Critical response The Turin Horse received critical acclaim. At
Metacritic, the film received an average score of 80/100, based on 15 reviews. The film holds an 89% rating on the review aggregator
Rotten Tomatoes based on 63 reviews, with an average rating of 8.10/10. The critical consensus states, "Uncompromisingly bold and hauntingly beautiful, Bela Tarr's bleak parable tells a simple story with weighty conviction." Mark Jenkins of
NPR described the film as "... an absolute vision, masterly and enveloping in a way that less personal, more conventional movies are not".
A. O. Scott of
The New York Times lavished the film with praise, concluding, "The rigors of life can grind you down. The rigor of art can have the opposite effect, and
The Turin Horse is an example — an exceedingly rare one in contemporary cinema — of how a work that seems built on the denial of pleasure can, through formal discipline, passionate integrity and terrifying seriousness, produce an experience of exaltation. The movie is too beautiful to be described as an ordeal, but it is sufficiently intense and unyielding that when it is over, you may feel, along with awe, a measure of relief. Which may sound like a reason to stay away, but is exactly the opposite." Ray Bennett of
The Hollywood Reporter wrote from the Berlinale: "Fans of Tarr’s somber and sedate films will know what they are in for and will no doubt find the time well spent. Others might soon grow weary of measured pace of the characters as they dress in their ragged clothes, eat boiled potatoes with their fingers, fetch water, clean their bowls, chop wood and feed the horse." Bennett complimented the cinematography, but added: "That does not, however, make up for the almost complete lack of information about the two characters, and so it is easy to become indifferent to their fate, whatever it is."
Variety's Peter Debruge also noted how the narrative provided "little to cling to", but wrote: "Like
Hiroshi Teshigahara's life-changingly profound
The Woman in the Dunes ... by way of
Bresson, Tarr's tale seems to depict the meaning of life in a microcosm, though its intentions are far more oblique. ... As the premise itself concerns the many stories not being told (Nietzsche is nowhere to be found, for instance), it's impossible to keep the mind from drifting to all the other narratives unfolding beyond the film's sparse horizon."
Accolades The film won the
Jury Grand Prix Silver Bear and the Competition
FIPRESCI Prize at the Berlin Film Festival. It was selected as the Hungarian entry for the
Best Foreign Language Film at the
84th Academy Awards, but it did not make the final shortlist.
Tiny Mix Tapes named it the best film of 2012. In
BBC's 2016 poll of the greatest films since 2000,
The Turin Horse ranked sixty-third. ==See also==