Dragonfly
When 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.
17 April 1950, Chicago, Illinois, USA
9 July 1955, Chagrin Falls, Ohio, USA
17 March 1963, Southern Colorado, USA
18 November 1969, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
27 January 1958, San Diego, California, USA
August 22, 1989 in Cincinnati, Ohio, USA
Philippines
20 April 1963, Queens, New York, USA
5 June 1977, Passaic, New Jersey, USA
10 November 1956, Port Colborne, Ontario, Canada
27 March 1978, Santa Clara County, California, USA
4 November 1970, Westminster, Maryland, USA
13 June 1958, Maracaibo, Venezuela
21 January 1990, Monrovia, California, USA
15 April 1959, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA
2 April 1945, Morristown, New Jersey, USA
4 November 1969, Sacramento, California, USA
18 August 1971, Michoacan, Mexico
November 20, 2008
Neither spooky nor otherworldly.January 26, 2006
The 'surprise' ending is as predictable as it is a long time coming.March 13, 2002
A numbingly pretentious project.April 14, 2007
What Costner and everyone else is in constant danger of is spouting some awful dialogue.August 17, 2011
Preposterously plotted, highly sentimental supernatural thrillersFebruary 26, 2007
The 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.January 20, 2003
Despite the film's aspirations to soul healing, its uplift remains mechanical, like an escalator's.December 22, 2010
Boring, phony and a complete waste of talent.February 11, 2005
The 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.July 20, 2002
A sappy, often absurd disappointment.December 30, 2006
Boy, does the final reel stink.August 09, 2002
More dull than offensive, Dragonfly keeps Costner on screen for nearly every scene, which pretty much compounds the movie's boredom quotient.