All Critics (68) | Top Critics (24) | Fresh (64) | Rotten (4)
The movie is so clammily sensitive and tame that it stifles any strong response.
A sentimental, feel-good romance about pity sex.
The Sessions is bracing. It's also one of the few movies to recognize that people with severe physical disabilities have sexual lives, too.
A sweet but minor fictional parable about the strange possibilities of love.
A movie like this is really built around a performance, and John Hawkes - so powerfully evil in "Winter's Bone" and "Martha Marcy May Marlene" - carries the film.
"The Sessions'' treats intimacy with an explicitness and honesty that's very rare in movies.
Another dynamite vehicle for John Hawkes, in which Lewin's affecting script overcomes his pedestrian direction.
Skilled direction, a talented cast and a simple but elegant story will garner a lot of sympathy from its targeted, more mature audience.
It offers a relatable depiction of the powers of a positive mental attitude and perseverance in spite of horrendously bad luck. And some Oscar-caliber acting, to boot.
An incredibly low-key and feel-good adult movie about sex that's much funnier than most people are probably expecting, highlighted by a pair of Oscar-caliber performances by its two leads.
A frank exploration of sex and disability, The Sessions compensates for a minor structural misstep with an acute ear for tone and stellar performances throughout.
The bottom line here is that yes, a movie about a physically disabled man makes for one of the sexiest date nights of the year. Unless you're allergic to over-20s.
With Ben Lewin's film The Sessions, Hawkes is given the biggest and juiciest leading role of his career, and he pulls it off with remarkable grace and humor.
Less dreary than uplifting, The Surrogate succeeds as a light romance with heavy material.
The movie methodically punts each time it comes across anything interesting.
The Sessions is a magnificent film. This tale of a profoundly disabled man's sexual awaking is not only a genuine crowd pleaser , but it also gives a cinematic voice to the marginalized.
Mature but deeply powerful look at sex and the disabled.
Award-worthy performances from John Hawkes, Helen Hunt and William H. Macy.
This warm, witty, sensuous and quite wonderful study of a disabled artist terrifically avoids any "triumph of the human spirit" sentimentality.
The core of the move -- specifically the sessions between Mark and Cheryl -- is quite good.
More Critic ReviewsSource: http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/the_sessions/
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