64
Metascore
12 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 90TimeRichard SchickelTimeRichard SchickelIt is also extremely well acted at every level (one especially wants to single out Bob Balaban as the Government's chief aggressor and Wilford Brimley as its belated voice of conscience), and directed by Sidney Pollack with a sort of crisp but unassuming professionalism that is rarer than it ought to be. Perhaps best of all, the script, by sometime Journalist Kurt Luedtke, who was once part of a Pulitzer-winning investigative team on the Detroit Free Press, has a marvelously entertaining intricacy, briskly and believably building, half-inch by half-inch, Michael's outrage over and Megan's entrapment in the plot to get him.
- 80The New York TimesJanet MaslinThe New York TimesJanet MaslinEven when the action seems wrongheaded—and it frequently does—the movie is richly textured and well played.
- 80The New YorkerPauline KaelThe New YorkerPauline KaelSydney Pollack's directing is efficient and the film is moderately entertaining, but it leaves no residue. Except for the intensity of Newman's sly, compact performance...and the marvelously inventive acting of Melinda Dillon.
- 75Chicago Sun-TimesRoger EbertChicago Sun-TimesRoger EbertThe fact is, this movie is really about a woman's spunk and a common man's sneaky revenge. And on that level it's absorbing and entertaining.
- 63Chicago TribuneGene SiskelChicago TribuneGene SiskelA wildly overwritten melodrama about the sins of the press. Newman's character is compelling, but Field's reporter is such a lamebrain that we know she would be fired at any major newspaper. [25 Dec 1981]
- 63TV Guide MagazineTV Guide MagazineSydney Pollack's film is a solid, absorbing drama that, in profiling the damage that can result from investigative reporting, presents a counterpoint to All The President's Men.
- 60Chicago ReaderDave KehrChicago ReaderDave KehrFor all of its simplemindedness and deck stacking, the film is distressingly well made—Pollack is no artist, but he has a glistening technique (there aren't many American directors left who know how to plan their shots for such smooth cutting) and a strong sense of how to hold, cajole, and gratify an audience.
- Overwrought.
- 40Time Out LondonTime Out LondonImpeccably liberal in its orientation to 'issues' - the power and responsibilities of the press, the impact of misinformation - this avoids the excesses of Stanley Kramer-like telegraphy, only to come up looking aesthetically wet.