Watch Wrong Movie Online No Survey Dolph Springer (Reno 911's Jack Plotnick) awakens one morning to find he has lost the sole love of his life - his dog, Paul. Desperate to reunite with his best friend and to set things right, Dolph embarks on a journey which spirals into the realm of the absurd. On his quest, he drastically alters the lives of several severely bizarro characters, including a promiscuous pizza delivery girl (Entourage's Alexis Dziena), a mentally unstable, jogging-addicted neighbor, an opportunistic French-Mexican gardener, an eccentric pet detective (Steve Little of HBO's Eastbound And Down) and most mysterious of all, an enigmatic pony-tailed guru, Master Chang (William Fichtner) who imparts his teachings to Dolph on how to metaphysically reconnect with his pet. From fearless cinematic surrealist Quentin Dupieux, the director behind the head-exploding Rubber, Wrong is a wholly original and hilariously hallucinatory universe all its own. (c) Drafthouse Release Date Wrong Mar 29, 2013 Limited | |
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Actors For Wrong |
Jack Plotnick,Eric Judor,Alexis Dziena,Steven E. Little,Mark Burnham,William Fichtner,Regan Burns,Arden Myrin,Maile Flanagan,Todd Giebenhain,Barry Alan Levine,Zia Harris,LeShay Tomlinson,Guy Valentine,Max Nicolas,Tony Ruiz,Ian J. Putnam,Bob Jennings,Willy Cole Jenson,Josef Lieck |
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Genres Wrong : Drama,Comedy |
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User Ranting Wrong : 3.3 |
User Percentage For Wrong : % |
User Count Like for Wrong : 1,538 |
All Critics Ranting For Wrong : 6 |
All Critics Count For Wrong : 37 |
All Critics Percentage For Wrong : 70 % |
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Review For Wrong |
There's a winning confidence to the filmmaking, which is deceptively stylish - Dupieux favours nervy close-ups and blurred foregrounds - and some real soul in Plotnick's performance. Adam Nayman-Globe and Mail
Dupieux makes the viewer work for it with Wrong. And it's not always worth the effort ... Linda Barnard-Toronto Star
Dupieux has to be applauded for creating a unique universe, but sometimes he seems stuck in it - to the point where we feel we're not always in on the joke. David Lewis-San Francisco Chronicle
In Wrong, reality and the world of the film will regularly upend themselves; it's never quite reliably clear, though, that these inexplicable events are happening for a purpose. Joel Arnold-NPR
Dupieux doesn't make films for everyone, but he does craft creative and abstract trips that are more than worth going on, even if they're fantastically difficult to explain to anyone who has yet to join the club. Kate Erbland-MSN Movies
Dupieux's absurdism is simply muddled, masking the fact he doesn't really have much to say. Mark Olsen-Los Angeles Times
A work of much playfulness and imagination, Wrong hints at a broader promise of budding, starburst auteurism upon which the film as a whole -- a nice, silly riff that could work better in truncated form -- doesn't fully deliver. Brent Simon-Shockya.com
Quentin Dupieux's brand of absurdism lands somewhere between the plays of Eugène Ionesco, the looniest sketches of Monty Python, and the most adventurous efforts of the Adult Swim brigade. Jason Anderson-The Grid
This isn't a long film, but it lacks propulsion at times. Luckily, it maintains its wry outlook and never quite erases the good will that its best moments inspire. Jeremy Mathews-Paste Magazine
For all its dominant paradigm subverting, "Wrong" never feels dangerous or truly challenging, content generally to amuse rather than amaze. Marc Mohan-Oregonian
I'll happily jump aboard the "Why Not" train that Quentin Dupieux so emphatically conducts yet again for Wrong, another delightfully absurd film that so many viewers will wrongfully, but understandably, hate. Matt Donato-We Got This Covered
... crafts some amusing exchanges and trippy images even if the whole thing never adds up to much in the end. Todd Jorgenson-Cinemalogue.com
With all of its robe mocking, its pet kidnapping service, its squeaky turkey dog toys, and most of all its turd memories, Wrong is one of the most unique films you'll ever sit through. Chris Sawin-Examiner.com
Have you ever been stuck at a party talking to a guy who thinks he's a comic genius? Leah Churner-Austin Chronicle
There's off-kilter style to spare: empty frames, heightened sterile imagery and mannered performances. But there's nothing below the surface that we haven't seen before. Robert Levin-amNewYork
Wrong, despite its off-putting opening scene, carries itself in a bright, curious manner that encourages deeper investigation into Dolph's seriously messed-up week of misfortune. Brian Orndorf-Blu-ray.com
The story wanders at times and includes interludes that feel like non sequiturs even for a movie hinged on such absurdities, but Dupieux, with the help of Plotnick, has created a unique world of soft chaos and goofy humor. Matthew Odam-Austin American-Statesman
There's a sly brilliance to the way Dupieux responds to audience expectation by repeatedly, pointedly violating Chekhov's Law. Tasha Robinson-AV Club
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