Reviews provided by RottenTomatoes
Glenn Lovell, San Jose Mercury News: You may not believe everything you see... But you won't nod off, either. Read more
Wesley Morris, Boston Globe: Lavishly, exhilaratingly tasteless. Read more
Marta Barber, Miami Herald: Carrera gets solid performances from the strong cast led by Garcia Bernal. Read more
Richard Roeper, Ebert & Roeper: You can see the would-be surprises coming a mile away, and the execution of these twists is delivered with a hammer. Thumbs down. Read more
Michael Wilmington, Chicago Tribune: Eventually moves and stirs you, even if it often resembles those steamy Mexican TV dramas/soap operas called telenovelas. Read more
Stephen Holden, New York Times: The film's most disconcerting element is its confusing mixture of satire and melodrama. Read more
John Hartl, Seattle Times: The story line may be 127 years old, but El Crimen del Padre Amaro ... couldn't be more timely in its despairing vision of corruption within the Catholic establishment. Read more
Kenneth Turan, Los Angeles Times: The film is ... determined to treat its characters, weak and strong, as fallible human beings, not caricatures, and to carefully delineate the cost of the inevitable conflicts between human urges and an institution concerned with self-preservation. Read more
Eric Harrison, Houston Chronicle: The film has soap-opera elements ... but it is also a serious critique of the Catholic Church and of societal corruption. Read more
Steven Rosen, Denver Post: Overall, this is a juicy movie but certainly not a trashy one. Read more
Owen Gleiberman, Entertainment Weekly: The real crime is the way that the movie turns Gael Garcia Bernal ... into a backwater Freddie Prinze Jr. Read more
Globe and Mail: It's not hard to see why Mexican audiences are lapping this up. Read more
Chris Vognar, Dallas Morning News: Feels shrill, simple and soapy. Read more
Ernest Hardy, L.A. Weekly: The film winds up muffling its own powerful protest. Read more
Rex Reed, New York Observer: The story is timeless, but when adapted to the modern age, it makes for a wrenching film -- never preachy or sentimental, and refreshingly non-judgmental about the fundamental and contradictory issues it raises. Read more
Andrew Sarris, New York Observer: Read more
James Berardinelli, ReelViews: The source of fascination is observing how the characters develop and understanding the underlying influences that affect every action and decision. Read more
Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times: A melodrama, a film that doesn't say priests are bad but observes that priests are human and some humans are bad. Read more
Stephanie Zacharek, Salon.com: Nothing more than a stifling morality tale dressed up in peekaboo clothing. Read more
Edward Guthmann, San Francisco Chronicle: This is basically high-class melodrama -- Mexican soap opera on a Cadillac budget -- but Bernal is subtly effective as Amaro. Read more
Peter Howell, Toronto Star: For all of the criticisms of the Church in El Crimen del Padre Amaro, Carrera is quick to defend the basic humanity of his characters. Read more
J. Hoberman, Village Voice: Carrera's filmmaking is more workmanlike than stylish, but Padre Amaro is richly character driven and, for all its insolent, grotesque humor, straightforwardly humanist in its psychology. Read more
Ann Hornaday, Washington Post: A lurid but timeless reminder that the bureaucracies and regulations of organized religion have nothing to do -- indeed are often at odds -- with living a God-ward life. Read more