Willem Dafoe and Robert Pattinson go toe-to-toe as wickies—read lightkeepers—confined to each other's company over a month-long stint on a remote island in Robert Eggers' The Lighthouse. So what's to love about a black and white film set in the 1800s with only two speaking characters? Apparently, lots. Four takes from critics, who give the film a 91% rating on Rotten Tomatoes:
- It's "a ferocious battle of wills, a tour de force of cold, clammy suspense and a protracted descent into cabin-fever madness." And it's also "kind of a blast," at times reaching "a peak of pure-cinema ecstasy," writes Justin Chang, who commends both actors. It's Dafoe, however, who provides "the movie's most memorably imposing creation—a thing of pungent wit and rude, rum-soaked vitality," Chang writes at the Los Angeles Times.
- Dafoe gives "a command performance, but his more subdued co-star is a worthy match" in this "bracing squall of a movie, a briny delight that's as amusing as it is mesmerizingly strange," writes David Sims at the Atlantic. It's "a descent into madness told with the energy of a sea shanty" and "the grand, thudding aesthetic of a silent movie," he adds, applauding Eggers' impressive attention to detail.