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Crisis

✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

Belgium, Canada, United States · 2021
1h 58m
Director Nicholas Jarecki
Starring Gary Oldman, Armie Hammer, Evangeline Lilly, Greg Kinnear
Genre Crime, Drama, Thriller

A drug trafficker arranges a multi-cartel fentanyl smuggling operation. An architect and recovering addict investigates her son’s disappearance. A university professor confronts unexpected revelations about his employer, a pharmaceutical company bringing a new "non-addictive" painkiller to market. Set against the backdrop of the opioid epidemic, these three stories collide.

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What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

50

San Francisco Chronicle by Bob Strauss

It’s a more modest Traffic in several ways, adequate at what it tries to say about this dirty business but light on the wider scope of the suffering that it causes. Because there actually is a crisis, maybe it should be addressed with more of an emphasis on authentic details than on genre conventions.

40

CNN by Brian Lowry

The tragedy associated with such stories could provide fertile territory, theoretically, for a good drama about what went wrong and who's ultimately responsible. That movie might get made someday, but Crisis isn't it.

38

Slant Magazine by Chuck Bowen

Time and again, the film shortchanges the human elements of its stories for drug stats that can be Googled in a matter of seconds.

50

The Film Stage by Dan Mecca

There is an honest bleakness to Jarecki’s tale that certainly matches the tragedy of the real-life opioid crisis, though all of it feels surface level. Without a central rooting interest that’s engaging, all of the drama suffers. There’s plenty to admire in Crisis, just not enough to recommend.

50

The Hollywood Reporter by John DeFore

Ultimately, none of the storylines offers a surprise or tells us anything we don't already know, this many years into America's opioid ordeal. And arriving at a moment when Crisis could refer to so many other calamities, its failure to illuminate anything makes it feel like a distraction.

50

IndieWire by Kate Erbland

These stories are all tragic and sad and complex, and more than worthy of innumerable explorations. Many of them are even present in this film, even if nothing about them satisfies. Consider this one a crisis of its own: a well-meaning look at a world that never goes deeper than the surface.

40

Los Angeles Times by Michael Ordona

Whatever its goals, the filmmaking is uninspired. It’s heavily reliant on clichés, especially in its use of score, the lone-wolf cop and familiar devices to build tension.

50

Movie Nation by Roger Moore

The three stories could each have been their own movie, and probably a more compelling one than this mash-up turns out to be. Everybody gets in everybody else’s way for the first two and a half acts.

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