
Akhil (Akshay Kumar) finds out that he is the heir of 3000 crore rupees as he and his mother were abandoned by his diamond baron father (Panna Laal Johari) who is now dead. However, his life goes Topsy-turvy when he learns that the empire goes to entertainment (a dog).... (Full plot summary below)
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Akhil (Akshay Kumar) finds out that he is the heir of 3000 crore rupees as he and his mother were abandoned by his diamond baron father (Panna Laal Johari) who is now dead. However, his life goes Topsy-turvy when he learns that the empire goes to entertainment (a dog).
Leave your thoughts about It's Entertainment.
| Movie MezzanineLuke GoodsellConjures an elegant portrait of a nation lost in a surrealist slipstream, drawing on the iconography of its past and the shell of its present. It's one of the best American movies of the year. |
| Paste MagazineAndy CrumpEntertainment isn't an easy film to endure, but it is enchantingly noxious. We can't look away. |
| Village VoiceCalum MarshIt's what new films ought to strive for: to strike back against the familiar. |
| Globe and MailJohn SemleyLike Hamburger's meta-hacky comedy routine, the film confronts and challenges in order to produce something increasingly rare in American cinema: an active, engaged experience. |
| Willamette WeekCasey JarmanThe Frankenstein-esque final scenes of Entertainment make it painfully clear: As much as we want to read them as social critique, Rick Alverson makes monster movies. |
| Blu-ray.comBrian OrndorfEqually successful as a cult comedy and a non-lethal crowd dispersal weapon. |
| New YorkerRichard BrodyThe film is both jagged and suave, like an orchestrated concept album by a garage band. |
| Consequence of SoundJustin GerberRick Alverson's Entertainment will be admired by just as many people as it will be despised. |
| CraveOnlineFred TopelA confronting and challenging analysis of what entertainment actually means, and what we expect from our performers. |
| Wall Street JournalSteve DollarGet with the extreme deadpan tone and long takes, though, and the film feels as brave as it is potentially exasperating. |