movie reviews: Limitless

Monday, April 4, 2011

Limitless

Do you know how science said that we can access only 20 percent of our brain? Well, Eddie Morra, blocked writer Bradley Cooper played with valve of humour and heart bruised in unlimited, ups the ante to 100%. And suddenly, it is a typewriter, a linguist, one against, a wolf of Wall Street and a man owned. Thanks to a small pill jagged called NZT. It is illegal, well understood and rare even at $600 a pop push near OD level and pieces of your memory go poof! Try to go the cold Turkey, and your head will threaten to explode. Unlimited strikes you as an adrenalin which will have you saying: "I'll have what he has."
Peter Travers reviews unlimited in his weekly video series, "at the movies with Peter Travers".
It is the thing on a thriller of corn blown that really POPs. You are way less than 20% of your brain and warm current, collective hedonistic. Cooper out swinging, extending from charm and sex appeal on the monster becomes Eddie. And Director Neil Burger (the illusionist) corresponds to its intensity. Working from the spiky script Leslie Dixon carved novel by Alan Glynn The Dark Fields, 2001, Burger rides this fantasy escape in high style and hard. Robert De Niro, in an expensive haircut which does not hide quite smile of a thug, adds threat as Carl Van Loon (the name of love), a business mogul who wants to know where Eddie gets his mojo. And Abbie Cornish combines love found and lost in one lovely package. Again, this is show of Cooper, and the hangover Star treats Eddie as a role to feast, he done with enthusiasm. It intercepts all excess drab of a writer in New York, infamous for its failure to launch. The NZT ensured by a friend who is quickly murdered is her ticket, as long as supply lasts. Enter the NARCS, followed by the superior forces wishing to exploit the next big thing. The script sets up a premise of mind that a few real-world cultural wunderkinds may have their own NZT. I have never said that you, Mark Zuckerberg.
The Archive completes: more than 20 years of film Peter Travers reviews now online
OK, unlimited has its limits. The plot touches some nasty speed bumps, and the end is rote. But getting there is tremendous, Bending fun. Watch Eddie flex its brain cells takes a kick tied with Spider-Man to test his skills with small jumps and jump until it is leaping across rooftops. Note: the pill is not magic, it can only highlight the smarts you already have. The real housewives of Nip/Tuck USA will still have a struggle. What does unlimited a powerful provocation for the age of Adderall. It is a dream of wet for anyone who has never dreamed to make a step ahead on the information highway. The worst side effect is that you will not believe a word of the thing done in the morning. Fair exchange.

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