Parents' Guide to

Woman in Gold

By Sandie Angulo Chen, Common Sense Media Reviewer

age 12+

Helen Mirren is best part of fact-based historical drama.

Movie PG-13 2015 110 minutes
Woman in Gold Poster Image

A Lot or a Little?

What you will—and won't—find in this movie.

Community Reviews

age 13+

Based on 3 parent reviews

age 10+

Good companion to Monuments Men

Took my 3 boys, 14, 12 and 8, to see this last night. We had seen Monuments Men and the boys are fascinated by this era and subject, and Woman In Gold was yet another story in the awful saga of how the Nazis looted and tried to destroy the Jewish culture. Helen Mirren was delightful. Ryan Reynolds I could have done without, but then again, he did a serviceable job playing the lawyer. There is a lot to discuss about this story...the artist Gustav Klimt, the wealthy having their portraits painted, WW 2, Nazis, Holocaust, art history, national pride and the symbols thereof, just on and on. We had a lively discussion on the way home! There is one instance of some cursing, and the overarching awfulness of the Nazis, but with guidance, an excellent choice for kids around 10 and up.
age 14+

Appropriate addition to WWII Studies

My son studied WWII in 9th grade, and I supplemented his studies by choosing WWII era movies. We watched Monuments Men, Swing Kids, and now this one. Woman in Gold is an excellent movie, though it is heart wrenching to be reminded of how terrible the human race can be to each other. I appreciated the opportunities it gave my son and I to discuss these issues.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say (3 ):
Kids say (1 ):

Like her compatriots Judi Dench and Maggie Smith, Helen Mirren is one of the preeminent actresses alive today, and even in less-than-stellar films, she never phones in her performances. She plays Altmann with the dignity and grace you'd expect of a woman who spent her first 22 years living in the luxury and elegance of upper-crust Vienna. With her lingering accent and sense of refinement, Altmann is a woman with high standards and a mission to secure either her family-owned art or, at the very least, a public apology from the Austrian government. Mirren, like Meryl Streep in The Iron Lady, is the main reason to see the film.

The flashbacks are a necessary and powerful interruption to the legal problems Maria and Randy face in 1998. Maria's memories shift between her childhood in the '20s and her wedding reception one year before the Anschluss brought Nazi rule, rampant anti-Semitism, and deportations to her lifelong home. As a young married woman, Maria is played by the talented Tatiana Maslany (Orphan Black). Maslany and Max Irons, who plays Maria's opera singer husband, Fritz Altmann, are so compelling as newlyweds facing the unthinkable that it's hard not to wish the movie were about them, rather than the elder Maria dealing with her rookie attorney's lawsuit. Reynolds is really the weak link in this movie. He's not convincing in the role, and Mirren does most of the dramatic heavy lifting. Ultimately this is a Mirren vehicle, and her performance will make audiences long for their own beloved aunts, just as Maria longs to have the Klimt painting of her beautiful Aunt Adele.

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