72
Metascore
10 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 100Wall Street JournalDorothy RabinowitzWall Street JournalDorothy RabinowitzThis singularly gripping work, timely for obvious reasons, is eloquent testimony to American political life today.
- After watching Four Hours At The Capitol, the January 6 attack feels more like a horror film, one that ends with the monster still at large.
- 91The PlaylistChristian GallichioThe PlaylistChristian GallichioSomber, depressing, and ultimately a must-watch, “Four Hours” moves through that fateful day with precise clarity – toggling between the lawmakers and those within the mob as the situation grew increasingly dire.
- 90CNNBrian LowryCNNBrian LowryFour Hours at the Capitol might be unlikely to change many hearts or minds, but watching the evidence months removed from the heat of the moment and the chaos that unfolded live on TV makes it difficult to entertain arguments that the media has overblown or misrepresented those images.
- 88Chicago Sun-TimesRoger EbertChicago Sun-TimesRoger EbertPerhaps some viewpoints WILL be changed by watching this documentary, which carries no distinct political slant and employs an old-fashioned “fly on the wall” technique, thus allowing the footage and the comments from participants on both sides to speak for itself.
- 80The GuardianLucy ManganThe GuardianLucy ManganThe underlying collective testimony furnished by Four Hours at the Capitol is that the age of Trump has not yet ended – and the true day of reckoning in the United States is still to come.
- 80The TelegraphAnita SinghThe TelegraphAnita SinghThe anger of the protesters that day was clear but in this documentary they were a variety of calm, smug and deluded. It was the police and politicians who were the angry ones.
- 50VarietyDaniel D'AddarioVarietyDaniel D'AddarioThe imagery of destruction and assault is powerful on its own terms; it’s in building the story of the participants’ motives and actions that Four Hours at the Capitol falters, making what could have been a definitive document into a deeply flawed one.
- 42IndieWireSiddhant AdlakhaIndieWireSiddhant AdlakhaThe film’s focus remains largely on the crowd — not the forces that pull and push at it, contort its shape, and determine its movement through space and history, but rather, the crowd as mere spectacle, divorced from all the things that paved its path to the Capitol.
- 25San Francisco ChronicleMick LaSalleSan Francisco ChronicleMick LaSalleA documentary that doesn’t have the stomach to tell the story of what happened on Jan. 6 explicitly, and to express the real threat to American democracy that that day represents, is of no use to anybody.