TV
2009 Fall Season
2009 Summer Season
2008-09 Midseason
2008 Fall Season
2008 Summer Season
Best Of 2008
Best Of 2007
Best Of 2006
Best Of 2005
Recent/Upcoming
Movies & Specials
46
The Prisoner
AMC, 11/15
73
Collision
PBS, 11/15
70
Schmatta: Rags to Riches to Rags
HBO, 10/19
84
Monty Python: Almost the Truth (The Lawyer's Cut)
IFC, 10/18
80
Occupation
BBC America, 10/18
Recent/Upcoming
Series Premieres
47
The Wanda Sykes Show
Fox,
Saturday
67
V
ABC,
Tuesday
54
The League
FX,
Thursday
81
Friday Night Lights Season Four
DirecTV 101,
Wednesday
77
Endgame
PBS,
Sunday
78
White Collar
USA,
Friday
20
The Jeff Dunham Show
Comedy Central,
Thursday
47
Lock 'n Load
Showtime,
Wednesday
74
30 Rock Season Four
NBC,
Thursday
65
Nip/Tuck Season Six
FX,
Wednesday
49
Secret Girlfriend
Comedy Central,
Wednesday
62
Sherri
Lifetime,
Monday
48
Three Rivers
CBS,
Sunday
Stars indicate the most critically-acclaimed shows.
Recount
EMAILPRINTMOVIE: HBO, Sunday 5/25 at 9:00p (120 minutes)

Generally favorable reviews
Based on 25 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?
Based on 31 votes
Read user comments
Rate this show >
Show Info
Genre(s): Drama, History
Created By: Danny Strong
First Air Date: May 25, 2008
Summary
Starring Kevin Spacey, Denis Leary, John Hurt, Tom Wilkinson, Ed Begley Jr., Laura Dern, Bruce McGill, and Bob Balaban
The hanging chad is recounted in HBO's TV movie featuring Kevin Spacey, Denis Leary, John Hurt, Tom Wilkinson, Ed Begley Jr., and Laura Dern.
Episode Guide & More Info: More about this show at TV.com
Also On The Web: Official Show Site
What The Critics Said
All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...
Orlando SentinelHal Boedeker
Director Jay Roach and writer Danny Strong do a superb job of putting you back in the 36-day marathon about the outcome of the 2000 presidential election in Florida. Don't want to go there? You'll miss a brilliant cast headed by Kevin Spacey and Denis Leary.
Read Full Review >Entertainment WeeklyGillian Flynn
At one point, before a press conference, Dern morphs her face from that of a human being into Harris' crazy-cuckoo public mask, and the moment is absolutely chilling. Fair? Debatable, but like Recount, it's a gorgeous bit of political theater.
Read Full Review >Washington PostTom Shales
Although Recount is a smashing success on almost every level, it's also a brutally disheartening experience for the story it tells.
Read Full Review >Hollywood ReporterBarry Garron
Sure enough, HBO's "Recount" is replete with inside politics. But it also has well-written characters, first-class acting and confident directing, which produces a level of tension and suspense you wouldn’t expect in a story about a widely reported recent event.
Read Full Review >LA WeeklyRobert Abele
Written with an eye for telling detail by Danny Strong, and directed in surprisingly nimble fashion by blockbuster-comedy wrangler Jay Roach (of the Austin Powers movies and Meet the Parents fame), it has the peculiarly alchemic structure of a nail-biting tragi-farce.
Read Full Review >TV GuideMatt Roush
HBO’s crisply told, colorfully acted Recount wants to be both legal thriller and nightmare farce as it recounts, with news footage and dramatic re-creation, the cliff-hanger aftermath in Florida of the 2000 “squeaker” election between George W. Bush and Al Gore (both mostly off camera).
Read Full Review >VarietyBrian Lowry
Smart, star-studded and anchored by another fine-tuned performance from Kevin Spacey, Recount finds the sweet spot between theatrical fare and TV that's precisely the constituency HBO wants to reach.
Read Full Review >The New York TimesAlessandra Stanley
Recount, an astute and deliciously engrossing film on HBO this Sunday night, retells the tale of Florida in all its bizarre and inglorious moments, from haggling over the “hanging chad” and “butterfly ballots” to the ruckus between the Florida secretary of state, Katherine Harris, and the Palm Beach County Canvassing Board.
Read Full Review >San Francisco ChronicleTim Goodman
Recount pays due diligence to history while at the same time fictionalizing the interactions of the participants.
Read Full Review >New York PostAdam Buckman
Wilkinson steals the entire movie with his portrayal of Baker, playing him as a brilliant, wily political strategist.
Read Full Review >Chicago Sun-TimesRoger Ebert
Recount, an efficient and relentless enactment of the strategists on both sides of the Florida controversy, shows an accident that was waiting to happen
Read Full Review >SalonHeather Havrilesky
Needless to say, Kevin Spacey and Denis Leary are both lively and funny in their roles as members of Al Gore's team, but it's Laura Dern who really steals the movie with her hysterically self-involved portrait of Katherine Harris.
Read Full Review >TimeJames Poniewozik
While it's not a great TV movie--it's basically a high-class Movie of the Week, a docudrama that dramatizes events you'll recall from the news at the time if you were following it--it's nonetheless a gripping recounting (ha!) of a Presidential drama that was pretty gripping at the time to begin with.
Read Full Review >Philadelphia InquirerJonathan Storm
Populated by some super actors, the film, sometimes fascinating, sometimes too drawn out, gets inside the frenzied Florida jockeying for a presidential victory.
Read Full Review >Wall Street JournalNancy DeWolf Smith
Even viewers who had thought they never wanted to hear about a dimpled chad again will find that Recount moves along at a satisfying clip and can make the old drama and suspense seem surprisingly fresh.
Read Full Review >New York Daily NewsDavid Hinckley
Recount effectively dramatizes that struggle, mixing a true-to-life script with real news footage.
Read Full Review >PopMattersCynthia Fuchs
Assuming that you share its sense of outrage at what Jim Baker and Supremes wrought (in a decision they declared a one-off, not applicable to any future rulings), the movie offers easy targets and conclusions. But to intimate there was a way to “win” if only everyone had played fair, Recount has to back off the entrenched problems and the more horrific conclusion, that the system is rigged and no matter who plays it, the end is the same.
Read Full Review >NewsdayVerne Gay
A watchable and skillfully made telefilm (Jay Roach of "Austin Powers" fame directed) that is, nonetheless, marred by a melodramatic reliance on Good vs. Evil, and guess which side is which?
Read Full Review >Pittsburgh Post-GazetteRob Owen
HBO's Recount is an entertaining political drama, one in which both Democrats and Republicans get dinged, but the film is clearly sympathetic toward the underdog Democrats.
Read Full Review >New York MagazineJohn Leonard
With the exceptions of a furious Denis Leary as Michael Whouley, chief political strategist of the Democratic National Committee, and an over-the-top Laura Dern as Katherine Harris, Florida’s hothouse secretary of State, a splendid cast mostly just sits around watching the bad news on television, dutiful to the letter of Danny Strong’s conscientious script yet insufficiently roused to righteous spirit even as, before their eyes, our republic gets banana’d.
Read Full Review >Boston GlobeMatthew Gilbert
Recount should be tight and tense, or, perhaps, wildly satirical. Instead, it just rehashes the mess all over again, in detail, with lots of news footage to support the dutifully invented backstage scenes.
Read Full Review >Chicago TribuneMaureen Ryan
It has so much political minutiae to get through--the hanging chads, the vote-counting procedures, the legal maneuverings, etc.--that the characters get short shrift.
Read Full Review >Slant MagazineEd Gonzalez
The film is already a lost cause from its opening scene, during which an old woman wearing a Star of David necklace walks into a polling station and appears stricken by either IBS or Alzheimer's after accidentally screwing up her butterfly ballot.
Read Full Review >SlateTroy Patterson
The one redeeming factor here is Laura Dern, who puts that elastic jolie laide mug of hers to memorable use as Katherine Harris. The performance makes you wish that Recount--which does contain a few fine moments of wild farce--had instead been created as a seven-episode sitcom playing out from her point of view.
Read Full Review >Baltimore SunDavid Zurawik
HBO's Recount fails. Invented dialogue and actions attributed to real-world figures play side by side with, and are indistinguishable from, verifiable actions and events that took place in Florida in 2000.
Read Full Review >What Our Users Said
The average user rating for this show is 6.7 (out of 10) based on 31 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
Bob C. gave it a9:
If this movie isn't at least a 9, I don't know what is. What a professional reenactment of a chilling, stupid, funny, serious and scary incident. G. W. was crowned and the world knows how THAT panned out. Great cast, great direction, great script.
Jon G. gave it a9:
This film is wonderfully done. It correctly captures the true nature of the 2000 election. If only this movie was made before the 2004 election. Maybe then republicans would not have repeated their mistake.
Elliott M. gave it a2:
Annoying acted and very poorly written. I'm as irked as the next person about the 2000 election debacle, but this is pathetic.
Judy T. gave it an8:
Very well done. Great acting, great dialog and really informative for anyone who thinks they know what went on. Really showed the travesty of democracy that was the 2000 election.
Troy K. gave it a3:
This was awful from the start. This could've been really, really good...but it fell really, really flat. It was more of another left wing spin film that didn't even attempt to capture the essence nor complexity of the situation. It was disappointing, but reminds me of why I shouldn't support HBO with my monthly fees.
Melissa D. gave it a9:
My husband and I have watched this over and over again. We truly enjoy it, and love knowing a little more about what went on.
Trxtr Kin gave it a9:
I thought it was a very entertaining look at the recount of 2000. I am sure it will be seen as just another liberal offering but then everything but FOX is these days. Unfortunately, people won't watch the movie and make their own judgements.
