Fox Searchlight Pictures | Release Date: September 15, 2010
7.6
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Generally favorable reviews based on 262 Ratings
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204
Mixed:
34
Negative:
24
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5
MarcDoyleSep 16, 2010
As I was watching this movie, I keep thinking about The Island, a movie with a similar scientific premise, but handled in a much more interesting way. Yes, that was a sci-fi action flick, and this is a pure drama, but it seems like almost TOOAs I was watching this movie, I keep thinking about The Island, a movie with a similar scientific premise, but handled in a much more interesting way. Yes, that was a sci-fi action flick, and this is a pure drama, but it seems like almost TOO much of the detail was left out of this movie. And it maintained a slow emotional burn throughout. Almost a bit boring. Doesn't have the emotional wallop like I thought it would have. I was disappointed that Sally Hawkins had such little (though impactful) screen time. Expand
1 of 2 users found this helpful11
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5
ShiiraOct 30, 2010
This review contains spoilers, click expand to view. It's the saddest music in the world. By itself, Judy Bridgewater's "Never Let Me Go" is just another torch song of no particular distinction, it's what Kathy H. brings to the canned performance; her naivety as a listener which makes the ordinary ballad so heartbreaking, when she misinterprets "baby", the singer's plea to a careless lover, as a petition to a baby, in the literal sense, that he/she "never let [her] go". While the cassette tape plays in the empty dorm room, Kathy H. slow-dances with a pillow, the baby she'll never conceive, in her arms, with Madame watching from outside the doorway, a little bleary-eyed, flummoxed by the young girl's humanity. In an instant, she knows the "gallery" is just window-dressing. These children do indeed have souls. This scene, more than any from the Kazuo Ishiguro novel, demonstrates the profundity of inhumaneness at work here, made all the more strange by the genteel setting of the Hailsham school, whose guardians, despite their advocacy against treating these children inhumanely, still believe that the final solution is a necessary evil. These unseen forces count on the guardians to poison their minds with propaganda about the world outside Hailsham, and the world inside their bodies.This ignorance; this resignation, that these children have been instilled with all their lives, since birth, made them feeble, made them strange. The pantomime Ishiguro describes in his Man Booker Prize-short-listed book, an imitation of motherhood which Kathy H. performs in a context so grossly misapprehended because of her own circumscribed purview, is a grotesquerie that makes the girl too vulnerable, too much like a freak. With the same stiff upper lip he applied to his third novel "The Remains of the Day", the pre-eminent writer of contemporary British fiction has no reservations about putting Kathy H., Tommy D. and Ruth in tragi-comic situations that serve them up for ridicule. Too bad the film version of "Never Let Me Go" chose to iron out the flaws which made the students less bland. They're maladjusted, but the film wants to ensure that audiences like them. In the book, Kathy H. had lots of sex with strangers, Tommy D. didn't seem nearly as thoughtful like how Andrew Garfield plays him, and Ruth was a whole lot more machiavellian at Hailsham, and especially at the Cottages. But most egregious of all, what "Never Let Me Go" loses in the translation from novel to film, is the original meaning of the Judy Bridgewater song, since the filmmaker changes Ishiguro's lyrics by replacing "baby" with "darling", a term of endearment that Kathy H. associates with Tommy D.. The dystopian film loses its key estranging moment in order to make the girl more relatable to the moviegoer, who can better identify with a girl in the throes of puppy love. Kathy H. has a better grip on her feelings in the movie than the book, an effect, however, that makes her indistinguishable from any other boarding school girl with growing pains. Instead of Madame, it's Ruth who's the quiescent observer, and like her best friend, she too seems overtly sophisticated and worldly, not at all how Ishiguro envisioned them, his "poor creatures", as Madame later describes them, but in the film, the jealous girl understands Kathy H.'s designs on Tommy D., understands the gist of the song, which gives her the impetus to steal the boy's heart. "Never Let Me Go" is too conventional for its own good. The love story plays too prominent a role in the narrative, at the expense of the dislocative atmosphere which drives the book, but disappointingly, not the adaptation, whose revamped character seem to understand the difference between love and sex, tears and come, in spite of their limited experiences. As adults, when Kathy H., Tommy D., and Ruth begin to fulfill their destinies as "carers"(Kathy H.) and "donors"(Ruth and Tommy), "Never Let Me Go" pays the price of loving its characters too much. The filmmaker wants the trio to be savvy about love, but naive about dying, but they seem too smart, so when the former Hailsham students don't seem fully cognizant to the fact that "completion" and death are a matter of semantics with little or no differentiation, it rings false. They should escape, but "Never Let Me Go" avoids that banality, so prevalent in the third act of so many genre films, especially science fiction, because Hailsham turned them into good little soldiers who wouldn't desert their mission and escape the fate which awaits them. In one scene, acting on a tip about a boat, Kathy H. drives Tommy D. and Ruth to the coastline, but the boat is purely for sightseeing. Marooned on the sand, nobody seems terribly disappointed that the boat isn't on the water. If it was, would they have the survival instinct to sail away? After Ruth dies, clearing the way for Kathy and Tommy to get their "deferral", why don't they just get in the car and take off? Expand
2 of 5 users found this helpful23
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5
MikkiHKMar 30, 2011
If they called this film 'Never Gonna End' it would have been much more accurate. While the premise of the film is kind of interesting in an intellectual way, the understated, sad sack performances of the three leads suck all the life out ofIf they called this film 'Never Gonna End' it would have been much more accurate. While the premise of the film is kind of interesting in an intellectual way, the understated, sad sack performances of the three leads suck all the life out of it. They are so wrapped up in themselves it's really hard to care about any of them. Carey Mulligan is cute as a button, but by the end, even she has lost any sympathy she might have had. If you like movies about frustrated, grey English upbringings, then you will have a ball with this movie. Expand
0 of 0 users found this helpful00
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6
trailofthebreadAug 23, 2011
Mulliganâ
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6
hanneguacamoleNov 20, 2015
Never Let Me Go never had the chance at being the same book and movie – the very elements and intricacies of conversation that contributed to the book's allure were those that were completely ignored in the movie. Perhaps I'm an unfairNever Let Me Go never had the chance at being the same book and movie – the very elements and intricacies of conversation that contributed to the book's allure were those that were completely ignored in the movie. Perhaps I'm an unfair critic, basing my rating on similarities between a book and its dramatization, but on it's own, I completely understand the movie. No mystery, but it served its purpose – like the clones put in their place. The odd relationships that form between these carers and donors and their relation to society are the star – as they entirely should be. The movie also raises questions about true love and morality with a unique take. Expand
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6
amheretojudgeAug 22, 2018
an eye on the horizon..

Never Let Me Go Never Let Me Go is a character driven drama about three friends that are tangled in a complex relationship where each of them is fueled with different agenda. As the premise requires, the chemistry
an eye on the horizon..

Never Let Me Go

Never Let Me Go is a character driven drama about three friends that are tangled in a complex relationship where each of them is fueled with different agenda. As the premise requires, the chemistry among the cast is aptly communicated among the viewers with stakes that creates the anticipated emotional impact. The writing is sharp, strong and adaptive if not gripping, since Knightley's track is a bit familiar, but still the build up of its peak of dramatic scene makes it all worth (the conversation at bed between Knightley and Mulligan is enthralling). The somewhat inner politics that is brewed among them is pure ample for the screenplay, as it not only helps it boost off but also offers appropriate gravitas. The set pieces are appealing and the costume design are alluring with stunning visuals and neatly shot locations that makes it pleasing to experience it on screen. The dialogues are calculative since most of the characters are reserved and poised in here, hence some of them are genuinely moving and effective. It is short on technical aspects like background score and cinematography. Mulligan is a revelation in here with her conserved yet expressive portrayal that speaks volume especially the sequence where Garfield requests for something impossible from her in the woods. On the supporting hand, Knightley as always delivers but Garfield too shows some promising potential along with Hawkins that is on driver's seat in the first act. Stunning visuals, breathtaking performance and thought-provoking conversations are the high points of the feature. The director Romanek's passion is clearly visible due to its honesty and innocence in it that factors in a lot with the help of Garland's finely edited adaptation. Never Let Me Go is accurately titled as it holds the viewers in its bubble that is both dark and bright, with an eye on the horizon.
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5
hamidgoodarziJan 8, 2023
This review contains spoilers, click expand to view. An adaptation of a novel is wonderful, but one should always look for distinctions between the adapted work and the produced work. This movie is in the science-fiction genre, which is under the dystopian genre. A painful and bitter family that depicts the future of human life. After watching the movie, I said to myself how good it is that I live in a time when human science has not yet reached such progress. The three main actors of the movie are great, but the music plays a filler role in most of the scenes and is annoying. Expand
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