Metacritic Film

Deception

Starring Hugh Jackman, Ewan McGregor, Michelle Williams, Maggie Q, Natasha Henstridge, and Rachael Taylor

MPAA RATING: R for sexual content, language, brief violence and some drug use

20th Century Fox
Action  |  Drama  |  Suspense/Thriller
108 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters April 25, 2008

A simple enough question, but how Jonathan McQuarry answers it will change his life forever. A corporate auditor adrift in a sea of New York's power elite, Jonathan's work is his entire life. But a chance meeting with Wyatt Bose, a charismatic corporate lawyer, introduces Jonathan to a decadent playground for Manhattan's executive upper crust. For these power brokers, whose eighteen-hour workdays leave no time for a personal life, there's "The List" - a sex club, of sorts, where the right cell-phone number and four simple words ("Are you free tonight?") can lead to an evening's sexual fulfillment. It's a world of "intimacy without intricacy," as Jonathan's first conquest (or vice versa) explains to him, and through The List Jonathan discovers a side of himself that he didn't know existed. But an affair with a ravishing and mysterious stranger known to Jonathan only by her first initial 'S', will expose him to yet another world he never imagined - one of betrayal, treachery and murder. (20th Century Fox)

WRITTEN BY
Mark Bomback

DIRECTED BY
Marcel Langenegger

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

31 / 100

Critic Reviews

63 TV Guide Maitland McDonagh
Jackman and McGregor are a delight to watch.
60 LA Weekly Sam Sweet
This vision of Gotham is as fastidious as the cockpit of a BMW. But rather than sell luxury sedans, Deception offers a fantasy even big money can't buy -- Wall Street as a cross between a James Bond adventure and a Victoria’s Secret spread.
50 Chicago Tribune Michael Phillips
With her arresting, off-kilter look of bruised desire, Michelle Williams ends up being the most interesting aspect of this somber corn.
50 USA Today Claudia Puig
Deception is not the cool, noirish thriller it tries to be. Despite a cast that includes double-crossers Hugh Jackman and Ewan McGregor and Michelle Williams caught in the middle, the film is a yawn.
50 The Onion (A.V. Club) Scott Tobias
The dynamic between Jackman and McGregor bears an uncanny resemblance to that of Aaron Eckhart and Matt Malloy from "In The Company Of Men": the cool, suave, experienced philosopher of excess and his weaker, more earnest pupil.
50 San Francisco Chronicle Ruthe Stein
An overwrought and ultimately silly thriller.
42 Seattle Post-Intelligencer William Arnold
The film's first-time director, the TV-commercial-trained Marcel Langenegger, is out to emulate Hitchcock with dashes of "Vertigo," "Strangers on a Train" and more. But his homage is uninspired and disconnected, and his film is a bore.
40 Salon.com Stephanie Zacharek
To his credit, Langenegger keeps things relatively simple instead of resorting to lots of fast cutting and fancy camera angles. To his detriment, the picture he has made barely moves at all. This no-style style isn't restraint; it's a kind of indifference to filmmaking.
40 Empire Kim Newman
Mildly titillating, but not very good.
40 The Hollywood Reporter Kirk Honeycutt
Why Hugh Jackman was so excited by Mark Bomback's script to star and produce the film is as big a mystery as why such talents-on-a-roll as Ewan McGregor and Michelle Williams joined the cast.
40 Variety Brian Lowry
Strip out Deception's fleeting nudity and what's left is a throwback to "B" movie days -- a thin thriller, burdened by clunky dialogue and prone to telegraphing its twists.
38 The Globe and Mail (Toronto) Stephen Cole
A lamentably slack and dishonest genre exercise.
38 ReelViews James Berardinelli
To succeed, Deception requires viewers to be both inattentive and stupid. There's not a twist in this flimsy and moth-eaten plot that isn't both contrived and transparent and not a character who hasn't been hopelessly manipulated by the needs of the narrative.
30 Washington Post Desson Thomson
Deception is another example of when genre-fication (the forcing of otherwise intriguing stories into the straitjackets of horror, thriller or other genres) reduces our entertainment to head-shaking banality.
30 The New York Times Manohla Dargis
A would-be erotic thriller with no heat and zero chills, Deception has the kind of glassy, glossy sheen and risible story that mean to suggest "Basic Instinct" but instead invoke lesser laughers like "Jade" and "Sliver."
30 Chicago Reader J.R. Jones
Jackman and McGregor throw their best American accents behind the effort, but Michelle Williams seems fairly bored as the sex-club partner who wins McGregor's heart. I'm with her.
30 Los Angeles Times Mark Olsen
Deception would be laughably bad if it weren't so rotely inert.
25 New York Post Lou Lumenick
Quickly devolves into a nonprescription alternative to Ambien.
25 Entertainment Weekly Lisa Schwarzbaum
Everything is wrong pretty much from the start of this misbegotten adventure.
25 Baltimore Sun Michael Sragow
Bomback's script is the worst thing a thriller can be - a flip-flopper, using quick character changes for plot twists. And Langenegger's direction rarely sustains a mood or tone, only a sleek veneer of luxury and knowingness.
25 Boston Globe Wesley Morris
The movie actually does feel like an Americanized work of Hong Kong moviemaking. But the desperate, derivative style, the nonsense plotting, and leggy, horny women are applied like too much MSG.
20 Austin Chronicle Steve Davis
Whether you view it as intellectually dishonest or just plain sloppy, Deception is a movie that more than lives up to its title.
20 New York Daily News Elizabeth Weitzman
The real culprit is first-time director Marcel Langenegger, who seems to have studied for his debut by watching nothing but Cinemax. The score hints at ominous activities that never happen, a rain machine provides the only atmosphere and the actors have to suffer through the silliest sex scenes in recent memory.

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