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Max Payne (2008) Certificate 15

Max Payne
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Rated 2.5 stars
Average rating
(52%)
 
Starring: Mark Wahlberg | Mila Kunis | Beau Bridges | Chris | Rothaford Gray
Director: John Moore
Studio: 20TH CENTURY FOX HOME ENTERTAINMENT
Run time: 100 mins
Collections: 100 Hot Hits | 100 Most Wanted
Genres: Action/Adventure | Audio Descriptive
Languages: English, English Audio Description
Released: April 13, 2009
Also available on: Also Available on: blu_ray

Coming together to solve a series of murders in New York City are a DEA agent (Wahlberg) whose family was slain as part of a conspiracy and an assassin (Kunis) out to avenge her sister's death. The duo will be hunted by the police, the mob, and a ruthless corporation.

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Rating of 2 stars out of 5
Time Out

Max Payne is to the original computer game what Sin City was to the graphic novel, a neo-noir revenge...

Highest rated reviews

44 out of 44 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 2 stars
come on John, you are supposed to make movie here

Picktokyo from from London, England, 20th October, 2008

If you have played Max Payne game, you will agree with me that Mark Wahlberg doesn't really suits the image of a Max Payne, but that is just one of a series of a whole poor misdirection in the movie. The story is mainly based on the original video game which is popular around 4 to 5 years ago. I have to admit the setting is a whole wonderful art direction set of New York City in a middle of harsh winter and rain. It is noir and I love it. It is just about the whole action that doesnt make sense. It is like a dark rambo, with many direction flaw. For instance, many of the movie scene you will see Wahlberg shooting at the bad guys and in return the bad guys will shoot EVERYTHING with rifles which is like 3 meters away from Wahlberg (in slow motion so you can notice how far they missed), and sometimes you will see Max shooting 4 bad guys at the same time with a machine gun effect - and how weird to see Max actually holding a shotgun NOT a machine gun. And limitless ammo also applies in the movie. And moreover you will see Max being shot again and again, and he doesn't even bleed - just like the video game. Should we actually remind John Moore that actually he is making a movie not a video-game-movie? and if it is a video game it is in an 'Easy Mode'. I am totally disappointed. The best part of the movie is Olga Kurylenko.

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17 out of 17 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 1 stars
*Spoilers* This is rubbish

A Customer from London, 27th April, 2009

Gosh, where to start? This was on a par with Constantine, it was that dire. Firstly, and this is probably the main point where this film falls down, the main character in films like this is meant to be a real badass, who can handle himself in a fight or shootout in an impressive manner. In Max Payne, Marky Mark just spends most of his time trying to look menacing, whilst running away from people shooting at him, getting beaten up by drug-enhanced bad guys and not actually doing much ass-kicking until the last 10 minutes, when he shoots a few people...then has a bit of a breakdown before shooting a defenceless middle-aged man. The head drug-enhanced bad guy is quite an interesting character, who could be great in a final showdown, but gets shot by the middle-aged man instead. The main bad guy (so completely obvious, it was hardly worth attempting to make his identity a secret at all) is not particularly intimidating. In fact, he is the middle-aged man. All in all, Max Payne doesn't really do much to warrant a film being made about the character. Secondly, what the hell is going on with the drug, and why do the characters take it? The general idea was that a very small percentage of the people who take the drug become strong. The rest go mental and start seeing Valkyrie demons, who seem to take great pleasure in killing the druggies in gruesome ways. So people take the drug, which seems to give them no discernible pleasure and sends them crazy so that they can see demons that try to kill them. Why? Also, what is the significance of the tattoos that the druggies have? Is it meant to protect them from the demons, or show allegiance to the demons? Because they seem to get killed by them either way. And are the demons meant to be real or hallucinations? I would say that they were meant to be figments of the druggies' imaginations, except that they look the same in everyone's minds and they kill Olga (by far the best thing about the film and she dies right at the beginning. Idiots!) and pull some guy out of a window. And how come, if they're meant to be protective spirits that take warriors to heaven when they die on the battle field, they appear to be hellish demons who actively seek out people to kill? Plenty more to say about why this is rubbish and very little positive to say about it, but you get the idea.

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11 out of 11 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 2 stars
Entertaining but nowt special

A Customer from Cheltenham, 16th November, 2008

The film as a whole is a watchable, dark, anti-hero type film and having not played the game I thought it was ok. Mark Whalberg is so moody in this film it's actually quite funny.

However

You're left at the end of the film asking yourself lots of questions;

Why the hell did it end there?
Is that it?
What the hell?
etc etc

I thought it could've been done much better. Looking at the posters for it I thought this was similar to the likes of Constantine. How wrong was I!

Not bad tho, as usual the special effects are up to scratch, even if it does leave you thinking wtf?

2/5

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8 out of 10 people found the following review helpful:

Rated 3 stars
Closer to a cop film than the game

Chantal from , 20th October, 2008

Starts slow with a lot of plot and get action at the end, QUite uneven.

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Most recent reviews

Rated 3 stars
An enjoyable 1h40

3Dsmoke from , 6th November, 2009

Ok, as far as plot line, it's a little thin - But what do you expect with a title like 'Max Payne'? Surely you expect something that's through and through action, violence, and a few hot women? Well I was pleased that on those three fronts it delivers. The special effects weren't quite up to watchmen standard, but they were very good. And I was particularly pleased to see that the supernatural elements of the plot were explained in a way which didn't violate any scientific common sense even if the physics are a little off, such as large men being hit by Max's shotgun go flying when max barely twitches from the recoil - think conservation of momentum, people! Ultimately, no, it will not enrich you mentally, and it is certainly not one of the best films I've seen. But I did enjoy it, and ultimatly, that's what movies are for. I recommend it.

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Rated 1 stars
If you're a fan of the games, this will seriously disappoint...

EddBSmith from , 6th November, 2009

I was so excited to see that Max Payne was being made into a film as I am a huge fan of the game and the film noir story. It was a dark, gritty tale of an ordinary man seeking revenge on those who took everything away from him. The film adaptation is quite the opposite, and here's why... Well, being a big fan of the game I went to see the movie as soon as it was at the cinema, and one of the first things I noticed within the first 20 minutes of the film was that there was no narration... Whatsoever! The Max Payne games played a lot of the story out through narration, but not only that, it was used to portray Max's psyche and inner thoughts in a very dark, poetic manner. It really added a new dimension to the game, and missing that out in the film was probably there biggest mistake, but yet there's more... I don't know whether it was just me, but after a while, Mark Whalbergs 'deep voice' starts to sound so forced, that it's actually annoying after a while. In the games, Max Payne had a very natural gritty voice which really suits the film noir style. As for the bullet time, well, in the games there was lots of opportunitys for bullet time and you'd need to use it quite frequently when facing multiple enemies. Now, I wasn't expecting for the entire film to be in slow motion action sequences, but I can only recall 2 or 3 bullet time sequences in the whole film. One of the other major flaws are the bit players, the characters that played the villians, mainly the people who were in the film for one scene just so Max could kill them. In the game, the characters trying to kill you do seem to run around aimlessly sometimes, but what do you expect from artificial intelligence. Take this one scene for example, two guys walk into some warehouse looking for Max Payne and hear a noise, so what do they do? They spend a good few minutes shooting all over the warehouse, and when they're finished, one of them says 'Hello?', then they start sneaking around quietly again after they just shot at everything. There were a lot of things like that in the film that just made it so unrealistic from what people would actually do in certain situations. All in all, it's an extremely poor film whether you've played the game or not, and the only bit of the film I actually enjoyed was the end song of the whole film which is called 'Heaven To The Max', it's a brilliant song which deserved to accompany a better film. I blame John Moore and Mark Wahlberg mostly, for the bad direction and poor performance. In an interview for Max Payne, Mark Wahlberg was asked if he'd played the games, to which he replied 'no'. I might be wrong here, but I imagined that if you're getting paid 6 digit figures for films, if not millions, then the least you'd expect from a lead role is to do their character and background research to truly understand the role that you'd be playing. This is why I can't imagine 'Marky Mark' going down in film history, instead he'll have his 15 minutes of fame and fade away like so many others.

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Rated 2 stars
Typical

A Customer from Derby, 6th November, 2009

Kind of weird at first, but a typical police double cross. Although Max Payne is well fit.........

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Rated 3 stars
Pretty dark but entertaining enough....

A Customer from london, 4th November, 2009

Nothing special - pretty dark but entertaining enough.....not for the faint hearted. Don't particulary like or dislike the film. Okay entertainment.

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