The Globe and Mail (Toronto) by Barry Hertz
There is not much more you could ask of a Canadian thriller, even if the director lets the Thailand-set portions of the film devolve slightly into clichéd Brokedown Palace territory.
Critic Rating
(read reviews)User Rating
Director
Daniel Roby
Cast
Antoine Olivier Pilon,
Josh Hartnett,
Stephen McHattie,
Jim Gaffigan,
J. C. MacKenzie,
Don McKellar
Genre
Thriller
When a drug deal goes sour, ex-heroin addict Daniel gets thrown into a Thai prison and slapped with a 100-year sentence. While he tries to survive his Bangkok incarceration, the news of his conviction captures the attention of journalist Victor Malarek, who decides to go after the shady undercover cops responsible for wrongly accusing Daniel.
The Globe and Mail (Toronto) by Barry Hertz
There is not much more you could ask of a Canadian thriller, even if the director lets the Thailand-set portions of the film devolve slightly into clichéd Brokedown Palace territory.
The Film Stage by Dan Mecca
A film like Most Wanted is a welcome one, featuring a well-told version of this all-too-common real-world narrative.
Chicago Sun-Times by Richard Roeper
This powerful and well-acted story might have been much more effective if told in strictly linear fashion.
Variety by Guy Lodge
Along with Pilon’s striking performance, the film’s sturdy, subdued craftsmanship keeps it from movie-of-the-week territory, even as Roby’s script ticks overly familiar boxes.
Movie Nation by Roger Moore
Giving equal weight to the four different points of view is one thing. Give us multiple timelines on top of that and you lose focus to the point where everything turns fuzzy.
The Hollywood Reporter by John DeFore
Quick and pretty constant cutting between different threads of this story keep Most Wanted from feeling as long as it actually is, but it also keeps us from committing fully to any one story, all of which feel slightly underwritten.
RogerEbert.com by Matt Zoller Seitz
A mediocre film that's unaware of the poor choices it's making is much harder to watch than a bad film that relishes its stupidity and poor taste. At least the second kind of film can be fun.
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