Viewing Period:
Run Time:
2 Hours, 14 Minutes
Starring:
Director:
Released in:
2003
Synopsis:
Academy Award-nominee and Golden Globe-winner Morgan Freeman ("The Sum of All Fears," "Along Came A Spider") stars in this supernatural thriller from the master of horror, Stephen King, with a screenplay by Academy Award-winner William Goldman ("Absolute Power," "All The President's Men"). Tom Sizemore ("Saving Private Ryan," "Heat") and Donnie Wahlberg ("The Sixth Sense," "Band of Brothers," TV's "Boomtown") also star in the film directed by Academy Award-nominee Lawrence Kasdan, who co-wrote the screenplays for "Raiders of the Lost Ark," "The Empire Strikes Back" and "Return of the Jedi." Four friends, tied together through a telepathic bond they gained as children, reunite as adults to fight an invading alien force that controls human beings like helpless puppets and threaten to take over the earth. Also starring Thomas Jane ("Deep Blue Sea," "Face/Off"), Jason Lee ("Vanilla Sky," "Enemy of the State") and Timothy Olyphant ("Gone in Sixty Seconds," "Go").
Copyright:
© 2003 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved
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CRITIC REVIEWS
Lew Irwin

If moviegoers do decide to sit out the weekend in front of their TV sets to follow developments in the war, they are not likely to miss much, most film critics appear to agree. They have generally meted out low ratings to all four new films. Catching the worst reviews of the lot is the Morgan Freeman starrer Dreamcatcher, adapted from a Stephen King novel by William Goldman and directed by Lawrence Kasdan. I went into Dreamcatcher hoping -- somewhat perversely, given the state of the world outside -- for a good scare, writes A.O. Scott in the New York Times, and found myself before long howling with laughter. (A few critics suggest that what the movie really needed was Terry Gilliam, of Monty Python and Brazil fame, to direct it.) Joe Morgenstern in the Wall Street Journal refers to it as a horror-free horror flick The funny business, Scott suggests, was not intended. Jack Mathews in the New York Daily News opines that given the talent that went into the making of the movie Dreamcatcher has no business being this bad. Incoherent, inane and interminable, is the way Claudia Puig describes it in USA Today. And Stephen Hunter concludes his review in the Washington Post this way: All in all -- well, there is no all in all. There are just parts. Some fit, some don't. Some are cool, some aren't. It's the craziest thing you ever saw. (By the way, critics are giving the 14-minute, computer-animated short Final Flight of the Osiris -- part of the Animatrix series plugging the upcoming The Matrix Reloaded -- terrific notices. It precedes the Dreamcatcher feature in many theaters.)

Reviewed by: quintusIX on 4/19/2009 6:04:34 AM
completely untenable theme....as one is expected to accept that an interplanetary war has been ongoing for decades without anyone noticing....excuse me?....freeman alert....he plays the sole officer in the field actually waging this war....finally, earth's enemies, although capable of interstellar travel, shape shifting, and telepathy, for reasons that are never explained, seem to prefer a clumsy approach of infection to a standup fight....as senseless as many nightmares, i can forgive the absence of logic for the sake of the gothic feel and imaginative touches....falls well within the genre of horror, although well outside the lines of plausible scifi.
Lew Irwin

If moviegoers do decide to sit out the weekend in front of their TV sets to follow developments in the war, they are not likely to miss much, most film critics appear to agree. They have generally meted out low ratings to all four new films. Catching the worst reviews of the lot is the Morgan Freeman starrer Dreamcatcher, adapted from a Stephen King novel by William Goldman and directed by Lawrence Kasdan. I went into Dreamcatcher hoping -- somewhat perversely, given the state of the world outside -- for a good scare, writes A.O. Scott in the New York Times, and found myself before long howling with laughter. (A few critics suggest that what the movie really needed was Terry Gilliam, of Monty Python and Brazil fame, to direct it.) Joe Morgenstern in the Wall Street Journal refers to it as a horror-free horror flick The funny business, Scott suggests, was not intended. Jack Mathews in the New York Daily News opines that given the talent that went into the making of the movie Dreamcatcher has no business being this bad. Incoherent, inane and interminable, is the way Claudia Puig describes it in USA Today. And Stephen Hunter concludes his review in the Washington Post this way: All in all -- well, there is no all in all. There are just parts. Some fit, some don't. Some are cool, some aren't. It's the craziest thing you ever saw. (By the way, critics are giving the 14-minute, computer-animated short Final Flight of the Osiris -- part of the Animatrix series plugging the upcoming The Matrix Reloaded -- terrific notices. It precedes the Dreamcatcher feature in many theaters.)
Reviewed by: quintusIX on 4/19/2009 6:04:34 AM
completely untenable theme....as one is expected to accept that an interplanetary war has been ongoing for decades without anyone noticing....excuse me?....freeman alert....he plays the sole officer in the field actually waging this war....finally, earth's enemies, although capable of interstellar travel, shape shifting, and telepathy, for reasons that are never explained, seem to prefer a clumsy approach of infection to a standup fight....as senseless as many nightmares, i can forgive the absence of logic for the sake of the gothic feel and imaginative touches....falls well within the genre of horror, although well outside the lines of plausible scifi.
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Reviewed by: quintusIX on 4/19/2009 6:04:34 AM
completely untenable theme....as one is expected to accept that an interplanetary war has been ongoing for decades without anyone noticing....excuse me?....freeman alert....he plays the sole officer in the field actually waging this war....finally, earth's enemies, although capable of interstellar travel, shape shifting, and telepathy, for reasons that are never explained, seem to prefer a clumsy approach of infection to a standup fight....as senseless as many nightmares, i can forgive the absence of logic for the sake of the gothic feel and imaginative touches....falls well within the genre of horror, although well outside the lines of plausible scifi.
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Language: English