Born on the Fourth of July

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Critics' Reviews

100
Boston Globe: Jay Carr
Oliver Stone's Born on the Fourth of July is a knockout, a huge angry howl of movie that uses a crippled Vietnam veteran's disability as metaphor for a country's paralysis. [5 Jan 1990, p.67]Read Full Review »
100
ROLLING STONE: Peter Travers
But Stone has found in Cruise the ideal actor to anchor the movie with simplicity and strength. Together they do more than show what happened to Kovic. Their fervent, consistently gripping film shows why it still urgently matters.Read Full Review »
100
The New York Times: Vincent Canby
It is a film of enormous visceral power with, in the central role, a performance by Tom Cruise that defines everything that is best about the movie.Read Full Review »
100
CHICAGO SUN-TIMES: Roger Ebert
Nothing Cruise has done will prepare you for what he does in Born on the Fourth of July. His performance is so good that the movie lives through it. Stone is able to make his statement with Cruise's face and voice and doesn't need to put everything into the dialogue.Read Full Review »
63
USA Today: Mike Clark
A fresh-slant Vietnam picture in which lead Tom Cruise achieves indisputable greatness, July is otherwise a "more often than not'' achievement. But though it's as full of itself as Stone's watchably windy Talk Radio, the film's roundhouse punches propel you into remote Mike Tyson-land when they connect. [20 Dec 1989, p.1D]Read Full Review »
60
Washington Post: Desson Howe
Stone has created a film whose overblown parts add up to far less than the epic whole he had in mind.Read Full Review »
60
LOS ANGELES TIMES: Sheila Benson
Possibly because Stone empathizes so enormously with co-writer Kovic, who came back from Vietnam at the age of 21 paralyzed from the chest down, the director has lost the specificity that made "Platoon" so electrifying. In its place he uses bombast, overkill, bullying. His scenes, and their ironic juxtapositioning, explode like land mines. [20 Dec 1989, p.1]Read Full Review »
60
Washington Post: Hal Hinson
This is an impassioned movie, made with conviction and evangelical verve. It's also hysterical and overbearing and alienating.Read Full Review »
See all Born on the Fourth of July reviews at metacritic.com »