The brave conduit of Schrader's doom-laden moralism is Greg Kinnear, giving one of those revelatory performances that makes everything an actor does prior seem like marking time.
Auto Focus (2002)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:155
Fresh:112
Rotten:43
Average Rating:6.7/10
Consensus: Kinnear and Dafoe help make this downward spiral of one man's life a compelling watch.
Runtime: 1 hr 46 mins
Genre: Dramas
Synopsis: AUTO FOCUS is the story of Bob Crane (Greg Kinnear), who was the star of the television series HOGAN'S HEROES in the 1960s. Before he achieved that particular fame, Crane was a popular radio talk... AUTO FOCUS is the story of Bob Crane (Greg Kinnear), who was the star of the television series HOGAN'S HEROES in the 1960s. Before he achieved that particular fame, Crane was a popular radio talk show host in Hollywood. His television work brought him a level of visibility and notoriety that he turned directly into sexual opportunity. Gallivanting with sleazy audiovisual salesman John Carpenter (Willem Dafoe), Crane built a life as a desperately addicted sex maniac. As the first home video cameras were invented, Carpenter and Crane began a prolific hobby of coercing girls to appear on tape while engaging in lewd sexual acts. The more intensely obsessed Crane became with his habit, the less his acting career mattered. He divorced his wife, allowing her custody of their two children, and remarried, having another son, only to divorce again. Meanwhile, his relentless sexual exploits became increasingly impersonal and mean-spirited. His public image suffered as he shamelessly made tasteless, sexualized remarks and got a reputation for openly displaying photographs of himself receiving oral sex. Paul Schrader's powerful, deeply effective, and darkly disturbing film makes a 180-degree transition as its story rolls out. What begins as a happy, colorful, naive portrayal of the entertainment industry becomes the nightmare of one man's disintegration in the face of temptation, money, and power. [More]
Starring: Greg Kinnear, Willem Dafoe, Rita Wilson, Maria Bello
Starring: Greg Kinnear, Willem Dafoe, Rita Wilson, Maria Bello, Ron Leibman, Bruce Solomon, Kurt Fuller, Michael Rodgers
Director: Paul Schrader
Director: Paul Schrader
Screenwriter: Trevor Macy, Michael Gerbosi
Producer: Todd Rosken
Composer: Angelo Badalementi
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
Reviews for Auto Focus
In surely the best performance of his career, Kinnear expertly charts how the facade of someone who is little more than facade crumbles without him even knowing it.
Sordid, surreal tale of "Hogan's Heroes" star Bob Crane's rise and fall grabs you tight like a clammy handshake and doesn't let go.
Kinnear plays Crane in one of the year's most pitch-perfect performances.
Auto Focus, Schrader's strongest movie since Affliction, is another meditation on American masculinity powerfully told with great wit and style.
[Kinnear's] performance has to be one of the most sympathetic acts of decency one actor has ever extended to another.
It's good while they're dealing with things that they actually know, but when they enter the realm of making assumptions it slows way down.
I get about 30 e-mail messages every day trying to sell me services quite similar to what Crane did back in the early days of home video, which might be the reason why Focus fell disappointingly flat.
A biopic about Crane’s life in the classic tradition but evolves into what has become of us all in the era of video.
It serves up a warning against the power of the image and its ability to both enchant and ultimately enslave.
Director Paul Schrader laudably keeps Auto Focus free of cheap sensation, but his one failing is that the film doesn’t disturb enough.
The film tries to make a case for Crane as the poster boy for fame's dark side, but it never quite succeeds.
[Kinnear's] marvelously ambiguous and deliciously blank here, lending a slightly sinister cast to every harmless, handsome man he's ever played.
A creepy, intermittently powerful study of a self-destructive man...about as unsettling to watch as an exploratory medical procedure or an autopsy.
Morality takes a beating in 'Auto Focus,' a film more suitable for stag parties than for multiplexes.
Latest News for Auto Focus
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December 09, 2004:
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