Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. Plot. Arthur Denning (Hopkins) is the owner of a major pharmaceutical firm. He is very controlling of his girlfriend Emily Hynes (Åkerman), and she is physically intimidated by his security guards. She is abducted, and Denning is sent photos of her bruised face. He is ordered to go to an art gallery with the ransom.

  3. Misconduct. Glenn Kenny February 05, 2016. Tweet. Now streaming on: Powered by JustWatch. “We tell ourselves stories in order to live,” Joan Didion once said. And yet, watching “Misconduct,” a twisty but exceptionally bone-headed—one might even say cretinous—legal thriller, sitting through its story hardly felt like “living.”.

  4. Feb 5, 2016 · Misconduct: Directed by Shintaro Shimosawa. With Josh Duhamel, Anthony Hopkins, Al Pacino, Alice Eve. When an ambitious young lawyer takes on a big case against a powerful and ruthless executive of a large pharmaceutical company, he soon finds himself involved in a case of blackmail and corruption.

    • (18K)
    • Crime, Drama, Mystery
    • Shintaro Shimosawa
    • 2016-02-05
  5. Synopsis. DArthur Denning (Hopkins) is the owner of a major pharmaceutical firm. He is very controlling of his girlfriend Emily Hynes (Åkerman), and she is physically intimidated by his security guards. She is abducted, and Denning is sent photos of her bruised face. He is ordered to go to an art gallery with the ransom.

  6. Feb 4, 2016 · By Stephen Holden. Feb. 4, 2016. On paper, it sounds juicy: “An ambitious lawyer (Josh Duhamel) finds himself caught in a power struggle between a corrupt pharmaceutical executive (Anthony Hopkins)...

    • Stephen Holden
    • Shintaro Shimosawa
  7. Feb 5, 2016 · An ambitious lawyer (Josh Duhamel) lands in hot water when he takes on a case against the corrupt executive (Anthony Hopkins) of a pharmaceutical company.

    • (27)
    • Mystery & Thriller, Drama
    • R
  8. Feb 5, 2016 · Feb 4, 2016 11:21pm PT. Film Review: ‘Misconduct’. A derivative but diverting thriller featuring relatively subdued turns by Anthony Hopkins and Al Pacino. By Joe Leydon. Courtesy of Lionsgate.

  1. People also search for