The Heir Apparent: Largo Winch | Telescope Film
The Heir Apparent: Largo Winch

The Heir Apparent: Largo Winch (Largo Winch)

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When a powerful billionaire financier is murdered, his second-in-command must locate his only heir – a heretofore unknown adopted son. The heir – a twenty-something adventurer – must race against an onslaught of assassins, corporate raiders and double-dealing insiders to prove his legitimacy, find his father's killers, and stop them from taking over his financial empire.

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What are critics saying?

70

Los Angeles Times by Kevin Thomas

It's handsome, large-scale escapist fare - and has as its costar the formidable, versatile Kristin Scott Thomas.

50

Chicago Reader by J.R. Jones

Fortunately for the company, Largo turns out to be a formidable knife fighter in the corporate sense; fortunately for this sleek, empty thriller, he turns out to be a formidable knife fighter in the street sense too.

50

Chicago Sun-Times by Roger Ebert

Did I care if Largo Winch won his struggle for control of Winch International? Not at all. Did I care about him? No, because all of his action and dialogue were shunted into narrow corridors of movie formulas.

50

New York Post by V.A. Musetto

The generic plot is redeemed by exciting action sequences, good-looking location photography and a hot sex scene involving a femme fatale named Lea (pixie-haired Melanie Thierry).

50

The New York Times by Stephen Holden

About halfway through, the wheeling and dealing becomes so elaborate and the villains so numerous that the only way to enjoy the movie is to let its preposterous story wash over as you sit back and take in the scenery.

50

Variety by Jordan Mintzer

Euro-financed production throws large chunks of change at a corporate espionage saga spanning several continents, yet most of the money seems to have landed in locations, with too little allocated to the script and stunt departments.

40

Time Out by Nick Schager

Whether sleuthing or smacking around thugs, Sisley makes a dashing hero, but this glossy action flick is heavy on tedious convolutions and depressingly light on character depth, suspense or political-economic intrigue.

38

Slant Magazine by Andrew Schenker

Like most of the film's performances, Sisley's comes off as flat and impenetrable, the result both of a certain stoical conception of character and the dissipation of focus that arises from the movie's perceived need to encompass so much.

30

Village Voice by Nick Pinkerton

It's impossible to imagine how anything this convoluted could have already earned a sequel, but it has.

25

San Francisco Chronicle by Mick LaSalle

The movie is a mess.