
A small town loner and a rebellious punk rocker unexpectedly fall in love as they are forced on the run and soon discover violence follows them everywhere.... (Full plot summary below)
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A small town loner and a rebellious punk rocker unexpectedly fall in love as they are forced on the run and soon discover violence follows them everywhere.
Leave your thoughts about Vincent N Roxxy.
| Blu-ray.comBrian OrndorfSchultz cranks up aggression and ends up suffocating the effort, displaying a callous disregard for tone to go with the feature's overall incompleteness. |
| Aisle SeatMike McGranaghanThe magic of Vincent N Roxxy comes from the performances. If there was any justice in the movie world, Zoe Kravitz's work here would propel her onto the A-list. |
| Eye for FilmJennie KermodeAs a sophomore feature (for director Gary Michael Schultz) this isn't bad, and it certainly has its moments, but ultimately it's a Thursday night DVD thriller rather than the Saturday night headliner Kravitz's work deserves. |
| Hollywood ReporterJohn DeForeEmile Hirsch and Zoe Kravitz, as strangers thrown together by a violent incident, enjoy an easy chemistry here, encouraging viewers to forget the menace that starts the story and, with startling violence, will end it. |
| indieWireDavid EhrlichFor a movie that doesn't quite know what it's trying to say about violence, it sure knows how to say it with vigor. |
| AV ClubKatie RifeSuffers from many of the same shortcomings that plagued tough-talking Tarantino homages in the late '90s but distinguishes itself with a satisfying climax. |
| GuardianNigel M. SmithPity that the bloody finale only makes up for the last third of what's otherwise pretty dreary. |
| Movie NationRoger MooreMurray and writer-director Theodore Melfi play us like a music box, manipulating and charming our socks off even as the Vincent for whom the film is named curses, gambles, drinks and cheats — all in front of an impressionable 10-year old. |
| Village VoiceAbbey BenderBy the end, the point-blank murders might make you queasy, but Kravitz still manages to project composure, even when her face is covered in blood. |
| CinemalogueTodd JorgensonAfter flashing some imaginative style and attitude, this ultraviolent crime thriller devolves into a routine tale of outsider romance and revenge. |