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Purpose

Purpose (2002)

February. 21,2002
|
5.2
| Thriller

A software developer becomes a billionaire and is distracted by fame, greed and power, then must save his invention and company from a hostile takeover.

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Reviews

Grimerlana
2002/02/21

Plenty to Like, Plenty to Dislike

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Phonearl
2002/02/22

Good start, but then it gets ruined

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Aiden Melton
2002/02/23

The storyline feels a little thin and moth-eaten in parts but this sequel is plenty of fun.

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Portia Hilton
2002/02/24

Blistering performances.

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gregc-1
2002/02/25

Excellent script - intelligent and stimulating. The characters are real and easily identified with. A truely solid production. Very few movies are able to capture the excitement of business and deal making - this movie explores the different traits of business, relationships, and the passion that helped raise the hype around dot com start-ups to ridiculous measures in the 1990's. In one word - inspiring.

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lafboy
2002/02/26

I liked this story very much, especially in a time where greed and money seem to be the front page themes of our national headlines lately. Purpo$e did a good job of posing the question to it's audience, "Why do you do what you do?" It looked amazing and the pace was sharp. I especially enjoyed Hal Holbrook as the Old Money Tycoon. Alan Lazar did a very good job in his feature debut and I look forward to his future projects.

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bsbfsu
2002/02/27

How do you measure success? By winning "the game"? This film does an excellent job of posing that question in the milieu of smart, driven, talented 20something cyberkings who make (and lose) it all in a high tech high stakes poker game. Who's bluffing and who's really got what it takes? "Purpose" is smart, funny, fast paced and right on top of its subject matter.

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edge-7
2002/02/28

Purpose, as a whole, does a good job of showing how money, power, and life in the fast lane during the dot.com boom in San Francisco can corrupt even those with good intentions. Jeffery Donovan (Robert) is great as the smooth talking deal closer that visionary John Elias (newcomer John Light) hires to help start the company. Paul Reiser, hardly recognizable as the mentor and friend to John, is funny and adds a lot to the film. Mia Farrow looks stunning, yet believable as the financial mogul out to make some money off the new company. Hal Holbrook and Peter Coyote add to the film, if nothing else than recognizable faces and steady acting. The film looks amazing, with fantastic shots of San Francisco and creative interiors that dominate the new money internet offices. Could be a sleeper hit if all the people who lost their jobs in the dot.com bust want to re-live it. It has a deep meaning behind the story of quality over quantity. I'd recommend it.

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