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Bradley Mack, une ex-star de films d'action à Hollywood se rend en Angleterre, espérant reconstruire son image en tant qu'acteur réputé.
Avis de la communauté (5)
Got better as it went on. Reoccurring gag with Mawaan Rizwan's Nigel is amusing. Derek Jacobi has a surprisingly touching scene. Iffy accent from Rebel Wilson though. Has that expected Xmas flick cheese (complimentary).
This movie starts out good, but gets worse and worse each second it goes on. The working in a theater in a small town part wasn't interesting and I didn't want to spend any more of my time looking at it, so I had to turn it off. The only good part of the move as it went on was the cab driver, but he wasn't the star and really deserved his own better movie to be in. P.S. I don't like Kiefer Sutherland, so I shouldn't have watched this in the first place!
I loved every second of this! Once a theatre kid, always a theatre kid I guess. Nice surprise to see Keifer Sutherland in a role like this. He was great.
Sure, with cup of tea and nothing else to do so watch this :D even in the end bloopers get me smile...not :) christmas movie ;)
Tinsel Town aims for a glittery, meta‑Hollywood satire but lands closer to a disjointed scrapbook of half‑formed ideas. It’s the kind of movie that clearly wants to say something about fame, image, and the machinery of celebrity culture, yet never finds the narrative discipline or tonal confidence to make any of it resonate. 🎭 What Works (Occasionally) A few clever visual gags: The film sprinkles in moments of stylistic flair—neon‑washed sets, exaggerated costume design, and playful transitions—that hint at a sharper, more self‑aware movie beneath the surface. Committed performances: Some actors genuinely try to elevate the material, injecting energy into scenes that otherwise feel flat. 🎬 Where It Falls Apart A muddled script: The story jumps between satire, melodrama, and quirky comedy without ever choosing a lane. Scenes feel stitched together rather than organically connected. Shallow commentary: The film gestures at critiques of Hollywood excess, influencer culture, and media obsession, but never digs deeper than surface‑level clichés. Tonally inconsistent: Emotional beats arrive without setup, comedic moments undercut dramatic ones, and the pacing swings wildly from sluggish to frantic. Lack of character depth: Most characters feel like archetypes rather than people. Their motivations shift scene to scene, making it hard to invest in their journeys. 🎞 Overall Tinsel Town is a glossy but hollow experience—ambitious in concept, clumsy in execution. It’s the cinematic equivalent of a flashy billboard: eye‑catching at first glance, but ultimately empty once you get close. A few bright spots keep it from being a total misfire, but the film never finds its voice or purpose. A scattered, unfocused satire that sparkles briefly but fades fast.