The worst movie of the year.
Alpha Dog (2007)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:137
Fresh:77
Rotten:60
Average Rating:5.6/10
Consensus: A glossy yet unflinching portrait of violent, hedonistic teenagers. Bruce Willis and Sharon Stone chew the scenery, while Justin Timberlake gives a noteworthy performance.
Rated: R [See Full Rating] for pervasive drug use and language, strong violence, sexuality and nudity.
Runtime: 2 hrs 2 mins
Genre: Dramas
Theatrical Release:Jan 12, 2007 Wide
Box Office: $15,133,185
Synopsis: A difficult gestation period led to Nick Cassavetes's ALPHA DOG being delayed and facing possible legal battles after the real-life subject of the film (alleged kidnapper and murderer Jesse James... A difficult gestation period led to Nick Cassavetes's ALPHA DOG being delayed and facing possible legal battles after the real-life subject of the film (alleged kidnapper and murderer Jesse James Hollywood) objected to his portrayal. The cinematic version of Hollywood is named Johnny Truelove and played by Emile Hirsch (LORDS OF DOGTOWN). Truelove is a wild 18-year-old who deals drugs for a living and hangs out with his posse, who revolve around a core of Frankie (Justin Timberlake), Elvis (Shawn Hatosy), and Tiko (Fernando Vargas). When a client of Truelove's, Jake Mazursky (Ben Foster), is unable to pay off his crystal-meth debt, the group kidnaps his 15-year-old stepbrother, Zack (Anton Yelchin), who becomes a Patty Hearst-like accomplice in his own abduction. Indeed, Zack positively revels in his new position, and lives it up with the boys at every opportunity he gets. But Cassavetes's film really revs into gear as the cops close in on Truelove's band of outsiders, and they face a tough decision about what to do with Zack. The real draw here is Justin Timberlake, and he makes a decent job of his role as a bodyguard/friend to the kidnapped kid. Covered in tattoos and oozing testosterone, Timberlake revels in his role, and his female following will find plenty to gush over here. The film itself is executed at a lightning-fast pace, with quick jump cuts and on-screen captions that point out who the witnesses in the case were. Cassavetes plays around with split-screen techniques and nonlinear storytelling, but he remains acutely aware of what his young target audience is seeking from a modern crime drama, not letting the tension drop for a second. Small roles for Sharon Stone and Bruce Willis provide suitable support to the young cast, and a thumping rap and metal soundtrack supplies a perfect backdrop to the explosive on-screen shenanigans. [More]
Starring: Justin Timberlake, Sharon Stone, Emile Hirsch, Bruce Willis
Starring: Justin Timberlake, Sharon Stone, Emile Hirsch, Bruce Willis, Anton Yelchin, Lukas Haas, Shawn Hatosy, Harry Dean Stanton, Ben Foster, Dominique Swain, Alexandra Cassavetes, Olivia Wilde
Director: Nick Cassavetes
Director: Nick Cassavetes
Screenwriter: Nick Cassavetes
Composer: Aaron Zigman
Producer: Sidney Kimmel, Chuck Pacheco
Studio: Universal Pictures
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Reviews for Alpha Dog
Alpha Dog has much the same entertainment value you get from watching monkeys fling scat at one another in a zoo or reading the latest issue of Star magazine.
Cassavetes' film is pure Hollywood fiction and sensationalism mixed with some sense of reality, but hell I enjoyed it a great deal...
Alpha Dog is standard-issue tabloid fare pimped out as a serious true-crime saga.
Wants to be a horror story of sorts, but winds up being tedious and over-indulgent.
This film is way more about tits and ass and drugs and guns and California muscle cars and busting up house parties with kung fu than it is about deep characterization or the epic scale of Scarface.
The fraternity of Alpha Busta Kappa is all about not being perceived as the “******” or “*****” of the bunch.
A movie which has been put together with occasional skill but lacks a compelling reason to exist.
True, Alpha Dog is a film with no manners. But it has great nerve. What’s truly impressive is how the splintered story is buried by individual performances.
The movie may lose its way in the last 15 minutes but everything leading up to that point is gripping, edge-of-your-seat stuff.
Recovering from the Harlequin bathos of The Notebook, writer-director Nick Cassavetes directs this bogus-homeboy scenario as though his street cred depended on it.
Nick Cassavetes' film combines an aimless ramble through juvenile depravity in the affluent suburbs of LA and a quite disturbing evocation of the true-life murder of an adolescent boy in 1999.
Similar to the real kidnapping fictionalized in 'Alpha Dog,' the movie falls apart quicker than you can say Nick Cassavetes, who wrote and directed it.
Among the many movies about the California drug scene and lowlife, youthful wannabe thugs, Alpha Dog is far from the leader of the pack.
Whatever he observed in those true-life figures these roles are based on, [writer/director Nick] Cassavetes sure knew how to apply it to one nasty but exhilarating work of art.
True story or not, there's not a single character in this film worth spending time with.
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Trailer & Poster review ![]()
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| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 44% 44% | Night at the Museum: B… |
| 32% 32% | Terminator Salvation |
| 36% 36% | Angels & Demons |
| 95% 95% | Star Trek |
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| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
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