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Leave your thoughts about Rosaline.
| Original-CinKim HughesRosaline is a delight from start to finish, a brisk, bright-eyed, and inventive romantic comedy with constituent parts that probably shouldn’t work this well together but do. |
| The Globe and Mail (Toronto)Aparita BhandariRosaline ultimately sparkles in this cheeky telling of the greatest love story never told. |
| CNNBrian LowryTapping into the twin markets of A) lovers of rom-coms and B) recovering English majors, “Rosaline” promotes a fleetingly mentioned “Romeo and Juliet” character front and center, then builds a very clever and breezy movie around her. The result is a welcome starring showcase for Kaitlyn Dever more likely to prosper in the hamlet of Hulu than it would have fared in the province of theaters. |
| The A.V. ClubCourtney HowardDever is as excellent as ever as the acerbic, quick-witted, jilted ex. She coaxes the hilariousness and heartbreak out of each scene with ease and authenticity. |
| IndieWireKate ErblandPlayed by Kaitlyn Dever, this Rosaline is very mad indeed (why shouldn’t she be?), but the always-winning actress helps guide a prickly footnote into delightful territory. One part coming-of-age tale, one part literary reconsideration, and all totally fun, Rosaline proves there’s still plenty to mine from the classic canon, with lively twists. |
| The GuardianAdrian HortonRosaline . . . understands what makes a good adaptation: a sense of humor at least on par with if not exceeding the original, lighthearted lines with serious delivery, crackling romantic chemistry. And in the case of Rosaline, an unmissable lead in Kaitlyn Dever as a lovelorn medieval schemer left on read. |
| Paste MagazineKathy Michelle ChaconRosaline gets some things absolutely right—the casting of Dever, the use of music to lampoon genre clichés, its creative point of view—but it misses the mark it establishes for itself. It’s a misguided work that highlights the insincerities that have emerged in Hollywood’s recent charge towards “inclusion” and “diversity.” |
| TimeStephanie ZacharekThe picture is frisky and casual; it doesn’t try to be something it’s not. |
| VarietyTomris LafflyThere’s something fresh about the story’s unwillingness to pit a woman’s romantic quests against her career goals. |
| Screen RantRachel LaBonteThose who prefer their period pieces to be more traditional will find this blasphemous, but those willing to imagine a 16th century Verona with updated characters will get a kick out of Rosaline's antics. |