Bliss's reviews
Media reviews
Variety
Whether classified as straight-up genre piece or substance-abuse drama in disguise, this is a dive into psychedelic hedonism that succeeds in constantly topping itself, rather than succumbing to shock-value fatigue like the aforementioned Noé joints.
The A.V. Club
'Bliss' approaches its aesthetic with a straight-faced intensity, pummeling the viewer with woozy handheld closeups and violent bursts of montage until you feel like maybe you might have been dosed somehow on your way into the theater. The only irony here is that Begos says it?s his most personal movie to date.
Roger Ebert
For better and for worse, 'Bliss' truly makes you feel as if you, too, are suffering from a narcotic-induced, hallucinatory freak-out?one that leaves you physically exhausted, mentally spent and ultimately wondering what the hell just happened to you.
Los Angeles Times
Madison?s work aside, this picture isn?t all that exciting. It?s 80 tedious minutes of shouting, swearing, nudity and gore, cut together with the deftness of a chainsaw.
Festival Internacional de Cine de Lanzarote