23 (1998) Poster

(1998)

User Reviews

Review this title
29 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
Apparently realistic, but a bit arid narration focusing on one side only
BeneCumb29 August 2016
Films dealing with real events in the past and focusing on a non-general subject should find a specific form or approach - for the sake of wider understanding and praise. In 23, the story begins auspiciously, but then the pace abates, and many scenes and characters have little meaning for the story development - or they have a role, but the viewers obtain no satisfactory clarification. The activities of law enforcement are almost not depicted at all. True, the leading performances are realistic and good (particularly August Diehl as Karl Koch), and the moods and style of the 80ies have been caught, but the run of events and the ending did not meet my expectations in full.

Well, this story has its interesting angles at present as most of people in the 1980ies had no PC or intranet, but it is not on the level of e.g. Who Am I – Kein System ist sicher, dealing with hackers as well.
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they're not after you.
Horst_In_Translation23 November 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Or so it says. The 1998 movie "23" centers on paranoia, hacking and government involvement. Even if the references related to the number are interesting, I'm not too fond of the title. They could have come up with something better here. What I am very much fond of though, is August Diehl's performance. He plays young German hacker Karl Koch whose death is as mysterious as his life to this day, a man who starts out as a true revolutionary, but finally becomes just a pawn in the hands of the mighty and powerful. And I was not the only one who was amazed by Diehl's portrayal. He had not acted in movies before, was in his early 20s, not even 23, when this film was made and won right away Best Lead Actor at the German Film Awards that year. This film was the cinematic birth of one of the finest German actors of the last 15 years. Because of his looks, many compare him to the young Christopher Walken and to this day that Diehl slowly approaches 40, you'll have a hard time to find another actor in the German-speaking parts of the world who's that gifted in portraying the abysses of the human soul (you could maybe make a case for Daniel Brühl in "Das weiße Rauschen"). He's starred in many German films since his breakthrough and also, here and there, in Hollywood. His turn in Tarantino's "Inglourious Basterds" was a real highlight and he showed tremendous screen presence that makes you regret he was in it only for so little time.

But Diehl is not the only impressive component: "23" was Hans-Christian Schmid's second film for the big screen and he was only in his early 30s at this point as well. Just like Diehl, Schmid made it to the top of his branch in the last 15 years. At least in Germany. The two reunited for Schmid's film "Distant Lights" a couple years later, but Diehl only had a supporting part there and I truly hope we'll soon get another Schmid/Diehl movie starring Diehl as a meaty lead character. Another actor I love is Burghart Klaußner, but his part here was just too small and insignificant to really make a difference. It's all about Diehl. Story-wise the film is fine, especially in those moments where the fine line between paranoia and actually being followed blurs. Another highlight are the many references to political events this movie includes (like the Palme murder).

It's a decent film. I wouldn't say it's one of my favorite German movies or best films I've seen from 1998, but for those interested in the (by now not so) new wave of German Cinema, it's truly worth a watch. Let me close this review by saying another thing I liked was the famous "Ton Steine Scherben"/Rio Reiser song used for the ending credits. It fit the tone of the film nicely and is just such a classic. Sometimes German films struggle with their choices of music, but this was a perfect pick.

Those three paragraphs were my review for this film from 23rd November 2013 and yesterday, 23rd November 2023, I rewatched this film on the big screen on the occasion of an event linked to the number 23 that brought many people working on this film together again: Schmid, his co-writer Gutmann, producer(s) and several actors such as Diehl, Busch, Landuris, Joswig, Klaußner and Tschörtner were there for the occasion. Really nice idea, something that should be done for more films and I think all the people on stage enjoyed it as well to see each other again and talk about the movie in front of a sold-out theater. Not a small one, so this shows you how much people appreciate some of the classics and it was not the film "Lola rennt" that was maybe the only reason why "23" did not win the big prize at the German Film Awards back then. Anyway, I will share some thoughts that I had while watching yesterday and first I must apologize for not mentioning Fabian Busch in my original review. He played his part well and turned a bit of a nothing character into something memorable. There is surely more to him than initially catches the eye, but pay attention to Karl's comment on one occasion how Busch's character is more talented than all of them together. As for Diehl who played Koch, I still liked his performance, even if I was not as enthusiastic about him last night as I was back in 2013. But Diehl's recognition value is undeniable. In any movie he's in. Glad to see he is having a strong career still and has worked with some great directors, even if I somehow hoped for him to maybe have an even bigger impact. But playing the lead in a Malick film is surely nothing too shabby. A bit surreal that now more time lies between the year 2023 and his Tarantino film than between "23" and said Tarantino film. Diehl is twice as old now as he was when he starred in "23", so he has been acting in films for more than half his life now. Back then, he was still a film student.

What can also be added about this movie here is that a lot of it is fictitious. Several characters are, but at the same time a great deal about Koch is close to what happened back then during his lifetime, even if he never burned any money. The fate of his parents is authentic, maybe not what he said towards his dad. Despite this, the first half of the film is a bit on the light side, mostly thanks to Landuris' character, even if this man also turns out pretty hostile towards the end. Pay attention to the scene in which Kremp's character knows his own method to open a door and how it is a bit foreshadowing to his aggressions and how much a threat he may pose. We see this in one of the final scenes when the characters meet again. To this day no one knows for sure what happened to Koch the day he died. No foul play still seems most likely, but with all the time passed now since May 1989, there will probably never be any news related to this death. This also means by the way that the film came out approximately a decade after the young man's death. He was about as young when he died as Diehl was when he portrayed him. Another depiction here that was not too far away from reality was Koch's worrying drug addiction sadly. This way the film almost felt like an anti-drug statement. Or anti-cocaine statement I should say maybe as it wasn't against marijuana or so and the people in it were smoking the latter as well. The ending came very abrupt. I mean Koch was now away from those who posed a threat to him, but if you did not know about the case, you probably would not have thought the character died all of a sudden in the end, so the ending was as mysterious as the real case at hand.

One thing I quite liked about the film was all the music: This does not only include the Ton Steine Scherben song I mentioned in the original review, actually a cover version by Freundeskreis, but both interpretations are good, but also for example the song from the train scene. Or a song about money that I had to look up afterwards. The Deep Purple number at the beginning is considered crucial by some, but did not leave a lasting impression on me, maybe because I don't have much of a connection with the band. I guess some will also remember the Iggy Pop classic included here. Another thing we must of course elaborate on is the concept of conspiracy theories that plays a vital role in this film. I actually liked that not all of what we see in here is just in Koch's head apparently, like we understand in the party scene that the landlord intervenes if something goes against his liking, so it makes no sense how he just doesn't care when Koch stops paying his rent. I thought so when Koch mentioned it and the confrontation scene in the street when the landlord only wants to get away from him was also very telling. Could very well be true that the government was spying on Koch, we even see the bug getting removed towards the end, so for once he was right. Maybe on other occasions too? It was maybe those moments when Diehl managed to shine the most. Another one was the meltdown scene with Landuris' character having the number 23 on his buttocks and it was so clear to us all in the audience that he was pranking or mocking the young man, but to Koch it was not. He was certainly a bit on the naïve side, but at the same time he just hoped to find somebody who would remotely understand him. His girlfriend (if we can call her that) didn't, actually her reaction to borrowing the book was a bit funny how she lacked enthusiasm entirely, and same is also true for Busch's character who was a loyal friend to Koch, but just not as deep in all that as Koch himself.

Finally, a fairly interesting inclusion here is the late Robert Anton Wilson who played himself as the man who through his writing planted many thoughts in Koch's head. This means that Wilson was not too opposed to the movie and did not see it as negative criticism, but maybe saw it in a way where it could perhaps even make him more known, at least in Germany. And not in a bad way. I would agree. Koch is never really depicted as evil and some other characters clearly are. He is mostly suffering. Look at the car glass scene The mention of replacing 7 days of 24 hours each by 6 days of 28 hours each was also interesting. Makes you think how the day/night schedule is determined by society. Or rather those running it. You cannot have a normal (what is normal?) job for example if your week has six days and those days are longer than 24 hours. Just like that you will find many interesting references. Look at Busch's character how he sits and what he holds in his hand and how he holds it when another character tells him and Koch to be quiet. There is way more than that, so from this perspective it is a good film for a rewatch. From the quality perspective, it maybe isn't. I was a bit hesitant here this time to keep up my original positive recommendation from a decade ago, but I will do so, even if it was a close call. I do think though that after two or three watches the chance here is very slim that I want to give it another go. Still nice that this 95-minute film is not forgotten.
5 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Very good movie - with very misleading ads
msz10 June 1999
An intriguing portrait of a young man drifting away from reality. And since that young man was a famous hacker with an unhealthy interest in conspiracies, the movie has got to be about conspiracies, right? Wrong. But that's exactly what the ads would like you to think. Very bad marketing for a very good movie. And beware: it can bring you to tears!! (Just thinking about that PDP in the rain makes me weep ... *sniff*)
9 out of 14 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
What is so scary about the number 23?
floyd-2718 September 2000
Conspiracy theorist alert! All conspiracy theorists need to see this movie. I wont mislead you all, it's not a conspiracy movie. It's a German cinematic variation of "The Falcon and the Snowman", based on actual events that took place in West Germany during the mid 80's.

It involves a young and rebellious radical, who happens to have a healthy appetite for conspiracy theories. Him and his good mate then turn to computer hacking as a means of fighting the war against nuclear power through out Europe.

As they get more involved people start offering them money to hack organisations for information (Including the KGB).... This is when things start becoming a bit awry!

Very thought provoking stuff, highly recommended!!!
19 out of 21 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
23
film_riot27 February 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Hans Christian Schmid's "23" presents a not too far away time, when it was possible, that some amateurs could break into the world's most important computer systems. And on of those hackers was Karl Koch, a young idealist with big interest in theories about a world conspiracy. Why did Karl Koch become as paranoid as he did? That's the question I asked myself after watching "23". Maybe it's for the better that the question doesn't get a clear answer, because there won't be one. It could be the seed of his father, who is unwilling to try to understand him and causes rebellion. Or maybe that Karl focuses strongly on the negative sides of our society, mostly of them he feels unable to change. The movie makes an exciting journey alongside Karl, showing us his good intentions and his naivety. This all becomes possible with the great acting of August Diehl and his co-stars Fabian Busch, Jan Gregor Kremp and Dieter Landuris.
4 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
great ..... worth to watch I promise
moritzbonn-18 January 2006
In Fact, there are quiet many German movies which have brought the evidence to establish themselves as classics. In general these movies are dramas or comedies and very often they provide the viewer with historical informations of a certain time and area. However, what is often missing is suspense. Allhough German television is full of good crime stories and thrillers this Genre is hardly found in German cinema.

At least this is one reason why I like this movie so much. 23 allows to enter the mind of a burnt out, intelligent but unloved son, who tried to break out of his boring life by rebelling against his dominant father and the establishment of the mid 80th. Where as his protest uses to be more like coming out of a group behavior which is based on ideals his intention during the movie changes completely and ends up in a computer spy environment heavily connected with a continuous downward development of his mental and physical condition.

In one sentence: This movie is one of those that shouldn't end because you want to know more about everything,the whole thing, so deep you will place yourself into the plot and you don't want to leave it. 23 changed my life. Afterwards, I had another opinion about reality.

Check it out yourself, I extremely recommend this movies
16 out of 20 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Not accurate, but fun
pbpbneatboy18 April 2017
23 is a 1998 German drama thriller film about a young hacker Karl Koch, who died on 23 May 1989, a presumed suicide. It was directed by Hans-Christian Schmid, who also participated in screen writing. The title derives from the protagonist's obsession with the number 23, a phenomenon often described as apophenia. Although the film was well received by critics and audiences, its accuracy has been vocally disputed by some witnesses to the real-life events on which it was based. Schmid subsequently co-authored a book that tells the story of the making of 23 and also details the differences between the movie and the actual events.
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
I felt 15 years younger
latzin.kram6 December 1999
I watched this movie because some articles made me curious ... the film is very thrilling and full of sophisticated humor. i felt 15 years younger, it was like leafing through a diary. I was born in 1964 so the time of Karl Koch's youth was the time of my youth, too. I have, however, never been a hacker. I think it was the first scene: Karl Koch takes his key and walks to his car, "accompanied" by "Child In Time". From that beginning I was in the film and I loved it. I also love "mathematic tricks" and "mathematic obsessions", just like Karl Koch. If the Americans would have made this film there would have been a love story and maybe also a happy-end. 23 is a great European film.
25 out of 35 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Interesting mix of German late sixties' politics, conspiracy theories and electronic pirating.
x-rain17 August 2005
The premise of this film is that late teen hacker Karl Koch, rebelling against his conservative(step)father and concerned with the complex conspiracy theories laid out in the novel "Illuminati", gets drawn in by two dodgy dealers that convince him that, as all info should be available to everybody, it would be absolutely consequential to conduct computer-espionage for the Sowiet Union. Accompanied by his friend David, this enterprise develops into a drugged and paranoid trip. In my opinion, the film renders quite a nice picture of what must have been the atmosphere during this period in German history, at the same time allowing a look back at early hacking. Conspiracy theory, though, is given the heaviest stress, in combination with the two youths getting carried away by the sheer excitement of their 'revolutionary' activities - and noses full of coke. Admittedly, it seems hardly believable this would be based on a true story. One of the reviews featured here, though, accused the actors of being to 'theatrical'. Although they might not perform on an academy-award-winning level, I rather thought everybody was acting pretty fairly.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Important history and intense acting
samlix3 November 2019
Acting on the highest levels. Best german movie have ever seen.
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
trainspotting?
aw-623 April 1999
Saw this at our local film festival. Feels very heavily influenced in terms of style and presentation by Britain's Trainspotting - the main protagonist haircut, cachetic physique, overdose scenes, etc. Still, the lead can give Ewan McGregor a run for his money in the acting department. Of course, the story is completely different from Trainspotting.

Well constructed and developed story. One can feel the main character's escalating paranoid and eventual loss of control as circumstances and events got too big for him to handle. Was there really such a character in real life? Poor chap.
2 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
It's indeed a great movie
Warlock2117 December 2004
I think this is a great movie. It's focus is on the *person* Karl Koch, how he became the character he was in the end, and definitely not another "Hacker"-like movie or a story about the so-called "KGB-Hack" and how his group was finally busted. What makes this movie different from e.g. X-Files is that it is realistic; everyone can easily reconstruct how Karl Koch came to believe in the conspiracy-theories based on the "Illuminatus"-books - A believe that was increasingly strengthened by his ever increasing cocaine addiction. This is also a movie about friendship, false friends, and how friendship and trust are sacrificed to money and addiction.
8 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
interesting idea but kind of arid performance
gufi-044294 January 2019
Warning: Spoilers
The acting game was on a good level and the obsession with Illuminati that the main character Karl had was something original. And he was an interesting figure with his addiction and etc. But after some time, his characteristics can't keep the viewer's attention and the movie becomes kind of plain and dull. Some scenes were boring and some moments - monotone. I can't say there was many intriguing things during the movie so I wouldn't watch it a second time.
1 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Interesting concept, but flawed structure
info-7313 March 2002
This film is very interesting as for its premise and its concept, but then unfortunately falls apart in the third act. It would have been more thrilling if there had been a real conspiracy against the hero. If there is something that German filmmakers can learn from Americans is that once a promising and intriguing premise for a thriller is set up the film will remain a thriller until the end and not steer into a relatively harmless pseudo-psychological drama.
4 out of 16 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Very German AND at times really funny
manuel-pestalozzi22 July 2003
Warning: Spoilers
23 is an admirable piece of work. The cast is good. So is the script. It basically tells the story of Western Germany in the 1980ies. The main character embodies the hysteria which was at that time rampant in the Federal Republic. It was fashionable to say "I'm afraid" (of nuclear warheads, of nuclear power, of the repeatedly predicted imminent ecological holocaust, of American president Ronald Reagan etc. etc.). An anti Western neurosis was widespread. All this (and the 80ies editions of German weekly Der Spiegel) come to mind while watching 23.

The main character, Karl Koch, is a high-strung, intelligent youth without a family (some sort of modern time "Young Werther") who is obsessed with personal computers and a weird science fiction story in which a world wide conspiracy of "Illuminates" is described. The figure 23 is the secret code of the conspirers. Together with a friend Karl Koch decides to somehow "counterbalance" the threat by using their computer skills to deliver information to the Eastern Bloc. (Apparently the story is based on true facts, the young man and his friend did enter computer systems of nuclear power stations, military installations etc. and they did deliver information to an intelligence agency in East Berlin). Their contact asks for more and more specified information and pays them in hard cash. The money is mainly used to finance their cocaine habit. So Karl Koch's life spirals downward, he is guilt ridden and ever more close to acute persecution mania. When the 80ies are over and the Iron Curtain is lifted, it is over with Karl Koch. He pays a heavy price for his obsessions.

Tragic as the overall story is, there are quite a few really funny scenes. A fine sense of humor prevails throughout the story. The two idealistic middle class youths gang up with two lowlifes, petty criminals who tell them they can establish contacts with the Eastern Bloc (which they actually do). The two unequal pairs truly are a motley crowd and there are gross misunderstandings as well as a true feeling of brotherhood during the cocaine parties. The most hilarious incident: Karl Koch and his friend have hardware problems. Their small "Atari" aggregate can't cope any more. So they go to a "garage sale" in a nuclear power station and buy a huge old computer. They have it delivered under a tarpaulin by a small truck to their elegant 19th century apartment house in fashionable downtown Frankfurt. Their lowlife friend, also a computer freak, joins them in the street in front of the apartment house. He looks at the truck and its cargo in gaping disbelief and quickly gets into a flying tantrum. You need heavy current for this! he cries out. Well, we'll get heavy current, then, says Karl Koch, slowly loosing his self assuredness. And you need a whole cooling unit if you don't want to fry it all, shrieks the lowlife. The next scene you see heavy rain coming down in the apartment house‘s backyard. The expensive piece of junk stands there like a ghost, in the mud.
23 out of 30 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
7/10
cosmin74200011 October 2021
A movie with a goood ideea , but not inspired from real facts , or better say the facts presend in movie like taking place in 1986 were in reality happend in 1989. In 1986 there are 5000 PC'S IN AL THE WORLD., in 1989 the number increase at 100000..WWW network appears in 1991.
0 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
I gave it a "9"
Seamus-1014 January 1999
"23" is one of the best german movies for a long time. It is based on the story of the life of Karl Koch (August Diehl: excellent) who was one of the best hackers of his time. 23 is the number of the Illuminators, the members of a worldwide secret society in the book "Illuminatus" by Robert Anton Wilson (who has a short guest appearance). On his high point of hacking Koch broke into the computers of US government arms control and delivered the data to the KGB. The film is a trip back to the 80's: The cold war, Olof Palme's assassination, Gadhaffi and Tschernobyl - most of the viewers will remember those things which dominated policy and influenced the all day life. The film shows the development of Karl Koch from his teenage years to his death as a person destroyed by his cocaine abuse and the extreme pressure he experienced in the wheels of eatern/western policy. This is a very good movie with very good actors-don't miss it!
5 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Best german movie for a long time
Seamus-1021 January 1999
"23" is one of the best german movies for a long time. It is based on the story of the life of Karl Koch (August Diehl: excellent) who was one of the best hackers of his time. 23 is the number of the Illuminators, the members of a worldwide secret society in the book "Illuminatus" by Robert Anton Wilson (who has a short guest appearance). On his high point of hacking Koch broke into the computers of US government arms control and delivered the data to the KGB. The film is a trip back to the 80's: The cold war, Olof Palme's assassination, Gadhaffi and Tschernobyl - most of the viewers will remember those things which dominated policy and influenced the all day life. The film shows the development of Karl Koch from his teenage years to his death as a person destroyed by his cocaine abuse and the extreme pressure he experienced in the wheels of eatern/western policy. This is a very good movie with very good actors-don't miss it!
8 out of 13 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Excellent
imdb-3192 August 2000
This is one very dragging along piece of film. It clearly reconstructs the youth of Hagbard, a young German hacker in the eighties. This film reminds me of so much of my own youth, and August Diehl's (Karl Koch) acting is perfect, that me and my wife now had to see it for the third time.

Read Clifford Stoll's book "The Cockoo's Egg. Inside the World of Computer Espionage" to see the movie from the American view. You will understand some scenes better, for example where the number salad comes from on the computer screen in the phone booth.
6 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Extraordinary!
A-N-N-A27 March 1999
I really liked "Lola rennt", but I loved "23". The plot is fascinating, the music is great, the cast is gorgeous. While telling the story, the movie takes you back into the 80s. August Diehl as Karl Koch does an outstanding performance. After watching "23", you'll ask yourself if there is really an international conspiracy going on. Nearly every time you hear or see this number, you'll think "What if it was true?". A must see. 10 points.
6 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
This hacker is just a traitor of his country
helyukh12 March 2023
Hacker have chosen russian side. Using and loving American computers and American internet while hating America... Clever?? This is the result of a century long russian propaganda in Germany. Sad. Very sad. In fact he betrayed his country by giving sensitive information to russians. Drug addiction was not the reason. Reason was propaganda and stupidity. I wonder why so many approving comments here. Also it's not making you a real hacker by using just bruteforce and phishing - almost every ordinary people can do this. I would recommend to watch movies about real hackers instead like "Takedown, 2000", "Hacker, 2016", "Who Am I, 2014".
0 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Hacking History
laurenta11 March 2004
A well researched accurate but still fast-paced movie.

This movie is of some significance to the history of computer hacking. Karl Koch may have been the loonie the movie presents, and I'm not sure he invented the concept of a Trojan, but the depiction of BBS/hacking/phreaking in the late eighties is nice and nostalgic.

The acting really works, very believable. Also reminiscent of cold war madness and fears. The "illuminatus" aspect is a bit of a sideshow, maybe true to what really happened, but it's not so certain. Who knows what really went on between these crazy Germans?...
7 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Excellent
Syad9 February 1999
A fascinating movie. Wonderful story, camera and directing. And one of the most excellent casts I ever saw in any kind of movie. Great work!
7 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
There is no truth to find - only irritation
zero-2314 March 1999
For many viewers this film was spoilt by advertising, that showed a movie full of spying, hacking and big mysteries.

Yes. Big mysteries.

Left is one. How does a pretty smart guy lose contact to the "Reality", whatever that is meant? It is good, that this movie only had a low budget, that makes it possible to recognize the smallest change in acting.

Simple plot, overwhelming acting, financial flop, just a terrific film.

Thumbs up and 10 points
5 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Awesome.
Morn-324 January 1999
What an awesome year the German movie scene has been having! And "23" was part of it... definitely one of the coolest (yet most serious) German movies in the last couple of years. While it still sacrifices some realism for the sake of suspense, it's probably one of the most realistic "hacker movies" ever made. I grew up with the same computing stuff Karl Koch uses in the movie, so I loved it. Yay!
5 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
An error has occured. Please try again.

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed