Next (2007)
Blessed, or cursed, with the ability to see events minutes before they occur, Cris Johnson earns a living as a magician in Las Vegas and keeps a low profile under an alias. Cris then draws the attention of FBI agent Callie Ferris who is seeking to use his abilities to prevent a nuclear terrorist attack.
8 August 1974, Bradford, Yorkshire, England, UK
5 November 1940, Mesa, Arizona, USA
10 October 1961, Charlottesville, Virginia, USA
31 December 1966, Baltimore, Maryland, USA
9 October 1970, Elmira, New York, USA
16 September 1927, New York City, New York, USA
8 September 1962, Dessau, German Democratic Republic [now Saxony-Anhalt, Federal Republic of Germany]
12 August 1950, Laramie, Wyoming, USA
1984
3 December 1960, Fayetteville, North Carolina, USA
1953
October 31, 2007
Predictable Cage sci-fi tale may entertain teens.
October 22, 2007
Someone that can change the future like Cage does here is a bit like Superman, but without any Kryptonite . . .
September 22, 2007
Suffice it to say that I'm a big time warp movie fan and this is a good one.
July 07, 2008
Nobody said this had to be great art, but why couldn't it be a satisfying thrill machine?
May 03, 2007
A schlocky mix of bad special effects and worse Cage hairdos.
April 23, 2009
Tamahori and the phalanx of writers implode Dick's intriguing premise into a pedantic thriller.
April 27, 2007
Once you know the rules, it's hardly worth playing. Especially when you find out you've been tricked.
September 22, 2007
Another failed attempt to bring Dick's deliriously paranoid mind-set to the screen.
November 17, 2007
It's debatable whether Cage's supernatural ability is any more interesting than his strange coiffure.
May 03, 2007
Next features Nicolas Cage as a clairvoyant who can see events before they occur. If anyone on the production team had similar abilities, they could have foreseen that the film was a folly in the making.
April 27, 2007
Colossal waste of time.
December 03, 2007
This busy sci-fi thriller often seems like a page full of equations rendered meaningless by an early misplaced decimal point.

