Rolling Stone Reviews Cosmopolis
Only a short review by Peter Travers of Rolling Stone but a good one.
…This mesmerizing mind-bender ought to prove two things: (1) Robert Pattinson really can act; (2) Director David Cronenberg never runs from a challenge. Pattinson stars as Eric Packer, a master of the universe at 28 but still helpless to stop his financial world from collapsing as he rides around Manhattan in a white stretch limo. Destination: haircut. That’s it: one day, one limo. But DeLillo crowded that day with incident. And Cronenberg, a master recalling his surreal work on eXistenZ and Naked Lunch, adapts the novel with a poet’s eye and a keen ear for language. Eric has hermetically sealed himself inside a limo designed to block out every trace of the outside world. Inside, Eric can ignore the Occupy Wall Street-like protests from the 99 percent, consult with his geek chief (Jay Baruchel) and his money guru (Emily Hampshire), submit to a prostate exam, have sex with his mistress (Juliette Binoche), and get out for disturbing meetings with his wife (Sarah Gadon) and a disgruntled former employee (Paul Giamatti). Working with gifted cinematographer Peter Suschitzky, Cronenberg creates a crumbling world in microcosm. In this fever dream of a movie, Pattinson is incendiary, notably in a climactic gun scene with the great Giamatti. Cosmopolis, demanding as it is daring, is no easy ride. I mean that as high praise.
4/5 stars.
Yes, Rob really can act – finally people are acknowledging this & about damn time we say.  I just cannot get enough of the praise Rob & the film are receiving.




Sare
I love that Rob and the movie are getting great reviews. I really loved it. I don’t get why some people don’t understand it though. I found it easy to follow. I guess i went in there knowing not to think too much into everything and just go where the movie takes me. Does that even make sense?! lol Can’t praise it enough. Rob was fantastic.
Carmel
I agree Sare – I found the movie easier to digest than the book – although reading the book did prepare me for the dialogue and I love the book so much. Having the actors interpret DeLillo’s words really bought it out of being such an intellectual exercise and made everything real. Once more I can only draw comparisons to Shakespeare.
It is fantastic to see the weight of opinion about Rob’s ability move so radically in the right direction. Finally, correct their past wrongs