If You Like this movie you can streaming Stoker movie without downloading HERE
Genre Movie :Drama,Horror,Mystery & Suspense
Mpaa Rating : R Release Date : Mar 1, 2013 Limited
Actors :Mia Wasikowska,Matthew Goode,Nicole Kidman,Dermot Mulroney,Jacki Weaver,Lucas Till,Alden Ehrenreich,David Alford,Peg Allen,Lauren Roman,Phyllis Somerville,Harmony Korine,Dominick "Dino" Howard,Tyler Von Tagen,Thomas Covert,Jaxon Johnson,Paxton Johnson,Judith Godrèche,Ralph Brown
Visitor Ranting & Critics For Stoker
All Critics Ranting For Stoker : 6.5If You Like this movie you can streaming Stoker movie without downloading HERE
New Trailer For Stoker
Movie Image New Stoker
Review For Stoker
Stoker trembles between the portentous and the ridiculous, and I think you know which one is going to win. The audience does make its decision: They've been had yet again.David Thomson-The New Republic
'Stoker': Park Chan-wok's sensually sinister 'Shadow of a Doubt'
Joe Baltake-Passionate Moviegoer
Stoker is a movie about tension and inaction, about people trying to figure out what's going on in someone else's head.
Connie Ogle-Miami Herald
Stoker is a cunning exercise in transgression. But one can't help but wonder what kind of film Park might have made if he'd had the full creative control to which he's accustomed in Korea.
Christopher Orr-The Atlantic
None of it is life-changing, but it is effectively eerie. Stylishly spooky, even.
Tom Long-Detroit News
"Stoker" plays out like a Kabuki "Macbeth": gallons of style slathered on a story you already know by heart.
Michael O'Sullivan-Washington Post
I liked the mood of Stoker: gothic, dark, strange and melancholy. It's like a really creepy Sunday afternoon.
CJ Johnson-ABC Radio (Australia)
A coming of age story that subverts to a coming of the deranged
Cameron Williams-The Popcorn Junkie
Her elder co-stars may lead this psychological mind dance with ease, but it is Mia Wasikowska who astounds the most.
Ed Gibbs-The Sunday Age
Stoker delves into some seriously dark psychological territory, while somehow rising above it. It pulls the impressive trick of making ugly acts seem beautiful...
Tony Stamp-Flicks.co.nz
Classic film language has been fixed since the 20th century and modern film language can be so frenetic that it's refreshing to see a daring filmmaker creating tension and dread out of slow-paced, deliberate choices rather than quick-cut chaos.
Eric Melin-Scene-Stealers.com
Marvelously assembled by a craftsman who takes pleasure in unsettling our minds while he messes with our eyes.
Eric D. Snider-About.com
a hothouse psychodrama rendered in a deliberately cool style that gives it the feel of a dollhouse chamber play conceived in a mental institution
James Kendrick-Q Network Film Desk
Even if the actual story gets a little soft at times and pulls its punches for the American audience, Stoker is worth taking a look at.
Kevin Carr-7M Pictures
Stoker has the kind of script that would have made Hitchcock giddy at the knees as murder, suppressed sexuality and dense mystery whirls into a thick fog of suspicion and intrigue.
Matthew Pejkovic-Matt's Movie Reviews
A horror masterpiece...
Felix Vasquez Jr.-Cinema Crazed
Quiet, cool, and simply gorgeous to look at, Stoker is easily one of the most accomplished chillers of the year.
Scott Weinberg-FEARnet
A visual feast whose psychosexual boilerplate proves intriguingly complex, Stoker is a born classic - a brilliant English-language crossover effort for Park that doubles as a genre-transcending triumph.
Todd Gilchrist-ToddGilchrist.com
While one is sure Stoker will satisfy many with its haughty ambivalence about any number of social taboos, others will find Park's first English-language effort decidedly vapid...
Tim Cogshell-Alt Film Guide
A twisted little bildungsroman... Stoker successfully defies expectations at most turns.
Simon Miraudo-Quickflix
You never know where Park is going to take you next, even when you're not so sure you want to go along.
Al Alexander-The Patriot Ledger
It's admirable how effortlessly Park adapts to English, fearlessly exploring his creepy, squirmy themes without compromise.
Jeffrey M. Anderson-Common Sense Media
Style doesn't just win out here, it smashes substance like a bug under a shoe.
Brian Tallerico-Film Threat
Park subverts standard framing rules when characters are speaking to one another, employs sweeping camera movement from weird angles, and stops key scenes just at their climax, only to return to them later for a fuller picture.
Eric Melin-Lawrence.com
TagLine Stoker Innocence Ends
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