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Quiz Show (1994)
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Reviews Counted:49
Fresh:47
Rotten:2
Average Rating:8/10
Consensus: Robert Redford refracts the sociopolitical and moral issues posed by the subject material through a purely entertaining, well-acted lens.
Runtime: 2 hrs 13 mins
Genre: Dramas
Synopsis: Based on the book by Richard N. Goodwin, this Robert Redford film tells the true story behind the great quiz show scandal of 1959. As television becomes more popular throughout the 1950s, quiz... Based on the book by Richard N. Goodwin, this Robert Redford film tells the true story behind the great quiz show scandal of 1959. As television becomes more popular throughout the 1950s, quiz shows follow suit, attracting compulsive viewers who cheer for the brilliant, intellectual contestants--America's best and brightest. Herbert Stempel (John Turturro) may be unattractive and abrasive, but in 1959 he is the reigning champion of the game show TWENTY-ONE. When ratings begin to slip, the network decides that it's time to bring in a more appealing champion and bribes Stempel to answer incorrectly and purposely lose to Charles Van Doren (Ralph Fiennes), a handsome WASP professor who eventually achieves celebrity status and incredible wealth. Feeling bitter and betrayed, Stempel accuses the producers of feeding answers to the quiz show winners, prompting a congressional investigation. As the scandal grows, a different portrait of America emerges--one that shatters the nation's illusion of perfection so prevalent in the 1950s. Rob Morrow stars as Dick Goodwin, the investigator who labors tirelessly to establish the truth and simultaneously develops a respectful friendship with the subject of the investigation, Van Doren. [More]
Starring: Ralph Fiennes, John Turturro, Rob Morrow, David Paymer
Starring: Ralph Fiennes, John Turturro, Rob Morrow, David Paymer, Paul Scofield, Hank Azaria, Christopher McDonald
Director: Robert Redford
Director: Robert Redford
Screenwriter: Paul Attanasio
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Reviews for Quiz Show
Mr. Redford has made a rich, handsome, articulate film about a subject truly worth talking about.
As a pure period piece Quiz Show delivers beautifully, but Redford's foursquare, documentary-like approach, however artful, unspools a story with about as much drama as a game show itself.
A quietly powerful take on innocence lost, its lessons apparent every time we turn on the television.
Quiz Show' is a uniquely American tragedy, told with subtlety and complexity.
Robert Redford's assurded true story about quiz show corruption is totally engrossing, with genius performances from Ralph Fiennes and John Turturro.
The film is surprisingly good. The screenplay is intelligent, inventive and always interesting. The dialogue is keen and the characters are well developed and three-dimensional.
This is one of those vibrant, mixed-up American movies that fails to reach its loftier goals but is saved by its showbiz sparkle.
What Redford is saying isn't new, but it has rarely been said in a mainstream movie with this kind of passion.
Few films are so intellectually complicated while still being so commercially entertaining.
Redford again showed his good directorial skills and the recreation of late 1950s is almost flawless.
An exciting achievement, not only the most accomplished film of Redford's directorial career, but one of the best to carry his name.
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