditation on the hardship and rhythms of rural life, [the film] becomes something more intimate". Rating it with four stars out of five, Helen O'Hara of
Empire magazine, summed up the film as "[s]tunningly beautiful and quietly powerful, this is a portrait of a vanishing way of life and of a determined woman who's just trying to make her way in the world". David Sims of
The Atlantic called
Honeyland "a rare nature documentary that's deeply personal". He elaborated, "a sensitivity to both petty human concerns and striking natural beauty is what makes
Honeyland a particularly enthralling documentary. Nature filmmaking that focuses only on the environment can feel a little dry, while so-called human-interest storytelling can be cloying;
Honeyland succeeds by combining the two." Sheena Scott from
Forbes shared Sims's sentiments, writing that "it is the moments of intimacy that make this film so unique and beautiful".
Dina Iordanova, an academic of world cinema at the
University of St. Andrews criticized the directors' claim that the movie was not scripted or re-enacted and questioned the authenticity of the documentary in her review published in
Docalogue. She stated that the movie was too fictionalized to be regarded as a documentary and claimed it was "a
bona fide Flahertian re-enacted documentary. One can also call it "fake." She also criticized the alleged romanticization and exploitation of the austere conditions of Hatidže’s circumstance for the political message on sustainability, defining it a "morality tale about environmentalism and sustainability that borders on preaching.".
Honeyland was ranked as the third-best documentary and twelfth-best foreign film of 2019 in a survey of over 300 critics around the world conducted by
IndieWire. On Metacritic, it was ranked as the twenty-fourth-best film of 2019. It also appeared on twenty-three critics' year-end top-ten lists, ranking first in three of them.
Accolades Honeyland received its first monetary award prize of €30,000 from the
Turkish Radio and Television Corporation at the 2019
Sarajevo Film Festival in late August 2019. Money received from the award was used to purchase a new house for Hatidže in the nearby village of Dorfulija in
Lozovo Municipality, close to her relatives and friends. Kotevska and Stefanov also started a campaign titled
Donate for the Honeyland Community that sends jars of natural honey to donors of a fund that benefits Hatidže and her neighbors.
Honeyland was the most awarded movie at the 2019 Sundance Movie Festival, winning awards in three categories, including the Grand Jury Prize, the Special Jury Award for Impact for Change, and the Special Jury Award for Cinematography, all in the World Cinema Documentary Competition category. In February 2020, the documentary won an award in the category of Best International Success at the 23rd
Golden Ladybug of Popularity Awards in North Macedonia. Hatidže attended the event and performed two songs after receiving the award. On 13 January 2020,
Honeyland received nominations in the categories for
Best Documentary Feature and
Best International Feature Film at the
92nd Academy Awards; it was the first documentary in the history of the Oscars to receive a nomination in the both categories. It is also the second Macedonian film to earn an Oscar nomination after
Before the Rain (1994). Matilda Coleman of
The New York Times dubbed the movie an "Oscar game changer" and stated with its two nominations, it paved the way for more success of the documentary genre in future Academy Award nominations. Jake Coyle writing for the
Associated Press deemed the documentary a "quietly revolutionary Oscar nominee" and said it "speaks to ... the increasingly boundless nature of [the] documentary [genre]". Following the movie's dual nomination, several other countries started submitting their documentaries for dual categories at the 2021 Oscar awards. ==See also==