An attempt on the life of the president reveals a much larger conspiracy in this thriller starring Dennis Quaid, Matthew Fox, and Forest Whitaker. VANTAGE POINT takes the point of view of five witnesses and shows them all to reveal the truth. Read more
| Starring | Sigourney Weaver, Matthew Fox, Forest Whitaker, Dennis Quaid |
|---|---|
| Director | Pete Travis |
| Genres | Action/Adventure, Audio Descriptive, Thriller |
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Salamanca, Spain. The President of the US of A (William Hurt) is in town to sign a new international security accord. At his side: secret servicemen Kent Taylor (Matthew Fox) and Thomas Barnes read more »
Salamanca, Spain, and crowds jostle in the main square as secret service agents usher in the US President (William... read more on Time Out
Absolutely dreadful. I was conned into this by the trailer which made it look original, interesting, clever, and full of imaginative twists. Unfortunately it's a cheap and unintentionally comical parody of the Hollywood blockbuster with all the usual clichés, car chases and happy endings. All the goodies survive car crashes, being shot, blown up, while the baddies get what's coming to them. By the fifth 'vantage point' (the same scene being repeated again and again and again and again from a different points of view) I was ready to shoot myself. But being boring is its best point, other than that, it panders to American patriotism and arrogance with a lazy and ridiculously unbelievable script and laughable symbolism. Forest Whitaker made a mistake agreeing to this. Should have gone straight to TV.
Some people can not watch a film like this, because it involves seeing some footage over and over again. If however you enjoy 'who done it' films and trying to solve things on your own you might enjoy this. There is of course the element of America saves all and hero's survive anything to pursue the bad guys.
It is original in some aspects and anything a bit different is worth a look. Forest Whitaker is always good. He is a font of emotion.
Dreadfully dull. To attach such a classic as Rashomon to this tripe seems like a poor attempt to attract moviegoers. The premise behind Rashomon is that the story is played out from differing perspectives of the characters involved; and we know how stories can appear different that way.
Vantage point, however, is simply just one story repeated over and over again but from the actual experiences of the characters, no interpretation. The only similarity is that the plot is slowly unravelled with each passing.
Each view of the the story repeats about 5 times (by this time my eyes started to roll) before deciding to conclude with a situation that's risible. The situations that exist in order to keep the flimsy plot rolling are too convenient, and will leave you asking (in a Harry Hill voice) 'what are the chances of that happening!'.
I t had good entertainment value. Good car chases, bomb explosions fast pace etc but after a while I got bored of the replays.
Mostly though I thought he story line was utter American Propaganda S***E. 'The terroists are out to get us all'. What rubbish everyone knows the real perpetraitors of 9/11 was the American goverment itself. Just more brainswashing to get the world at large to conform to an Orwellian society.
Dont belive the Hype
Absolutely dreadful. I was conned into this by the trailer which made it look original, interesting, clever, and full of imaginative twists. Unfortunately it's a cheap and unintentionally comical parody of the Hollywood blockbuster with all the usual clichés, car chases and happy endings. All the goodies survive car crashes, being shot, blown up, while the baddies get what's coming to them. By the fifth 'vantage point' (the same scene being repeated again and again and again and again from a different points of view) I was ready to shoot myself. But being boring is its best point, other than that, it panders to American patriotism and arrogance with a lazy and ridiculously unbelievable script and laughable symbolism. Forest Whitaker made a mistake agreeing to this. Should have gone straight to TV.
Some people can not watch a film like this, because it involves seeing some footage over and over again. If however you enjoy 'who done it' films and trying to solve things on your own you might enjoy this. There is of course the element of America saves all and hero's survive anything to pursue the bad guys.
It is original in some aspects and anything a bit different is worth a look. Forest Whitaker is always good. He is a font of emotion.
if you dont mind a story being told over and over by different points of view....then this is for you......stick with it its a great film.......i will buy this one when it is released.
Where Akira Kurosawa chose to make 'Rashomon' with a highly stylised narrative to suggest the impossibility of obtaining the truth from contrasting eye witness accounts, 'Vantage Point' uses it purely and simply as a stylistic device. This is essentially a shallow film with no new ideas and an all to predictable plot. One Dimensional characters also mean that a potentially brilliant cast can not save this movie. This is a dull, conventional film perhaps borrowing a little too much from Pete Travis' time directing 'The Bill' episodes.
80 minutes of utter stinking putrid swill..
If you want to see all what's wrong with current movies in America watch this.
If perchance you think it was a good film! then I suggest suicide as the only possible answer for what ails thee.
Yes it's really that bad.
Badly acted, felt like a made for tv film.turned it off after 15 minutes.
Dull boring, smart ass whodunnit style movie. A waste of good actors. What was it all about? Who cares. Totally pointless. Don't waste your rental.
oh dear, are hollywood still funding films this bad? i guess so. intriguing for the first 20 mins, then had to see ending just to work out why the director did it this way. still none the wiser . rent this at your peril. YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED.
Salamanca, Spain. The President of the US of A (William Hurt) is in town to sign a new international security accord. At his side: secret servicemen Kent Taylor (Matthew Fox) and Thomas Barnes read more »
Salamanca, Spain, and crowds jostle in the main square as secret service agents usher in the US President (William... read more on Time Out