Metascore
71

Generally favorable reviews - based on 18 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 14 out of 18
  2. Negative: 0 out of 18

Critic Reviews

  1. Reviewed by: Randy Myers
    Mar 27, 2024
    88
    It’s an exceptional documentary, even if the second half can’t quite keep up with the first.
  2. Reviewed by: Richard Roeper
    Mar 26, 2024
    88
    One of the most impressively and creatively shot filmed biographies in recent memory.
  3. Reviewed by: Neil Alcock
    Apr 26, 2024
    80
    There are few surprises, but this is a fascinating compare-and-contrast exercise between an innovative, anxious young man on the cusp of greatness, and the cultural icon he became.
  4. Reviewed by: Sean L. McCarthy
    Apr 1, 2024
    80
    If you don’t consider yourself the biggest Steve Martin fan or you need a refresher course on how he became the most popular comedian of the late 1970s, then by all means STREAM IT to the first episode, but everyone should make sure to watch the second part, which provides a much richer, fuller portrait of the comedian, actor, playwright, art collector, and in his later years, husband, father and comedy partner.
  5. Reviewed by: Brian Lowry
    Mar 28, 2024
    80
    One of the benefits of streaming has been the appetite and latitude for such retrospectives, allowing artists to engage in expansive self-reflection. “STEVE!” feels like a particularly good use of that format, showcasing a personality everybody knows but, at least in his heyday, few really knew.
  6. Reviewed by: John Anderson
    Mar 27, 2024
    80
    Making film about creativity is a losing proposition, ordinarily, but Mr. Neville comes dangerously close to positioning the artistic impulse on screen naked.
  7. Reviewed by: Peter Bradshaw
    Mar 26, 2024
    80
    This is a thoroughly watchable, intimate and intelligent portrait, although Martin can still be cagey when it comes to family.
  8. Reviewed by: Roger Moore
    Mar 30, 2024
    75
    Generations of great and wildly successful stand-ups have followed him, but none seem to have achieved the shift in the culture Martin generated, even if some have equaled the standards of stand-up success he and to a lesser degree Richard Pryor established for what “making it” might look like, with or without “happiness” to go along with it.
  9. Reviewed by: Nina Metz
    Mar 28, 2024
    75
    What he [director Morgan Neville] captures here is a compelling dichotomy between the warmth and faux guilelessness of Martin’s persona as a comedian and his reticent personality.
  10. Reviewed by: Jessica Kiang
    Mar 27, 2024
    75
    The two films could have been combined into one tighter and more effective feature, but even as bifurcated and somewhat baggy as it is, “Steve!” is a smart and charming portrait of a smart and charming man who keeps it all willfully, unfashionably apolitical, and who carefully avoids talking trash about anyone other than himself.
  11. Reviewed by: Brian Tallerico
    Mar 27, 2024
    75
    The first half of “Steve!” becomes more about a career than a person, which left me feeling a little distant from the subject at its conclusion. And that’s what makes the second half, subtitled “Now,” a masterstroke on Neville’s part.
  12. Reviewed by: Peter Debruge
    Mar 26, 2024
    70
    Nothing in the first episode quite prepares audiences for where Neville plans to take them in the follow-up. Sure, the roots of the unhappy dynamic with his dad are there, paying off Martin’s own late-life parenting efforts, but “Now” would likely move people just as well if screened by itself. It’s so different in form from “Then” that the films feel like separate answers to a single assignment, rather than two halves of a complete project. If anything, they’re disconnected pieces of a far larger puzzle.
  13. Reviewed by: Rodrigo Perez
    Mar 27, 2024
    67
    It’s compelling in its much more amiable golden years second half, but did it truly need to be three-plus hours long? In that regard, it might be for hardcore Steven Martin disciples only and serves as an example of the streaming age excess where runtime limits are there for a good reason.
  14. Reviewed by: Vikram Murthi
    Mar 26, 2024
    67
    Both “Then” and “Now” go down smoothly enough to watch at home, but it’s only “Then” that captures a specific moment in American culture crucial for any young comedy nerds to learn about.