Arts & Entertainment

Film Critics: 'Incredible Burt Wonderstone' Lacks Magic

This movie about aging magicians might make you want to attempt a disappearing act from the theater.

The premise, courtesy of IMDb: 

When a street magician's stunt begins to make their show look stale, superstar magicians Burt Wonderstone and Anton Marvelton look to salvage their act — and their friendship — by staging their own daring stunt.

'The Incredible Burt Wonderstone' is rated PG-13 and runs 100 minutes. Now playing at the Carmike Riverstone 15 Cinemas in Canton. For more theater information, show times and pricing, click the link above.

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What critics are saying:

There's nothing particularly smart or fun about this film. It can be silly but rarely in an inspired way. And with a cast this well stocked with comedy talent, and direction by Don Scardino (an Emmy nominee for 30 Rock), you'd think just a few more laughs would not feel like such an impossible reach. — Marshall Fine, The Huffington Post

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As a comedy about an egoist’s rise and fall, 'The Incredible Burt Wonderstone' seems like a script that passed through Will Ferrell’s hands before it materialized in Carell’s in-box. Whereas Ferrell is usually likable and self-mocking enough to pull a sensitive rabbit out of his hat, Carell’s character never draws us closer, so the sleight-of-hand transformation is too obviously a trick. — Joe Williams, St. Louis Post Dispatch

A movie satirizing magicians — even rock 'n' roll hipster magicians — is only slightly more cutting edge than a movie mocking mimes or carnies. At times 'The Incredible Burt Wonderstone' seems as creaky as old Rance Holloway.

But this is also one dark and wickedly funny comedy. — Richard Roeper, Chicago Tribune

You would think that a film about magicians would have some magic to it. And you would think that a movie boasting such artful laugh masters as Steve Carell, Jim Carrey, Steve Buscemi and Alan Arkin would have some real comedic heft. In the case of 'The Incredible Burt Wonderstone,' you would be wrong on both counts. It is not a dreadful film. There are just enough laughs and clever moments to keep it north of the Adam Sandler line of comic ineptitude. But it is so wildly inconsistent that it always seems on the verge of completely falling apart and losing what little attachment it has to reality. — Charlie McCollum, San Jose Mercury News 

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