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15 Minutes Reviews

Exceptionally violent, intense DeNiro thriller.

| Original Score: 3/5 | Aug 26, 2010

| Original Score: 2.5/4 | Mar 19, 2002

| Original Score: 2/5 | Apr 16, 2001

| Original Score: 2.5/5 | Apr 9, 2001

| Original Score: 1/5 | Mar 30, 2001

Full Review | Original Score: 3/4 | Mar 23, 2001

Herzfeld's a secondhand-meister, simply regenerating themes, styles and a story line that we've all seen -- and tired of -- somewhere before.

| Original Score: 1/5 | Mar 9, 2001

The movie is nothing if not ambitious. The movie is nothing if not overdone. The movie is also, well, pretty much ... nothing.

| Original Score: 2/5 | Mar 9, 2001

A clumsy urban thriller.

Full Review | Mar 9, 2001

Two horrifyingly bad hours that should stand as a reminder to keep Hollywood away from big issues or anything else it can put in its mouth and choke on.

Full Review | Mar 9, 2001

A shrewd thriller.

| Original Score: 3/4 | Mar 9, 2001

The filmmaker tries to eat his cake and have it as well, giving his audience ample servings of what we presumably want while slapping our wrists for it at the same time.

| Mar 9, 2001

A picture that has a crowd-stopping impact.

Full Review | Original Score: 3.5/5 | Mar 9, 2001

Overwrought and hypocritical.

Full Review | Mar 9, 2001

Ultra-violent, blatantly manipulative and politically reactionary.

Full Review | Mar 9, 2001

De Niro and rising star Edward Burns have just enough knowing, gritty give-and-take in 15 Minutes to make you hungry for more.

Full Review | Original Score: 2/4 | Mar 9, 2001

A real movie, rough edges and all, and not another link from the sausage factory.

| Original Score: 3/4 | Mar 9, 2001

There's a dynamite movie to be made about the collision -- and collusion -- of celebrity culture, violence, and media complicity. But the hot-button 15 Minutes isn't it.

Full Review | Mar 9, 2001

A tiresome screed that purports to teach us a lesson about violence and the media even as it serves up much more than the minimum daily requirement of stabbings, bloody gunshot wounds and relentless stomach punches.

Full Review | Mar 9, 2001

Warhol's statement was just a one-liner, and a movie requires more than that to run two hours.

Full Review | Mar 9, 2001

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