I finally saw this - liked it more than I thought. Very cool depiction of a scary Orwellian future. The story may have been a bit shaggy and I'm sure there are any number of plot holes to poke at, but Justin Timberlake and Amanda Seyfried made a good enough Bonnie & Clyde to hold my interest till the end. The way I can tell a really bad movie is when my mind starts wandering to plot hole poking before it's even over.
For instance, who was the rocket scientist who designed the arm doohickeys so that people could lose time unwillingly? Why not just design the system so that can't happen? Problem solved, movie averted!

Musta been the same designer who later went on to design holodecks so that the safeties can be turned off...
The way Cillian Murphy died was a bit of a headscratcher. If he's prone to getting so caught up in his work that he forgets about his clock, how has he survived 50 years in the job?
And why don't the Timekeepers have the equivalent of overdraft protection? When one of those guys is running low, their account is automatically and wirelessly topped off. Problem solved, movie averted part 2!
And the way the movie ended, uh...you can knock over all the banks you like, but you'll never get anywhere. How about hitting some maternity wards and preventing babies from being implanted with self-destruct mechanisms?
I guess I just don't really get what the film wants to say.
I thought it was one of the most politically unsubtle movies I've seen in a long time (part of the reason I liked it; mainstream Hollywood usually eschews controversy). Vincent Kartheiser and the rest of the capitalists piggies in New Greenwich are the 1%, gaming the system to keep the masses oppressed!
What I want to know is, how did this system ever get started? Did everyone get all the time they wanted for free at the beginning? Cause nobody in their right mind would sign up for the possibility of being 25 forever, at the cost of being run ragged after your 25 birthday trying to keep from croaking long before your natural lifespan was up.
Which brings me around to yet another plot hole, or maybe just an open question: the bad guy who said that everyone can't be allowed to live forever because it would overpopulate the world (even worse than it's overpopulated now) was right, of course. Which is a good reason why Justin & Amanda need to start hitting the maternity wards and resetting human beings the way they're supposed to be - old and wrinkly!
