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Hard Word, The
Lions Gate Films Inc.

Hard Word, The reviews
Critic Score
Metascore: 51 Metascore out of 100
User Score  
3.0 out of 10
based on 24 reviews
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based on 1 votes
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MPAA RATING: R for strong violence, language, sexuality and brief drug use

Starring Guy Pearce, Rachel Griffiths, Robert Taylor, Joel Edgerton, Damien Richardson, Rhondda Findleton, Kate Atkinson, and Vince Colosimo

Three prisoners are about to be released on bail -- Dale (Pearce), Mal (Richardson) and Shane (Edgerton). Meet the Twentyman brothers. Hard experience and an unspoken bond of family have made them masters of their craft -- armed robbery. It's a job and they do it because they're good at it. Their only rule is, no one gets hurt. (Lions Gate Films)


GENRE(S): Suspense/Thriller  
WRITTEN BY: Scott Roberts  
DIRECTED BY: Scott Roberts  
RELEASE DATE: DVD: October 7, 2003 
Video: October 7, 2003 
Theatrical: June 13, 2003 
RUNNING TIME: 102 minutes, Color 
ORIGIN: UK / Australia  

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...

80
Los Angeles Times Kenneth Turan
Interests us in ways we don't expect. It has a mordant sense of humor and a gift for character and incident that has attracted two of Australia's best actors -- Guy Pearce and Rachel Griffiths -- as well as an excellent supporting cast.
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80
Variety David Stratton
Hard-boiled entertainment in the Tarantino mold is leavened with a distinctively Aussie sense of humor in The Hard Word.
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80
The New York Times A.O. Scott
Amusingly gamy, an anecdotal crime film that's an antidote to the pile of overly slick robbery pictures of the past few years.
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75
San Francisco Chronicle Mick LaSalle
Tense and compelling, with the added charm of a mischievous spirit.
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67
Austin Chronicle Marrit Ingman
Works quite well for what it is: a wooly crime yarn with touches of humor and a satisfying, well-developed relationship between the schemers.
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63
Chicago Sun-Times Roger Ebert
This movie could obviously go on fooling us forever, but we are good sports only up to a point, and then our attention drifts. Shame, since there's so much good stuff in it, like how effortlessly Rachel Griffiths keeps two tough guys completely at her mercy.
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63
New York Post Megan Lehmann
Some of the plot points are confusingly vague, the tone lurches wildly between genres, and the film's epilogue pushes the bounds of believability - but The Hard Word could never be accused of being predictable.
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60
Chicago Reader Jonathan Rosenbaum
At times the plot developments in this post-Tarantino story seem so random they suggest automatic writing, but the characters and some of the settings kept me interested.
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60
The Onion (A.V. Club) Keith Phipps
Roberts' script and direction show sparks of wit, but the plot comes lifted from countless heist films.
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58
Portland Oregonian Kim Morgan
Though The Hard Word feels flimsy at times, its breeziness and humor, along with Pearce's performance, make it infinitely more amusing than it's got any right to be. You get the feeling that these actors had fun making this film, and that fun is contagious.
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50
Village Voice David Ng
Convoluted yet simple-minded, the movie frequently equates verbosity with wit.
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50
Christian Science Monitor David Sterritt
The film would work better if its story unfolded more swiftly and if its twists were more unexpected. The acting is solid, though.
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50
New York Daily News Jack Mathews
I may be wrong, but I think Guy Pearce is wearing Nicole Kidman's false nose in The Hard Word. Whatever it is that's on his face, it looks like a dead cod and won't win him an Oscar.
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50
Seattle Post-Intelligencer Sean Axmaker
Even a one-two punch from Australian stars Guy Pearce and Rachel Griffiths, who are wryly good in this crime caper, can't keep it from sinking into a cavern of cliches.
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50
Chicago Tribune Mark Caro
This Australian production pairs two always-watchable actors, Guy Pearce and Rachel Griffiths, yet never compels us to feel a thing.
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50
Boston Globe Ty Burr
Wonderful characters, these three, and The Hard Word never figures out what to do with them.
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50
TV Guide Maitland McDonagh
A blackly comic, neo-noir heist picture, Australian screenwriter Scott Roberts's directing debut fairly oozes strenuous eccentricity.
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50
Premiere Alex Kranz
Since the story really is about nothing more than who ends up with which bag of money, those eccentric details--that cow, the butchers' language--don't feel organic, but rather cosmetic. They're glamour to conceal the mundane.
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42
Entertainment Weekly Owen Gleiberman
An Australian crime caper that's one part ''Sexy Beast,'' one part ''The Full Monty,'' and three parts very flat soda.
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40
Wall Street Journal Joe Morgenstern
Like many dreams that enliven filmmakers' nights, this one derives from other, better films, though it does have a few clever twists.
40
Dallas Observer Robert Wilonsky
The screenplay does enough sabotage on its own; the nose, perhaps, is there to give us something to focus on lest our minds wander and wonder just how we chose to kill an hour and 48 minutes giving this crime caper access to our pocketbooks. (Might be good on video, though. Or cable.)
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40
LA Weekly Scott Foundas
The Hard Word’s greatest betrayal, however, is of its cast, of Pearce (hamming it up as the charismatic antihero) and Griffiths (as sexy as ever, but more or less abandoned by the movie midway through), who give it their all but get very little in return.
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30
Washington Post Stephen Hunter
Put another movie on the barbie, mate; maybe it'll be better.
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30
Washington Post Desson Thomson
Aside from the obviously Australian flavor to everything -- which can be entertaining at times -- there's no X factor to justify the whole exercise.
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What Our Users Said

Vote Now!The average user rating for this movie is 3.0 (out of 10) based on 1 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.

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