Of Mice and Men 1992

Critics score:
96 / 100

Reviews provided by RottenTomatoes

Vincent Canby, New York Times: Of Mice and Men is a mournful, distantly heard lament for the loss of American innocence. Read more

Owen Gleiberman, Entertainment Weekly: The new film version of John Steinbeck's Of Mice and Men is lyrical, stirring, and beautifully acted -- a seamless adaptation of a novel many will recall with almost too much familiarity. Read more

Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times: I would not have thought I could believe the line about the rabbits one more time, but this movie made me do it, as Lennie asks about the farm they'll own one day, and George says, yes, it will be just as they've imagined it. Read more

Time Out: It's hard ... to believe Malkovich's shamble and gape, a simian variant on Dustin Hoffman's Rain Man. Read more

Todd McCarthy, Variety: Well-mounted and very traditional, Of Mice and Men honorably serves John Steinbeck's classic story of two Depression-era drifters without bringing anything new to it. Read more

Desson Thomson, Washington Post: The great pleasure of this movie is in what performers Sinise and John Malkovich, Ray Walton and others do with it; what director Sinise does with it; and, perhaps most important, what screenwriter Horton Foote does with it. Read more

Megan Rosenfeld, Washington Post: Happily, director/star/co-producer Gary Sinise has approached it not with the awe of an English professor, but with the practical eye of a craftsman: Here are solid characters, a taut and emotional story, a beginning, a middle and a wrenching end. Read more