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The Game (1997)
During his 48th birthday, a successful and rich banker, Nicolas Van Ortton, receives his first present for his birthday ever from his brother, that gives him the chance to participate in the most dangerous game ever, the thing that makes him struggle against saving his life and getting out from such a dangerous game.
17 September 1955, San Jose, California, USA
4 December 1946, Wilmington, Delaware, USA
1 October 1960, Jacksonville, North Carolina, USA
1 September 1952, Kansas City, Missouri, USA
31 August 1916, New York City, New York, USA
30 January 1967, San Francisco, California, USA
7 January 1948, San Jose, California, USA
20 August 1961, New York City, New York, USA
1 September 1948, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
21 April 1945, Chicago, Illinois, USA
13 March 1930, Port Huron, Michigan, USA
17 December 1930, Tilsit, East Prussia, Germany [now Sovetsk, Kaliningrad Oblast, Russia]
October 06, 2012
Well-written, expertly paced, and undeniably riveting, The Game is perhaps most impressive in the way it strips down the Nicholas Van Orton character. The whole process is very layered and each layer breaks down Nicholas even more than the last.
October 04, 2011
Sure, it strains credulity, but it's clever, well-paced and builds to a spectacular -- if not altogether satisfying -- conclusion.
February 16, 2016
Engaging '90s thriller has lots of violence, profanity.
September 26, 2012
This is one of those movies that's so tightly written and densely plotted, it leaves no room for error -- or viewer queries. Unfortunately, the questions will start flying even before the picture's over.
June 18, 2002
The picture provides Douglas with one of his best roles. If he doesn't quite reach the bizarre heights he achieved in Falling Down, The Game makes its own demands.
October 18, 2012
[N]ifty filmic style and crackpot sensibility.
October 04, 2011
This 1997 thriller is fairly entertaining nonsense if all you're looking for is 128 minutes of diversion. But if you'd like something more from David Fincher, the director of Seven, don't get your hopes up.
January 01, 2000
Douglas is the right actor for the role. He can play smart, he can play cold, and he can play angry. He is also subtle enough that he never arrives at an emotional plateau before the film does, and never overplays the process of his inner change.
January 01, 2000
As it's unspooling on screen, the film is hugely entertaining, but there are several significant plot holes that grow wider the more closely they're investigated.
February 09, 2006
The film's 'message' about complacency transformed by chaos and uncertainty is hackneyed...
March 26, 2009
Regardless of how far one chooses to buy into The Game -- and the ending ambiguously suggests that it could go on and on -- there is no doubt as to Fincher's staggering expertise as a director and his almost clinical sense of precision.

