
The Guardian
It’s watchable, stately, sometimes ludicrous and – in sporadic doses – audacious. Revolutionary, however, it isn’t.
Full reviewBright, intelligent, passionate and free, Eleanor is Karl Marx's youngest daughter. Among the first women to link the themes of feminism and socialism, she takes part in the workers' battles and fights for women's rights and the abolition of child labour. In 1883 she meets Edward Aveling and her life is crushed by a passionate but tragic love story.
It’s watchable, stately, sometimes ludicrous and – in sporadic doses – audacious. Revolutionary, however, it isn’t.
Full reviewGarai’s explosive performance and Nicchiarelli’s oddly restrained film come together in at least one glorious moment...
Full reviewA film that seems like tidbits from a promising life that ultimately leads nowhere.
Full reviewWaves and shadows of grief move through Susanna Nicchiarelli’s ambitious film at every turn...
Full reviewWith the exception of a few fleeting sequences... (the) film is as lumberingly sombre as these things tend to get...
Full reviewNicchiarelli... has gone to great lengths to avoid the trappings of a period film...
Full reviewMiss Marx is available to stream in New Zealand now on Google Play and Apple TV.
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