Where in the World Is Osama bin Laden? Reviews
What starts as a rather goofy, computer-animated, video game mockery transforms into mature investigative journalism.
| Original Score: 6/10 | Nov 28, 2020
Benefits from Spurlock's relaxed style and overall faith in humanity.
| Original Score: 2.5/4.0 | Sep 27, 2020
A shameless vanity project that's better off ignored.
| Original Score: 1.5/4 | Jul 6, 2019
Spurlock's latest documentary is one long ego-trip.
| Original Score: 2/5 | Nov 4, 2018
This is a pointless film. It is sans point, has zilch point, scores nul points in the point department.
| Aug 23, 2018
Full Review | Original Score: 2/5 | Nov 17, 2011
Shrinks the world situation to fit the mood of America and gets away with it. Candy-coated reality? Yankee vanity? Maybe so. But the sunniness is welcome.
| Apr 28, 2011
Makes Michael Moore look like Marcel Ophüls
| Aug 26, 2009
There is room for a tough, journalistic documentary presented by someone who really did want to know the answer. But this isn't it.
| Original Score: 1/5 | Oct 18, 2008
Complicated global problems require something a bit more challenging than this.
| Oct 18, 2008
| Original Score: 5/10 | Oct 18, 2008
| Original Score: 3/5 | Oct 18, 2008
Morgan Spurlock is a living, breathing cautionary tale. Take a good, long look, kids: This is what happens when society validates really annoying people.
| Original Score: 1/4 | Oct 18, 2008
| Original Score: C | Oct 18, 2008
Spurlock's disarming, slightly goofy demeanor gets him out of situations that might mean trouble for anyone else. His films are always fun and even illuminating to watch.
| Oct 18, 2008
Full Review | Original Score: 2/4 | Oct 18, 2008
This film finds him becoming more sentimental, perhaps because of his new domesticity, but the film is still consistently entertaining.
| Original Score: 3/5 | Sep 19, 2008
What makes it all work is how honest and grounded Spurlock is.
| Sep 1, 2008
Woefully small-scale, often misguided.
| Original Score: C- | Aug 22, 2008
Morgan goes out into the big bad, wide world as the naive and innocent everyman, asking the question of the title, but actually posing more complex issues - which address the human condition.
| Aug 7, 2008