A black-hearted ripped-from-the-headlines number that looks and feels like it could have walked out a '70s grind house just yesterday.
Stuck (2007)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:85
Fresh:62
Rotten:23
Average Rating:6.4/10
Consensus: Steeped in gallows humor, Stuck is a taut, tense examination of a tragic accident.
Theatrical Release:May 30, 2008 Limited
Synopsis: Best known for his horror classics RE-ANIMATOR (1985), FROM BEYOND (1986), and DOLLS (1987), director Stuart Gordon turned to character-driven thrillers in the early 2000s with KING OF THE ANTS... Best known for his horror classics RE-ANIMATOR (1985), FROM BEYOND (1986), and DOLLS (1987), director Stuart Gordon turned to character-driven thrillers in the early 2000s with KING OF THE ANTS (2003) and EDMOND (2005). STUCK continues in that vein, exploring humankind's potential for cruelty toward one another. Inspired by real events, this is a bloody and disturbing revenge film with a pitch-black sense of humor and a handful of fine performances. Tom Bardo (Stephen Rea) is having a bad Friday. He's out of work and preparing for an interview at the employment agency when he is suddenly evicted from apartment. A computer glitch then causes him to spend the entire day waiting for his interview, then is turned away. With nowhere left to go, he finds himself sleeping on a park bench, only to be rousted by a cop. Enter Brandi (Mena Suvari), a corn-rowed nursing assistant heading home after a night of partying. Talking on the phone and driving under the influence, Brandi hits Tom, sending him crashing halfway through her windshield. Afraid of the consequences, she chooses to drive home, park the car in her garage, and not tell anyone. But Tom, despite this indignant end to a terrible day, still has some fight left in him. Based on true events that occurred in 2002 in Fort Worth, Texas, STUCK boldly plays on the grim absurdity of the situation. John Strysik's smart script pokes fun at the macho posturing of thug culture and the sad implications of a society where there are no exceptions to the "no snitching" policy. Suvari gives a wild, fun performance, and Rea's likable Tom is a prototypical underdog. Funny, painful, and crowd-pleasing, this is truly and proudly a B-movie, and a worthy addition to Gordon's impressive body of work. [More]
Starring: Mena Suvari, Stephen Rea, Russell Hornsby, Rukiya Bernard
Starring: Mena Suvari, Stephen Rea, Russell Hornsby, Rukiya Bernard, Carolyn Purdy-Gordon, Wayne Robson, R.D. Reid, Patrick McKenna, Sharlene Royer
Director: Stuart Gordon
Director: Stuart Gordon
Screenwriter: John Strysik
Story: Stuart Gordon
Producer: Stuart Gordon, Christian Arnold-Beutel, Robert Katz, Jay Firestone, Ken Gord
Composer: Bobby Johnston
Studio: ThinkFilm
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Release:
Oct 7, 2008
Reviews for Stuck
There's no shortage of scenes that you'll watch through your fingers, groaning -- but you'll watch all the same.
Remarkably, Gordon has fashioned a moody, minor masterpiece that eloquently speaks to both the bloody body politic and the creeping, creepy American mindset that whispers, 'If we ignore it, maybe it will go away'.
It's a righteously nasty piece of work, and a rare example of a movie that traffics in B-movie grime without a trace of Grindhouse-style self-consciousness.
Screenwriter John Strysik could have written the script for Stuck on Post-Its. It slaps endless reminders of social significance over the fictionalized case of a female driver who hit a pedestrian and left him snagged and disabled in her windshield.
I wasn't expecting much, so I wasn't overly disappointed... but I do expect better from the man behind RE-ANIMATOR and FROM BEYOND.
Stuart Gordon (Re-Animator) turns this grim item from the stranger-than-fiction file into a provocative thriller in which horror and suspense collide with biting social commentary.
It's an energetic B-movie with pulpy magnetism. Think of it as slapstick social realism.
"Stuck" does what any good B movie should, working its way under your skin with a mix of gory jolts and outrageous humor, while cutting uncomfortably close to the bone in its look at how people really behave under pressure.
disturbing in all the right ways, turning an incredible real-life story of human callousness and suffering into a tawdry entertainment that makes guffawing, sociopathic rubbernecks of us all.
Stuck is disturbing in all the right ways, turning an incredible real-life story of human callousness and suffering into a tawdry entertainment that makes guffawing, sociopathic rubbernecks of us all.
As the title of this splatter comedy by writer-director Stuart Gordon indicates, he's like a bug stuck to her windshield, and that's about the level of humanity and insight one can expect here.
The director approaches the fact-based story with equal amounts of disdain, fascination and bemusement.
A compact, lurid tabloid item that blows the lid off mundane human insensitivity
Gordon gets the balance of gratuitous gore, suspense and humor just right.
A ridiculous effort that fails to raise the blood pressure, and the poor quality of the film makes it a late night Cinemax guilty pleasure at best.
The primordial image of [a woman] driving around with half of a man on her hood invokes titters of discomfort ... But director Stuart Gordon ... hasn't a clue what to do with this story.
Uninspired by a true story, the first 20 minutes before the collision are entertaining but, after metal hits flesh, you can almost hear the premise creaking as it’s stretched to feature length, resulting in some of the dullest moments I can remember.
Stuck finds [director Stuart Gordon] reaching new heights (or depths) of offense, with some very graphic gore and other particularly exploitative material.
Latest News for Stuck
May 29, 2008:
Critical Consensus: Sex and the City Will Please Fans
This week at the movies, we've got love and commerce (Sex and the City: The Movie, starring Sarah Jessica Parker and Kim Cattrall) and romantic getaways gone wrong (The... More...
May 29, 2008:
Stuck Just the Latest Offbeat Choice for Suvari ![]()
With this Friday's Stuck, Mena Suvari adds another strange chapter to the decidedly un-Hollywood story she's written for herself since starring in American Beauty. More...
May 27, 2008:
Surprisingly taut and absorbing, even if you're already familiar with the famous case it is loosely based upon. ![]()
More...
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