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Year One
Stars indicate the most critically-acclaimed movies.
Prestige, The

Generally favorable reviews
Based on 36 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?
Based on 168 votes
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Movie Info
Genre(s): Drama | Fantasy | Sci-fi | Suspense/Thriller
Written by:
Jonathan Nolan
Christopher Nolan
Christopher Priest (novel)
Directed by: Christopher Nolan
Release Date:
Theatrical: October 20, 2006
DVD: February 20, 2007
Running Time: 128 minutes, Color
Origin: USA / UK
Summary
RATING: PG-13 for violence and disturbing images
Starring Hugh Jackman, Christian Bale, Michael Caine, Scarlett Johansson, David Bowie, Rebecca Hall, Andy Serkis, and Piper Perabo
Christopher Nolan directs this mysterious story of two magicians whose intense rivalry leads them on a life-long battle for supremacy full of obsession, deceit and jealousy with dangerous and deadly consequences. (Touchstone Pictures)
Also On Metacritic
FILM: Batman Begins Insomnia Memento The Dark Knight
Also On The Web: Internet Movie Database View The Trailer Official Studio 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...
Charlotte Observer Lawrence Toppman
To talk more about the movie's layers is to risk giving away too much. I'll say only that this film confirms Nolan's status as the director whose work I look forward to more than any other.
Read Full Review >TV Guide Maitland McDonagh
The film's prestige is a doozy, both dazzling and preposterous, but if you're watching closely -- as Cutter advises in the film's first few minutes -- it's flawlessly set up.
Read Full Review >Rolling Stone Peter Travers
Nolan directs the film exactly like a great trick, so you want to see it again the second it's over. I'd call that wicked clever.
Read Full Review >USA Today Claudia Puig
A visually stunning, startlingly clever sleight of hand that will have audiences pondering well after the lights go up.
Read Full Review >Entertainment Weekly Owen Gleiberman
The Prestige isn't art, but it reaps a lot of fun out of the question, How did they do that?
Read Full Review >The New York Times A.O. Scott
Stuffed with hard-working actors, sleek effects and stagy period details, The Prestige, directed by Christopher Nolan from a script he wrote with his brother Jonathan, is an intricate and elaborate machine designed for the simple purpose of diversion.
Read Full Review >Los Angeles Times Kenneth Turan
The Prestige does more than focus on magicians. It is so in love with the romance, wonder and ability to fool of stage illusion that it becomes something of a magic trick in and of itself
Read Full Review >Washington Post Ann Hornaday
Bale and Jackman inject their reliable charisma into two otherwise very cold fish. Okay, I'll say it: If you see only one magic-at-the-turn-of-the-century movie this year, make it this one.
Read Full Review >Slate Dana Stevens
The Prestige is utterly without pretense. It doesn't want to explore epistemological questions about the nature of perception and memory; it just wants to mess with our heads. And as a wily, slightly sadistic chess game of a movie, it succeeds quite nicely.
Read Full Review >Newsweek David Ansen
Take the movie's first words to heart: watch closely. You'll be well rewarded.
Read Full Review >Time Richard Schickel
For all the film's murky misdirections, it is very enjoyable. That's because Nolan's recreation of the illusionists' backstage world is so marvelously detailed, including as it does revelations of how some of their best tricks are accomplished.
Read Full Review >Empire Dan Jolin
The Prestige traces the course of their bitter feud, as their respective acts of sabotage become ever more deadly.
Read Full Review >Chicago Sun-Times Roger Ebert
Christopher Nolan's The Prestige has just about everything I require in a movie about magicians, except ... the Prestige.
Read Full Review >Portland Oregonian M. E. Russell
It's a gorgeous, strange little piece -- but I did find myself wishing it poked fewer aces out its sleeve after urging us to pay such close attention.
Read Full Review >Miami Herald Rene Rodriguez
Nolan, who has become an assured, stylish filmmaker in the span of only a few films, keeps the complicated plot spinning.
Read Full Review >Baltimore Sun Chris Kaltenbach
In the end, there's enough movie magic in The Prestige to keep you guessing, even after the film's over.
Read Full Review >Boston Globe Ty Burr
It's like "The Illusionist" crossed with a really hard Sudoku.
Read Full Review >The Globe and Mail (Toronto) Rick Groen
[Nolan is] back in the fine engineering business, crafting a story as intricately designed as a magician's lock, tightly packed with tumblers of deception and issuing a fun challenge to any volunteers in the audience: Just try to pick it.
Read Full Review >Village Voice Scott Foundas
The result is a lopsided yet absorbing movie in which the director is less drawn to his main characters than to those on the periphery.
Read Full Review >The Onion (A.V. Club) Scott Tobias
For all its surface dazzle, The Prestige shares with this year's earlier "The Illusionist" a certain core hollowness. Maybe that's a natural consequence of even the best magic shows: You can't help but feel duped.
Read Full Review >Premiere Ethan Alter
If The Prestige is something of a let down as a magic trick, it's more successful as a tale of obsession. The rivalry between the magicians is brutal and bloody and Bale and Jackman do their best work when they're plotting each other's downfall.
Read Full Review >New York Daily News Jack Mathews
By describing the structure of a great trick in a movie about a great trick, The Prestige makes a promise it can't keep. Its third act is about as convincing as a photo of a cow jumping over the moon.
Read Full Review >Chicago Tribune Michael Phillips
Many, I suspect, will fall for The Prestige and its blend of one-upsmanship and science fiction. I prefer "The Illusionist," the movie that got here first.
Read Full Review >New York Post Kyle Smith
On the M. Night Shyamalan scale of stupid endings, The Prestige isn't as bad as "The Village" but it's comparable to "Unbreakable."
Read Full Review >Seattle Post-Intelligencer Paula Nechak
If you can forgive some woeful casting and a plot that is as creakingly thin as an old staircase, you can enjoy director Christopher Nolan's The Prestige.
Read Full Review >The Hollywood Reporter Kirk Honeycutt
Audiences might enjoy this cinematic sleight of hand, but the key characters are such single-minded, calculating individuals that the real magic would be to find any heart in this tale.
Read Full Review >Film Threat Mark Bell
When all is said and done and you get the full explanation of what meant what and who did what to whom, it's not fulfilling at all. It's a magic trick that's all showmanship and craft, but lacking true whimsy, ultimately failing the audience.
Read Full Review >Chicago Reader J.R. Jones
"The Illusionist" also centers on a 19th-century magician, and the elegant contours of its story are even more impressive compared with Nolan's clutter of double and triple crosses.
Read Full Review >Philadelphia Inquirer Steven Rea
Jonathan and Christopher Nolan's adaptation of this novel by Christopher Priest offers three acts of exasperating muddle.
Read Full Review >Salon.com Stephanie Zacharek
The Prestige is a trick box with too many false bottoms. Ultimately, the last one simply gives way -- leaving us with a hole, and a little residual darkness, but not much else.
Read Full Review >New York Magazine David Edelstein
The tit-for-tat scenario ought to be wildly entertaining, but the magic is crude, the characters flyweight, and the story protracted and unpleasant.
Read Full Review >Austin Chronicle Marc Savlov
Truth itself is little more than a word in The Prestige, a film that both celebrates the wonder of being fooled and the foolishness of wanting just that.
Read Full Review >Variety Dennis Harvey
Clearly, director Nolan is aiming for something else. But the delight in sheer gamesmanship that marked his breakout "Memento" doesn't survive this project's gimmickry and aspirations toward "Les Miserables"-style epic passion.
Read Full Review >San Francisco Chronicle Mick LaSalle
Thus, we find ourselves watching an ice-cold movie about competition that contains not a shred of rooting interest.
Read Full Review >What Our Users Said
The average user rating for this movie is 8.5 (out of 10) based on 168 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
R. L. gave it a10:
There are three acts to a magicians show. The first is called the pledge: the magician shows the audience something normal, but in reality it's not. The second act is called the turn: The Magician makes the ordinary something do something incredible.The third act is called The Prestige, and that is what this exceptional film is about. The Prestige stars Hugh Jackman and Christian Bale as Robert Angier and Alfred Borden, they were best friends and partners until one night one of there biggest tricks went horribly wrong and cost them a valued member of the act.The two friends are now the bitterest of rivals; trying to out do each other to see who's the better magician. As the rivalry escalates into a full blow obsession, the two magicians start to make and preform more and more dangerous tricks. But all is not what it seems. The Prestige directed by Christopher Nolan and based on the novel by Christopher Priest is the second movie made to explore the depths of stage magic, and it is by far the best one, The Prestige is a dark and sinister psychological thriller that will boggle your mind and keep you coming back for even more.You'll want to see it again the minute it's over, it's that good, this film explores the depths of what revenge and obsession does to a man, what it does to a person and what it can do to your life. We see that on Angier's part that it has turned him into a monster,a man who would kill to be the best, Borden on the other hands has not been affected to much, by this we can that this rivalry doesn't extend all the way into Alfred's life as it does Robert's. Obsession and revenge is a thing that most people live for and thrive on everyday of there lives. We see that here with Robert, he won't stop until he's destroyed Alfred's life, that's revenge. Angier will also stop at nothing until he learns all of Borden's secret's, that's obsession. put those two together and you've got a movie you can't afford the miss. Also watch closely because nothing is what it seems.
Bill R gave it a3:
Dissappointing. This film had some great elements that could have lead to a fantastic film, but it falls flat. The "tadaa" moment is explained away with some ridiculous science fiction. If the true "Secret" of the big trick is some sort of science fiction mumbo jumbo, then why does the film try to be true at all to the art and skill of the magicians up to that point? If you are going to allow sci-fi fantasy to come in at the end, then what is the point of the rest of the "how does it work?" plot elements. The film cheats on the very craft it touts to be about.... Aweful.
James L. gave it a9:
I do not write this review to suggest this film is the most glorious piece of art I have ever seen, I merely write it to suggest that Ebert is a fraud. How dare he receive the "Pulitzer Prize" when a myriad of writers (many of whom write reviews on movies, music, and literature) are unquestionably more equipped than he is. He is verbal troglodyte whose negative comments cloud any semblance of fair judgment on the majority of films he reviews -- nay, anything he writes. He merely posits his myopic views (as fact) without considering that he may, if God may allow it, be foolhardy in his conclusions. Without having a degree of 'prestige' when it comes to describing the plot, characterization, and tone of the film -- Ebert manages to undermine an astronomical cache of film techniques that 'The Prestige' tastefully (yet impressively) offers with restraint -- nay -- poise. He disgusts me and should be shot, tarred, and feathered in a public arena so those who have suffered by his negligence can reap the reward of a fair trial. Ebert, please challenge me so I may show you to be the lesser of two minds and ascend to the glory of your misappropriated job.
Grant H. gave it a10:
A true masterpiece. its one of my favorite movies. the scores giving to it by the critics don't do it justice. the ending is the best ending to any movie I have seen.
Paul L. gave it a9:
full of twist and turns this movie is a fun ride to be. Awesome rivalry between these two. Good movie too.
Rishi I gave it a9:
Was told by a friend to watch this movie, because he kept banging on about the plot twist. Well, it seems he was right. It is very good, the script is beautifully written and Bale is magnificent throughout.
John gave it a9:
Very cool movie! The twists were amazing and had me remembering the film long after I'd seen it. There is great acting happening here. The world and characters are believable. All in all another great film by Nolan.
