what begins as a chamber piece, directed by Stephen Daldry and Justin Martin from a screenplay by Dennis Kelly, becomes a full-fledged movie with a pair of marvelous performances at its claustrophobic center
it's that clever bickering and the occasional unexpected poignant insight ...make "Together" stick with you. Out of the recent batch of relationship movies that have emerged from the pandemic, this is by far the best
capturing the fear and confusion, and the daily adjustments we all had to make, Together squeezes out every significant moment of the pandemic into one expertly acted performance
as adept as "Together" is at capturing the challenges of the pandemic — the uncertainty, the anger, the bone-deep exhaustion — it’s rather less convincing as a love story
a spiky, fitfully effective portrait of pandemic-era claustrophobia and undifferentiated angst; "Together" isn't particularly weighty, but it possesses undeniable resonance
a brilliant, claustrophobic film from Dennis Kelly; When "Together" is good, you cannot take your eyes off it; Sharon Horgan and James McAvoy convey doubt and anxiety so well that it’s jarring to see them declaim with complete certainty