New York Magazine (Vulture) by
The ending is a huge letdown, doing little besides setting the stage for the sequel… But for a good hour and change, the film is a big toy box that teases you out of the Gloom.
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Russia · 2004
Rated R · 1h 54m
Director Timur Bekmambetov
Starring Konstantin Khabenskiy, Vladimir Menshov, Galina Tyunina, Mariya Poroshina
Genre Fantasy, Action, Thriller
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Long ago, there was a battle between Warriors of Light and Warriors of Darkness over the fate of the world that ended in a shaky truce. The fragile peace is kept in check by two groups - the Day Watch and the Night Watch - until Night Watch member Anton Gorodetsky finds himself at the center of a prophecy that could ignite another war.
New York Magazine (Vulture) by
The ending is a huge letdown, doing little besides setting the stage for the sequel… But for a good hour and change, the film is a big toy box that teases you out of the Gloom.
In the final act, the movie dons a more human face and commits to an absorbing tale of crime and punishment, albeit pushing the fatigued message that you can't always tell light from dark these days.
Despite its cheesy blood and thunder and ludicrous "Sunshine Makers" metaphysics, this is the funniest apocalypse I've seen since George Romero's "Land of the Dead."
Los Angeles Times by Kenneth Turan
Director Timur Bekmambetov has combined two things that never connected before. He's taken a glossy Hollywood-type fantasy thriller about the battle between supernatural forces of good and evil right here on planet Earth and infused it with a homegrown, distinctively Russian soul.
The Hollywood Reporter by Kirk Honeycutt
Everything today's young audiences are conditioned to want: incessant noise, jumpy editing, torrential music, shallow, overblown characters and sheer emptiness at its core. Imagine yourself trapped inside a two-hour video game, and you've got the Night Watch experience.
TV Guide Magazine by Maitland McDonagh
Although this first chapter in a three-part tale is inevitably overburdened with back story, it ends on one hell of a cliff-hanger.
The filmmakers don't seem to realize that if a movie with a mythology this groan-inducingly convoluted doesn't have a sense of humor about itself, the laughs are going to come anyway. They just won't be of the intentional variety.
Entertainment Weekly by Owen Gleiberman
A fractious fiasco: whiplash camera movement set to raging blasts of death metal, a story so incoherent it made me wish I was watching, instead, the collected outtakes from Van Helsing.
The New York Times by Stephen Holden
The film may be a mess - narratively muddled and crammed with many more vampires, shape-shifters and sorcerers than one movie can handle, but it bursts with a sick, carnivorous glee in its own fiendish games.
Three different stories show how the simple act of either catching or missing a train profoundly changes one man's life.
The exciting sequel to the popular Russian sci fi film "Night Watch."
Let the manhunt begin.
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