Los Angeles Times by Kevin Thomas
Offers a riveting depiction of the classic collision of fate and character, with geography in this instance playing a crucial role.
Critic Rating
(read reviews)User Rating
Director
Tom Tykwer
Cast
Ulrich Matthes,
Marie-Lou Sellem,
Floriane Daniel,
Heino Ferch,
Josef Bierbichler,
Laura Tonke
Genre
Drama,
Thriller,
Romance
Young blonde translator Rebecca lives with her boyfriend ski instructor Marco in a mountain villa owned by her friend, nurse Laura. Rene, local cinema projectionist, steals Marco's car and gets into a car crash with local Theo, whose daughter, after being in coma for a time, dies. Rene suffers from partial short term memory loss and starts a relationship with Laura. Meanwhile Marco is looking for the man who stole his car and Theo - for the man who killed his daughter...
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Los Angeles Times by Kevin Thomas
Offers a riveting depiction of the classic collision of fate and character, with geography in this instance playing a crucial role.
Boston Globe by Jay Carr
Angst-ridden, yet graceful, stylish, and optimistic allegory about swerving off one road and finding your way back via another.
New York Daily News by Jami Bernard
Kinetic, sexy and full of meaningful coincidences and intertwined fates.
TV Guide Magazine by Ken Fox
From its ominous opening to its spectacular climactic stunt, the hypnotic precursor to director Tom Tykwer's "Run Lola Run" is a quieter but creepier affair.
Film.com by Tom Keogh
As he did in "Run Lola Run," he has clearly patented an original combination of cinematic eye and ear candy and a profound, irresistible fascination for the role of chance in this world.
Baltimore Sun by Chris Kaltenbach
Characters are manipulated and lives made whole in ways both satisfying and unexpected.
San Francisco Examiner by Wesley Morris
A tedious, soapy romp about overlapping lives and destiny.
Chicago Reader by Jonathan Rosenbaum
I can't yet decide whether the film works or not, but it certainly held me for its full two hours.
Entertainment Weekly by Owen Gleiberman
It's slow and pretentious, full of craggy Bavarian snowscapes and dour "mystical" portents that seem to circle back to nothing but themselves.
New York Post by Jonathan Foreman
A cold, emptily stylish exercise -- and one that sorely lacks the speed and vigor that made "Lola" run.
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