-
All our servers are currently overloaded. Please try again later or get our premium subscription.Get PremiumRefresh pageWe are currently experiencing technical difficulties with our servers. We hope to have this resolved soon. This issue doesn't affect premium users.Get PremiumWatch on MixDrop/MyStream
Dragonfly
TrailerWhen a loved one dies, are they gone forever? Dr. Joe Darrow (Kevin Costner) can answer that question. As a grieving doctor, Joe is being contacted by his late wife through his patients near death experiences.Actors: Kevin Costner, Susanna Thompson, Joe Morton, Ron Rifkin, Kathy Bates, Robert Bailey Jr., Jacob Smith, Jay Thomas, Lisa Banes, Matt Craven, Casey Biggs, ...»Director: Tom ShadyacCountry: United States, GermanyDuration: 104 minQuality: HDRelease: 2002IMDb: 6.10 CommentsSort By- Newest
- Oldest
-
Actors of "Dragonfly"
-
Characters of "Dragonfly"
Joe DarrowPlayed by: Kevin CostnerCharlie DickinsonPlayed by: Ron Rifkin -
Directors of "Dragonfly"
-
Creators of "Dragonfly"
-
Critic Reviews of "Dragonfly"
Chicago ReaderFebruary 26, 2007The undisputed king of the cornball concept, Kevin Costner has an uncanny aptitude for gravitating toward the dopiest projects in sight, but this time he's outdone himself.
Time OutJanuary 26, 2006The 'surprise' ending is as predictable as it is a long time coming.
L.A. WeeklyJanuary 20, 2003Despite the film's aspirations to soul healing, its uplift remains mechanical, like an escalator's.
Denver Rocky Mountain NewsAugust 09, 2002More dull than offensive, Dragonfly keeps Costner on screen for nearly every scene, which pretty much compounds the movie's boredom quotient.
Chicago TribuneJuly 20, 2002A sappy, often absurd disappointment.
New York ObserverMarch 13, 2002A numbingly pretentious project.
EmanuelLevy.ComAugust 17, 2011Preposterously plotted, highly sentimental supernatural thrillers
Common Sense MediaDecember 22, 2010Boring, phony and a complete waste of talent.
Film ThreatApril 14, 2007What Costner and everyone else is in constant danger of is spouting some awful dialogue.
Cincinnati EnquirerFebruary 11, 2005The screenplay credited to Brandon Camp, Mike Thompson and David Seltzer starts out with energy and substance, but reverts to time-filling repetition before it reaches the last-minute climax.
-
Gallery of "Dragonfly"