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Crossing Over

EMAILPRINTMGM, The Weinstein Company

Crossing Over reviews
38
5.7 User Score:

Generally unfavorable reviews

Based on 31 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?

Based on 8 votes
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Movie Info

Genre(s): Drama

Written by: Wayne Kramer

Directed by: Wayne Kramer

Release Date:
Theatrical: February 27, 2009
DVD: June 9, 2009

Running Time: 140 minutes, Color

Origin: USA

Summary

RATING: R for pervasive language, some strong violence and sexuality/nudity

Starring Harrison Ford, Jim Sturgess, Ashley Judd, Alicia Braga, Alice Eve, and Ray Liotta

The US offers hope—but that often comes at a price. Many can earn citizenship legally through a lengthy bureaucratic process, but others find themselves out of luck in a country where virtually anything can be bought. Sex, violence and betrayal become their currency. Some wait in line for permission to enter the U.S. while others take matters into their own hands. (The Weinstein Company)

What The Critics Said

All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...

67

Entertainment Weekly Owen Gleiberman

Crossing Over is so eager to go for the emotional jugular that it never quite forges an enlightening point of view.

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67

The Onion (A.V. Club) Vadim Rizov

Tied together with endless, flattening shots of L.A.’s cloverleaf freeways, Crossing Over is often simplistic and occasionally lugubrious, but it's rarely boring.

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63

Rolling Stone Peter Travers

Kramer takes on a hot, unwieldy topic in Crossing Over -- the dream that immigrants have of U.S. citizenship and the nightmare of achieving it, especially with shortcuts. I'm sure Kramer will be picked to pieces for trying something while Hollywood crap climbs the box office ladder. There are all kinds of nightmares.

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63

ReelViews James Berardinelli

Enough things in Crossing Over work to keep the film from becoming a bore, but this is a definite step down from Kramer's past efforts, "The Cooler" and "Running Scared."

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63

Chicago Sun-Times Roger Ebert

Some of these stories are fascinating and some are heartbreaking, but together they seem too contrived.

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63

Philadelphia Inquirer Carrie Rickey

Harrison Ford - in his best role in years - and Cliff Curtis are the main reasons to see the film.

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58

Christian Science Monitor Peter Rainer

Crossing Over is not a success but make no mistake: There is great drama to be found in these streets.

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50

Premiere Staff (Not credited)

The controversial subject matter will undoubtedly hit close to home for many people, but a few genuinely uncomfortable scenes will either provoke the audience into serious thought or just cause them to leave the theater angry.

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50

USA Today Claudia Puig

There is undoubtedly a good movie in the varied experiences of American newcomers. But it would need to involve sagas more urgent and more original.

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50

Salon.com Stephanie Zacharek

A disappointing picture that suffers from all manner of ills: Both the direction and the dialogue are stiff and awkward, and Kramer -- who also wrote the script -- crams too many not-believable-enough subplots into the movie's "Crash"-style construction. Yet Crossing Over is an interesting failure.

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50

Chicago Tribune Michael Phillips

The movie expresses honest concern for the plight of so many newcomers to America, legal or illegal. What it lacks is moment-to-moment credibility.

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50

Boston Globe Wesley Morris

If Crossing Over is less self-congratulatory than "Crash" about confronting its designated problem, it's just as inept at dramatizing the complex ways that problem unites and divides us. Here every cause is something you can wear around your neck.

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50

The Globe and Mail (Toronto) Rick Groen

Had Crossing Over chosen to tell one of them well, rather than seven badly, it would have made for a fine movie. Instead, all we get is a mess of good liberal intentions loosely anchored to a mass of pure Hollywood hokum.

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50

Chicago Reader J.R. Jones

A busy, Crash-like complex of LA stories, each hammering home the injustice of our immigration law.

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50

Miami Herald Rene Rodriguez

Crossing Over is a result of the sledgehammer approach writer-director Wayne Kramer (Running Scared, The Cooler) takes to his subject matter -- the same heavy-handed tactics that earned "Crash" three Oscars.

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50

Portland Oregonian Marc Mohan

Some will win and some will lose their encounters with unbending American bureaucracy, but all deserve better, which should leave viewers eager for an even-handed take on this issue crossing over into disappointment.

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42

Seattle Post-Intelligencer Sean Axmaker

For all the bludgeoning insistence of Kramer's contrived plots and blunt direction, there's not much conviction to the outrage.

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40

Empire Simon Braund

Being over-stuffed and heavy-handed are not even Crossing Over’s biggest problems. That dubious honour goes to an absolute failure to address its nominal subject-matter in any meaningful way.

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40

Austin Chronicle Marjorie Baumgarten

The latticework of social meaning that makes up Crossing Over is ultimately a flimsy structure that pays lip service to liberal values while only occasionally inventing anything of dramatic significance.

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40

The New York Times Manohla Dargis

If Mr. Kramer's outrage felt honest, his film would be easier to respect. But time and again, he undermines his own righteousness by pumping up the violence and stripping down his talent.

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40

New York Daily News Joe Neumaier

Writer-director Wayne Kramer adds what could be called mainstream threads to his messy script, but the result is simplistic across the board.

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38

New York Post Lou Lumenick

Here comes Wayne Kramer's Crossing Over, a bid to create the "Crash" of illegal-immigration dramas.

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30

Village Voice Scott Foundas

And so it goes, with Kramer--who doesn't really seem to like people very much--failing to muster even the superficial empathy the makers of the similarly programmatic "The Visitor" and "Rendition" showed toward their own cardboard-cutout imperiled illegals.

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30

New York Magazine David Edelstein

There are a bunch of other clunky immigrant subplots (the Jews get a comic one, the Turks a scary one), but it isn't until the massacre–cum–civics tutorial in the liquor store that Crossing Over crosses into the mythic realm of camp. What a waste. I still say it's better than "Crash," though.

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30

The Hollywood Reporter Stephen Farber

The film plays like a garish melodrama that reproduces the most ham-fisted, polemical aspects of "Crash."

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30

Variety Todd McCarthy

The way the picture dwells almost exclusively on cinematically exploitable elements -- gangbanger crime, prostitution, honor killing, terrorism paranoia -- gives it a sordid patina that even the classy, able thesps can't offset.

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30

Washington Post Ann Hornaday

As Crossing Over makes its patronizing points, by way of two-dimensional characters and billboarded plot points, it recalls other, better movies that dealt with the same subjects far more deftly.

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25

San Francisco Chronicle Mick LaSalle

A mess.

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20

Slate Dana Stevens

All of its plot threads are equally dreadworthy.

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10

Los Angeles Times Kenneth Turan

Forced, heavy-handed and overdone, it's a pretend serious film that offers crass manipulation in the place where honesty is supposed to be.

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10

Wall Street Journal Joe Morgenstern

Wayne Kramer's interlocking saga of immigration in 21st-century America definitely crosses over, from workaday mediocrity to distinctive dreadfulness.

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What Our Users Said

The average user rating for this movie is 5.7 (out of 10) based on 8 User Votes

Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.

Jay H. gave it a6:
A bit too dramatic but it is a sincere effort. The entire cast is good. It doesn't always convince however. Decent but nothing outstanding.

Paul N. gave it an8:
Somewhat downbeat and a bit too politically correct; but the performances and interlacing storylines hold your attention. Worth a look for the thinking moviegoer.

Elijah T. gave it a3:
A total waste of time. A generic political drama with no soul. NEXT!

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