28
Metascore
18 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 75Chicago Sun-TimesRoger EbertChicago Sun-TimesRoger EbertA mercilessly convoluted version of a Twister, that genre in which the plot whacks us as if it's taking batting practice. I will not hint at anything that happens. I will simply observe that it's all entertaining.
- 60VarietyRonnie ScheibVarietyRonnie ScheibUneven but enjoyably titillating black comedy should elate Rickman fans while pleasing aficionados of extra-flakey caper flicks.
- Shows strains of stylistic overkill with egregious flash-edit tricks and sped-up camera moves, while the signal-flare plotting indicates that perhaps a bit more time could have been taken on the screenplay.
- 38Chicago TribuneMichael PhillipsChicago TribuneMichael PhillipsI enjoyed Eliza Dushku's mad poetess, probably for the wrong reasons, but with a project this meager, you take your artful sneers and scenic diversions where you can get them.
- 30Washington PostPhilip KennicottWashington PostPhilip KennicottIt's all wildly implausible and occasionally fun, but it could be so much better if director Randall Miller (who co-wrote the screenplay) had thrown in a little more character development and excised a half-dozen crazy plot twists.
- 25Entertainment WeeklyOwen GleibermanEntertainment WeeklyOwen GleibermanRandall Miller (Bottle Shock), appears to be trying to cross a bad Elmore Leonard thriller with a bad indie-festival family-angst comedy. He gives us the worst of both worlds.
- 25Seattle Post-IntelligencerBill WhiteSeattle Post-IntelligencerBill WhiteWhat finally sinks the film is that the more it tries to dazzle us, the more uninterested we become.
- 20Village VoiceVillage VoiceDirector and co-writer Randall Miller is so ill at ease with the basic building blocks of the genre that Nobel Son quickly announces itself as one of those misbegotten clunkers where almost every creative decision isn't just wrong but tone-deaf.
- 20The New York TimesManohla DargisThe New York TimesManohla DargisAn aggressively noisy exercise in style over substance about nasty people doing nasty things to one another in (sigh) Southern California.
- 16The A.V. ClubNathan RabinThe A.V. ClubNathan RabinNobel Son sadistically resurrects the Tarantino knockoff--an unloved, foul-mouthed little bastard of a subgenre that should now go away forever.