Watch New Admission with HD Movie Format

Friday, September 27, 2013

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Tina Fey (30 Rock) and Paul Rudd (This is 40) are paired for the first time on-screen in Admission, the new comedy/drama directed by Academy Award nominee Paul Weitz (About a Boy, In Good Company), about the surprising detours we encounter on the road to happiness. Every spring, high school seniors anxiously await letters of college admission that will affirm and encourage their potential. At Princeton University, admissions officer Portia Nathan (Tina Fey) is a gatekeeper evaluating thousands of applicants. Year in and year out, Portia has lived her life by the book, at work as well as at the home she shares with Princeton professor Mark (Michael Sheen). When Clarence (Wallace Shawn), the Dean of Admissions, announces his impending retirement, the likeliest candidates to succeed him are Portia and her office rival Corinne (Gloria Reuben). For Portia, however, it's business as usual as she hits the road on her annual recruiting trip. (c) Focus

Movie Title : Admission
Release Date : Mar 22, 2013 Wide
Genre Movie :Comedy
Mpaa Rating : PG-13
Actors :Tina Fey,Paul Rudd,Nat Wolff,Michael Sheen,Wallace Shawn,Gloria Reuben,Travaris Meeks-Spears,Lily Tomlin,Ann Harada,Ben Levin,Daniel Joseph Levy,Maggie Keenan-Bolger,Elaine Kussack,Christopher Evan Welch,Michael Genadry,Juliet Brett,John Brodsky,Camille Branton,Sarita Choudhury,Freddie Francis


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Visitor Ranting & Critics For Admission

User Ranting Movie Admission : 3
User Count Like for Admission : 28,501
Critics Ranting For Admission : 5.5
Critics Percentage For Admission : 38 %

Trailer For Admission

Admission
TagLine Admission Let someone in.
Review For Movie Admission
The many strands of this amiable yet overstuffed romantic comedy don't hang together, though each, on its own, has a modest charm.
Richard Brody-New Yorker

What is most distressing about Admission is that it serves as further evidence that Tina Fey, despite her dominance of the small screen, has not yet mastered the big one.
Christopher Orr-The Atlantic

This is certainly an interesting idea, though the movie is badly handicapped by Fey, who must venture beyond her usual snippiness into scenes of genuine poignancy and proves unequal to the task.
J. R. Jones-Chicago Reader

Granted, this is not automatic laugh-riot material, nor should it be, but didn't Fey recognize how hackneyed it all is?
Peter Rainer-Christian Science Monitor

If Fey ends up making movies as good as this one over the next few years, television's loss will have been cinema's gain, for real.
Glenn Kenny-MSN Movies

You'll be glad you enrolled.
Stephen Whitty-Newark Star-Ledger

What's a romantic comedy to do when it is neither romantic nor comedic? When that film is Admission, it plunges forward drunkenly, hoping to overcome its inadequacies with goodwill created by the cast.
Forrest Hartman-Reno Gazette-Journal

Overstays its welcome before petering out unremarkably.
Eric D. Snider-EricDSnider.com

An engaging cast holds our interest even when this rom-com meanders down unnecessary sideroads and dips into corny sentimentality.
Rich Cline-Shadows on the Wall

Princeton must have thought this film could help its reputation. It's more likely to increase applications to Yale, Harvard and MIT.
Philip French-Observer [UK]

Given two options, Admission routinely takes the less interesting of the two, and wastes a great deal of on-screen talent in the process.
Joe Cunningham-HeyUGuys

Have you ever wondered how the admission procedure functions in Ivy League universities? No, me neither.
Donald Clarke-Irish Times

There are chuckles and moving moments, just not enough of them.
David Aldridge-Radio Times

Intermittently sharp but often dully over-extended.
Derek Malcolm-This is London

We generally expect more wacky humour from Fey and Rudd than this comedy, which is packed with perhaps too-smart dialog and a lot of warm sentiment.
Rich Cline-Contactmusic.com

Romantic and family complications ensue but nothing especially memorable or purposeful. Or funny.
Henry Fitzherbert-Daily Express

It is ... perilously short on laughs, and the few that do come are generated by Lily Tomlin as the heroine's ferociously feminist mother.
Christopher Tookey-Daily Mail [UK]

Admission wants to win a place in our hearts, but after 108 minutes of relatively hard labour the majority of viewers probably won't let it in.
Graham Young-Birmingham Mail

The comic material really isn't there, and the plot transitions feel forced and uncomfortable ...
Peter Bradshaw-Guardian [UK]

The movie subverts expectations, and not in a good way, by seeming in a dither about its own identity.
Tim Robey-Daily Telegraph

This is comedy with zero pulse.
David Jenkins-Little White Lies

The tone is uneven, the central romance is unconvincing and it's disappointingly low on actual laughs.
Matthew Turner-ViewLondon

The themes are important, even if in this Hollywood laundering they are sloshed about in love suds and clattered by uneven comedy spins.
Nigel Andrews-Financial Times

A perfectly serviceable, star-led romance, Admission is also proof that some actors are just fun to watch in anything (which here extends to the supporting cast as well as the leads).
Rob Daniel-Sky Movies

The staggeringly unconvincing dynamic between the central characters not only leaves Fey and Rudd helpless, it ensures the whole movie is effectively rudderless.
Ben Rawson-Jones-Digital Spy

Admission is disappointing rather than disastrous but it's desperately lacking in spark and individuality.
Emma Simmonds-The List

Movie Images Admission
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Movie Overview For Admission

Straitlaced Princeton University admissions officer Portia Nathan (Tina Fey) is caught off-guard when she makes a recruiting visit to an alternative high school overseen by her former college classmate, the freewheeling John Pressman (Paul Rudd). Pressman has surmised that Jeremiah (Nat Wolff), his gifted yet very unconventional student, might well be the son that Portia secretly gave up for adoption many years ago. Soon, Portia finds herself bending the rules for Jeremiah, putting at risk the life she thought she always wanted -- but in the process finding her way to a surprising and exhilarating life and romance she never dreamed of having.

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TagLine Admission Let someone in.

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