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U Turn

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France, United States · 1997
Rated R · 2h 5m
Director Oliver Stone
Starring Sean Penn, Nick Nolte, Jennifer Lopez, Joaquin Phoenix
Genre Thriller

A man on the run is forced to stop in a small desert town after his beloved Mustang breaks down. Things begin to look up when an alluring woman brings him home to help fix her curtains...until her husband finds out.

Stream U Turn

What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

40

Washington Post by

U-Turn is, for a while, darkly amusing. But along comes the second hour, which insults you for even partially succumbing to the first.

80

The New York Times by Elvis Mitchell

However simply he approaches this familiar milieu, Mr. Stone winds up treating his story's sin-soaked connivers the way Francis Ford Coppola treated vampires. Neither of them is really capable of anything plain.

75

ReelViews by James Berardinelli

Yet, although Stone has clearly made this motion picture with his tongue planted firmly in his cheek, he nevertheless manages to capture all of the tension and mystery necessary to hold the viewer's interest.

70

Los Angeles Times by Kenneth Turan

The latest in an unending series of bleakly comic, nihilistic neo-noirs to reach the screen, U-Turn's story of a bad day in an Arizona hell invests a lot of skill and style in a trifling tale. So it manages to sporadically amuse even while it's wasting your time.

38

Chicago Sun-Times by Roger Ebert

This is a repetitive, pointless exercise in genre filmmaking--the kind of movie where you distract yourself by making a list of the sources.

78

Austin Chronicle by Russell Smith

Yet for all its unmistakable visual trademarks (hypersaturated colors; mad-scientist tinkering with film stocks and editing technique; sudden presentation of enigmatic, troubling images), this is also the most radical departure Stone has ever made in terms of basic sensibilities.

75

San Francisco Examiner by Walter Addiego

The standard noir trappings are here: the femme fatale, double-crossing, fatalism, broken dreams, innocence betrayed and the rest of it. But Stone pushes it all so far and so relentlessly that it becomes absurdist comedy.

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