The Informers Critic Reviews

Metascore®:

35 =
Based upon 12 Critic Reviews
See all The Informers reviews at
Sorted by:
The New York Times | A.O. ScottAdd Critic to Favorites

Nearly every time Mr. Jordan, working from a script by Mr. Ellis and Nicholas Jarecki, tries for similar effects, he goes badly awry, so that you snicker when the movie is trying to be poignant and groan when it aims to make a joke.Read the full review

USA Today | Claudia PuigAdd Critic to Favorites

Shocking is the fact that three highly regarded actors -- Kim Basinger, Mickey Rourke and Billy Bob Thornton -- chose to star in this dreadful film.Read the full review

ReelViews | James BerardinelliAdd Critic to Favorites

The Informers is nihilism for nihilism's sake; a bleak and borderline-unwatchable collage of misanthropes, self-absorbed a**holes, and pathetic weaklings as they struggle to move forward during the early 1980s in Los Angeles.Read the full review

Washington Post | John AndersonAdd Critic to Favorites

A nihilistic, narcissistic, knuckleheaded move about nihilistic, narcissistic knuckleheads, The Informers might have been an interesting exercise in satire, if it only had a sense of humor. Which it doesn't. You'll need one, though, after forking over 10 bucks to see it.Read the full review

San Francisco Chronicle | Mick LaSalleAdd Critic to Favorites

Has an air of detachment and sadness, enhanced by the movie's being set a full quarter century ago.Read the full review

The Onion (A.V. Club) | Noel MurrayAdd Critic to Favorites

Though The Informers is by no means great--nor wholly true to the vision of Ellis, who co-wrote the screenplay with Nicholas Jarecki--moments sprinkled throughout the film capture Ellis' particular mix of flip yuppie satire and lived-in paranoia better than any big-screen version of his work to date.Read the full review

Rolling Stone | Peter TraversAdd Critic to Favorites

One of the worst movies of this or any year.Read the full review

Variety | Rob NelsonAdd Critic to Favorites

The film is banal by obvious intent. The only question, as with other Ellis adaptations including "American Psycho," is whether auds will appreciate the aggressively shallow depiction of an aggressively shallow milieu, or mistake the pic's implicit critique for the crime itself.Read the full review

Los Angeles Times | Robert AbeleAdd Critic to Favorites

Conjures up plenty of debauched tableaux with its photogenic, jaded showbiz denizens and hangers-on, but nary a reason for existing.Read the full review

Chicago Sun-Times | Roger EbertAdd Critic to Favorites

If The Informers doesn't sound to you like a pleasant time at the movies, you are right. To repeat: dread, despair and doom. It is often however repulsively fascinating and has been directed by Gregor Jordan as a soap opera from hell, with good sets and costumes.Read the full review

Track Your Favorite Critics | Start Now