
A man who assumes the identity of his deceased twin in Argentina.... (Full plot summary below)
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A man who assumes the identity of his deceased twin in Argentina.
Leave your thoughts about Everybody Has a Plan.
| Little White LiesPaul FaircloughAt heart it's a crime flick, but Piterbarg has woven in a woozy psychological undercurrent with a powerful pull that places it a cut above. |
| Shockya.comBrent SimonWanna see/hear Viggo Mortensen get his Spanish on? That's a big part of the potential interest for Everybody Has a Plan, given the otherwise slow, dangling drama of its assumed-identity conceit. |
| AV ClubMike D'AngeloApart from the novelty of seeing Mortensen act in Spanish, there’s virtually nothing of interest, and even he does little more than confirm that a performance can be monosyllabic in any language. |
| New York TimesRachel SaltzMr. Mortensen keeps you watching, even when the movie’s storytelling underwhelms. But Everybody Has a Plan is less about story than about texture and atmosphere. They stay with you, as does the haunted visage of Agustín, drifting on the delta waters. |
| Contactmusic.comRich ClineWhile it's fascinating to see Viggo Mortensen starring in an Argentine thriller, the film itself is disappointing and dull, keeping all the compelling emotions so internalised that we find it difficult to care what happens. |
| ScotsmanAlistair HarknessPiterbarg works hard to mute the plot's more fanciful elements. If fact, she ends up going too far in the wrong direction, turning this into an underpowered thriller instead. |
| Radio TimesDamon WiseFeels a little long and uneven, although Mortensen is quite superb as the two chalk-and-cheese brothers. |
| Daily Express (UK)Allan HunterEverybody Has A Plan possesses the film noir elements that might have worked for Robert Mitchum in the Fifties but writer/director Ana Piterbarg lacks the confidence and conviction to pull it off. |
| Chicago Sun-TimesMatt Zoller SeitzIts chief virtue is its lead performance, in which twin brothers are played by a promising new Argentinian actor named Viggo Mortensen. |
| Time OutCath ClarkeHats off to Viggo Mortensen. He pulls off playing identical twins in this Argentinian thriller, which never quite lives up to his talents. |