In Limitless, a potently fanciful and fun thriller about a drug that turns you into a genius, Cooper proves a cock-of-the-walk movie star.
80
Arizona RepublicBill Goodykoontz
Arizona RepublicBill Goodykoontz
Some of its conceits may not hold up under intense scrutiny, but, generally speaking, it's a good time at the movies.
80
Chicago ReaderJ.R. Jones
Chicago ReaderJ.R. Jones
Some might call this movie a step backward after Burger's previous feature, the painfully honest Iraq war drama "The Lucky Ones," but as a stylish intrigue it's hard to beat.
75
Chicago TribuneMichael Phillips
Chicago TribuneMichael Phillips
Almost all of it works as wish-fulfillment fantasy.
63
Orlando SentinelRoger Moore
Orlando SentinelRoger Moore
This film based on Alan Glynn's novel "Dark Fields" is entirely too reliant on voice-over, a bit too tarted-up by Burger in an effort to make this head trip a visual experience.
Directed with a pulsating fervor by Neil Burger, Limitless is absurd but entertaining action-adventure escapism. Bradley Cooper is versatile and virile, and a valiant leading man.
40
Village VoiceNick Schager
Village VoiceNick Schager
Without a complex thought about narcissism, merit, or addiction, Limitless is content to be an empty, one-note, satire-free fairy tale of avarice and corporate-political ambition.
As we work our way back to that cliff-hanger of an opening, it becomes clear that the movie is no acid critique, but a hollow endorsement of high living. Guess every generation gets its "Boiler Room."