Reviews provided by RottenTomatoes
John Hartl, Seattle Times: The people in Remember Me, My Love evaporate the minute the lights come up. Read more
Ruthe Stein, San Francisco Chronicle: Remember Me, My Love is hard to forget. Read more
Kenneth Turan, Los Angeles Times: It's a narcissist's picnic; all of the characters are so unapologetically selfish in their passion to maximize their human potential that it's difficult to care about any of them, one way or another. Read more
Michael Booth, Denver Post: I liked it; you may not. It may come down to your level of fascination with people who scream and gesture wildly in melodramatic Italian. Read more
Gregory Kirschling, Entertainment Weekly: How often does a director make pretty much the same film twice in a row and pretty much nail it both times? Read more
Ella Taylor, L.A. Weekly: If it were less prone to soap-opera histrionics, this screechy saga of an upscale family collapsing under the weight of its members' self-absorption might have something worth saying. Read more
Stephen Holden, New York Times: If this movie is any indication, middle-class urbanites in Italy are even more crass, old-age-phobic and obsessed with body-image than their counterparts in the United States. Read more
David Ng, Village Voice: The 48-year-old Morante is the real thing; like Deneuve, Rampling, and Huppert, she graces middle age with both intelligence and a rumpled, lived-in sex appeal. Read more