Average Rating: 7.4/10
Reviews Counted: 195
Fresh: 163 | Rotten: 32
While it may lack the revelatory punch of Polanski's finest films, Ghost Writer benefits from stylish direction, a tense screenplay, and a strong central performance from Ewan McGregor.
Average Rating: 7.4/10
Critic Reviews: 37
Fresh: 30 | Rotten: 7
While it may lack the revelatory punch of Polanski's finest films, Ghost Writer benefits from stylish direction, a tense screenplay, and a strong central performance from Ewan McGregor.
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Average Rating: 3.5/5
User Ratings: 54,612
A ghostwriter stumbles onto a secret that places his life in danger as he takes down the life story of a former U.K. prime minister in this Roman Polanski-helmed adaptation of the Robert Harris novel. Convinced by his agent that he's been granted a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, talented British screenwriter "The Ghost" (Ewan McGregor) agrees to aid British prime minister Adam Lang (Pierce Brosnan) in completing his memoirs after the leader's former aide dies under mysterious circumstances.
Feb 19, 2010 Wide
Aug 3, 2010
$11.0M
Summit Entertainment
All Critics (195) | Top Critics (37) | Fresh (165) | Rotten (33) | DVD (7)
Polanski's 'The Ghost Writer': Cosmpolitan Composition
The result is a political thriller refreshingly long on grown-up dialogue yet lamentably shy on, well, thrills. This chatty thing does go on.
The swirl of visual poetry, political intrigue and personal zeal that Polanski creates gets under your skin and brings an icy hand up your back. This is moviemaking.
Polanski is in total command of his medium, something that hasn't been a sure thing since the 1970s, The Pianist notwithstanding.
So elegant, so deliciously scary, so masterfully controlled that you feel tingles of bliss even as your skin crawls.
Another director would almost certainly have bobbled this devilish mixture of paperback suspense, political chicanery, and jet-black comedy. In Polanski's hands, it's an unholy pleasure: a diversion that stings.
The Ghost Writer is tense, unsettling and deeply thrilling because of the way a master filmmaker looks at the world.
Polanski's a master of carefully drawing you in that cold gray place where everything is wrong, no one sleeps well and secrets are hidden from the hapless main character until it's too late for anyone to make it out with their lives or souls intact.
For all of it's mirroring of real life circumstances, The Ghost Writer's shrouded revelations are ever transitory.
The great thing about Brosnan's performance is that his character's shadow looms over the entire film, yet Brosnan never resorts to chewing the scenery or becoming a Blair charicature.
Polanski's skills are obvious in his compositions and patience, and a nervous energy hovers over much of the picture...yet I consistently felt disengaged, like the pacing was mismanaged.
Polanski es un gran cineasta, y aquí lo demuestra - una vez más - en una narración atrapante que combina suspenso con humor negro (...)
I would not put the narrative conceit The Ghost Writer perpetrates in its final moments past a doped up high school sophomore in a screenwriting elective.
An often-tense affair that comes with just the right amount of cynicism, a great cast, and one that treats the audience with a modicum of intelligence.
Polanski at near the top of his form
Polanski does an excellent job evoking an increasing sense of paranoia and danger.
The Greyscale Adventures Of Tony Blair: SuperSpy (as I call it) is a deliberately directed, well acted and classy treatment of a plot that is so balls-out ridiculous I firmly believe the writer wears a tin-foil hat.
Polanski grinds the gears to entertaining effect, never losing pace from beginning to end, while not necessarily offering anything new.
We're all entitled to our own opinions regarding his past but Polanski deserves credit as a filmmaker. The Ghost Writer proves that he's as good as ever at the age of 77.
Polanski's master touch, his attention to framing, lighting, to every detail, and his wicked visual witticisms make it a joy for any film lover. Welcome back, Roman.
This effort joins the director's Frantic in the "jet-lag" category where mind and body can never quite catch up with a new, deeply problematic -- and probably dangerous -- environment.
[E]legant, gripping... gorgeously simple to look at yet deeply involving in its story...
Ewan plays a ghost writer who takes up a job to ghost write the memoirs of the ex British Prime Minister Adam Lang (Pierce). Ewan's predecessor and former aide of Lang died in an unfortunate accident. Lang is accused of ordering the torture of terrorists and is being investigated for war crimes. Ewan tries to discover
April 18, 2010
Super Reviewer
The original title of the film and also the correct title of the book on which it is based is The Ghost. The Ghost writer doesn't work as a title as the film isn't just about the Ghost Writer but also the Ghost of his predecessor. I find it quite frustrating really that the producers felt the need to change it? Maybe
September 1, 2011Super Reviewer
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