When it comes to Adam McKay's VICE,Watch Hugas Online critics are on very different sides of the (theater) aisle.
Despite early and persistent Oscar buzz (the film scored six Golden Globe noms), the Dick Cheney biopic has received a fairly mixed first wave of critical reception. While some laud the film as cleverly biting, others have denounced it as a clumsy display of political hatred.
Starring Christian Bale, Sam Rockwell, and Amy Adams, VICEuses a nonlinear structure to walk audiences through the political career of "the most powerful vice president" in modern American history. Touching on Cheney's rise to national politics and yes, his involvement in the Iraq War, VICEpaints a controversial portrait of an even more controversial figure.
SEE ALSO: Mixed reviews reveal critics can't quite agree on 'Aquaman'Before putting your confidence in VICEon Dec. 25, check out critics' takes below.
Richard Lawson, Vanity Fair:
In a vacuum, Bale’s performance would be a thrilling bit of imitation, a dark parlor trick that’s all the more exciting because no one else is doing it. But in Vice,Bale’s uncanny apery is leaned on too heavily, as if half the film’s work is done because it nails the Cheney impression. Successfully telling Cheney’s story—particularly how he was uniquely suited to leveraging loopholes in executive power to reorder U.S. security policy toward disaster—requires more legwork than merely a good impersonation. McKay set a difficult, exacting task before his movie, and yet he keeps it too hepped up on pieces of flair to really knuckle down and focus.
Matt Goldberg, Collider:
The performances are sublime and precise, but they’re in service to a story where they’re figures in a much larger canvas. Bale is uncanny as Cheney, completely slipping into a taciturn figure and making you forget there’s even an actor there. But it’s not in service of understanding Cheney as much as it’s trying to paint a picture of what Cheney was involved in. We need to believe in Cheney’s world, grotesque and absurd as it may be, and these performances are essential grounding for the disturbing world McKay shows us.
William Bibiani, IGN:
The didactic quality of McKay’s Oscar-winning The Big Short, which frequently broke the fourth wall to explain complicated economic theories (as entertainingly as possible) returns in Vice. It’s a comedy, it’s a drama, and it’s a political science lecture about the dangers of executive privilege.
Stephanie Zacharek, TIME:
The tone of Viceis jauntily Michael Moore-ish, although McKay doesn’t even seem as angry as Moore tends to be. He frequently interrupts the story with found footage or bold images. Some is zany (a blood-red heart floating in black space), some is jarring (abstract but vivid depictions of torture), but almost none of it works. McKay’s style here is the equivalent of a knowing cackle; the whole enterprise, elaborate as it is, comes off as lacking in passion. The Big Shorthad an exhilarating kick, but it also left you feeling queasy over the destructive misdeeds you’d just witnessed. Vicejust leaves you feeling sapped, advertising its cleverness without actually being clever.
A.O. Scott, The New York Times:
It will break no news and spoil nobody’s fun to note that McKay is not a fan of his protagonist. His argument is essentially that much of what critics of the current president fear most — the erosion of democratic norms; the manufacture of “alternative facts”; the rise of an authoritarian executive branch — already came to pass when George W. Bush was in office. But “Vice” offers more than Yuletide rage-bait for liberal moviegoers, who already have plenty to be mad about. Revulsion and admiration lie as close together as the red and white stripes on the American flag, and if this is in some respects a real-life monster movie, it’s one that takes a lively and at times surprisingly sympathetic interest in its chosen demon.
Rafer Guzmán, Newsday:
“Vice” is not an attempt to explain or understand Dick Cheney at all. It’s not really a life story, but a bitter reminder that Cheney helped sell Americans a war in Iraq using false information. A fair point — but all this movie wants to do is punish him for it. With Christian Bale in a remarkable transformation as the monochrome Cheney (the actor gained 45 pounds for the role), “Vice” is the perfect film for anyone who felt that “W.,” Oliver Stone’s sympathetic biography of the 43rd president (with Richard Dreyfuss as a much more human Cheney) lacked the proper level of hatred.
Leah Greenblatt, Entertainment Weekly:
The answer to that question — if it exists at all — isn’t really anywhere to be found in Adam McKay’s slick, wildly meta, and occasionally too-clever portrait of the most influential and easily least understood figure to ever hold the nation’s second-highest post. Instead, the movie offers a sort of speculative shadow biography of an obscure also-ran who somehow rose from sodden mediocrity (Cheney flunked out of Yale, where he mostly seemed to major in alcohol) to the highest halls of executive power — and did it all, a title card intones, “like a ghost.”
Trump proves7 of 2018's worst fashion trendsA woman solved a noisy neighbor problem with compassion, and cakeGreat white shark spotted jumping out of water just feet from surfersHow to generate your Apple Music 'year in review'If you see a pregnant Olivia Wilde on a subway, please offer her your seat'Fallout 76' players can get three old Fallout games for freeSlack apologizes for, reinstates accounts it banned for U.S. sanctionsTurn your Roomba's trip around the house into a playable 'Doom' mapAustralia's extreme heatwave is 'the face of climate change'NASA gets everSlack apologizes for, reinstates accounts it banned for U.S. sanctionsSingapore gets third Paralympic gold in its history thanks to swimming champ Yip Pin XiuGoogle had a glorious explanation for this cow's blurred face in Street ViewHonor View 20 is out with a hole punch screen, 48I ate 100 different 'pigs in blankets' at a sausage party and it was painfully deliciousWADA confirms hackers leaked medical records of another 25 Olympics athletesLinkedIn coThe Steamie Awards is a 'Simpsons' writer's fast food awards showThe Chainsmokers bro would like everyone to stop calling him a bro 'The Lego Star Wars Holiday Special' coming to Disney+ in Nov. 2020 We've entered the breakup phase of lockdown romances In the Shetland Islands, swiping on Tinder doesn't mean you're single Amazon looks to turn malls into fulfillment centers, report says Euphoric scenes as Germany legalises same sex marriage Smart TVs are coming for Roku. Here's why that's a bad thing. Pete Souza is trolling Donald Trump for insulting Mika Brzezinski 8 helpful Chrome extensions to improve working from home Women's inspiring Instagram photos remind us to be kinder to our bodies 8 gadgets to help make distance learning easier for students and teachers TikTok reportedly set to sue Trump administration as early as Tuesday Samsung's Galaxy Buds Live are surprisingly easy to repair No, this doesn't mean that Joe Biden owns antifa.com 'Halo Infinite' delayed until 2021, Xbox Series X set for November Hannibal Buress paid a look Uber Boat isn't a ride Guy books a ride on an app, but a huge truck came to pick him up instead The notoriously cheerful baby Asahd Khaled wept at the sight of Justin Bieber 'The Office' stars recall filming Pam's big crying scene with Dwight Google Maps is back on Apple Watch after more than 3 years
2.4559s , 10132.546875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Hugas Online】,Openness Information Network