Sinopsis(1)

El legendario realizador de cine Ridley Scott y el ganador del Premio Pulitzer, Cormac McCarthy unen sus fuerzas en el thriller El consejero, protagonizado por Michael Fassbender, Penélope Cruz, Cameron Diaz, Javier Bardem y Brad Pitt. McCarthy, realiza su debut como guionista y Scott entreteje el ingenio característico del autor y el humor negro con un escenario de pesadilla, donde un respetado abogado coquetea por primera vez con un negocio que se escapa de su control. (20th Century Fox España)

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POMO 

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español Una crueldad elegante. Un choque del mundo lujosamente vestido de un abogado amante de la inocencia femenina, con el infierno de carteles mexicanos. Ridley presenta este conflicto sin acciones, mediante diálogos. No juega con las emociones, trata de jugar con el intelecto e incluso con la filosofía. La motivación de los personajes sólo se insinúa, el motor de la película son la expectación de sus (ambiguas) reacciones y como acaban las situaciones emocionantes. La película no filosofa muy bien, pero disfruté la actuación y la gracia visual. Pese a los contornos más agudos de la historia, le doy cuatro estrellas. La posición y el movimiento de Cameron en el parabrisas es inolvidable. Placer culposo en la superficialidad. ()

Malarkey 

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inglés Brad Pitt plays a bastard, Michael Fassbender plays a bastard, Javier Bardem is both a pervert and a bastard. Penelope Cruz is good, especially in the beginning, but on the other hand she is not there that much. Cameron Diaz plays such a bitch that it made me sick. Nevertheless, all the acting performances are great, I just don’t really know who to focus on in order for the movie to appear at least a little bit likeable. This way it is Ridley Scott’s most unpleasant movie for me, and it doesn’t matter that it has an interesting story when I’m not able to enjoy it with these actors. ()

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DaViD´82 

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inglés Or: how the best living oversees writer and the best living British director didn’t really see eye to eye in matters of art. Each of them does their own thing regardless of the other. And so Cormac rolls out all the screenwriters’ tricks ignoring the purely symbolic metaphorical and existential level which is full of ambiguous characters, holding up mirrors, hidden motivations and declamations seemingly about nothing, but in reality about redemption, damnation, the (im)possibility to choose and predestination and its thriller storyline represents just a necessary (but smarter and more true to life than it might have seem), all connecting excuse. The other one concentrates on what makes sense from the genre film making point of view and so he doesn’t care about the characters, the message, let alone the symbolism of the movie. The result is so unique, peculiar and well casted (apart from that one exception that breaks the rule... Yes, I’m talking to you Cameron) that in some circles it’s on its way to becoming a cult movie and for rest it’s doomed to remain misunderstood, damned and heading the Razzies. ()

EvilPhoEniX 

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inglés The Counselor is a delightfully funny, sexy, meditative, gory, and intelligent film, and for me, one of the most modern of the 21st century. The style, elegance and extravagance of the film shines through. It is also worth mentioning the very solid cast, which features all of my favourite actors. Spoiler: the scene where Cameron Diaz fucks Javier Bardem's car and Brad Pitt's disarming here definitely the biggest highlights of the film! Action 4/10, Suspense 5/10, Gore 7/10, Story 7/10, Atmosphere 6/10. ()

novoten 

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inglés I will not stoop to commenting on the senility of Ridley Scott, because there are plenty of users aping similar big-mouthed statements from foreign reviews about last year's Prometheus. That said, it is still true that I am quite disappointed. Not that Ridley forgot how to direct – but that he is simply unrecognizable in The Counselor. It is all just Cormac McCarthy's self-absorbed screenplay, materialized into lazily rolling dialogues, framed by a pretty good side plot and very inconsistently cast. While Michael Fassbender and Brad Pitt carry everything, Cameron Diaz turns out to be a casting misstep unlike any I can remember. Every gesture or word feels forced and wooden, making all the smaller positives (the soundtrack, the action flashes) almost forgotten. Given the creative team, I can't believe I'm stooping so low, but when even I, who easily let myself be captivated by the story, can see through the random fragments to the very end, something is wrong. ()

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