Final Score | Telescope Film
Final Score

Final Score

Critic Rating

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User Rating

During a populated West Ham United football game, the entire stadium is seized by a group of heavily armed criminals. One former U.S. soldier must use all his military skills to save both the daughter of a fallen comrade and the vast crowd, unaware of the imminent danger.

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What are critics saying?

80

Time Out by Alex Godfrey

It is wittier, warmer and more unpredictable than it has any right to be.

60

The Hollywood Reporter by Frank Scheck

Bautista has the low-key charisma, natural appeal and formidable physicality necessary for an action star, and he makes Final Score worth watching (at home while eating pizza and drinking beer, preferably) despite its endlessly derivative elements.

60

Los Angeles Times by Kevin Crust

The characters are familiar movie types sufficiently fleshed out and well performed to hit all the emotional and comedic cues. The fight scenes and stunts — especially a masterfully choreographed motorcycle chase throughout the stadium — and a lack of obvious CGI provide the requisite thrills.

60

Variety by Dennis Harvey

Park your brain cells in the lobby, and this U.K. production about a terrorist attack on a London soccer stadium — with Dave Bautista as Bruce Willis plus 100 or so extra pounds of muscle — is an entertainingly over-the-top ride that doesn’t even try to be “credible.” It’s not quite daft or otherwise distinctive enough to be memorable.

60

The Guardian by Leslie Felperin

Final Score puts a cheeky British spin on the set-up.

50

Movie Nation by Roger Moore

Director Scott Mann did the all-star but little-seen “Heist” a few years back, and wrings what he can out of this tired plot. For me, the picture started with a bang, leveled off and then gently nose-dived in the third act.

40

Empire by Jonathan Pile

A nice idea, and the setting makes it instantly more interesting to a UK audience, but it’s let down by lapses into cliché and by simply not being audacious enough with its action set-pieces.

38

ReelViews by James Berardinelli

A fully disengaged brain is probably the key to enjoying Final Score. Employing even basic logic engenders a recognition of how truly stupid this screenplay is, especially when it comes to the resolution.

38

Slant Magazine

To observe that the Dave Bautista-starring action flick Final Score is yet another Die Hard knockoff may be tiresome, but it's not as if the film gives one much of a choice, as it offers up a ceaseless barrage of scenes lifted from the John McTiernan classic.

38

Slant Magazine by Pat Brown

To observe that the Dave Bautista-starring action flick Final Score is yet another Die Hard knockoff may be tiresome, but it's not as if the film gives one much of a choice, as it offers up a ceaseless barrage of scenes lifted from the John McTiernan classic.