If Phantom Thread is indeed Daniel Day-Lewis' last film, the actor is going out on a high note. Working with writer-director Paul Thomas Anderson, he plays 1950s London fashion designer Reynolds Woodcock, who gets more than he bargains for in a waitress-turned-muse. Here's what critics are saying:
- Day-Lewis "gives it his all" and "brings Reynolds to life with every shade of gray imaginable—in one scene we sympathize with him then, moments later, we despise him," writes James Berardinelli at Reel Views. You'll need to be patient through "an hour of background and character development." It's necessary, however, for a "fascinating and riveting" second half showcasing "as warped a love story as one is likely to find."
- Not easily definable, the film is "beguiling"—"a rare combination of audacity and precision, impeccably tailored yet full of mystery and magic, like an essential part of it is beyond Anderson's control," writes Scott Tobias at NPR. Among its strengths: "arresting compositions, a carefully integrated piano-and-viola score by Jonny Greenwood, and performances that crackle with wit and verve."