A haunting and moving tribute to the Australians who sacrificed their lives in WWI against not the Germans but the Turks at the lesser sung battle of Gallipoli from the assured hand of Peter Weir.
100
TV Guide Magazine
TV Guide Magazine
Director Weir and cinematographer Russell Boyd's re-creation of the invasion and battle action is stunning, but what makes Gallipoli such an affecting film is its intimate presentation of the friendship between Archy and Frank (wonderfully essayed by Lee and Gibson).
80
The New York TimesJanet Maslin
The New York TimesJanet Maslin
Mr. Weir's work has a delicacy, gentleness, even wispiness that would seem not well suited to the subject. And yet his film has an uncommon beauty, warmth and immediacy, and a touch of the mysterious, too.
80
Variety
Variety
Peter Weir's Gallipoli tackles a legend in human terms and emerges as a highly entertaining drama on a number of levels, none of them inaccessible to anyone unfamiliar with the actual events.
50
TimeRichard Schickel
TimeRichard Schickel
Well acted and, within its limited terms, well made, Gallipoli represents a failure of nerve as well as design.
40
Chicago ReaderDave Kehr
Chicago ReaderDave Kehr
Classy and lifeless - a prettily photographed, heavily directed antiwar film.