- Studio: ARC Entertainment (II)
- Release Date: Sep 30, 2011
- Critic Score
- Most active
- Publication
- Most clicked
-
38If Bunraku were serious about subverting or reinventing the genres it's cobbled together, Moore would play the gunslinger or the samurai or the crime boss. But no. All she gets are a couple of scenes that demonstrate that she still looks great soaking wet.
-
Sep 29, 201130Everything feels secondhand in Guy Moshe's Bunraku, a potpourri of genres that ends up a morass of clichés.
-
30No image or moment is grounded – every shot is augmented with restless animation, smart-ass narration or video game sounds. The artificiality of it all is smothering.
-
30It's a picture that's akin to a terrarium of plastic flowers -- gaudily decorative, but airless and lifeless.
-
20It should surprise no one that visually quirky, graphic-novelish, pulp-noir action flicks rarely come through the sausage machine intact.
-
12Writer-director Guy Moshe's crime saga is a work of second-generation derivation, weaving together scraps from homages to Westerns, film noir, samurai films, gangster pics, and class-warfare dramas.
-
0Extremely cool-looking in the manner of "Sin City,'' but clumsily staged, slackly acted and mind-numbingly dull, Israeli director Guy Moshe's English-language fantasy is set in a future when guns, and apparently coherent conversations, have been outlawed.
User score distribution:
-
Positive: 6 out of 8
-
Mixed: 1 out of 8
-
Negative: 1 out of 8
-
7
-
8Though debuting in 2010 at the Toronto International Film Festival, Bunraku didn
-
8