
On a crisp fall evening in the mid-90s, the new girl at club INFERNO, Bambi, struggles to fit in with the other dancers. She prepares herself to finally become an integral member of the group, despite her nerves and inexperience. Meanwhile, Jason, arriving to celebrate his 18th birthday, is nervous, but wants to fit in with his boisterous, much more experienced friends. Bambi and Jason cross paths, with Bambi finally able to take the plunge, but this lap dance may be more ter... (Full plot summary below)
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On a crisp fall evening in the mid-90s, the new girl at club INFERNO, Bambi, struggles to fit in with the other dancers. She prepares herself to finally become an integral member of the group, despite her nerves and inexperience. Meanwhile, Jason, arriving to celebrate his 18th birthday, is nervous, but wants to fit in with his boisterous, much more experienced friends. Bambi and Jason cross paths, with Bambi finally able to take the plunge, but this lap dance may be more terrifying than Jason originally expected.
Leave your thoughts about Dionne Copland's Inferno.
| Christian Science MonitorPeter RainerUnless you are a Dante scholar, and perhaps not even then, following Inferno is a wild goose chase - without the goose. |
| BeliefnetNell MinowOne action scene is underwater, but the rest of it drags so much it feels like it might be, too. |
| Family Home TheaterJames PlathIs it as good as the first two films? No. But because of the formula there are still pleasures to be had, and director Howard does a good job of integrating the medieval images and keeping viewers off-balance. |
| Shockya.comHarvey S. KartenNeither colorful photography nor Tom Hanks can make up for a lack of focus. |
| Arkansas Democrat-GazettePiers MarchantIt's like watching someone else playing a video game -- it looks like it might be fun from a distance, but that's as close as you're allowed to get. |
| JunkeeLauren Carroll HarrisHanks' performance could generously be described as contractually obliged, and the film as a whole as a theatrically-released telemovie. |
| ABC Radio BrisbaneMatthew ToomeyLangdon isn't doing much this time around. There are a couple of puzzles to solve but the more prevalent scenes involve him running from the authorities Jason Bourne style. |
| The Patriot LedgerAl AlexanderHoward, in his third go-round at the helm of the much-maligned, but financially lucrative franchise, still hasn't gotten a handle on making these bungled endeavors anything more than a chore. |
| New York Magazine/VultureDavid EdelsteinTom Hanks takes his art down a peg with another paycheck performance as the dramatic cipher Robert Langdon in Inferno, Ron Howard’s mostly lame adaptation of Dan Brown’s wholly lame novel. |
| Your Movies (cleveland.com)John UrbancichThe third time is not exactly a code of charms for producer/director Ron Howard and Professor Robert Langdon (Tom Hanks) in their intricately weaved 'Inferno.' |