Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Watch The Numbers Station Movie Online No Survey

Watch The Numbers Station Movie Online No Survey


After his latest mission goes disastrously wrong, veteran CIA black ops agent Emerson Kent (John Cusack, 2012) is given one last chance to prove he still has what it takes to do his job. His new assignment: guarding Katherine (Malin Akerman, Watchmen), a code operator at a top-secret remote CIA "Numbers Station" where encrypted messages are sent and received. When an elite team of heavily armed assailants lays siege to the station, Emerson and Katherine suddenly find themselves in a life-or-death struggle against an unknown enemy. With the station compromised and innocent lives at stake, they must stop the deadly plot before it's too late. (c) Image
Release Date The Numbers Station Apr 26, 2013 Limited
The

Actors For The Numbers Station

John Cusack,Malin Akerman,Liam Cunningham,Lucy Griffiths,Hannah Murray

Genres The Numbers Station : Mystery & Suspense

User Ranting The Numbers Station : 2.9
User Percentage For The Numbers Station : %
User Count Like for The Numbers Station : 2,005
All Critics Ranting For The Numbers Station : 4.6
All Critics Count For The Numbers Station : 17
All Critics Percentage For The Numbers Station : 29 %

Review For The Numbers Station

A predictable hodgepodge of uninteresting psychological cat-and-mouse, dimly lighted action filmed by director Kasper Barfoed in standard-operating shaky-cam ...
Robert Abele-Los Angeles Times

With Cusack's help, Barfoed holds your interest without resorting to car chases, a rarity in a contemporary thriller.
Lou Lumenick-New York Post

This dreary spy drama is as flat and airless as the concrete bunker in which it unfolds.
Jeannette Catsoulis-New York Times

Akerman does work hard to keep up the energy level. Cusack, though, seems bored by the superficial proceedings, which don't even offer the distraction of a real romantic connection or a suspenseful confrontation.
Elizabeth Weitzman-New York Daily News

There are some decent shootouts, but the movie's strongest assets are the soulful performances ...
Chuck Wilson-Village Voice

John Cusack's usual clipped way of talking serves him well in the role of a disillusioned black ops agent. He's also convincing in the film's gunplay sequences and in his guarded interaction with others.
Betty Jo Tucker-ReelTalk Movie Reviews

Cusack's glum visage immediately lays a wet blanket over Danish director Kasper Barfoed's English-language debut and keeps it firmly in place until the final fade-out.
Ethan Alter-Television Without Pity

It's little wonder the movie spends so much time running in circles when we see where it ultimately goes.
Mark Dujsik-Mark Reviews Movies

The Numbers Station is a lean, tactile thriller that grabs you from the opening and keeps you aptly entertained.
Julian Roman-MovieWeb

Assembled from competent elements and featuring more dedicated performances than one might expect, The Numbers Station is still a tad too nondescript to leave much of an impact.
Simon Brookfield-We Got This Covered

If you're looking for a dynamic, politically-tinged thriller, you could do a lot better, but you could also do a lot worse.
Christopher Null-Film Racket

Claustrophobic and repetitive...a numbingly tedious would-be thriller.
Frank Swietek-One Guy's Opinion

Strictly for fans of the stars and perhaps those with an insatiable curiosity about career low points, the feature is certainly digestible, but rarely memorable.
Brian Orndorf-Blu-ray.com

The Numbers Station is watchable for the things it gets right, yet it is impossible not to think that a lot of pieces to this puzzle are missing.
Mike McGranaghan-Aisle Seat

Cusack and Akerman scramble down a series of dimly lit, identical-looking passageways. The setting is as ill-defined as the characters.
A.A. Dowd-AV Club

Cusack looks visibly bored. If someone had a camera on you while you were watching it, you would look the same way.
Brian Tallerico-HollywoodChicago.com

Sits awkwardly between shoot 'em up and psychological thriller without offering the excitement of either.
Tomas Hachard-Slant Magazine

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