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Alphabet Killer, The
20
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43
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26
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24
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60
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63
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62
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82
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43
Death Race
15
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62
Duchess, The
43
Eagle Eye
xx
Eden Lake
67
Flow: For Love of Water
36
Fly Me to the Moon
42
Fred Claus
72
Ghost Town
54
Hamlet 2
49
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71
Horton Hears a Who!
55
House Bunny, The
xx
Lower Learning
51
Mamma Mia!
63
Man Named Pearl, A
89
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43
Meet Dave
31
Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor, The
64
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51
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36
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64
Wanted
72
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27
Women, The
47
X-Files: I Want to Believe, The
89
Man on Wire
82
Dark Knight, The
81
Still Life
72
Woman on the Beach
72
Ghost Town
71
Horton Hears a Who!
67
Flow: For Love of Water
64
Wanted
64
Pineapple Express
63
Man Named Pearl, A
63
Burn After Reading
62
Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian, The
62
Duchess, The
61
Wackness, The
60
Traitor
60
Blind Mountain
57
Towelhead
55
House Bunny, The
55
Ping Pong Playa
54
Hamlet 2
51
Mamma Mia!
51
Savage Grace
51
Step Brothers
49
Hancock
47
X-Files: I Want to Believe, The
43
Eagle Eye
43
Anamorph
43
Meet Dave
43
Death Race
42
Fred Claus
36
Space Chimps
36
Righteous Kill
36
Fly Me to the Moon
31
Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor, The
27
Women, The
26
Babylon A.D.
24
Bangkok Dangerous
20
American Carol, An
16
Surfer, Dude
15
Disaster Movie
xx
Eden Lake
xx
Alphabet Killer, The
xx
Lower Learning
Stars indicate the most critically-acclaimed movies.
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Stuck
THINKFilm
 |
|
FILM:
MPAA RATING: R for strong violence, disturbing content, sexuality/nudity, language and drug use
Starring
Mena Suvari,
Stephen Rea,
Russell Hornsby,
and
Rukiya Bernard
Stuck is a tabloid-tinged thriller inspired by true events. Brandi is a compassionate young retirement-home caregiver in-line for a promotion. Tom is a victim of the downsized economy, out of work and newly homeless. Their worlds collide when Brandi, driving home from a club after too many drinks and pills, accidentally hits Tom, the impact smashing his body head-first through her car’s windshield. If discovered, this “accident” will extinguish her bright future, so instead of saving him, her plan is to let him pass and dispose of the body later. Faced with this reality, Tom knows he must escape if he wants to survive. (THINKFilm)
| GENRE(S): |
Horror
|
Suspense/Thriller
|
| WRITTEN BY: |
Stuart Gordon
|
| DIRECTED BY: |
Stuart Gordon
|
| RELEASE DATE: |
DVD: October 14, 2008
Theatrical: May 30, 2008
|
| RUNNING TIME: |
94 minutes, Color |
| ORIGIN: |
Canada | USA | UK |

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...
91
The Onion (A.V. Club)
Scott Tobias
It's a righteously nasty piece of work, and a rare example of a movie that traffics in B-movie grime without a trace of "Grindhouse"-style self-consciousness.

90
Film Threat
Matthew Sorrento
A fresh and rewarding take on cinematic terror.

75
Entertainment Weekly
Owen Gleiberman
Stuart Gordon, the mostly under-the-radar director of "Re-Animator," pops back into view with this amusing trifle -- a piece of scuzzy tabloid noir.

75
TV Guide
Ken Fox
A drum-tight, extremely grisly thriller. And odd as it may sound given the subject matter, it's also surprisingly funny.

75
Philadelphia Inquirer
Steven Rea
Rea, with his hangdog looks and Jimmy Stewart line readings, spends a good deal of his time writhing in fake blood and broken shards - not what you'd call glamorous work, but he does it with conviction.

75
Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Bill White
Unlike the worthless torture porn that is destroying the genre, Stuck is a horror movie with a reason for being.

70
Salon.com
Andrew O'Hehir
These people can behave well or poorly, but they were already bugs on the windshield of life before their unhappy collision.

70
The New York Times
Stephen Holden
Stuck, while not strictly a horror film, is steeped in gore and carries a seam of mocking gallows humor as relentless as that of "Sweeney Todd."

70
Los Angeles Times
Robert Abele
Suvari's increasingly loopy and cruel selfishness is its own nifty moral suspense, while Rea's sad sack vibe -- he already looks like a collision victim in the pre-accident scenes -- is a bleakly amusing counterpoint to his gritty refusal to go quietly.

70
Variety
Joe Leydon
Ingeniously nasty and often shockingly funny as it incrementally worsens a very bad situation, then provides a potent payoff with the forced feeding of just desserts.

70
Village Voice
Robert Wilonsky
Stuck is both darkly comic and disgusting; the name alone reduces the crime to a sick joke.

67
Austin Chronicle
Marc Savlov
Laugh? Cry? I thought I'd die, but then that's the genius of Gordon.

65
NPR
Bob Mondello
Stuart Gordon's inventions -- vivid, gruesome and occasionally quite funny -- offer a just-deserts ending and make both characters surprisingly active participants in their fates.

63
New York Post
Lou Lumenick
Mena Suvari has her best role since "American Beauty" as Brandi, a self-centered nursing home employee distinctly lacking in sympathy for anyone.

63
USA Today
Claudia Puig
This is not enjoyable entertainment, but it is brutally watchable.

63
ReelViews
James Berardinelli
There are times when it is bitingly funny and times when its bloodiness can cause a wince and a shudder - but director Stuart Gordon is not adept at blending the two extremes into a cohesive whole.

60
New York Daily News
Joe Neumaier
A taut drama that manages to be thoughtful without forgetting it's a creep-out.

58
Baltimore Sun
Michael Sragow
Thanks to Suvari, audiences laugh nervously at the mortification of soul and flesh, but she doesn't really do them much of a favor. She simply keeps them watching as a would-be gross-out comedy turns into would-be gross-out tragedy.

50
The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
Liam Lacey
History repeats itself, the first time as tragedy, the second time as farce, Karl Marx said. That might explain the possibility of even making a movie such as Stuck.

50
San Francisco Chronicle
Walter Addiego
At its best, Gordon's work is bracing and pointed, though it's not for the queasy.

50
Boston Globe
Wesley Morris
Gordon made similar lurches all over the map in his previous exercise in grotesquerie, "Edmond," which was based on a David Mamet play and starred William H. Macy as, of all things, a racist misogynist on a grisly bender. Stuck could have used some of that outrageousness.

50
Portland Oregonian
M. E. Russell
Unfortunately, the film loses its merciless rage toward the end, devolving into a stock and broadly comic thriller about unpleasant people you never quite get to know.

50
New York Magazine
David Edelstein
The film becomes an aria of agony--but with a rousingly yucko finish!

30
Washington Post
Ann Hornaday
The question is why the time, talent and treasure of such energetic and even gifted artists have been marshaled in such a disgusting and trivial genre exercise and what viewers are supposed to get out of it. Isn't life hard enough?

30
Chicago Reader
J.R. Jones
As the title of this splatter comedy by writer-director Stuart Gordon (Re-Animator) indicates, he's like a bug stuck to her windshield, and that's about the level of humanity and insight one can expect here.


The average user rating for this movie is 8.0 (out of 10) based on 2 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
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