69
Metascore
17 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- Woods delivers one of his all-time great performances and Stone demonstrates the sheer ambition, both thematic and filmic, that would become a career theme.
- 80Time OutTime OutThe polemic may seem obvious and at times laboured, but the action sequences are brilliant, and the film does achieve a brutal, often very moving, power.
- 80TV Guide MagazineTV Guide MagazineCaustic, vivid, and without question the best major film about recent conflicts in Latin America.
- 80EmpireWilliam ThomasEmpireWilliam ThomasStone takes gritty subject matter and hacks it into a perilous ride based on Boyle's life in Salvador. Showing the true, upsetting and harsh realities of which most of us try not to think of. Pure Oliver Stone.
- 75Chicago Sun-TimesRoger EbertChicago Sun-TimesRoger EbertSalvador is a movie about real events as seen through the eyes of characters who have set themselves adrift from reality. That's what makes it so interesting.
- 60CineVueChristopher MachellCineVueChristopher MachellThe editing, too, is rough around the edges, but it all adds to the sense of madness that pervades El Salvador – a sense that only grows the more intense the further that Boyle journeys into this Central American heart of darkness.
- 50Chicago TribuneGene SiskelChicago TribuneGene SiskelWexler told his story in credible human terms. Writer-director Stone felt the need to jazz up his action with wacked-out characters who belong in a ''Saturday Night Live'' sketch.
- 50Chicago ReaderDave KehrChicago ReaderDave KehrStone works some imaginative changes on the usual formulas of propagandistic fiction—Boyle is anything but the usual bland audience-identification figure, waiting around to be converted to the ideological position of the filmmakers—but as a director, he still didn't have the chops to bring off such an ambitious, multilayered project: the picture lunges into hysterical incoherence every few minutes, and Stone must resort to platitudinous simplifications to clear things up. It's lively, though, to say the very least.
- 40The New York TimesWalter GoodmanThe New York TimesWalter GoodmanThe main characters tend to be either grotesques or stereotypes, who keep getting into incoherent arguments, composed largely of variations on America's favorite epithet...For a movie with pretensions to laying out political realities, the colorful Salvador is black and white.