71 recensioni
I really like Karl Urbain and it nice to see him not in a sidekick role)
Nothing special,but enjoyable little flick to spent some time...
not as bad as some say...
- aramt-07935
- 15 mag 2019
- Permalink
Bent (2018) is about a former cop that was framed, lost his partner and now is seeking out revenge, while battling his inner demons to just call it quits and stay with his all time love.
It has an OK plot and I like what they did with it, but they make things way too big and never explain them enough. A conspiracy? Is it Goverment related? Is it only about rogue agents fighting over money? In the end, all that doesn't matter.
It's not an action movie. It's about seeing an investigation unfolds and it's kinda bland. There are some curveballs, but they are rather weak.
Overall, just an OK flick.
It has an OK plot and I like what they did with it, but they make things way too big and never explain them enough. A conspiracy? Is it Goverment related? Is it only about rogue agents fighting over money? In the end, all that doesn't matter.
It's not an action movie. It's about seeing an investigation unfolds and it's kinda bland. There are some curveballs, but they are rather weak.
Overall, just an OK flick.
- gabriel_sanchez
- 10 giu 2018
- Permalink
I quite liked this movie, just above average. I don't know why so many people had reviewed this film and say that it is a rehash, been done so many times before. Er hello, what film has'nt been done many times before. Even classics like the Big Sleep were done before. Superman....he can fly and can save the world..rehash. Detective or detectives find out who the bad guy is. NCSI. CSI...Sherlock Holmes.
Just because the film did not have a shoot out and car chase every five seconds, does not mean it was a bad film. Or was it because people had to concentrate on the dialogue.
As I said its an ok film.
A weak storyline, poor script, slow pace and ham acting, make for a less than enjoyable ride. A rehashed idea, done a thousand times and 999 times better! Our lead, Karl Urban, makes Matt Damon seem to have limitless emotional depth. He permanently looks like he is suffering from hard stools - maintaining the same expression throughout. The wardrobe department wasn't too taxed, given he wore the same outfit the whole movie, but for a t-shirt change. Continuity need sacking; cops break our hero's tail light and 20 seconds later it is fully functioning and undamaged again! Make-up is a bit odd, a punch in the nose illicits much blood after a thousandth of a second and one character shot in the final scene bleeds out immediately from the head and body, despite being shot only once. One character dies from a non-lethal wound! The storyline is simple enough. Man accused of something he didn't do goes out to prove otherwise and uncover a thinly-veiled conspiracy. I lost interest so many times, due to the slow pacing and poor script. The movie is lacking in drama and you become disengaged from the plot really easily. In short, it's not good.
- makka-00955
- 9 mar 2018
- Permalink
- astodghill01
- 16 giu 2018
- Permalink
- thebigrip-1
- 9 mar 2018
- Permalink
This is not a bad little crime story. However, Karl Urbans abilities are not enough to carry the movie on its own. The supporting casts acting skills are mostly not up to scratch and the movie seems to have been clearly made on a low budget.
Bent starts out with promise but quickly goes downhill and never rebounds. Urban as Detective Gallagher has that cop look and voice, but he's about the best actor in this mess. The best scene is 2 minutes in when his girlfriend, a singer, rips into Ball of Confusion, but then, yep, you get confused.
Then there's a gun scene on a boat with unexpected consequences, and nothing gets explained. Urban meets Andy Garcia, and we have no idea who he is. Sofia Vergara shows up, no clear idea who she is. There is absolutely no character development, so no clue who these people are. Gallagher seems to be on his own, disavowed by the police. He drives here and there and everywhere, but no clue what he's doing. That pretty much explains the movie.
What's worse is that the acting was inexplicably bad. Andy Garcia had this crying scene about Gallagher, with his wife, and you have NO clue why she's upset and why he's crying. There's another scene with another cop who investigates an attack on Gallagher, and this guy was just a terrible actor, like he was reading off the cards. Sofia Vergara walked her way thru lines and her character did some stupid things.
Then suddenly you get to the end and Gallagher has everything figured out, but no clue about how he got there. It was a very confusing movie with really bad acting and poor character development. The scenery and setups were ok, but really a sub-par detective story. There are so many better detective cop stories than this. Really, don't waste your time. Dr McCoy should have just stayed on the Enterprise instead of beaming into this terrible movie.
Then there's a gun scene on a boat with unexpected consequences, and nothing gets explained. Urban meets Andy Garcia, and we have no idea who he is. Sofia Vergara shows up, no clear idea who she is. There is absolutely no character development, so no clue who these people are. Gallagher seems to be on his own, disavowed by the police. He drives here and there and everywhere, but no clue what he's doing. That pretty much explains the movie.
What's worse is that the acting was inexplicably bad. Andy Garcia had this crying scene about Gallagher, with his wife, and you have NO clue why she's upset and why he's crying. There's another scene with another cop who investigates an attack on Gallagher, and this guy was just a terrible actor, like he was reading off the cards. Sofia Vergara walked her way thru lines and her character did some stupid things.
Then suddenly you get to the end and Gallagher has everything figured out, but no clue about how he got there. It was a very confusing movie with really bad acting and poor character development. The scenery and setups were ok, but really a sub-par detective story. There are so many better detective cop stories than this. Really, don't waste your time. Dr McCoy should have just stayed on the Enterprise instead of beaming into this terrible movie.
So, where, for the love of all that is holy, is this movie supposed to be taking place? Apparently it is supposed to be somewhere in the U.S., because otherwise what the hell are all these Americans doing in the movie. Originally Karl Urban's Jeep appears to have Louisiana Plates on it, but in every scene with multiple back ground cars, there are lots of cars that aren't even sold in the U.S.
I also need to point out that NO police force in the U.S. has ever used BMW E36 sedans as cop cars, or Land Rover Discoverys, at least that I can find. And those police badges on the sleeves of their uniforms could not be more generic. Maybe this movie suffered from High Definition clarity.
Also, the establishing shots for the locations are bizarre and simply wrong, and the cops all sound like they're from New York.
It's just so confusing. As if the producer and director had never set foot in the U.S. and was just guessing at what it would look like.
I've seen worse movies, but this one had the potential to be much better, regardless of the rehashed plot. At least I don't feel the need to find these people and ask them for my time back.
I also need to point out that NO police force in the U.S. has ever used BMW E36 sedans as cop cars, or Land Rover Discoverys, at least that I can find. And those police badges on the sleeves of their uniforms could not be more generic. Maybe this movie suffered from High Definition clarity.
Also, the establishing shots for the locations are bizarre and simply wrong, and the cops all sound like they're from New York.
It's just so confusing. As if the producer and director had never set foot in the U.S. and was just guessing at what it would look like.
I've seen worse movies, but this one had the potential to be much better, regardless of the rehashed plot. At least I don't feel the need to find these people and ask them for my time back.
- thedaddymoose
- 20 mar 2018
- Permalink
"Bent" is a fairly typical low-budget direct-to-video noir police story with a few satisfying plot twists, adequate production values and a good performance by Andy Garcia in a supporting role. It is not cathartic or cerebral and doesn't offer anything memorable in terms of gunfights, pyrotechnics, stunt work, stage combat or car chases. Even Sofia Vergara's first onscreen shower scene is unfortunately not particularly memorable. The script is weak and needed a couple of rewrites before it would have been ready for production. The opening scene is not sufficiently well crafted to justify or explain the consequences.
I watched this film shortly after viewing "Downsizing," which I knew had received discouraging reviews. I wasn't even particularly intrigued by the story, but it had a great cast and a big budget, so I decided to give it a try. I wound up watching it in about six segments over three days. "Bent" was produced with perhaps a tenth of the budget and without some of the top-level talent, but it held sufficient interest for me to watch it in one sitting, although I admit to engaging in a little multitasking during a few of the slower parts. It is not a great film, but suffices as a pleasant diversion.
Sofia Vergara delivers a credible performance as the femme fatale. Karl Urban does as well as can be expected with the material he's given, as a brooding detective out to clear his name. Andy Garcia delivers a nuanced, multidimensional performance. The major problem is the script, which is underwritten and relies too heavily on exposition.
I'm giving the movie eight stars, which is generous to a fault, but intended to offset a few reviews that seem unfairly harsh.
I watched this film shortly after viewing "Downsizing," which I knew had received discouraging reviews. I wasn't even particularly intrigued by the story, but it had a great cast and a big budget, so I decided to give it a try. I wound up watching it in about six segments over three days. "Bent" was produced with perhaps a tenth of the budget and without some of the top-level talent, but it held sufficient interest for me to watch it in one sitting, although I admit to engaging in a little multitasking during a few of the slower parts. It is not a great film, but suffices as a pleasant diversion.
Sofia Vergara delivers a credible performance as the femme fatale. Karl Urban does as well as can be expected with the material he's given, as a brooding detective out to clear his name. Andy Garcia delivers a nuanced, multidimensional performance. The major problem is the script, which is underwritten and relies too heavily on exposition.
I'm giving the movie eight stars, which is generous to a fault, but intended to offset a few reviews that seem unfairly harsh.
- ginocox-206-336968
- 11 mar 2018
- Permalink
- lillinfields
- 8 ago 2018
- Permalink
You thought Sofia Vergara is a bad actress? You should see Karl Urban's performance. It's a primary school's acting level, but less entertaining. Also, the story is a text book cliche, thriller with no thrill at all. I really want to know who invest money in projects like this. And why?
"On his latest private investigation, a shamed former cop connects a murder case to a government conspiracy involving rogue agents from a top spy agency."
Does anything about this description make anyone want to see this movie? How many times has this been done before? How many different nuances does the government conspiracy movie genre need? Or how about the spy movie genre? There is literally so much going on in this world that would make for an entertaining tale, that no one even has to come up with anything on their own. They could embellish any existing story in our world's history and have a good storyline, but no, they went ahead with another trite, been-there, done-that, man in a black leather jacket fighting corruption, straight to DVD, too boring to watch while stoned, too stupid to watch while sober, movie.
Does anything about this description make anyone want to see this movie? How many times has this been done before? How many different nuances does the government conspiracy movie genre need? Or how about the spy movie genre? There is literally so much going on in this world that would make for an entertaining tale, that no one even has to come up with anything on their own. They could embellish any existing story in our world's history and have a good storyline, but no, they went ahead with another trite, been-there, done-that, man in a black leather jacket fighting corruption, straight to DVD, too boring to watch while stoned, too stupid to watch while sober, movie.
- heydiddlediddle007
- 25 nov 2018
- Permalink
The 96 min length felt like 3 hours in this overly dragged out slow paced mess. Was there even an editing department involved with this production? The writing/screenplay and directing by Bobby Moresco was atrocious - a high school drama student could have done better. The score was all over the place. The acting was OK for B-grade actors except for Karl Urban, who's performance was a disaster. His monotonic dialogue and wax expressions made it seem like this was his first acting role. It's also pathetic to see all 8 and above reviews only reviewed this film, thus all fakes. Sad to see the producers needing to trick the viewers in seeing this disaster. It's an honest and generous 3/10 from me.
- Top_Dawg_Critic
- 24 mar 2018
- Permalink
- Cinema2kMendoza
- 17 giu 2023
- Permalink
- Leofwine_draca
- 16 gen 2020
- Permalink
Two big reasons for seeing this movie: Sofia Vergara.
She's a beautiful gummint agent, but who cares? Just look into her eyes and fall into the abyss.
Oh, and there's Karl Urban. He still has to keep his face covered to hide his complicit role in a certain space opera. But you know something? I have greatly enjoyed each and every role he's ever done.
The film showed up on late-night and I managed to catch the pre-title scene from where they approach the boat, and I had no idea who was in it. I see that the cast includes Al Pacino--- oops, rather Andy Garcia. Yeah, he was channelling Michael from GF3. "THEY KEEP DRAWING ME BACK IN!"
Every time that this genre shows up on my screen, I think "they're making all these cop flicks, how come I never hear anything about them." But, I enjoyed most of whatever humour there was, and it's got a good beat and it's easy to dance to.
She's a beautiful gummint agent, but who cares? Just look into her eyes and fall into the abyss.
Oh, and there's Karl Urban. He still has to keep his face covered to hide his complicit role in a certain space opera. But you know something? I have greatly enjoyed each and every role he's ever done.
The film showed up on late-night and I managed to catch the pre-title scene from where they approach the boat, and I had no idea who was in it. I see that the cast includes Al Pacino--- oops, rather Andy Garcia. Yeah, he was channelling Michael from GF3. "THEY KEEP DRAWING ME BACK IN!"
Every time that this genre shows up on my screen, I think "they're making all these cop flicks, how come I never hear anything about them." But, I enjoyed most of whatever humour there was, and it's got a good beat and it's easy to dance to.
This movie is reminiscent of an old detective story from the 1970s. Like a cop going around trying to solve a crime while being on leave for doing something bad on the job, like Dirty Harry. It includes the over-the-top tough guy dialogue as well.
The plot is ok, but man the dialogue and the weird actors/background make it seem really amateurish. And then you realize why. Yeah, this is not the US, it's Italy. After seeing a sign on a building that says "PortMobility", I Googled it and found it in Rome. Not the US.
Hence, a Spaghetti detective story, made in italy!
The clues were all the weird accents. A TV reporter with an Italian accent, the cop with a weird accent. The European cars in the background. And no discernible landmark from the US. Not to mention the weird Police uniforms, they looked like some Eastern European uniforms, not American cop uniforms. While driving Euro cop cars.
It was a weird movie overall. Which was kind of surprising since it had a couple well known actors.
If you're bored and can stream it for free, do it just to see how many hints you can notice that it's Italy.
The plot is ok, but man the dialogue and the weird actors/background make it seem really amateurish. And then you realize why. Yeah, this is not the US, it's Italy. After seeing a sign on a building that says "PortMobility", I Googled it and found it in Rome. Not the US.
Hence, a Spaghetti detective story, made in italy!
The clues were all the weird accents. A TV reporter with an Italian accent, the cop with a weird accent. The European cars in the background. And no discernible landmark from the US. Not to mention the weird Police uniforms, they looked like some Eastern European uniforms, not American cop uniforms. While driving Euro cop cars.
It was a weird movie overall. Which was kind of surprising since it had a couple well known actors.
If you're bored and can stream it for free, do it just to see how many hints you can notice that it's Italy.
So many things that made absolutely no sense. Sofia Vergara was just thrown in for no reason other than this weird love interest. Most of the movie was just too convenient. I agree with other reviewers that it was ridiculous that he was always in the same clothes plus never changed the expression of his face. I found it difficult to remain awake watching this movie. One minute someone is fighting with him, the next minute they're best friends going over facts of the crimes. It was a complete waste of our evening.
- calligraphybytammy
- 26 gen 2019
- Permalink
When a drug bust goes sour, a good cop takes the fall and ends up behind bars. Upon his release, he commits himself to finding out if he was betrayed by his partner or someone else. Along the way, he discovers that the case that he had been investigating has ties far beyond the drug trade.
Starring Karl Urban (Dr. McCoy in the new Star Trek films), this is a thriller with shades of the old police dramas that used to be all the rage in the 80s. Full of action, suspense, and a few good twists and turns along the way, it will definitely keep you guessing.
Starring Karl Urban (Dr. McCoy in the new Star Trek films), this is a thriller with shades of the old police dramas that used to be all the rage in the 80s. Full of action, suspense, and a few good twists and turns along the way, it will definitely keep you guessing.
- adrianrose-29917
- 20 mag 2022
- Permalink
I feel like it could have been better with more action if it was a tad bit more fast pace but nevertheless it was a pretty good film!
- TheHorrrorGirlLover
- 5 ago 2021
- Permalink
This movie tried so hard to be good and failed. The storyline is weak. Acting is second-rate. I like Sofia Vergara in Modern Family and she is ok in other movies Ive seen but this role is very bad for her. Trying to get her to get rid of her accent in this role didnt work for her, it took away any talent she had in acting. As for Karl Urban and Andy Garcia, it would look like they havent had better movie offers around. Forgettable.
- lynansaysingle
- 4 set 2018
- Permalink
It's apparent within the first 5 minutes that this is very low budget. The writing and directing are just horrible. It's as if this movie was made in 1987. Everything just seems off. There is one point where Andy Garcia starts crying for no apparent reason and that's the only unpredictable part of the movie.
- Prophet636
- 2 nov 2018
- Permalink