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In 24 short hours Monty Brogan (Norton) goes to prison for seven long years. Once a king of Manhattan, Monty is about to say good-bye to the life he knew -- a life that opened doors to New York's swankest clubs but also alienated him from the people closest to him. In his last day on the outside, Monty tries to reconnect with his father (Brian Cox), and gets together with two old friends, Jacob (Philip Seymour Hoffman) and Slaughtery (Barry Pepper). And then there's his girlfriend, Naturelle (Rosario Dawson), who might (or might not) have been the one who tipped off the cops. Monty's not sure of much these days, but with time running out, there are choices to be made as he struggles to redeem himself in the 25th hour. (official distributor synopsis)

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Reviews (8)

novoten 

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English "I was waiting for the rough journey of a condemned dealer for justice and clearing my name, and Spike Lee tells more about a sad farewell to a slightly desperate existence. In the end, I was disappointedly bored for over a hundred minutes, only for an amazing finish to reveal itself, leaving a significantly better taste than the film perhaps deserves." ()

kaylin 

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English Spike Lee can have whatever opinions he wants, and you don't have to agree with them, but you have to admit he has a sense for storytelling, for characters, and that he's capable of using forms that fit the story. Even in 25th Hour, he chooses scenes that are sometimes very specific, and almost artistic, but they manage to enhance the impression that the story is creating. A successful film about one human fate. ()

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Lima 

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English As Monty says: Fuck the Wall Street brokers. Self-styled masters of the universe. Michael Douglas, Gordon Gekko wannabe mother fuckers, figuring out new ways to rob hard working people blind. Send those Enron assholes to jail for FUCKING LIFE! You think Bush and Cheney didn't know about that shit? Give me a fucking break! [...] Fuck Osama Bin Laden, al-Qaeda, and backward-ass cave-dwelling fundamentalist assholes everywhere. On the names of innocent thousands murdered, I pray you spend the rest of eternity with your seventy-two whores roasting in a jet-fuel fire in hell. You towel-headed camel jockeys can kiss my royal Irish ass!” YEAH! I would definitely subscribe to that, and not just to this quote, but to many others. But that doesn't change the fact that the overall impression of the film is quite mixed. Spike Lee tries to tell us so much and the result is a disjointed hodgepodge of scenes, some of which don't even seem to belong there. The character of Anna Paquin is completely unnecessary, the scenes with her have no connection with the plot. Likewise, the Ground Zero scene looks like a patch on new clothes. Apparently Lee's painful scars on his soul were still very fresh a year after the attack. And the ending, those minutes overflowing with pathos… ugh, ugh… At times I had the feeling I was watching something really great, then I had the opposite impression. What was great, though, was the performances. All of them. One big two-hour acting concert. Yet the resulting emotional impact was weak. Perhaps also because I can't sympathise with a drug dealer, someone who feeds on the "misery and addiction of others". ()

POMO 

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English 25th Hour is such a small film, and yet it’s so big! From every minute you can feel the intellectual charge and the director’s commitment and goal. The actors are fantastic, and Barry Pepper in particular is very surprising. The psychological tension in the dialogue could crush an elephant. It’s easy not to give this excellent, distinctive film a full five-star rating, but it’s impossible to reasonably justify why it doesn’t deserve one. ()

Kaka 

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English Stunning performances by everyone involved, the director's passion for the material, and brilliantly precise dialogues make this film a very unusual and original experience. A barrage of emotions that attacks the viewer from all sides, leaving them no chance to escape. Spike Lee's commitment to the material occasionally leads to a few unnecessary scenes that shatter the overall balance and flow of the plot, but what the hell, it is still strongly above-average filmmaking, and the people behind it definitely have nothing to be ashamed of. A perspective on the modern world, presented in a way that almost nobody can dislike. ()

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