Hurrying to attend the court to attend the judge’s words on his case to gather his sons and former wife in a house he buys, Gavin, a Wall Street lawyer wrongly hits the car of a man that recovers alcoholism recently, the thing turns upside down his life.
A thrilling ride but also a thoughtful one, it's a movie that does manage to do more good than bad by the end of the day.
Sacramento News & Review
August 07, 2008
Themes about corporate ethics, greed, corruption and our vulnerability in the face of determined evil have a Falling Down finality that is weakened by unconvincing character arcs.
Common Sense Media
December 22, 2010
Emotionally violent thriller for mature teens.
Time Out
February 09, 2006
A slickly shot, intelligent thriller, it's buoyed up by an exceptional performance from Jackson, who brings crumpled dignity and pathos to his habitual loser.
The ending is guaranteed to aggravate any self-respecting New York driver.
Cinema em Cena
February 01, 2010
Evitando o maniqueísmo, o roteiro cria dois personagens complexos e ambíguos ao mesmo tempo que recheia a narrativa com diálogos bem construídos e instigantes.
L.A. Weekly
June 01, 2002
The two stars? They're exactly right.
New York Observer
April 25, 2002
In addition to gluing you to the edge of your seat, Changing Lanes is also a film of freshness, imagination and insight.
"Changing Lanes" asks how far we'd go not to lose what's ours, but it's a morality play with hope for détente rather than any destructive force. Gavin and Doyle are two severely flawed men whose best intentions are knocked about by their worst impulses.