To Walk Invisible: The Bronte Sisters Reviews
It's all very charming and funny without being unduly sentimental.
Full Review | Dec 18, 2018
... the collected genius of the Bront sisters-the whole reason this thing was made, the whole reason we're watching-is reduced to a footnote to Branwell's dissipation.
Full Review | Dec 19, 2017
Wainwright expertly explores the idea that while the expectations for Branwell just about crushed him, the fact that nothing was expected of his sisters goaded them into acts of creation that burn with a fire that readers can still sense today.
Full Review | Mar 24, 2017
Except for a jarring (and a bit cheesy) coda, To Walk Invisible immerses us in the Bronts' world, from the wide moors and lowering gray skies to the interiors shot in a claustrophobic replica of their house.
Full Review | Mar 23, 2017
To Walk Invisible presents the Bront sisters as they've never quite been seen before.
Full Review | Mar 23, 2017
This one-off Masterpiece is well-stocked with tea and melodrama, as it tells the story of one of literary history's most important times and places: the Bronte household from 1845 to 1848.
Full Review | Mar 23, 2017
The film is graced by lovely performances from the main cast in particular. The work by the actresses in the lead roles is so good, you can easily forget that they don't look at all as though they could be related.
Full Review | Original Score: 3/4 | Mar 23, 2017