Poor Will Smith! Critics tore apart Netflix's first hopeful blockbuster, 'Bright'
Bright was Netflix's first attempt
at a big-budget movie and critics have (mostly) taken to tearing it apart limb
by limb, lambasting everything from the photography to the writing to the
premise as a whole.
Directed by Suicide Squad's David Ayer and
written by Victor Frankenstein's Max Landis, many
critics felt the ambitious fantasy/cop movie, peppered with heavy-handed commentary on racism, fell
flat on its face. There are a few reviewers and viewers that spoke favorably of Bright, but for the most
part, the Will Smith-starring film has left many people wishing they had those
two hours back.
SEE ALSO: What's coming to Netflix in January
Here are a few of the harshest reviews of Bright from critics and viewers who thought it was a failure of a movie.
Bright’s mishandling of sensitive
topics that deserve to be handled with care is so mind boggling audacious that
it quickly starts to feel like an insult to actual activism groups. There’s a
scene at the beginning of Bright in which Smith’s all-American-bravado
cop, Daryl Ward, is tasked with removing a pesky fairy hanging around his
property. Fairies in the world of Bright are like mosquitos with personalities;
hungry, menacing little creatures seen as a nuisance. Ward, broom in hand,
prepares to kill the fairy, saying, "Fairy lives don’t matter today."
It’s borderline insulting, but what makes
watching Bright so painful is
how obvious it is that Landis and Ayer are trying to do right by the
wrongdoings they see. Bright tries to
identify the biggest issues facing society today and start a dialogue, but in
doing so creates more problematic conversations.
Bright is a misnomer on two
levels. First of all, the majority of Netflix’s new $90 million original movie
takes place at night and in fairly dingy rooms, and that, in combination with
how the whole production is lit, means that most of the action is obscured and
visually unintelligible. Secondly, there’s nothing about this movie that’s an
inherently good idea—or rather, very generously speaking, maybe the story could
have made some valid points about the state of race relations in America with a
little more thought. But as things stand, Bright plays like the kind of
movie a kid might make up (“And then this happens! And then this happens!”) if they were
given a very rough overview of American history and then told to write a script
about it.
David Fear, Rolling Stone:
Kicking off with a montage featuring
"Curse the Police" graffiti and murals of orcs with fists raised in
the air, Bright wastes no
time in setting up its magic + metaphor modus operandi and quickly pounding it
in to the ground. Then, perhaps realizing that it has little to really say
about racial relations or class divisions in America past "because, see,
the orcs are like African-Americans in this
scenario, you totally picked up on that, right?", the movie drops any
attempt at using the conceit in the name of satire or incisiveness past an NFL
dig or two
Some critics — actually only about a handful —
felt that the mix of Ayer and Landis was a match made in heaven, and the story
of the film worked wonderfully. Some viewers also felt the movie was good and
fun, although many included the caveat that it was, in fact, dumb.
Peter Debruge, Variety:
This ambitious, yet astonishingly well-executed
Netflix tentpole directly benefits from the way Ayer’s gritty, streetwise
sensibility grounds Landis’ gift for creating an elaborate comic-book
mythology. “Bright” hinges on the relationship between two reluctantly paired
police officers: battle-scarred beat cop Daryl Ward (Will Smith) and his
idealistic new partner, Nick Jakoby (Joel Edgerton), the first Orc ever allowed
on the force. It’s a brilliant twist on an old dynamic that simultaneously
supports an allegory about 21st-century discrimination so rich, you could
create a college course dedicated solely to analyzing how it operates.
Luckily, if you have Netflix, you can watch Bright this weekend
to escape the holidays for a bit and see for yourself.
I liked it. Don't come after me. I am just saying that it.
ReplyDeleteMan, suddenly Will can't get a good movie to save his life. Stale prince?
ReplyDeleteWhen critics tear something apart they are wrong. When they say good things about a horrible star wars movie they are right. That's the critics paradox UNTIL WE ALL AGREE TLJ WAS TERRIBLE.
ReplyDeleteWatching now. Good so far. Hopefully it will be like the last Jedi. Critics and fans on opposite ends.
ReplyDeleteI dunno, I liked it. However it would have been 10x better as a series. Can we get a series? I would have loved to watch the tension grow and ease between the different races.
ReplyDeleteI thought it was a good movie. So good, I think I'm going to watch it again.
ReplyDeleteSaw previews and it reminded me of alian nation..was a pretty cool show..
ReplyDeleteCritics dont matter on Netflix. Better luck next time though.
ReplyDeleteIt was good but haters always gonna hate
ReplyDeleteIt’s their own fault for hiring a couple of duds like Landis and Ayer.
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to watching it later on.
ReplyDeleteI had fun watching it... kinda like "The Lord of the Rings" and "The Training Day" mash-up.
ReplyDeleteLoved it ...WTF is wrong with critics!
ReplyDeleteGoing to watch it tonight. It looks cool.
ReplyDeleteCould it be worse than Adam Sandler's film Sandy Wexler?
ReplyDeleteCould only stomach about 20 mins of it. It was boring.
ReplyDeleteThey can take their opinions and shove them I liked it
ReplyDeleteRIP the money spent on this piece of garbish ����
ReplyDeleteJust watched it and I liked it and I was ready to write it off as garbage
ReplyDeleteThe trailers pretty much predicted this..
ReplyDeletewe tried for twenty minute. Boring cuss word snooze. Alienation did it better.
ReplyDeletejust watched - its ok for the first attempt of a bigger production
ReplyDeleteThe movie was actually good!
ReplyDeleteIt's a good movie! Can't wait for the second one.
ReplyDeleteJust finished it and really enjoyed it
ReplyDeleteCan it be any worse than the last jedi?
ReplyDeleteI wanna watch it, I know I'll enjoy it
ReplyDeleteI liked it, but it felt like I was watching a incompleted tv show
ReplyDeleteIt was no blockbuster but it wasn't bad to watch.
ReplyDeleteI actually enjoyed it
ReplyDeleteQuite enjoyed the movie
ReplyDeleteThey shoulda cast Kevin Spacey
ReplyDeletei love it
ReplyDeleteIt was a let down
ReplyDeleteI liked it !!
ReplyDeleteGood movie. Bad director.
ReplyDeleteLiked it
ReplyDeleteI saw it. It’s a bad movie.
ReplyDeleteYet it was so great
ReplyDelete