The Globe and Mail (Toronto) by Brad Wheeler
“Bodhi,” in Sanskrit, is short for “being of wisdom.” In Hawaii, “Keanu” means “cool mountain breeze.” And, in Hollywood, Point Break means never having to bother with a plausible plot.
China, Germany, United States · 2015
Rated PG-13 · 1h 53m
Director Ericson Core
Starring Edgar Ramírez, Luke Bracey, Teresa Palmer, Ray Winstone
Genre Action, Adventure, Crime, Thriller
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A young undercover FBI agent infiltrates a gang of thieves who share a common interest in extreme sports. A remake of the 1991 film, "Point Break".
The Globe and Mail (Toronto) by Brad Wheeler
“Bodhi,” in Sanskrit, is short for “being of wisdom.” In Hawaii, “Keanu” means “cool mountain breeze.” And, in Hollywood, Point Break means never having to bother with a plausible plot.
Slant Magazine by Christopher Gray
In its philosophical and criminal investigations (largely imported from Kathryn Bigelow's original), the film moves in dozens of illogical directions, but not without achieving a patina of earnest credibility.
The Hollywood Reporter by Elizabeth Kerr
Ericson Core’s Point Break strips the silly fun and relatively straight-ahead narrative from the original for a humorless, if photogenic spin on extreme crime.
ReelViews by James Berardinelli
Unless you’re a fan of extreme sports photography, the 2015 Point Break lags behind its predecessor in most areas.
Screen International by James Marsh
Core’s incarnation of Point Break is about one thing, extreme sports, and it is no small relief that the film at least handles those sequences well.
The sense of living dangerously is somewhat lacking as Kurt Wimmer’s emotionally vacant screenplay fails to make audiences care enough about the characters to sweat over their physical exertions.
San Francisco Chronicle by Peter Hartlaub
The makers were clearly paying attention to the smaller details. But somehow, they missed all the big things that made the first Point Break a memorable escapist film of its time.
The casting does the film few favors. Ramirez is charismatic, but has none of Patrick Swayze’s mad twinkle. It’s a humorless film that makes you go “Wow” more than it involves you.
Washington Post by Stephanie Merry
It takes a very special director to make scenes of sky-diving, free climbing, big-wave surfing and BASE jumping something to yawn at. Yet Ericson Core must be that kind of miracle worker, because Point Break, his update of the 1991 cult classic, is basically a cavalcade of extreme sports, but with less drama than a highlight reel.
For all the adrenalizing positives in this reworked Point Break, inadvertent silliness remains
A young couple is forced to make a brutal choice between gang loyalty and the love they have for one another.
Every betrayal begins with trust.