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Vantage Point
Columbia Pictures (Sony)

Vantage Point reviews
Critic Score
Metascore: 40 Metascore out of 100
User Score  
5.2 out of 10
based on 32 reviews
Read critic reviews
How did we calculate this?
based on 89 votes
Read user comments
Rate this movie

MPAA RATING: PG-13 for sequences of intense violence and action, some disturbing images and brief strong language

Starring Dennis Quaid, Matthew Fox, Forest Whitaker, Sigourney Weaver, and William Hurt

In Columbia Pictures' action-packed thriller Vantage Point, eight strangers with eight different points of view try to unlock the truth behind an assassination attempt on the president of the United States. Thomas Barnes and Kent Taylor are two Secret Service agents assigned to protect President Ashton at a landmark summit on the global war on terror. When President Ashton is shot moments after his arrival in Spain, chaos ensues and disparate lives collide in the hunt for the assassin. In the crowd is Howard Lewis, an American tourist who thinks he's captured the shooter on his camcorder while videotaping the event for his kids back home. Also there, relaying the historic event to millions of TV viewers across the globe, is American TV news producer Rex Brooks. As they and others reveal their stories, the pieces of the puzzle will fall into place...and it will become apparent that shocking motivations lurk just beneath the surface. (Columbia Pictures)


GENRE(S): Drama  |  Suspense/Thriller  
WRITTEN BY: Barry L. Levy  
DIRECTED BY: Pete Travis  
RELEASE DATE: DVD: July 1, 2008 
Theatrical: February 22, 2008 
RUNNING TIME: 90 minutes, Color 
ORIGIN: USA 

What The Critics Said

All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...

83
Seattle Post-Intelligencer William Arnold
Flat-out one of the more exciting and original gut-busters that Hollywood has produced in many a month. It's virtually all action, but the action is never mindless and it is full of marvelous surprises every step of the way.
Read Full Review
75
Charlotte Observer Lawrence Toppman
Three-fourths of a terrific thriller, which in this dreary run of winter movies seemed like clear spring water to this parched traveler. The setup is so riveting, the suspense so carefully prolonged, that I didn't mind when it unraveled into lunacy near the end.
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75
Philadelphia Inquirer Carrie Rickey
Because Vantage Point is really a concept movie, the actors are not much more than pawns on the chessboard: They move one square at a time.
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70
The New Yorker David Denby
Is it art? Not remotely. But, up to the final scenes, it’s a tremendous piece of engineering. After all, the narratives have to synch up visually, which can’t be easy to manage. And the hurtling force of Vantage Point is fun to watch.
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70
Time Richard Corliss
The movie is best seen as straightforward, sometimes harrowing melodrama, packed with mistaken identities, beautiful villains, a kindly tourist who can outrace the bad guys, and a lost little girl whom the film brazenly sends onto a highway full of speeding cars. It's as if Dakota Fanning had wandered onto the streets of Ronin.
Read Full Review
70
Chicago Reader Jonathan Rosenbaum
If you're up for good nihilist entertainment, look no further.
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67
Portland Oregonian Shawn Levy
A slick and exciting film
Read Full Review
63
ReelViews James Berardinelli
It's a fast-paced motion picture that fails the "reality test" but maintains a certain intensity for its entire running length. It's entertaining in the same way that an episode of "24" is entertaining.
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63
Premiere Ryan Stewart
When Vantage Point is staying with Quaid and Fox as they hunt the suspected assassins (including the arrestingly beautiful Israeli actress Ayelet Zurer) it's a perfectly serviceable thriller with high production values and some better-than-average car chases.
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60
Empire Kim Newman
Some okay thrills with good performances and some smarts. But the last reel plunge spoils things. Myth for the new millennium: any average, out-of-shape middle-aged Yank, including the President, can get in a punch-up with a few well-armed, super-trained terrorists, and win.
Read Full Review
58
Entertainment Weekly Owen Gleiberman
Vantage Point starts to slide off the rails when it tracks a tourist (Forest Whitaker) and his trusty camcorder; instead of Zapruder-like intrigue, the episode has him running around like an agent in a rote thriller.
Read Full Review
50
Chicago Tribune Michael Phillips
With a less pedigreed international cast the whole thing would be a disaster, as opposed to a chilly new kind of disaster film.
Read Full Review
50
The Globe and Mail (Toronto) Liam Lacey
Quaid and Whitaker, who serve more or less as the designated humans in this clockwork contraption of a film, are capable in corny roles, but otherwise Vantage Point is as stuffed with cardboard performances and expositional speeches as any seventies disaster flick.
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50
TV Guide Maitland McDonagh
At a certain point, its sheer can you top this excess, and credibility files out the window three's no reason to continue paying attention.
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50
USA Today Claudia Puig
Turns out to be a tepid thriller that promises more than it delivers.
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50
The New York Times Manohla Dargis
This is competent if completely impersonal filmmaking of a familiar type that finds the usual allotment of famous, or at least famous enough, actors.
Read Full Review
42
Baltimore Sun Chris Kaltenbach
An overly gimmicky and fatally repetitive terrorist thriller that quickly wears out its welcome.
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42
The Onion (A.V. Club) Scott Tobias
The loaded cast does what it can with the paper-thin characterizations, but Vantage Point gets hijacked early by its high-concept premise, and it quickly devolves into a by-the-numbers thriller with the numbers out of order.
Read Full Review
42
Christian Science Monitor Peter Rainer
How can we take this doomsday scenario seriously when we keep waiting for Bruce Willis to rise from the ashes?
Read Full Review
40
Los Angeles Times Kenneth Turan
The truth is that two other films with Greengrass' name on them, "The Bourne Supremacy" and "The Bourne Ultimatum," have spoiled us for this kind of thriller filmmaking, and stacked against that, Vantage Point doesn't have a chance.
Read Full Review
38
Rolling Stone Peter Travers
By the end, Vantage Point is such a unholy mess of drooling sentiment and sloppy loose ends that you’ll hate yourself for being suckered in.
Read Full Review
38
Boston Globe Ty Burr
The result is a movie that's both clever and stupid - an interesting feat.
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38
New York Post Kyle Smith
Throws in enough hurtling bodies, screaming bullets and totaled cars that it at least holds your interest, so it passes the worth-watching-if-you're-stuck-on-an-airplane test.
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30
Washington Post John Anderson
Although it was held back by the studio for about a year, someone apparently came to the inevitable conclusion that no amount of ripening time was going to help this gimmicky and ultimately harebrained movie.
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30
Salon.com Stephanie Zacharek
Wears off in about 10.8 minutes.
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30
The Hollywood Reporter Sheri Linden
Straight out of the slice-and-dice school of filmmaking, Vantage Point fractures chronology and perspective in a vain attempt to disguise its flimsiness.
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30
Film Threat Pete Vonder Haar
What you won’t be able to ignore is the ridiculous way Vantage Point’s brings everything to an end.
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30
Village Voice Scott Foundas
Produced by Paul Greengrass, and conceived as something of a companion film to his own "Bloody Sunday," there wasn't a moment in "Omagh" that rang false. There's not a single one in Vantage Point that rings true.
Read Full Review
25
San Francisco Chronicle Mick LaSalle
Vantage Point has nothing going on. There's no artistic, philosophical or even jolly entertainment reason for adopting this strategy. It's just arbitrary, a gimmick.
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20
Austin Chronicle Marc Savlov
If you can work your way past Vantage Point's goofy casting that places a bland, blank-eyed Hurt in the White House, then I suppose you can manage to forgive this "Rashomon" rip-off's other glaring idiosyncrasies, of which there are many.
Read Full Review
10
Wall Street Journal Joe Morgenstern
Why, beating the audience about the ears, eyes and brain with essentially the same sequence of events from eight characters' points of view, none of which adds much more than deafening hysteria and identically dreadful music. The filmmakers seem to have missed the point that each re-enactment in "Rashomon" provides new and conflicting information. It makes you wonder if they studied the wrong movie. Maybe they rented "Rush Hour," or a video on Rosh Hashanah.
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10
Variety Justin Chang
A 23-minute movie dragged out, via some narrative gimmickry, to a punishing hour and a half.
Read Full Review

What Our Users Said

Vote Now!The average user rating for this movie is 5.2 (out of 10) based on 89 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.

M L gave it an8:
Saw this at a $2 theatre...besides the rip in the screen, I was on the edge of my seat for the complete last half of the movie. The characters seemed to fit well into their parts and the car chase scene was well done. The conspiracy theme wasn't too disturbing except for the poor untrained Secret Service actors...(they really are alot tougher and smarter than directors make them to be ((I'm ex-military)). I really enjoyed the last few minutes...how all the parts collided together...nice twist. Fairly nice plot altogether. Kudos to William Hurt's character for being the gentleman president with a little common sense and straight thinking. -not a warhawk, nor weak-knee kind of guy.

Sam O. gave it a10:
This movie was very well composed and put together. The action and suspense slowly combine together to form the story and the driector does this very well. 10/10!

Bangell gave it a7:
A unique and interesting film.

Chris A. gave it a10:
AMAZING thriller and car chase.

ElKay gave it a2:
Forest Whitaker needs to redeem himself for his horrible performance in this film. Sigouney Weaver was not needed for the role she played. Anybody can shout "Camera 1" "Camera 2, I'm losing you!" It's been a long time since I've sat in a movie theater and heard people laughing out loud at a movie that's not a comedy.

Andy W. gave it a1:
If you enjoy watching the same 10 minutes of film repeated half a dozen times and calling it a "movie," you'll love this picture. Also, if you believe that a shaky camera, where you can't really tell what's happening in an action seen, is a substitute for good filmmaking, rush out and buy a ticket. If you don't really have to care about characters one way or another and are entertained by an overly complex, completely unbelievable plot, see this film several times! Otherwise, save your money.

Einar J. gave it a3:
The movie is so stereotypical, that i can't believe i even found this movie somewhat appealing. The idea of viewpoints sounds wonderful (main reason i even gave this movie a 3), but it becomes tedious, revisited and in the end abandoned for an all out momentum, we-dont-have-enough-of-a-budget-to-add-more-viewpoints. There is almost no character development, and all the characters are typical and uninteresting. Despite half the cast dying somewhere in the movie, without much emotion, the plot could've worked with some enhanced character development. Forest Whitaker acts decently, but seems to fit in the Forest Whitaker type of role, barely causing for major acclaim. The movie was just awful really, yet could keep you somewhat appealled for the first time in theatres.

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