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97
4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days
17
88 Minutes
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97
4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days
83
Paranoid Park
82
Taxi to the Dark Side
80
Bigger, Stronger, Faster*
79
Visitor, The
79
Iron Man
78
Before I Forget
75
Young@Heart
75
Boy A
74
Mongol
72
Lou Reed's Berlin
70
Standard Operating Procedure
70
Outsourced
67
Forgetting Sarah Marshall
67
Snow Angels
65
Married Life
65
Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull
65
Water Lilies
64
Fall, The
62
Kabluey
61
Stuck
57
Forbidden Kingdom, The
56
Leatherheads
56
Then She Found Me
55
Baby Mama
55
Pathology
54
You Don't Mess with the Zohan
54
CSNY: Déjà Vu
53
Sex and the City: The Movie
52
Mother of Tears, The
51
Finding Amanda
51
Promotion, The
49
Pirates Who Don't Do Anything: A VeggieTales Movie, The
48
Run, Fat Boy, Run
46
Jack Brooks: Monster Slayer
39
Young People F**king
37
Made of Honor
37
War, Inc.
37
Speed Racer
34
Happening, The
32
Chapter 27
31
Deception
30
Sarah Landon and the Paranormal Hour
27
How to Rob a Bank
24
Love Guru, The
17
88 Minutes
Stars indicate the most critically-acclaimed movies.
|
Stop Loss
Paramount Pictures
MPAA RATING: R for graphic violence and pervasive language
Starring
Ryan Phillippe,
Abbie Cornish,
Channing Tatum,
Joseph Gordon-Levitt,
Ciarán Hinds,
Timothy Olyphant,
Victor Rasuk,
and
Rob Brown
Sgt. Brandon King fought for America. He fought for freedom. He fought for his family. He gave everything, and then he came home to begin his life anew. But now his superiors want more: They want him back. (Paramount Pictures)
| GENRE(S): |
Drama
|
War
|
| WRITTEN BY: |
Mark Richard
Kimberly Peirce
|
| DIRECTED BY: |
Kimberly Peirce
|
| RELEASE DATE: |
DVD: July 8, 2008
Theatrical: March 28, 2008
|
| RUNNING TIME: |
113 minutes, Color |
| ORIGIN: |
USA |

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)
Nathan Rabin
Stop-Loss is a human story first and foremost, and Peirce and her stellar young cast ensure that the message never gets in the way of the storytelling.

88
TV Guide
Ken Fox
It's a richly textured, psychologically acute film that takes an unblinking look at the tattered life of the returning soldier, and it's boosted by two powerful performances from Phillippe and the increasingly impressive Tatum, a former underwear model who has somehow turned into a fine actor.

88
Rolling Stone
Peter Travers
Even when the script slips into sentiment, Peirce sticks with her troubled, questing soldiers, and through this raw and riveting movie, they stick with us.

88
Philadelphia Inquirer
Carrie Rickey
Stop-Loss carries the emotional force and propulsive drama of the quintessential soldier's story.

83
Baltimore Sun
Chris Kaltenbach
There's little time for nuance in Stop-Loss, and it doesn't deny any of the film's power to wish Peirce would occasionally slow things down enough to let her audience ponder what they're seeing.

75
San Francisco Chronicle
Mick LaSalle
Clearly, Peirce's motives are pure. She's not using the "stop-loss" issue as a wedge to make the government or the administration look bad. She's using it to dramatize an injustice and to advocate on behalf of the soldiers.

70
Los Angeles Times
Kenneth Turan
Stop-Loss is a film that does it right.

70
New York Magazine
David Edelstein
It’s ironic that Stop-Loss loses its momentum when the characters go on the road. Yet Rasuk--the star of "Raising Victor Vargas"--gives a stunning performance.

70
The New Yorker
David Denby
Stop-Loss is not a great movie, but it’s forceful, effective, and alive, with the raw, mixed-up emotions produced by an endless war.

70
Time
Richard Schickel
A relentlessly grim film.

70
Washington Post
John Anderson
It's a remarkably entertaining movie, thanks in part to a first-rate cast and a director who knows you can't make a point without calling everyone to attention.

67
Austin Chronicle
Marc Savlov
Phillippe does a dark, searing turn with a character that could have easily been little more than Taps-era hubris, and Gordon-Levitt, as one of King's more fragmented former charges, is riveting and convincingly small-town Texas.

67
Entertainment Weekly
Lisa Schwarzbaum
A painfully polite Iraq war drama pitched at the MTV generation.

67
Seattle Post-Intelligencer
William Arnold
While there are good things about it, Stop-Loss is nothing spectacular.

67
Christian Science Monitor
Peter Rainer
What we're left with is outrage in a vacuum. It's impossible to separate out the stop-loss tactic from the misadventures of the war itself, and that's what this film, to its discredit, accomplishes.

67
Portland Oregonian
Shawn Levy
Pierce never pulls these pieces together satisfyingly, and the result is a botched effort to put a human face on a genuinely alarming situation.

63
Chicago Tribune
Jessica Reaves
While Stop-Loss doesn’t pack anything like the emotional wallop of her previous film, the movies do share Peirce’s clear-eyed refusal to answer difficult questions with simplistic answers.

63
Charlotte Observer
Lawrence Toppman
Someone watching Stop-Loss with younger eyes might feel the heat of the main soldier's dilemma more than I did, but I couldn't help thinking director Kimberly Peirce was presenting us with abstract ideas in the forms of half-realized characters.

63
New York Daily News
Elizabeth Weitzman
Despite several attempts, we're still waiting for the drama that convincingly captures the experienc of soldiers who've fought in Iraq. Stop-Loss" isn't that film, but at the very least its efforts are honorable.

63
USA Today
Claudia Puig
It's an uneven experience, with some evocative moments and others that don't resonate as much as they should.

60
Village Voice
Scott Foundas
In the end, Stop-Loss's evening-news topicality proves both an asset and a liability--an irresolvable structural conundrum. Simply put, the film so effectively reconstitutes those Vietnam-homecoming touchstones that we can anticipate its every move well before it makes them.

60
The New York Times
A.O. Scott
Ms. Peirce’s movie, which she wrote with Mark Richard, is not only an earnest, issue-driven narrative, but also a feverish entertainment, a passionate, at times overwrought melodrama gaudy with violent actions and emotions.

60
The Hollywood Reporter
John DeFore
A young cast and hotheaded melodramatic streak make it broadly accessible, perhaps enough so to help the film scrape past boxoffice challenges faced by other Iraq-centered features.

60
Empire
Helen O'Hara
Strong performances from the young cast make a compelling case that the US govt is failing its soldiers, but the film’s a little too much of a blunt instrument.

60
Film Threat
Pete Vonder Haar
Stop-Loss is a bit uneven. Mixed messages abound.

50
ReelViews
James Berardinelli
After a strong start, Stop-Loss becomes driven by a series of contrivances before falling prey to bad melodrama and even a little cheesiness.

50
Boston Globe
Ty Burr
Heavy metal, alt-pop, southern rock, orchestral swells, wailing Middle Eastern tunes all vie for our attention, but none of this noise drowns out the sound of good intentions twisting themselves into an impotent knot.

50
Chicago Reader
J.R. Jones
Though its intentions are noble, it's hampered by a stock romantic subplot (Phillipe falls for his friend's squeeze, Abbie Cornish), a familiar structure (since The Best Years of Our Lives soldiers invariably come home in threes), and a lack of symmetry (some of Gordon-Levitt's story seems to have wound up on the cutting-room floor).

50
Miami Herald
Rene Rodriguez
An earnest and well-meaning but disappointing failure.

50
Variety
Joe Leydon
A wildly uneven drama, by turns sincere and synthetic.

50
The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
Rick Groen
With the release of Stop-Loss, a precedent of sorts has definitely been set. If we've yet to see a brilliant Iraq movie, the wait is over for a bad one – this is it.

50
Wall Street Journal
Joanne Kaufman
Swamped by clichés, continuity problems, stock characters and very good intentions.

40
Salon.com
Stephanie Zacharek
A filmmaker's personal connection to the material doesn't necessarily mean that the resulting picture will be any good, and Stop-Loss is so dramatically tedious that it feels remote instead of resonant.

38
Premiere
Aaron Hillis
What little anti-war critique Peirce presents -- and she has it in her, which makes it all the more dubious -- gets trampled over by jingoistic Rambo porn.

25
New York Post
Kyle Smith
As phony as a re-enactment with finger pup pets.


The average user rating for this movie is 6.3 (out of 10) based on 43 User Votes
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