All the Way (Blu-ray)
Politics is war.
Out of Print:
Future availability is unknown
on most orders of $75+
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Brand New
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Blu-ray Details
- Run Time: 2 hours, 12 minutes
- Encoding: Region A
- Released: September 6, 2016
- Originally Released: 2016
- Label: HBO Home Video
Performers, Cast and Crew:
Starring | Bryan Cranston & Anthony Mackie | |
Performer: | Bradley Whitford, Ray Wise, Melissa Leo, Stephen Root, Frank Langella, Ethan Phillips, Aisha Hinds, Toby Huss & Joe Morton | |
Directed by | Jay Roach | |
Edited by | Carol Littleton | |
Screenwriting by | Robert Schenkkan | |
Composition by | James Newton Howard | |
Produced by | Scott Ferguson & Jeffrey Richards | |
Director of Photography: | Jim Denault | |
Executive Production by | Bryan Cranston, Justin Falvey, Darryl Frank, Jay Roach, Robert Schenkkan & Steven Spielberg |
Entertainment Reviews:
Rating: 3/5 --
Strong performances and well defined characters help this film work. [Full review in Spanish]
Full Review
Cinema Movil
Rating: 4/5 --
Just as Johnson steamrolled opposition en route to a landslide 1964 election victory, so Cranston's charisma blew everyone else clean off screen. The actor also went "all the way" and it was absorbing to watch.
Full Review
Daily Telegraph (UK)
Rating: 4/4 --
Beneath the melodrama of the maneuvering for power, there are millions of ordinary human beings who depend on the right outcome.
Full Review
Salon.com
Much of the film's draw, and pleasures, stem from watching Bryan Cranston work the character (not to mention the prosthetic nose and ears).
Full Review
Los Angeles Times
Rating: 4.5/5 --
With a unique subject matter and a bit of creative license, Director Jay Roach (Trumbo) brings us a captivating story that both enrages us and draws us in simultaneously.
Full Review
FlickDirect
Rating: 2/5 --
The writing only takes the time to make LBJ into a fully fleshed-out, complex creature, while everyone else is judged simply by Roach and Schenkken's bland conception of moral codes.
Full Review
Collider
It's been a while since I saw a TV movie that had everything going for it, yet failed to be memorable. All the Way should have been a classic: electrifying, surprising, moving, artful. It's not.
Full Review
New York Magazine/Vulture