Metacritic Film

We Own the Night

Starring Joaquin Phoenix, Mark Wahlberg, Robert Duvall, and Eva Mendes

MPAA RATING: R for strong violence, drug material, language, some sexual content and brief nudity

Columbia Pictures
Crime  |  Drama
117 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters October 12, 2007

Bobby Green has turned his back on the family business. The popular manager of El Caribe, the legendary Russian-owned nightclub in Brooklyn's Brighton Beach, he has changed his last name and concealed his connection to a long line of distinguished New York cops. For Bobby, every night is a party; he greets friends and customers or dances with his beautiful Puerto Rican girlfriend, Amada, in a haze of cigarette smoke and disco music. But it's 1988, and New York City's drug trade is escalating. Bobby tries to keep a friendly distance from the Russian gangster who is operating out of the nightclub--a gangster who is being targeted by his brother, Joseph, an up-and-coming NYPD officer, as well as his father, Burt, the legendary deputy chief of police. (Columbia Pictures)

WRITTEN BY
James Gray

DIRECTED BY
James Gray

Overall Metascore

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

59 / 100

Critic Reviews

83 Christian Science Monitor Peter Rainer
It's awfully difficult at this point in film history to come up with a car chase that's startlingly new, but Gray pulls it off. It's the best of its kind since "The French Connection."
83 Seattle Post-Intelligencer William Arnold
At its core, it's an exploration of the demands and obligations of brotherly love, staged with honesty, originality and a surprising spark of intelligence.
80 Village Voice Nick Pinkerton
The closest thing Gray's done to a commercial actioner, the film also applies his genius for tone (aided by superlative sound work) to set pieces that throb with trauma: a tinnitus-soundtracked shoot-out and a rain-slick car chase set to the tempo of windshield wipers.
75 Rolling Stone Peter Travers
We Own the Night is defiantly, refreshingly unhip.
75 ReelViews James Berardinelli
With a cast like this, one has a right to expect something amazing, so the fact that We Own the Night is merely "entertaining" might cause disappointment in some quarters.
75 Chicago Sun-Times Roger Ebert
This is an atmospheric, intense film, well acted, and when it's working it has a real urgency.
75 USA Today Claudia Puig
The movie really belongs to Phoenix, who gives a haunting performance with just the right degree of intensity.
75 Boston Globe Wesley Morris
The movie's climactic car chase is as absurdly thrilling as it is innovative. Set almost silently in a blue-gray daytime downpour, it has a tough, improvisatory danger that makes the movie. If John Coltrane went in for action sequences, he'd have dug this one.
75 The Onion (A.V. Club) Scott Tobias
Whatever the case, We Own The Night plays like a masterpiece because it skillfully appropriates actual masterpieces, not because it earns the label on its own merits.
70 Washington Post Ann Hornaday
Phoenix is an arresting presence on screen, but don't expect any "Departed"-esque fast talk from Wahlberg, who is oddly inert in a role that should crackle with brotherly ambivalence.
70 New York Magazine David Edelstein
Gray knows how to sell the idea of unalterable destiny with a car chase: That’s the mark of a real action director.
70 Salon.com Andrew O'Hehir
An intriguing blend of mainstream audience-pleaser and a more subtle, even intellectual agenda.
70 Variety Todd McCarthy
Adequately acted and flecked with the required quota of action to satisfy genre fans, pic recalls numerous good police dramas of the 1970s, but mostly in superficial ways that bring nothing new to the table.
67 Entertainment Weekly Owen Gleiberman
The story is too patterned and too contrived.
63 Philadelphia Inquirer Steven Rea
At times solid and suspenseful, at times dopily implausible and woefully familiar.
63 Premiere Glenn Kenny
We Own the Night can't sustain itself; as the stakes of the story get higher, Gray paints it in broader and broader strokes until there's almost nothing you can believe in it anymore.
63 New York Daily News Jack Mathews
When it goes wrong, specifically when Bobby is given a badge like an angry Earp brother in "Gunfight at the O.K. Corral," the story turns into something barely at the level of a TV cop show.
63 The Globe and Mail (Toronto) Liam Lacey
Creaky in its plotting, occasionally electrifying in its direction, We Own the Night is even more of a throwback to old-fashioned crime dramas than Martin Scorsese's "The Departed."
63 TV Guide Ken Fox
Phoenix gives a nice performance as a man caught between loyalties but blind to the realities all around him, but Gray's screenplay is filled with clunky, Dr. Phil-sounding aphorisms that stop the movie cold.
60 Los Angeles Times Kevin Crust
It's a bare-knuckled crime drama set in 1988 that stylistically could have been made that year and emphasizes Gray's strengths as a director while drawing attention to his limitations as a writer.
60 The Hollywood Reporter Kirk Honeycutt
A more accomplished film than "Yards." Yet it will fail to satisfy police movie buffs, as procedures are de-emphasized, and the drama is too perfunctory and obvious.
58 Portland Oregonian M. E. Russell
This is a perfectly serviceable thriller. It's just not the New York family crime saga it clearly wants to be.
50 New York Post Kyle Smith
Too slow to be a guilty pleasure and too dumb to be an innocent one.
50 Miami Herald Rene Rodriguez
Ultimately done in not just by its familiarity -- anyone who can't figure out where the story is heading hasn't watched enough Scorsese -- but also by the convenient coincidences and contrivances Gray relies on in order to pump the story into something greater than it needs to be.
50 Charlotte Observer Lawrence Toppman
Yet the whole thing is so generic, so been-there-before, that I spent most of it asking myself nitpicking questions. To wit:
50 San Francisco Chronicle Mick LaSalle
Things are a little off. The style is gritty 1970s-style crime thriller, but the morals are straight out of 2007, and the movie is set in 1988.
50 The New Yorker Anthony Lane
Gray would have been happiest, I guess, to make movies in the nineteen-seventies, and this one feels much closer to 1975 than to 1988; he could certainly use a seventies audience to watch his movies now--one that could be trusted not to grumble about his slow, unexcitable fades.
50 The New York Times A.O. Scott
The problem with We Own the Night is that it mistakes sentiment for profundity, and takes its ideas about character and fate more seriously than it takes its characters and their particular fates. “I feel light as a feather,” Bobby says in a crucial scene, at which point the movie starts to sink like a stone.
50 Chicago Reader J.R. Jones
The story takes place in 1988 in the Brighton Beach neighborhood of Coney Island, but I could never figure out why; with its pitiless gangsters and virtuous boys in blue, it could have been set anywhere.
50 Chicago Tribune Michael Phillips
Gray’s writing lacks the punch and zing that might take your mind off such rickety plotting.
42 Baltimore Sun Michael Sragow
The plotting is so rickety that the action hinges on suspicions roused by a character carrying a cigarette lighter and matches. Is that more rare or suspect than a man wearing a belt and suspenders?
40 Film Threat Don R. Lewis
Falls into the category of the contrived and forgettable cop drama.
40 Austin Chronicle Marjorie Baumgarten
Gray's signature long takes and overhead shots are in evidence and add to the film's fatalistic tone, and one rainy car-chase sequence is a real keeper. But, overall, it's impossible to shake the film's gloomy sense of eternal repetition.

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