The Prestige (2006)

prestige
Rolling Stone
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details
Studio: Touchstone Pictures
Studio: Warner Bros. Pictures
Rating: PG-13
Release Date: Oct 20, 2006
Running Time: 135 mins.
Country Of Origin: United States
synopsis
It all begins in rapidly changing, turn-of-the-century London. At a time when magicians are idols and celebrities of the highest order, two young magicians set out to carve their own paths to fame. The flashy, sophisticated Robert Angier is a consummate entertainer, while the rough-edged purist Alfred Borden is a creative genius who lacks the panache to showcase hismagical ideas. They start out as admiringfriends and partners. But when their biggest trick goes terribly awry, they become enemies for life--each intent on outdoing and upending the other. Trick by trick, show by show, their ferocious competition builds until it knows no bounds, even utilizing the fantastical new powers of electricity and the scientificbrilliance of radical inventor Nikola Tesla—while the lives of everyone around them hang in the balance.
cast + crew
Robert Angier
Alfred Borden
Cutter
Nikola Tesla
Olivia Wenscombe
Julia McCullough
Alley
Leonard
Jess Borden
Screenplay
Screenplay
Source Material
Producer
Producer
Executive Producer
Executive Producer
Executive Producer
Executive Producer
Associate Producer
reviews
Source
rating  PETER TRAVERS - October 20, 2006
There are nifty tricks galore up the sumptuous sleeve of this offbeat and wildly entertaining thriller. But I won't spoil them. You can safely know this: Hugh Jackman as personality-plus Robert Angier and Christian Bale as cool technician Alfred Borden are turn-of-the-twentieth-century magicians out to beat the other at his own devious game. In The Illusionist, Edward Norton had to work alone. Jackman and Bale make a mind-bending team. Special props to Bale, whose award-bait tour de force will… Continued
Source
rating

For all its twists, turns and mind manipulation--much like the very tenets of magic--The Prestige is the one thing such a movie should never be: neither awful nor great--just decent.

Story

''...Every great magic trick has a third act, the most difficult act: the prestige.'' That quote, taken from Cutter's (Michael Caine) oft-referenced opening voiceover, doesn't quite sum up the movie, but it certainly alludes to its magic and trickery to come. What ultimately brings us to The Prestige's… Continued