Ann Hornaday
Select another critic »For 2,056 reviews, this critic has graded:
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49% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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49% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 0.7 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Ann Hornaday's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 66 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | The Tragedy of Macbeth | |
| Lowest review score: | Orphan | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,363 out of 2056
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Mixed: 375 out of 2056
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Negative: 318 out of 2056
2056
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Ann Hornaday
The Hangover Part II offers absolutely nothing new to fans of the first film. In fact, once the comfort of familiarity has worn off, they may well feel as baited-and-switched as the patrons of one of the sketchier clubs the boys visit.- Washington Post
- Posted May 25, 2011
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- Ann Hornaday
He (Herzog) emerged with a breathtaking tour of art that, in its formal sophistication, dynamism and rhythmic lines, looks as bold and new as Cezanne's work must have looked in the 1860s.- Washington Post
- Posted May 19, 2011
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- Ann Hornaday
A mesmerizing cinematic journey that is often as arduous and spare as the lives of its hard-bitten protagonists.- Washington Post
- Posted May 19, 2011
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- Ann Hornaday
On Stranger Tides feels as fresh and bracingly exhilarating as the day Jack Sparrow first swashed his buckle.- Washington Post
- Posted May 19, 2011
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- Ann Hornaday
Wiig has the natural beauty and self-deprecating expressiveness it takes to be a star comedienne; she spends much of Bridesmaids looking like a slightly girlier version of Lucinda Williams.- Washington Post
- Posted May 12, 2011
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- Ann Hornaday
In The Conspirator, Wright announces in no uncertain terms that she is back and more than ready for her close-up.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 14, 2011
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- Ann Hornaday
This is a movie that imbues even the hoariest quest-peril-life lesson tropes of family animated films and imbues them with new life and rhythm.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 14, 2011
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- Ann Hornaday
This meditation on violence explores the toxic knock-on effect of powerlessness and overcompensation, delivering a potent essay on the roots of society's most primal evils.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 7, 2011
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- Ann Hornaday
A taut, mostly well-crafted race against the clock that combines the time-loop conceit of "Groundhog Day" and the postwar paranoia of "The Manchurian Candidate."- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 31, 2011
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- Ann Hornaday
In spirit, and sheer joie de vivre, it's everything the movie business should aspire to. Win Win exemplifies movies the way they oughtta be.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 24, 2011
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- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 17, 2011
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- Ann Hornaday
While qualifying as the most gorgeously appointed and finely detailed version of the novel so far, still lacks the element of essential fire to make it come fully, even subversively, to life.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 17, 2011
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- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 10, 2011
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- Ann Hornaday
Telling an old story in a new way and infusing what might have been a dry political polemic with poetry, passion and unlikely warmth.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 3, 2011
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- Ann Hornaday
Depp possesses one of the finest speaking voices in the business - a nimble, mellifluous instrument that can go from sexy growl to fey warble in no seconds flat.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 3, 2011
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- Ann Hornaday
Equal parts playful, sophisticated and engrossing, The Adjustment Bureau is like the first songbird of spring, signaling that the winter of our collective brain-freeze is over and it's safe to go back to the multiplex.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 3, 2011
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- Ann Hornaday
Haphazardly conceived, phlegmatically paced, lazily filmed and punctuated with gratuitous moments of sexual and scatological slapstick.- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 25, 2011
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- Ann Hornaday
The weakest link in Unknown - okay, other than the utter preposterousness of its entire premise - is Jones, who as a modern-day version of Hitch's ice queens can't hold her own with the likes of Kim Novak, Grace Kelly and Eva Marie Saint.- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 17, 2011
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- Ann Hornaday
Like Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton before him, Helms plays a lamb trotting hopefully through the abattoir, blessedly unaware of the blades hanging just above his head.- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 11, 2011
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- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 11, 2011
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- Ann Hornaday
Another Year allows viewers to occupy both psychic spaces, nesting into the warm comforts of a long-lived-in home and then, on a dime, seeing it through the searching eyes of the marginalized figures that, over the course of 11 films, Leigh has so often championed.- Washington Post
- Posted Jan 22, 2011
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- Ann Hornaday
Writer-director Derek Cianfrance, who with Blue Valentine makes an astonishing debut.- Washington Post
- Posted Jan 6, 2011
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- Ann Hornaday
What on the surface seems to possess all the melodrama and photogenic suffering of a banal prime-time weepie instead becomes a lucid, tough, deeply sensitive examination of emotional fortitude.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 25, 2010
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- Ann Hornaday
It's the kind of movie that succeeds as a culmination of moments that ring true and sweet.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 23, 2010
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- Ann Hornaday
"Don't tell, show" has been the writer's imperative for generations; Coppola takes that edict to its most visual and satisfying extremes.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 23, 2010
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- Ann Hornaday
True Grit has sweep and scope and entertainment value to burn, but it's Mattie who invests even the grandest aesthetic elements with meaning.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 22, 2010
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- Ann Hornaday
If you think "Rocky" and "Raging Bull" define the alpha and omega of boxing movies, think again. David O. Russell's The Fighter proves there's still punch in the genre, especially when a filmmaker tells a familiar story in a brand-new way.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 17, 2010
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- Ann Hornaday
It's the kind of absorbing, attractive, unfailingly tasteful enterprise that a critic can recommend without caveat.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 16, 2010
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- Ann Hornaday
Due Date isn't pretty; in fact, it gets kind of ugly. But, at least in the eyes of certain beholders, therein lies its peculiar, bent beauty.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 15, 2010
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- Ann Hornaday
From the story itself to the way it's told, Unstoppable is a hymn to stylish, unpretentious competence.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 14, 2010
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- Ann Hornaday
A jagged little pill of a movie from baby boomer avatar Edward Zwick.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 13, 2010
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- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 9, 2010
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- Ann Hornaday
Burlesque delivers eyeful after eyeful of rapid-fire opulence and spectacle. But its most memorable sight is the indelible image of one star taking flight, and another triumphantly staying put.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 9, 2010
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- Ann Hornaday
At its heart, it's about the communities we forge - real and imagined - to save our own lives.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 9, 2010
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- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 9, 2010
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- Ann Hornaday
It's half of a really good movie, full of the enchantment, emotion and incident for which the Potter series has become so fanatically cherished.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 8, 2010
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- Ann Hornaday
A funny, affecting movie about growing up in the shadow of a formidable mom.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 7, 2010
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- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 6, 2010
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- Ann Hornaday
It plods along dutifully, with the occasional zigzag into contrivance, tidy coincidence and outright preposterousness.- Washington Post
- Posted Nov 18, 2010
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- Ann Hornaday
The kind of taut, serious adult drama Hollywood rarely produces anymore. Quality-starved audiences should flock to it, if only to ensure that more of them get made.- Washington Post
- Posted Nov 18, 2010
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- Ann Hornaday
Although Ralston's act of desperation is admittedly difficult to watch, viewers who might avoid the film out of squeamishness would be depriving themselves of one of the year's most exhilarating cinematic experiences.- Washington Post
- Posted Nov 11, 2010
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- Ann Hornaday
Client 9 doesn't make any excuses for Spitzer, who is interviewed extensively in the film and who wisely insists that he alone is responsible for his fate.- Washington Post
- Posted Nov 11, 2010
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- Ann Hornaday
Even Mary Tyler Moore's sunny but vulnerable Mary Richards or Tina Fey's Liz Lemon seem more fleshily real than Becky.- Washington Post
- Posted Nov 10, 2010
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- Ann Hornaday
Howl mixes a number of story lines and aesthetic approaches: We get glimpses of Ginsberg's early days as a poet, including his relationships with Kerouac and Neal Cassady, as well as a depiction of the trial, where a parade of critics and professors pronounced Ginsberg's creation either a work of genius or irredeemable filth.- Washington Post
- Posted Oct 28, 2010
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- Ann Hornaday
If you think you've absorbed all you could about subprime mortgages, credit default swaps and the arcana of elaborate derivatives, think again. Inside Job traces the history of the crisis and its implications with exceptional lucidity, rigor and righteous indignation.- Washington Post
- Posted Oct 21, 2010
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- Ann Hornaday
Say this about Stone: When it's good, it's very good. And this twisty, atmospheric drama is at its best when Edward Norton takes center screen as the title character.- Washington Post
- Posted Oct 20, 2010
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- Ann Hornaday
A wonderful thing to snuggle into, as full of heart and pep and innocence as the title character himself.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Pirouettes along a beguiling but treacherous line between horror and whimsy.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
May not achieve the transcendent heights of "Neil Young: Heart of Gold," but it has its own pleasures.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Even at its most troubling, Cyrus is powered by a deep vein of humanism, one that offers hope to even the weirdest among us.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
A grisly, often cynical piece of work whose joyless, aggressive spirit is made even less appealing by its soulless visual style.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
At once daring and hackneyed, absorbing and off-putting, a triumph of one sort and, more lastingly, a failure of another.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Has its share of surprises, especially in the performances of its two main players.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Elmo graciously shares the stage with a cast of players who will not only delight youngsters but will come as sweet relief to grown-ups.- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
Much of what's offensive and insufferable about All About Steve can be laid at the feet of screenwriter Kim Barker, best known for inflicting "License to Wed" on the world. Why do these people still earn obscene amounts of money churning out dreck? And why do stars like Bullock keep paying them?- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
They succeed in presenting a compelling series of dots, to use the current parlance, but they don't succeed in connecting them.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Late Marriage is a closely observed, somewhat funny, ultimately very sad movie.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
As vivid as many scenes are, there are just as many that seem taken directly out of the Cute Irish Movie notebook.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
If Fighting for Life is propaganda, it's the best kind, largely avoiding editorialization and instead focusing on simple human drama.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
An unobjectionable if uninspired updating of a classic family story for the minivan generation.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
9 Songs inadvertently proves just how limited experimentation for its own sake can be.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
It should be required viewing before going into a supermarket, McDonald's or your very own refrigerator.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Riveting, gracefully constructed film.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Anamaria Marinca delivers an utterly transfixing performance as Otilia, a young woman who helps a friend (Laura Vasiliu) obtain an illegal abortion in the waning days of Romania's communist Ceausescu regime.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Even the most forced, artificial episodes in Funny People ring oddly true, because George's life -- the obscene wealth, the loneliness, the fame -- is odd. Perhaps not since "Sunset Boulevard" have the wages and eccentricities of celebrity been depicted with such tough, almost perverse honesty.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
May be most valuable for its depiction of the strength of democratic ideals, even in the most precarious and contradictory of circumstances.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
The jittery, scattershot camerawork of Greengrass's longtime cinematographer, Barry Ackroyd, was used far more coherently in Kathryn Bigelow's Oscar-winning "The Hurt Locker," and the constant blurry close-ups of computer screens and street-level scrums lose their power with each successive cut.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
From its sepia-toned palette to the Motown hits that drive its terrific soundtrack, Glory Road is utterly authentic. But most astonishing is an unrecognizable Jon Voight as Adolph Rupp.- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Sloppy compendium of filthy jokes and lowbrow sight gags.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
While its themes of revenge, mutual resentment and grim fatalism offer little hope for a ready solutions, the movie itself testifies to the power of creative collaboration in finding common ground.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
As much as any earnest historical drama, Secret Ballot serves as an eloquent argument for civic life, showing its human elements to be no less flawed for being so necessary.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
A wonderfully complex character at the center of a gratifyingly satisfying yarn.- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
Brokeback Mountain possesses handsome and sympathetic lead players, magnificent scenery, heartbreaking melodrama, righteousness and cultural import. But as a testament to the importance of following one's passion, it's devoid of one crucial thing: passion.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Oropelled by memorable performances by mostly unknown actors. The most famous of the ensemble, Hanna Schygulla, delivers a by turns serene and shattering performance as a mother struggling with loss, conscience and the first glimmers of unexpected connection. She's only one essential and unforgettable part of a flawless whole.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Sylvia plays it safe, and in doing so it becomes little more than just another domestic melodrama devoid of life and, of all things, poetry.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Jack Frost can't possibly straddle its emotional shifts between morbidity and sheer nonsense. [11 Dec 1998]- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
The biggest sin of Sex and the City 2 is its lack of beauty. It's garish when it should be sumptuous, tacky when it should be luxe, wafer-thin when it should be whip-smart and sophisticated.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Might provide a much-needed fix for Mac's most ardent fans, but they'll have to wait for a star vehicle that fully exploits the range of his comic gifts.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Rarely has love at any age been depicted so honestly on screen. For such a fully realized portrait to be created by a 28-year-old first-time director is even more remarkable.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Read like a long, anguished prayer, but on screen it looks an awful lot like blasphemy.- Baltimore Sun
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- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
Hot Fuzz deploys the same mix of genre conventions, slapstick and old-school British humor that made "Shaun of the Dead" such a dumb-but-good romp.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Lasseter and his team plunge the audience into a collective case of empty- nest syndrome, with a dash of mortal terror thrown in for grins. And again, they make it work.- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Whether the entire production comes off as classy or cloying depends entirely on the viewer's mood.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Both lead players are appealing and attractive enough to make an otherwise tepid movie at least un-excruciating.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
If Mystic River is just a bit overplayed, a tad too highly pitched, it still resonates with grief and fury and feeling.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Stanley Kubrick's wicked sendup of the then-burgeoning military-industrial complex is still lacerating today. Which is better, George C. Scott's bull-like portrayal of Gen. Buck Turgidson ("Mr. President, I'm not saying we wouldn't get our hair mussed") or the Peter Sellers trifecta of Group Capt. Lionel Mandrake, Dr. Strangelove and President Merkin Muffley? You'll watch it and weep -- from laughter and maybe just a hint of despair. [13 June 2004, p.N03]- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Visually dazzling, epic in its sweep and deeply romantic in its sensibility, The House of Sand is one of those films whose images and ideas linger long after the lights come on, having been burned into the viewer's consciousness.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Let's get it out, loud and clear: Jerry Maguire is not a sports movie. It's a stealth chick movie, wrapped in a swaddling of jock stuff so that it gets through guy radar without setting off the missile defenses.- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
Just when you begin to think you know who the cat and mouse really are, in steps Viola Davis to steal not just her scene but the entire movie from Streep.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
A stunningly inert piece of cinema, a movie that basically boils down to serial shots of people talking to each other.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
High-grade cheese, the sort of highly pitched melodrama that in the 1950s would have been the stuff of a lurid, lavishly staged Douglas Sirk picture.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
It's at once too restrained and too perversely funny to have emanated from the play-it-big-but-play-it-safe sensibilities of Hollywood, U.S.A.- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Whether it's the sight of Reynolds squeezed painfully into a football uniform or the endless footballs-to-the-crotch and tired gay jokes, The Longest Yard has the feeling of mutton dressed as lamb.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
A carefully conceived and earnest movie that announces its many points just a bit too carefully and earnestly.- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
Even within what often looks like a self-indulgent exercise in humiliation, pain and gratuitous gore, there is no denying the moments of genuine and powerful feeling in The Passion of the Christ -- some of which, by the way, evoke Jesus's most profound teachings of Jewish principles.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
That rare movie that manages to be not only an adroit, carefully observed study in character and suspense, but important.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
It's popcorn pulp that collided -- at 100 mph, natch -- with a far more sober and crafty grown-up movie.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
The three leads deliver funny, convincing performances in a film that wears both youthful callowness and intellectual sophistication lightly. Mutual Appreciation is the kind of movie whose dialogue mostly hews to the rhythms of "like, you know, whatever" but then occasionally throws in a word such as "puissance." And, like, it totally works.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Aside from Lillard, the stand-out here is Cook, who plays a new breed of post-feminist Cinderella with a convincing mix of seriousness and vulnerability (although just once, it would be nice if Cinderella could keep her glasses on and still be beautiful). With her doe eyes and peaches-and-organic-yogurt complexion, Cook resembles a young Winona Ryder (if that's possible), right down to the appealing blend of sweetness and self-assurance. [29 Jan 1999: 1E]- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
Most of the humor in The Pink Panther derives from Martin's silly French accent, especially when he tries to pronounce the word "hamburger." But zat joke, she ees not funny. And The Pink Panther ees, how you say, ze real dog.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
A thoroughly absorbing, even transfixing, journey to a future that may already be upon us.- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
It's a sprawling experiment in philosophical time travel and metaphysical noodling. And it's an earnest, magnificent wreck.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Filled with so much heartbreaking beauty, Bringing Out the Dead might be best described as an artist's sketchbook, a series of tableaux and ideas that provide a telling glimpse of a director whose work is always evolving.- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
Exudes genuine appeal, thanks to director Kenny Ortega's brilliant choreography and a gifted cast.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
May not be "Fargo," but it nestles comfortably somewhere beneath that masterpiece and "Miller's Crossing," yet far above such forgettables as "The Ladykillers" and "Intolerable Cruelty."- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
The most controversial thriller of the year turns out to be about as exciting as watching your parents play Sudoku.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Kiarostami has been hailed as the premier humanist filmmaker at work in a larger Iranian cinematic renaissance, and all his formal signatures are on view here -- the small, intimate canvas, the loose, improvised air of the performances, the absence of an authoritarian directorial hand.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Like all good fairy tales, this outsize celebration of perseverance and moral triumph contains within it a deeper idea -- in this case, the relative nature of what we think we know, and what's worth knowing at all. No doubt Dickens himself would approve.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Goodbye Solo is visually simple and stunning, especially the haunting nightscapes of Solo's perambulations. But more important, Goodbye Solo is driven by deep feeling and sensitivity. Don't miss it.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
The new Karate Kid brings fresh life and perspective to the classic tale of perseverance and cross-generational friendship, thanks to Harald Zwart's sensitive direction and two exceptionally appealing stars.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Ultimately groans under the weight of its own quiet gorgeousness.- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
To watch Mr. & Mrs. Smith, which continually sacrifices its potential for sophisticated fun on the altar of style and physical stunts, is to realize how far we've come from the great movies of, say, George Cukor or Howard Hawks.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Bekmambetov handles these narrative bumps with ease, infusing even the hoariest -- and goriest -- of horror movie cliches with equal parts macabre fascination and jaunty humor. The film lives up to its hype with a style, swagger and substance that will appeal not just to the fanboys (and girls) but to their uninitiated friends as well.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Dworkin, having led viewers so deeply into her subjects' lives, resists coercing them into any pat conclusions. We're left to wonder about Love and Diane -– and root for them -– on our own.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
One of those cinematic curiosities that almost always fade quickly, but that will usually find a devoted cult audience once it hits that peculiar Elysian Field known as the aftermarket.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Shouldn't fool viewers into thinking it's anything but a pseudo-artsy piece of tripe.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Catherine Breillat's pretentious, meandering, self-indulgent portrait of a libidinously deprived young woman is nothing more than pornography tricked out as feminist parable.- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
Volckman and Miance are undoubtedly superb draftsmen; what they need is a writer of comparable skill.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Eat Pray Love finally settles into its own cinematic destiny as an attractive escapist love story, in which the romance is more with the I than with the guy.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
By presenting Avatar in 3-D, Cameron is staking his claim and building a fence around his own precious resource, making it unobtainable on any but his own terms to increasingly emboldened and technologically savvy natives.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Regardless of the cute little hats and clam-diggers she wears, it's impossible to believe Kidman as a breathless ingenue; that relentless drive and steely Kidmanesque determination keep jutting through the cotton in flinty, sharp-edged shards.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Bale and Jackman inject their reliable charisma into two otherwise very cold fish. Okay, I'll say it: If you see only one magic-at-the-turn-of-the-century movie this year, make it this one.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Builds slowly but passionately, not dancing to some Hollywood tune, but finding its characters where they are and letting them be who they are.- Baltimore Sun
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- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
A special place in purgatory must be reserved for John Leguizamo, who produced and stars in The Babysitters, a loathsome slice of exploitation at its most cynical and crass.- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Within this structurally baggy weepie, at least two perfectly good movies fight to break free, one a provocative legal thriller, the other a melodrama.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
A movie that sags and drags under the weight of poor pacing, execrable writing and largely unlikable characters.- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
It's all too zany and madcap and Woody Allen-redux to be remotely credible, but Ira & Abby turns out to be witty and winning, in large part because of its cast.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Has important things to tell viewers about global politics, and in an eerily resonant way.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Helped immensely by a lush and poignant musical score by Joe Hisaishi, Fireworks makes a quietly powerful impact. [22 May 1998]- Baltimore Sun
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- Washington Post
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- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
In reality, Eros is a letdown, a collection of bagatelles that, with one exception, fails to live up to its promise.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
The film would be insufferable if it weren't for the total sincerity and commitment of its players.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
A dog-frequency movie: enjoyable only to those tuned in to its particular register.- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
A boilerplate melodrama whose good guys and bad guys are so baldly drawn they could have been conceived by Friz Freleng.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
An inert, sloppily written melodrama as grim and featureless as its frozen Midwestern setting.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Epitomizes the kind of somber, aesthetically refined and morally engaged film that commands deep respect without inspiring much affection.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
A movie that, in the story of one man dying, shows us all how to live.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Grounded in the direct, disarming truth of their experience, the movie has a straightforward lack of cheap sentiment that saves it from being either too maudlin or saccharine-sweet.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
A riotous, rapturous explosion of sound and color, Black Orpheus is less about Orpheus's doomed love for Eurydice than about Camus's love for cinema at its most gestural and kinetic.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Although audiences will admire the film's do-it-yourself energy and commitment, Poster Boy finally collapses of its own contrived weight, deflating just when it should soar into madcap -- or at least thoughtful -- satire.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Packing a dizzying array of motives and tensions into his careful, densely layered round robin, LaBute orchestrates The Shape of Things like a suspense thriller, full of hidden agendas and emotional switchbacks.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Viewers are urged to grab an aisle seat, the better to dance when the music moves them -- as it surely will.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
At the movie's thoroughly expected conclusion, a visual joke has a bedraggled cat licking at the icing on a wedding cake, but it's really Melanie who gets to have it and eat it, too.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
An uninteresting take on a tired formula that is only occasionally funny and usually pretty gross.- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
Does a terrific job of capturing the outlaw energy of the original production.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
The net effect is one of frustration and will surely send Cohen compleatists back to their record collections for relief.- Washington Post
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- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
Falters when it falls into exploitation (Irena's flashbacks to scenes of depraved sexual torture) and fatal contrivance.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
A lyrical, mysterious and provocative meditation on the power of memory and narrative, After Life is a fascinating speculation on life and death -- until its plot takes a turn so melodramatic that the spell is broken. [20 Aug 1999, p.3E]- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
At once listless and overheated, giddy and utterly zipless, the current incarnation lacks not just the savoir-faire of its stylish predecessor but also the sex appeal.- Washington Post
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- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
If you're looking for some good family interspecies entertainment, take the little ones to see "Stuart Little 2" again; in the meantime, you might want to crawl into your cave and sleep through this one.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
In addition to being a study in great acting, this is a study in great directing.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
A true original, thanks to some memorable characters, an engaging story and a thrilling classical soundtrack.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Most important, the film has a terrific supporting character in St. Marie herself, portrayed by the real Canadian island of Harrington Harbour (pop. 300).- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
In a textbook example of the have-it-both-ways ethos of self-loathing narcissism, Carell has succeeded in creating a character of old-fashioned decency in a movie that otherwise flouts it at every turn.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
It has its own subversive power, as it elevates one family's struggle for working-class survival and valorizes a woman of simple faith and inner strength.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
He has a knack for creating vivid characters even in the briefest of vignettes in his live act, many of which are taken from his life, growing up poor in Greenbelt.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
There is undeniable power in Magnolia, in which small moments of truth are given epic gravitas, not just by Anderson's adroit cinematic style (no one's camera is more restless or inquisitive), but by the wisdom and compassion of the characters he creates.- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
The loudest, trashiest, stupidest, cheesiest celebration of ritualized male aggression of 2004.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Explodes in a burst of energy, musical chops and an eerie political prescience that makes it feel like something beamed from some past-is-future time warp.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Indeed, Scream is better than the average slasher film, as its advertisers insist. And, indeed, it is probably Wes Craven's best film, as they also insist. But that is a little like saying the pimple on the left side of your nose is "better" than the pimple on the right side.- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
A quietly resonant movie about the painful alliance between single mothers and their daughters, and the complicated drama of separation.- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
The news is good for Bridge to Terabithia fans. The beloved children's book has not just survived but thrived in its adaptation to the screen.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Morgen plunges viewers completely into the anarchic, exhilarating, finally ambiguous world of 1968 America; his final stroke of genius is his choice of music, which includes a breathtaking use of Eminem's "Mosh."- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
A soaring, sympathetic ode to the outlaws, subversives and insurgents who occupy the edges of popular culture, making them safe for everyone else's dreams.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Must-see viewing for anyone who thinks of Christmas as just a mall and its night visitors.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
This toxic, contemptuous, unforgivably unfunny bagatelle finds Allen at his most misanthropically one-note.- Washington Post
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- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
Like its predecessor, the movie is a joyous celebration of extravagant pulp and post-Soviet kitsch, joyously trafficking in gore, loud cars, ladies' stilettos and excess for its own sake.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
The result is a film exponentially more vivid and absorbing than the garden-variety rock-doc or biopic. "About a Son" is a must for anyone who still loves Cobain, or still has hope for cinematic portraiture.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Trudging nobly under a mantle of impeccably earnest intentions and a fussy, too-quaint-by-half production design, Honeydripper lags and drags to its utterly predictable end. There's not a spark of spontaneity or soul about it.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Sadly, the filmmakers haven't given viewers enough context or information about their protagonist to know whether he's utterly free or utterly unmoored -– or to care very much either way.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Reproducing every bruise, blowup and body-check and getting right up on the ice and into the fray, the movie brings the audience back to 1980 with bone-crunching verisimilitude.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Viewers anticipating side-splitting guffaws will be disappointed: Stuck on You is a strangely lackluster, flaccid string of fitfully humorous episodes.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
McQueen has taken the raw materials of filmmaking and committed an act of great art.- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Without a note of music or any other extraneous narrative device, Emitai plunges the viewer deep into the lives of the Diola, to the point where the subtitles translating the Diola and French languages are almost superfluous. [02 Feb 1998]- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
A candid, colorful and deeply meaningful sociocultural time capsule, one that captured the black community at the height of its political energy and optimism.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
One of the most eagerly awaited cinematic projects of 2006, which may be why it lands with such a curious thud.- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Siegel's depiction of the film's supporting characters too often borders on caricature. By the movie's strained, overheated climax, it's clear that Siegel, in his directing debut, is less interested in his protagonist as a character capable of transformation than as a human petri dish of futility and pathology.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Garca brings his finely calibrated sense of drama to the subject of adoption, which he handles with characteristic restraint and insight -- at least until the film's maudlin, too-pat finale. That sharp melodramatic turn is a shame, because so much of what has gone before in Mother and Child is of real quality.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
No matter how much fun it is to watch -- and for hard-core movie fans, it is often enormous fun -- there's a certain relief when it stops and we're popped back out to our banal, one-track lives.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Shot through with cheeky wit and hilarious musical numbers by the aforementioned slugs, Flushed Away features an eye-popping boat chase through London's watery nether regions, as well as the winning vocal talent of Kate Winslet, Bill Nighy and Ian McKellen, doing his best Sydney Greenstreet. Well done!- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Absorbing, funny, exhilaratingly entertaining ride through two years in the life of the most successful heavy metal band in history.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Invictus, which features outstanding performances from both its lead actors, succeeds wonderfully on its simplest level, as a portrait of political genius.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Schorr's endearing little movie gets under your skin much like the music it celebrates.- Washington Post
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- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
The story's more sober elements are regularly leavened by hip visual flourishes and even some quiet comedy.- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
As a tasteful take on a minor novel, Metroland is genteel enough, but it lacks the urgency and scope of a must-see movie. [07 May 1999]- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
Rarely have the dangers of drifting apart been given such a visceral and genuinely upsetting emotional wallop.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
An elegant romantic thriller adapted from a novel of the same name, is a terrific film.- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Hang in there and Despicable Me turns into an improbably heartwarming, not to mention visually delightful, diversion.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
If Slade doesn't necessarily advance the medium with this installment, he nonetheless advances the franchise, with enough lucidity and skill that he's persuaded at least one erstwhile agnostic to take a stand.- Washington Post
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- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
It's not meant to be scary. It's meant to be Disney -- a fun and warm children's fantasy.- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
The Fall is often an affectionate caricature itself, but one of astonishing beauty, featuring two heartfelt performances from Untaru and the tender, often mordantly funny Pace. They're perfect foils for Tarsem's gorgeous tone poem to cinema as a medium of magic and miracles, stories and lies.- Washington Post
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- Baltimore Sun
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- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Exhibits the weaknesses and the strengths of what has become a nearly foolproof formula for keeping viewers engaged.- Washington Post
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- Baltimore Sun
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- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
The conventional and the cliche are slam-dunked in favor of a fresh, authentic take on passion, ambition and coming of age.- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
Dans Paris will delight aficionados familiar with its myriad references, and there's no denying the appeal of Duris and Garrel. But once the source of the boys' primal wound is revealed, the whole enterprise comes to feel as mechanical as the Bon Marche window display that serves as one of the film's plot points.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Afghan Star goes much deeper, eloquently conveying the tensions, small victories and shattering setbacks of a fragile democracy struggling to regain a once-flourishing culture.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
The Road possesses undeniable sweep and a grim kind of grandeur, but it ultimately plays like a zombie movie with literary pretensions.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Coppola brilliantly conjures the young queen's insular world, in which she was both isolated and claustrophobically scrutinized.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
There're some low New York laughs in Swingers and some nice clothes if you like bad taste, but on the whole, I'd rather be in Philadelphia. At least they know how to make a sandwich in that town!- Baltimore Sun
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- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
The question is why the time, talent and treasure of such energetic and even gifted artists have been marshaled in such a disgusting and trivial genre exercise and what viewers are supposed to get out of it. Isn't life hard enough?- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Shot through with a bold, extravagant generosity of spirit, this journey behind the literal and figurative looking glass marks a gratifying return to form for Gilliam.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Grisly, stylish and often weirdly funny, Blood Simple is a reminder of how rarely an original artistic sensibility is announced to the world and how much better movies are when that sensibility is allowed to keep going its own way.- Baltimore Sun
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- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
Though Watt's emphasis on coincidence and fate seems strained at times, Look Both Ways is rich in dreamy summer atmosphere and deadpan wit.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
The movie has been made with consummate carelessness but with occasional moments of knowing humor.- Washington Post
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- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
There's too much slow-mo and too many music cues, but there's a low-key buzz to Wahlberg's scenes with Greg Kinnear.- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Creation is fatally weakened by an excess of pathos; in a Darwinian universe, it would be quickly swallowed up by a leaner, fitter movie.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Prove(s) once again how ingenious, artful and flat-out entertaining animation can be.- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
A movie suffused with a warm glow of nostalgia for times and music and movies gone by.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Surprisingly formulaic. So many scenes seem lifted from a 1950s melodrama, from Blake and Francis' repentent mother (Leslie Ann Warren) to the film's tearjerker of a final scene.- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
The fact that there's nothing wrong with it -- that there's nary a scenic detail or scrap of dialogue or performance that isn't utterly on the nose -- is precisely what's wrong with it.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Crackles right along, stopping only long enough for Scorsese's signature bursts of explosive violence. Those brawls feel a bit rote, but what's different here is a newfound playful humor.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
The result is a vivid portrait, not just of one unforgettable young man but also of a country in transition.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
An exquisite return to cinema at its most intimate, allusive and humanist. Without a firebomb, muscle-bound star or gunfight in sight, it explodes with the most fragile and combustible substance on earth: human nature.- Baltimore Sun
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- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
McDormand is the best thing about Laurel Canyon. She's also the most unfortunate victim of a film that seems unable or unwilling to give even its most intriguing and compulsively watchable character her due.- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
The film's flaws are nothing compared with the pleasures it offers, chiefly in its unapologetic pursuit of old-fashioned sweetness and romance.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
At once belabored and muddled movie, whose dreamy visual style and daring sexual material can't elide glaring inconsistencies in tone, plot and logic.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Quite simply, a beautiful film, in both form and content.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Most revelatory here is Malli, who defies the stereotype of submission and subservience and emerges as a woman of self-possession and substance. (The earthily beautiful Bat-Sheva Rand infuses the character with a generous dollop of her own zaftig sensuality.)- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
If I had to sum up Tristan & Isolde for a term paper, I'd say it's like "Braveheart" without the face paint, "Shrek," except the Lord Farquaad character is a sweetheart, and "Freaks and Geeks" because James Franco is so hot, even in Orlando Bloom-y ringlets.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
A vivid, poetic evocation of life in post-invasion Iraq that works both as impressionistic collage and candid portraiture.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Moormann deserves credit, not only for choosing a wonderful and deserving subject for a film, but for doing him proud.- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Despite Madagascar's formulaic tendencies, it's a formula that works, so parents are urged to sit back, relax and enjoy -- the kids surely will.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Deeply absorbing and moving with the caffeinated speed of Smith's own feisty campaign, Can Mr. Smith Get to Washington Anymore? is at once a celebration of small-d democracy and an elegy to it, a portrait that will surely inspire and infuriate viewers.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Why -- when there are so many funnier, smarter, more gifted performers who can't get arrested in Hollywood -- why, for the love of all that's good and holy, does Martin Lawrence get to keep making movies?- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Rich, sweet, densely layered and deeply satisfying. A film that might have been a dry exercise in earnest nonfiction filmmaking becomes a soaring, artistically complex testament to survival, character and hope.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
This is a movie that starts silly and just gets sillier -- at one point Candice Bergen shows up with a Buddhist monk -- but its laughs are sweet-natured, and Heaven knows the lead players earn every one.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
Possesses its share of modest laughs, many of them delivered by Ted Danson as Bridget's bemused husband. But director Callie Khouri (best known for writing "Thelma & Louise") doesn't bring the dash needed to make this a comic heist on a par with "Ocean's Eleven."- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
It feels like a retread of several better movies, with a nastier, more bitter edge.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
It's as if the book itself has been locked up and institutionalized, forced to conform to a system that all but obliterates its own unique personality.- Baltimore Sun
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- Ann Hornaday
An engrossing, well-crafted story of a grave injustice avenged, hitting all the right notes of sympathy, outrage and, finally, relief.- Washington Post
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- Ann Hornaday
An absorbing primer in one of the most fascinating chapters in American social history.- Washington Post
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- Washington Post
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