Metacritic Film

Reign of Fire

Starring Matthew McConaughey, Christian Bale, Izabella Scorupco, Gerard Butler, Alexander Siddig, Benny Nieves, Randall Carlton, and Doug Cockle

MPAA RATING: PG-13 for intense action violence

Touchstone Pictures
Suspense/Thriller
100 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters July 12, 2002

An exciting tale of adventure and survival that fuses a medieval past with a post-apocalyptic future. (Buena Vista Pictures Entertainment)

WRITTEN BY
Gregg Chabot (also story)
Kevin Peterka (also story)
Matt Greenberg

DIRECTED BY
Rob Bowman

Overall Metascore

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

39 / 100

Critic Reviews

75 ReelViews
The fact that Reign of Fire does what it sets out to do is a cause for celebration amongst those who like special effects-laden action movies featuring fire-breathing monsters and mayhem.
70 Chicago Reader Hank Sartin
An odd cross between "Mad Max" and "Dragonheart," this movie is all borrowed ideas, but it's still trashy fun.
70 LA Weekly
Bowman and production designer Wolf Kroeger do an excellent job of evoking a twice-baked England, while writers Gregg Chabot, Kevin Peterka and Matt Greenberg keep the script devilishly pitched just shy of preposterous (it's McConaughey who stumbles beyond).
70 New Times (L.A.)
The beasts are employed to splendid metaphorical effect, which may be lost on viewers perceiving nothing but an action romp.
70 The New York Times
Loads of fun. It has a jamming B-picture buzz -- the kind of swift filmmaking and high spirits that have been missing from movies for a while.
63 Charlotte Observer
The film delivers the goods, reptile-wise. Though the computer-generated villains look a bit clumsy at ground level, they're superb in the air.
63 Boston Globe
This is quite enjoyable as creature features go, and Bale continues to demonstrate his curious under-the-radar appeal. As for McConaughey, let's just say a star is reborn. Suddenly that whole naked-bongo-playing incident makes a lot more sense.
63 Chicago Tribune Chris Jones
It's a decent, fast-moving and visually powerful summer action romp for the teenage demographic-the dragons are deliciously evil critters, with a nice retro identity.
60 Variety
An uncommonly satisfying mix of medieval fantasy, high-tech military action and "Mad Max"-style misadventure.
58 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
A collision of medieval fantasy and commando action movie, where you can almost believe in the high-concept mix-and-matching.
50 Miami Herald
Stops dead the second the monsters fall out of view. It doesn't help that the movie's post-apocalyptic future is of the unimaginative backlot variety, or that the movie takes itself so seriously.
50 Los Angeles Times
Though Reign of Fire's concept of a humans-versus-dragons smackdown is a good one, the way it's worked out on screen is more silly than compelling.
50 Baltimore Sun
The script gives the actors less of a chance than the dragons give to Homo sapiens.
50 New York Daily News
Clearly, nobody's going to win any awards for this, but maybe Bale and McConaughey knew what they were doing after all. The music is loud, the action is fierce and the bodies are buff.
50 Film Threat
Surprisingly lifeless monster movie.
42 Portland Oregonian
Like a dog walking on its hind legs across a freshly waxed floor -- awkward, slow, deliberate, seeking approval -- the action thriller Reign of Fire gets from start to finish, somehow, without tumbling into complete disaster.
40 Austin Chronicle
Will make monster fans ache for what might have been.
40 TV Guide
Some great things can found in this fluidly kinetic film, well-directed by X-Files series and movie veteran Rob Bowman, including no-nonsense dialogue, epic photography and a terrific score. It's too bad the story is so sloppy and stupid.
38 Philadelphia Inquirer
Often incomprehensible (a combination of jumpy editing and lots of thick British Isles accents) and hardly ever entertaining - even unintentionally.
38 New York Post
It strains belief that nuclear weapons couldn't kill off the dragons, but three people with crossbows could.
38 USA Today
The story doesn't clarify why the dragons hibernated for hundreds of years, nor why they awakened. Clearly, however, the filmmakers might have benefited from more sleep before penning the script.
38 The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
Reign of Fire never comes close to recovering from its demented premise, but it does sustain an enjoyable level of ridiculousness.
30 The Onion (A.V. Club)
Director Rob Bowman seems at a loss as to what to bring to the film, which, even with its good choice of leads, plods along from one dragon fight to the next, all of them staged to showcase Fire's impressive CGI dragons, but none choreographed with any real flair.
30 Washington Post
It's just silly, loud and goofy. The dragon needed a bigger part and the two stars smaller ones.
30 Village Voice
Peaks early with a vertiginous dogfight; thereafter, spotty CGI and a bamboozling plot conspire toward a colossal anticlimax.
25 Chicago Sun-Times
One regards Reign of Fire with awe. What a vast enterprise has been marshaled in the service of such a minute idea. Incredulity is our companion, and it is twofold: We cannot believe what happens in the movie, and we cannot believe that the movie was made.
20 Rolling Stone
So what's not to like? There's the bad CGI, the choppy pacing, the comically intense acting, the repetition, the dullness and mostly the idiot plot about how there's only one male dragon and everything will be fine if they kill the Big Dick. Wha? Somebody get a hose and put this Fire out.
20 Salon.com
Dragons torch the earth as manly men with weird hair battle them in this colossally misconceived dud.
20 Washington Post
A disaster of a drama, saved only by its winged assailants. You know a picture's in trouble when you find yourself rooting for humankind to lose.
0 San Francisco Chronicle
Truly awful.

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