45
Metascore
18 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 75Boston GlobeBoston GlobeThe director gives us a small, sincere and nearly perfectly realized film about adolescence in Oklahoma, aptly entitled The Outsiders. [24 Mar 1983]
- 75Rolling StonePeter TraversRolling StonePeter TraversFrancis Coppola's revision of his 1983 film of S.E. Hinton's best seller The Outsiders is funny, touching and revelatory, with twenty-two minutes of added footage and a new soundtrack featuring Elvis Presley. [Review of re-release]
- 75TV Guide MagazineTV Guide MagazineThe charismatic Dillon is a believable delinquent and gets solid support from a cast that went on to populate some of the better youth pictures in years to come. [Review of re-release]
- 63Chicago Sun-TimesRoger EbertChicago Sun-TimesRoger EbertCoppola's teenagers seem trapped inside too many layers of storytelling.
- 60VarietyVarietyFrancis Coppola has made a well acted and crafted but highly conventional film out of S.E. Hinton's popular youth novel, The Outsiders.
- 50Christian Science MonitorDavid SterrittChristian Science MonitorDavid SterrittAs a movie, it's mediocre.
- 50The Globe and Mail (Toronto)Jay ScottThe Globe and Mail (Toronto)Jay ScottThis is an honestly moving, ungainly film. [25 Mar 1983]
- 30TimeRichard CorlissTimeRichard CorlissAlas, The Outsiders is not quite a good one. Because it falls in with the undulating rhythm of the life of its heroes, for whom a fatal fight and a quiet night have almost equal importance, the picture never manages to reach the peaks of satisfying Hollywood melodrama.
- 20The New York TimesVincent CanbyThe New York TimesVincent CanbyIt is spectacularly out of touch, a laughably earnest attempt to impose heroic attitudes on some nice, small characters purloined from a ''young-adult'' novel by S.E. Hinton, the woman who wrote the novel on which ''Tex'' was based.
- 10Chicago ReaderDave KehrChicago ReaderDave KehrFrancis Ford Coppola's gang film is as moony about death as "One From the Heart" was over romance; the film is unremitting in its morbid sentimentality, running its teenage characters through a masochistic gamut of beatings, killings, burnings, and suicides.