After Rendition, The Kingdom and Babel skirted around the issue, here, at last, is a film brave enough to question the whys and wherefores of the War On Terror. As such, it’s not just an absorbing movie, but an extremely brave one, too.
Lions for Lambs (2007)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:176
Fresh:48
Rotten:128
Average Rating:4.8/10
Consensus: Despite its powerhouse cast, Lions for Lambs feels like a disjointed series of lectures, rather than a sharp narrative, and ends up falling flat.
Runtime: 1 hr 32 mins
Genre: Dramas
US Box Office: $14,971,658
Synopsis: Robert Redford directs and stars in this provocative ode to political activism. Boasting a powerhouse cast that also includes Meryl Streep and Tom Cruise, the film features three storylines... Robert Redford directs and stars in this provocative ode to political activism. Boasting a powerhouse cast that also includes Meryl Streep and Tom Cruise, the film features three storylines centered on the Iraq war. Cruise is Jasper Irving, a rising Republican senator who has summoned Janine Roth (Streep), the head journalist at a large news corporation, to sell her on the government's new military strategy. It's his hope that she in turn will sell the public on the idea. Meanwhile, a history professor (Redford) is trying to convince one of his more promising students to strive to make a difference in the world. Professor Malley believes Todd Hayes (Andrew Garfield) to be a bright young man, and he wants to know why Todd has become so apathetic about his schoolwork, and, after the two banter back and forth about the nature of activism, Malley tells him about two of his former students, Ernest and Arian (Michael Pena and Derek Luke), both of whom are currently serving in Iraq. Unbeknownst to Malley, at that very moment, Ernest and Arian are engaging in the exact military strategy that Senator Irving is discussing with Roth. Their mission has just gone terribly awry, and the men have fallen into enemy territory. So the senator and journalist argue, the professor and student debate, and all the while the wounded soldiers wait desperately for rescue. These disparate storylines slowly build and converge, culminating in a blaring statement about civic responsibility and social conscience. Cruise and Streep are a delight to watch, and their battle of words gives the most heat to the film. As one might expect, it casts an extremely critical eye at the current state of American politics. However, it veers toward hope, and a call to action. Redford, himself a longtime activist, appears to be sending an open letter to America: turn off the celebrity coverage and get involved. [More]
Starring: Tom Cruise, Meryl Streep, Robert Redford, Michael Peña
Starring: Tom Cruise, Meryl Streep, Robert Redford, Michael Peña, Andrew Garfield, Derek Luke, Peter Berg
Director: Robert Redford
Director: Robert Redford
Screenwriter: Matthew Michael Carnahan
Producer: Robert Redford, Matthew Michael Carnahan, Andrew Hauptman, Tracy Falco
Composer: Mark Isham
Studio: MGM/UA
Reviews for Lions for Lambs
Not a lot of entertainment with this edification. It's thought-provoking, but so's CNN.
Preachy, worthy and far too wordy, Lions For Lambs doesn't roar so much as bleat. Less a movie than a bungled party political broadcast on behalf on the United Artists party.
a more appropriate title for Lions for Lambs could be Lamenting for Liberals.
A real mixed bag, then, destined to be remembered more for its indulgent use of three Hollywood heavyweights than its call to action against a war-mongering government, the compliant media in its thrall and a youth too apathetic to care.
For all its studied sturm and drang, Lions for Lambs is superficial, piecemeal, and woefully unprepared to argue its points.
Redford may be well intentioned, but Lions For Lambs comes across as a toothless primer for water-cooler conversation rather than a potent, political piece of filmmaking.
Realmente é triste quando um filme com o qual concordamos ideologicamente se revela profundamente falho como narrativa cinematográfica.
It is exhibitionist cinema for the post-Crash era, designed to tell us what we already know and somehow stir us out of our apathy simultaneously.
...this reviewer happens to agree with the politics espoused in the film... this reviewer also thinks this movie is one of the biggest failures on screen this year.
Lions for Lambs appears to have taken its inspiration from Al Gore's stolid An Inconvenient Truth, using the stage lecture and Power Point presentation in lieu of dramatic momentum.
The movie is a talkathon with a certain amount of military action. It could be presented about as well as a radio play.
It's the role of an artist to not just comment on current events, but also to shape that commentary into a dramatic form that'll excite, move and inspire people. Lions for Lambs isn't filmmaking; it's list-making.
What distinguishes this from other recent war movies is that it's about far more than a tragic skirmish...it's provocative entertainment that makes you think.
Jesus Christ, Redford, if you wanted to make a feature-length cinematic editorial, why didn't you just go balls-out and have done with it?
An exhilarating piece of direction that begs the question, Robert Redford? This is the same man who's been content making the cinematic equivalent of reading the L.L. Bean catalog for his entire career, and now he's ready for a bare-knuckle brawl?
Only one step away from Redford turning towards the camera, pointing his finger, and asking, 'what will you do?'
A film that is less a fully developed portrait of its subject than it is a rough snapshot that conveys the immediacy of the times in a more gripping manner than most of the current crop of fictional films on the subject.
Latest News for Lions for Lambs
May 20, 2008:
Carnahan to Write, Direct Crime Drama for Mandate ![]()
Matthew Michael Carnahan has sold his latest script, currently being called Untitled Matt Carnahan Crime Project, to Mandate Pictures. More...
April 07, 2008:
RT on DVD: There Will Be Blood Drinks Lions for Lambs, Dewey Cox's Milkshakes
P. T. Anderson's Oscar-winning oil opus There Will Be Blood hits shelves this week, so if you missed Daniel Day-Lewis' astounding turn as the prospector with a heart as black as... More...
January 30, 2008:
Robert Redford Taking A Walk in the Woods
The best remedy for critical drubbings and box-office indifference -- at least for Robert Redford, whose Lions for Lambs endured both in the final weeks of 2007 -- just might be... More...
January 11, 2008:
Weinsteins Sign Interim Agreement with WGA
Add The Weinstein Company to the list of studios that have signed interim agreements with the Writers Guild of America. More...
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