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      • The narrative isn't flawless and the acting is so-so, plus there are spots where it's obviously adapted from an older movie with 2000's editing tricks thrown in, but Wicker Park is a romantic thriller with many surprising twists that nonetheless engage until the end.
      www.rottentomatoes.com/m/wicker_park
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  2. Sep 3, 2004 · Reviews. What the #$*! is going on in ‘Wicker Park’? Drama. 114 minutes ‧ PG-13 ‧ 2004. Roger Ebert. September 3, 2004. 4 min read. Matthew (Josh Hartnett) finds the love of his life in Lisa (Diane Kruger), only to lose her through a series of misunderstandings in "Wicker Park."

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  3. Wicker Park is a 2004 American romantic thriller drama film directed by Paul McGuigan and starring Josh Hartnett, Rose Byrne, Diane Kruger and Matthew Lillard. It is a remake of the 1996 French film L'Appartement, which in turn is loosely based on Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream.

  4. Wicker Park. NEW. Matthew (Josh Hartnett) and Lisa (Diane Kruger) are madly in love. But one day Lisa vanishes. Simon enters an emotional tailspin and begins an obsessive quest to find her. Years...

    • (135)
    • Paul Mcguigan
    • PG-13
    • Josh Hartnett
  5. Overall, a movie definitely worth renting. The film begins a bit slowly but picks up very nicely about 30 minutes into it. There are a few twists and turns that will keep your attention. The acting was quite good, albeit with little-known actors except for Josh Hartnett of Blackhawk Down.

  6. A chance encounter changes the life of a young executive, who lays his forthcoming marriage to one side, pretends he’s away on a business trip, then sets abou.

  7. Wicker Park isn’t just awful, it’s infuriating. In a nutshell, it’s a contrived, incomprehensible, labyrinthine, never-ending series of extraordinarily frustrating scenes that conclude in a manner such that you’ll have to restrain yourself from beating your TV to death with a baseball bat.

  8. Tortuously twisting in on itself, Wicker Park keeps you guessing as it keeps its central pair apart. But it's scuppered by a plodding obviousness that's underlined by a sledgehammer...

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