A.O. Scott
Select another critic »For 2,141 reviews, this critic has graded:
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50% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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48% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 0.1 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
A.O. Scott's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 65 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Crime + Punishment | |
| Lowest review score: | Blended | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,187 out of 2141
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Mixed: 735 out of 2141
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Negative: 219 out of 2141
2141
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- A.O. Scott
And yet something vital here works. There are, come to think of it, a lot of little things.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The movie's comic heart consists of a series of indescribably loopy, elaborately conceived happenings that are at once rigorous and chaotic, idiotic and brilliant.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The picture, which fails to achieve its ambitions or to fulfill our expectations, is ultimately worse than a violent piece of hack work, in which the director isn't interested in displaying his integrity -- or taste. You'd be better off downloading the trailer: a much more convincing piece of storytelling.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The movie turns into a cobweb of tricky spins and twists that seems like a hip-hop version of "Ruthless People."- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
It feels willed, aggressive and unconvincing -- clammy rather than cool -- in a way that suggests artistic frustration rather than discovery. The water shortage may be a metaphor for the director’s creative desiccation, which his admirers can only hope is temporary.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Backstage isn't as good as the rap documentaries "Rhyme and Reason" and "The Show," but it still casts a keen, observant eye...on this world.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Pallid compared with the flaming id of television's "Will and Grace," the happy swizzle stick Jack, who's all appetites. When series television is more entertaining than a series of short independent films, that's something to worry about.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Mr. Reiner and Mr. Kudlow may not quite merit full-metal glory, but they don't deserve oblivion either, and Anvil! The Story of Anvil makes both a case and a place for their band.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The film, not unsurprisingly for a holiday- (and football-) season release from a major Hollywood studio, plays this story straight down the middle, shedding nuance and complication in favor of maximum uplift.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The lampooning is sometimes funny and occasionally offers up a tidbit of small truth. But much of it is awfully familiar.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Sensitive, modest, thrillingly self-assured first feature by So Yong Kim, was one of the standouts of the 2006 Sundance Film Festival -- exactly the kind of thoughtful, independent work one hopes to find there and too rarely does.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The Orphanage, a diverting, overwrought ghost story from Spain, relies on basic and durable horror movie techniques.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
There are worse things than loutish, laddish cool, and as a series of poses and stunts, Sherlock Holmes is intermittently diverting.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
When Suddenly finds its soul in the last half-hour, the title begins to make a lovely sort of sense.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Like a half-empty glass of Coke that's been sitting out for a couple of days; sure, it looks like cola, but one sip tells you exactly what's missing.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The curious thing about The Visitor is that even as it goes more or less where you think it will, it still manages to surprise you along the way.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Manages to be fairly entertaining in that exhausting, rackety, late-summer-kiddie-movie way.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
From 300 hours of material, Mr. Longley has created a collage of images, sounds and characters, an intimate, partial portrait of an unraveling nation -- a portrait that gains power partly by virtue of its incompleteness.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The obsessive crosshatching of allusion, spoof and homage that gives Grindhouse its texture is the product of a highly refined generational sensibility.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Mongol -- or, as I prefer to think of it, "Genghis Khan: The Early Years" -- is a big, ponderous epic, its beautifully composed landscape shots punctuated by thundering hooves and bloody, slow-motion battle sequences.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
In trying to make "Othello" more lifelike and bring it down to a younger audience -- in effect, to make it more democratic -- the adaptation has rendered the material artless.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The movie is staged like a pit stop -- Reindeer Games goes from being fun to being laughable.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The thicket of relationships that the director, Hiner Saleem, has created and weaves his cast and camera through is so invitingly hotblooded and crowded with hilariously melodramatic incident that the snowbanks are not nearly as forbidding as they initially seem.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The problem with the baroque and overripe Tattoo Bar is that everybody has a past. And there's so much crosscutting to those pasts in flashbacks, it's hard to keep track of whose past you're witnessing.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Few people other than future airline passengers should be subjected to such misery.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
A Christmas Carol -- I mean the source material, without a corporate possessive attached to it -- remains among the most moving works of holiday literature, and Mr. Zemeckis has remained true to its finest sentiments. He is an innovator, but his traditionalism is what makes this movie work.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
A bit of a puzzle. This is a good thing, since most movies plop down in easily recognizable categories and stay there, troubling neither their own intellectual inertia nor that of the audience.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Serves up its scattershot plots as if they were lined up on a menu, moving from appetizer to entree: there are more intrigues here than in the court of the Medicis.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
I hesitate, given the early date and the project's modesty, to call Into Great Silence one of the best films of the year. I prefer to think of it as the antidote to all of the others.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The real flaw is that the movie's best features -- the aching clarity of its central performances -- threaten to be lost in a wilderness of metaphor and mystification.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
It is intermittently engrossing, though a little overextended for the deadpan approach that Mr. Bitomsky uses.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
May not be perfect, but it honors its source and captures the key elements -- the humor and good sense, as well as the sheer narrative exuberance -- that have made White’s book a classic.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Once you have seen a sheep munching on a bloody human leg, you may think twice about your next leg of lamb. On the other hand maybe you'll be inspired to seek vengeance. To provoke one of these responses -- vegetarianism or a defiant meat eating -- may be the point of this odd, amusing film.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
It's in the small touches that this movie comes alive, and it's rare that directors can pull off this kind of thing.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
It is a heartbreaking film, and cruelty sometimes seems to be not only its subject but its method. Like the child on a high cliff that is one of its recurring images, the film walks up to the edge of hopelessness and pauses there, waiting to see what happens next.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The trouble with movies like those in the "Friday" series is that their success can lead to a need to inflate their importance, inviting pretentious descriptions like "folkloric" when "Friday" is much closer to chitlin circuit comedy.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The entertainment formula behind this short and nasty movie - devised according to someone's idea of what teenage boys with the guile, the facial hair or the "guardian" to gain admission to an R-rated movie are likely to enjoy - is sloppy and simple.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
It is a reasonably skillful exercise in genre and style, a well-made vessel containing nothing in particular, though some of its features - European setting, slow pacing, full-frontal female nudity - are more evocative of the art house than of the multiplex.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The film falls far short of its goals, but it is a classic of sorts. It belongs in that Blockbuster on Mount Olympus, where pristine new copies of "I Changed My Sex," "Dracula's Dog," "Blackenstein" and "Battlefield Earth" play constantly.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
It's a mirror and a portrait, and a movie as necessary and nourishing as your next meal.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The humor is coarse and occasionally funny. The archly bombastic score, by Edward Sheamur, is the only thing you might call witty. But happily, Jennifer Coolidge and Fred Willard show up, as the White Bitch and Aslo the Lion, to add some easy, demented class.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Does a thoughtful job of streamlining the bloody realities -- both literal and psychological -- of China's Cultural Revolution into roughly two hours of film.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The mildly xenophobic humor includes one of the few inventive mime insults seen in a movie; Eurotrip may be stupid, but it's not dumb.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
This breathless demi-noir has so much bounce that we barely get any time to mull over the gaping holes in its moth-eaten plot. It is competent but extremely slight.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Dour and bleak, yet this melodrama -- which doesn't amount to much of anything -- may stick with you.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Mr. Shyamalan may be the only mainstream director hankering for success with a need to understate; he is like Shaq without the tattoos. The result is a mastery of craft that may leave some hungry for more.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
While impressively made, this impassive and cold feature fails, in a spectacular fashion, to deliver the thrills.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
It works in so many ways except for the script, which sounds laughable. And sadly, when Lost and Delirious trips over its own two feet, it is laughable. It needs to follow Paulie's advice and rage more.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Nearly every melodramatic impulse has been suppressed in favor of a calm precision that serves both to intensify and delay the emotional impact of the film’s climactic disclosures.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
An often watchable, though goofy and lurid, blast of a costume drama set in the late 15th century.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
This bloated spectacle has all the get-up-and-go of one of the legendary late-era Elvis Presley concerts. The picture feels longer than Presley's career and as irrelevant as he was by the end.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
A dreary crash of malapropisms and slapstick maimings wrapped very loosely around a murder mystery.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The movie wants desperately to function as a romantic tragedy, with passions glancing off the thoughtless pursuit of satisfaction. But Vatel can't really define the differences between the two; it settles into a period funk, as shallow as the court popinjays it seeks to expose.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Brazenly self-confident in its refusal to pander to the imagined sensitivity of its audience. In this it differs notably from Albert Brooks's "Looking for Comedy in the Muslim World," which approached some of the same topics with misplaced thoughtfulness and tact.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Our judgments, in any case, may be superfluous, since the director, Mathieu Kassovitz, has already publicly described it as "pure violence and stupidity."- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Not especially good, but there is enough rough artistry in Mr. O’Connor’s direction to make you wish the film were better.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
It's one of the rare films for which a blooper reel would be redundant.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The art is lacking, but the material is remarkable enough to make up for pedestrian filmmaking.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Reign Over Me uses the rhythms and moods of comedy to explore, and also to contain, overpowering feelings of loss, anger and hurt. And like that earlier movie ("The Upside of Anger"), this one is maddeningly uneven.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
It's an interesting, maddening mess -- not a terrible movie, and by no means a dull one.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
This film, Mr. Caetano's feature-length directorial debut, has an emotional integrity that's concise and direct.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Probably the worst thing you can say about Hollywood Ending is that it has one: it turns out that Mr. Allen wasn't being ironic after all, he just made a comedy that feels ironclad.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The blossoming of her ambition, as much as her love life, drives the story forward, and turns Coco Before Chanel into a costume drama worthy of the name.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Mr. Herzog’s film is a pulpy, glorious mess. Its maniacal unpredictability is such a blast that it reminds you just how tidy and dull most crime thrillers are these days.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The only people who could be surprised at this movie will be those who wandered into the wrong multiplex theater by mistake.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
October Country feels at once personal and objective, a fascinating hybrid of two important tendencies in the modern documentary.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
A mellow dream of a movie that's an acquired taste. It's attractive because of the oblique way that Mr. Wenders ambles through a murder mystery that's stronger on characterization than on plot.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Relax, the staging of the action sequences is as viciously elegant as you've been primed to expect, though there is a dispiriting more-of-the-same aspect to the picture.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The Exploding Girl can also make you feel bad about wishing that she were just a little more interesting.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Plays like something picked up at a vintage store; you can see all the greasy fingerprints from those who have handled it before.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The picture has a daring attention-span deficit and an epic silliness that can be awesomely entertaining.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
It's an oddity that will be avoided by millions of people, this new Pinocchio. Osama bin Laden could attend a showing in Times Square and be confident of remaining hidden.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
There are no simple answers or obvious conclusions to be gleaned from this movie, which, like its soundtrack, is both sad and vibrant, meandering and formally sure-footed. It is an exciting debut, and a film that, without exaggeration or false modesty, finds interest and feeling in the world just as it is.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The movie's advertising tagline ("Starsky & Hutch — they're the Man") needs to be amended. The film belongs, completely and utterly, to Snoop Dogg.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
When the biggest compliment you can pay a picture is that it is professional and not smug, there's a little something missing, like invention.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The characters and situations are interesting enough, and the filmmaking is sufficiently skilled to provide a measure of reasonably thoughtful entertainment.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
World on a Wire, while too slow and diffuse to count as a lost masterpiece, is valuable in expanding our sense of what Fassbinder could do and is also a source of much visual and intellectual pleasure in its own right.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Guilty of behaving like a petty thievery corporation; it steals from so many other sources that we're forced to realize that it has little of its own to offer. As such, it can't help but fail to meet expectations, given the talents involved.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Nimble and self-assured as Mr. Daniels’s direction may be, he could not make you believe in “Precious” unless you were able to believe in Precious herself. You will.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
This movie incites curiosity tinged with confusion and irritation. It bristles with interesting ideas — about friendship and freakishness, honesty and anger — and intriguing characters, all of which may blossom in later episodes.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
A memoir, a history lesson, a combat picture, a piece of investigative journalism and an altogether amazing film.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Mr. Block has put his parents’ life, and his own, into this film with such warmth and candor that it may take more than one viewing to recognize it as a work of art.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The screenplay, by John Brancato and Michael Ferris, tosses out a few chewy bits of B-movie wit, most of them supplied by Mr. Jones, who expresses the ambivalence of an African-American visiting the motherland through a series of bitter jokes.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Lacks more than subtext: it barely has text. At times, the picture seems to have been edited with a blowtorch. But it gets the job done efficiently and swiftly.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The filmmakers know how potent the material is, and they don't hammer away at the obvious.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Perhaps the directors are under the delusion that the dodging and leaping can make up for an ending that leaves the cast members of "Killer" adrift and nearly scratching their heads in puzzlement.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
There's more to everyone here than we're initially led to think. The Good Girl is like a neurotically charged post-millennial take on the trailer-park comedies that Jonathan Demme once claimed for himself.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The brilliance of Stuff and Dough is that it wraps this powerful, disturbing drama in an anecdote from ordinary life. As is often the case in recent Romanian movies, the acting is so accomplished as to be invisible.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
There is a grungy high spirit during the first third of this film, but then it dissipates like a mist from an aerosol can.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Seems to just drift to a close rather than pronounce an end. This can be a result of wrestling with a daunting subject and not being up to its demands.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
After watching the fascinating and compelling new documentary Lost in La Mancha, you may forever wonder how it is that movies are made at all.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Modest in scope, but it feels complete, fully inhabited, in a way that more overtly ambitious movies rarely do.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Will Finn and Tess find the treasure before the bad guys? Will they put aside their differences and rekindle their love? Yes to both questions! I haven’t spoiled anything, by the way. But perhaps I’ve saved you some trouble.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Though Mr. Noé; displays prodigious filmmaking technique, his punk-operatic meditation on life, love, anger and -- most important -- guilt is superficially inventive, but singularly adolescent.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Both refreshing and confusing, the film equivalent of an ice cream headache.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Not that Cairo, Nest of Spies is meant to be a thriller, but even as a self-consciously anachronistic knockabout farce it rarely rises to the level of wit, either verbal or physical.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
In spite of its sometimes tiresome, sometimes amusing lewdness, follows a gee-whiz romantic-comedy formula that would not be out of place on the Disney Channel.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
In spite of its modest scale, tactful manner and potentially dowdy subject matter, is packed nearly to bursting with rich meaning and deep implication.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The storytelling and the visual style are rarely more than workmanlike, and the big scenes arrive punctually and are played with minimal nuance.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Not everything that happens in Fighting entirely makes sense -- it’s a fable, after all, and a fable doesn't necessarily have to -- but it breathes with a rough, exuberant realism that you rarely see in movies of its kind.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The stripped-down narrative is almost an apology for the ludicrous story -- but it's just not enough of one.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Does it have to be so witless, so stupid, so openly contemptuous of the very audience it’s supposed to be pandering to?- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The performances give the movie more flavor and life than the situation does; it often feels like prechewed Bubble Yum.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Half a movie at best. The broad humor at times derails Mr. Murphy's performances, but the movie provides a vehicle for him to display his reach.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
In the end Babel, like that tower in the book of Genesis, is a grand wreck, an incomplete monument to its own limitless ambition. But it is there, on the landscape, a startling and imposing reality. It's a folly, and also, perversely, a wonder.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Silent Waters is several different movies, and most of them feel negligible and meandering, until the film finally packs a wallop.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The law of diminishing returns is enforced so stringently that the movie succeeds not only in negating its own comedy, but its very being.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
I don't think Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang is an altogether bad movie. It's just a movie with no particular reason for existing, a flashy, trifling throwaway whose surface cleverness masks a self-infatuated credulity.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Has the advantage of being an unusually good superhero picture. Or at least -- since it certainly has its problems -- a superhero movie that's good in unusual ways.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Except for the access the director, David Teboul, had to Mr. Saint Laurent's inner circle, "Times" wouldn't be out of place on A&E.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Almost creates a sense of dread as you sit watching its raft of aimless, self-absorbed neurotics clang into one another.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
So what kind of a movie is Crash? A frustrating movie: full of heart and devoid of life; crudely manipulative when it tries hardest to be subtle; and profoundly complacent in spite of its intention to unsettle and disturb.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
So beautifully realized as a mood piece that it takes a while for a slight disappointment to register.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
A Viagra suppository for compulsive action fetishists and a movie that may not only be dumb in itself, but also the cause of dumbness in others.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
When it clicks, the picture should shock you into laughter -- enough to make you wish it were better and applaud its efforts anyway.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
It is for the most part a jumpy, suspenseful caper, full of narrow escapes, improbable reversals and complicated intrigue. But it has a sinister, shadowy undertow, an intimation of dread that lingers after Irving's game is up.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The problem with We Own the Night is that it mistakes sentiment for profundity, and takes its ideas about character and fate more seriously than it takes its characters and their particular fates. “I feel light as a feather,” Bobby says in a crucial scene, at which point the movie starts to sink like a stone.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
After a while the humorless solemnity of The Rocket stifles any interesting sense of Maurice Richard as a character. The hockey sequences are nicely done, though, and give a reasonably good sense of what a great player he was.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
More of a hoot than any picture dealing with the bloody, protracted fight between the Soviet Army and the Afghan mujahedeen has any right to be.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Volver, full of surprises and reversals, unfolds with breathtaking ease and self-confidence. It is in some ways a smaller, simpler film than either "Talk to Her" or "Bad Education," choosing to tell its story without flashbacks or intricate parallel plots, but it is no less the work of a master.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
May be simple, but it's also simple-minded; this is, after all, a movie determined to transform its Rebel soldier heroes into men of the people, making it as neglectful of politics as last summer's "Patriot," which evaded that nasty issue of slavery during the America Revolution.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The movie is smart in small ways, yet an underachiever in big ones -- but it will probably play very well on television. On the big screen, it's distended and diffuse.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Dan in Real Life is neither wildly farcical nor mockingly cruel, but rather, for the most part, winningly gentle and observant.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Mr. Leconte gives this meeting of opposites in Claude Klotz's script a lovely, sportive élan, instead of making it register as lumpy, obvious polemics.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Who would have expected Ms. Zellweger --- and Miramax -- to come through in a musical? And it's one of the few Christmas entertainments to run under two hours. Who couldn't love that?- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Not for the faint of heart, the movie is unsettling and startlingly true to life. At least that’s how it seemed to me. To the minors I happened to be accompanying, it seemed to be reasonably good fun.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
In spite of its raw, explicit moments, the film is at heart a sturdy morality tale about innocence and corruption, wealth and want, sex and power.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Mr. Goode shows all the charisma of a stalk of boiled asparagus molded into the likeness of Jeremy Irons.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
About as threatening as the real-life insect the apparition resembles; its large, mossy wings may scare some people, but the bug can only damage your woolens. The movie flirts with more damage than it can actually cause.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
You can have a perfectly nice time watching this spirited adaptation of the popular stage musical and, once the hangover wears off, acknowledge just how bad it is.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The sophistication of the stylized minimalism here in Infernal Affairs is dazzling.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
It is all perfectly dreadful and at times appallingly funny. Mr. Solondz winds thin tendrils of narrative around the dinner-table conversations, and allows everyone a chance to be earnestly foolish, unguardedly selfish and also, almost by accident, cruelly honest.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
It's been a long time since a commercially oriented film with the scale of "King" ended with such an enduring and heartbreaking coda.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
It is startling that a three-hour film dealing largely with the history of the Middle East should find no time to mention either the Israeli-Palestinian conflict or the role of oil in the region. And it is more than a little unsatisfying to see the complex history of American conservatism reduced to the dreams and schemes of a handful of intellectuals.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Raises expectations that it has no real inclination to fulfill. The movie's best bits would stand alone nicely on YouTube, or on Funnyordie.com, the comic video boutique of which Mr. McKay is an owner and where he sometimes dabbles in short-form hilarity.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The most indolent waste of screen time since Andy Warhol's marathon shot of the Empire State Building.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Does it sound as if I hate this movie? Don't be silly. But don't be fooled. This movie does not like you.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Because of the movie's wonderful shamelessness, its mordantly funny chills and fights are huge turn-ons. A B picture in love with the zest of its comic-book origins, it embodies that medium's pulse-pounding spiritedness and silliness.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Thankfully, Mr. Grimaldi and the screenwriters have no great lessons to impart or messages to deliver, and the film, while uneven -- sometimes too on the nose, sometimes anecdotal and diffuse -- is generally absorbing, thanks mostly to the quality of the acting.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The filmmakers’ evident affection for the book expresses itself as a desperate scramble to include as much of it as possible, which leaves the movie feeling both overcrowded and thin.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Best and most touching when it shows how willing punk is to eat its young.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Although it is briskly directed and enjoyably stylized, the film is shallow -- but empty.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The extent of the need around the world is so enormous and overwhelming that the efforts of the doctors in this sobering film seem both vitally necessary and woefully inadequate.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Sembène is a far more adroit and elegant storyteller than many may be accustomed to seeing.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Though it is modest, almost anecdotal, in scale, 12:08 East of Bucharest is also characterized by a precise and sneaky formal wit.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
It is a deeply personal piece of art that never descends into the confessional or the therapeutic, and a work of social and literary criticism that never lectures or hectors, but rather, with melancholy, tenderness and wit, manages to sing.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
This dumb, only intermittently (though sometimes even intentionally) funny sequel presumes that since almost everything else from the 1980's has come back, why not the cynosures of the "Nightmare on Elm Street" and "Friday the 13th" movies?- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
An action movie, a basic training movie, a swaggering sea adventure, a home front melodrama and an inspiring tough-love heroic teacher fable. If the aggregate of all these movies is exhausting and occasionally overwrought, some of the parts are stirring and effective, though not exactly fresh.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
This movie, without being particularly good, is nonetheless far less hysterical than "Da Vinci."- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
For his sins poor Stewart is kidnapped, tortured and shot up with horse tranquilizer after his leg is broken. It’s disturbing, and somewhat baffling too, until you grasp that this hapless sucker is a surrogate for the audience.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Manages to squeeze in several different endings — like a bad pop song that doesn't know when to fade out. But as Mr. Schwarzenegger's stature as an action figure diminishes, his effort to retain a piece of the market is touching.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
A kind of murder mystery, but eventually the only victim is the audience's interest -- the picture is uncompromising and inauspicious.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Yet there is so little characterization that when the sub goes down, you may find yourself confused as to which of the supporting cast members lived through the torpedo blast.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Even though it is sometimes dull and generally thin, there is something winning about the movie's genial lack of ambition.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The time does pass agreeably enough, and if Cairo Time does not amount to much, it does evoke a wistful state of feeling and a complicated city with enough skill and sensitivity that you wish it had dared more.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
In its sweet, lackadaisical way, Michel Gondry’s Be Kind Rewind illuminates the pleasures and paradoxes of movie love.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
If the extremity of Hallam's temperament tests the limits of our sympathy as well as our credulity, Mr. Bell's ability to seem by turns sweet and scary prevents us from losing interest entirely.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The pieces of New York, I Love You make up a parallel city that no one would want to live in, much less visit.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
What makes Leap Year so singularly dispiriting is precisely that it is bad without distinction -- so witless, charmless and unimaginative that it can be described as a movie only in a strictly technical sense.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Good pulp depends, above all, on a ruthless sense of economy, and Three Monkeys is just a bit too profligate, too fancy, to be entirely convincing.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
This Lady Chatterley, winner of five César awards in France, feels bracingly fresh, vital and modern.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Lebanon is meticulous, nearly clinical in its attention to what happens in war -- specifically what happened in the first days of the Israeli invasion of Lebanon in 1982 -- but it is also a palpably and intensely personal film.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The much too long, primitively plotted family action adventure Hidalgo, directed by Joe Johnston, has a handful of well-handled sequences but, given the young audience the film is intended for, the picture may be like having to finish an entire pot of broccoli to get a couple of jelly beans for dessert.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Might be described as an epic landscape film, a sweetly comic coming-of-age story or a lyrical work of social realism. But the setting -- a windswept, sparely populated steppe in southern Kazakhstan -- gives the movie a mood that sometimes feels closer to that of science fiction.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
In spite of its limited perspective on Vietnam, its churning, term-paperish exploration of Conrad and the near incoherence of its ending, (it) is a great movie. It grows richer and stranger with each viewing, and the restoration of scenes left in the cutting room two decades ago has only added to its sublimity.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Mr. Lawrence and Mr. Allen, who have never aspired very far beyond their affable television-comedy personas, are easier to watch than Mr. Travolta or Mr. Macy, who both undertake what can only be called acting. This is more than the picture deserves, but then again, so is Ray Liotta, as the chieftain of the bad bikers, and so is Ms. Tomei.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The movie itself is a nonstop barrage -- somewhere between a riot and an orgy -- of crude, obnoxious gags and riffs. If you are a connoisseur of sexual, scatological or just plain stupid humor, you will find your appetite satisfied, even glutted.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
So minimally plotted that not only does it lack subtext or context, but it also may be the world's first movie without even a text.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
It swerves from thriller to romantic comedy to farce without much conviction, though you can occasionally salvage a glimmer of amusing possibility. Mr. Williams scores with a few throwaway jokes.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Sweet Sixteen shows that he's (Loach) as capable of anger as his protagonist and just as eager to draw attention to an unchanging problem: the blight of generational poverty.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Don’t be fooled. The Brave One, though well cast and smoothly directed, is just as crude and ugly as you want it to be.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The resultant mix of dreaminess, violence and politics is a bit unwieldy, but it sticks to your ribs. You'll savor pieces of Duck, You Sucker in your head much later: the mark of a work by a true voluptuary, the overspill in whose craft comes as much from enthusiasm as arrogance.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Originally intended as a cable television series, Middle Men bears some telltale scars of hasty, clumsy truncation. Still, there is a raffish vigor that makes the movie watchable despite all-over-the-map storytelling and a fuzzy, superficial grasp of the salient themes.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
In its modest scope and mellow tone, 35 Shots of Rum resembles Olivier Assayas’s "Summer Hours," another recent film by a French director who has sometimes trafficked in provocation and extremity. Both movies embed extraordinary thematic richness within a simple, almost anecdotal narrative framework, and both achieve a rare eloquence about the state of the world by means of tact and reticence.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
If in hindsight An Education might make you a little queasy, it is hard to resist, like David himself.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
This competently made picture seems a rehash, and not a terribly interesting one. What's remarkable about it is how unremarkable it is.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The lack of narrative sophistication allows an Ecstasy-like disposition to set in; "Liberty" becomes goo-goo eyed over itself. It lacks the discipline to define Anna sufficiently; rather, it portrays her as either a lovable naïf or a spoiled narcissist in desperate need of a lesson.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The most transcendently, eye-poppingly, call-your-friend-ranting-in-the-middle-of-the-night-just-to-go-over-it-one-more-time crazily awful motion pictures ever made.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Edge of Darkness is reasonably well executed, but its competence reeks of fatigue. Another dead kid. Another angry dad. Another day at the office.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
There are few concert movies that were filmed were such abiding feeling and respect. It's of a potent vintage that goes down deceptively smoother with age.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Every effort to expand the range of feature-length animation beyond the confines of cautious family fare is to be welcomed, and budding techno and fantasy geeks are likely to be intrigued and enthralled.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
A valuable and intelligent introduction and tribute to their anarchic, uncompromising and absolutely peculiar genius.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
If only the story were leaner and more nimble -- but then again this is a Ridley Scott film, so you go in expecting bombast and bloat in the service of leaden themes.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The movie doesn't turn out to be as benignly right-wing as it initially suggests, though the plot turns can be spotted a mile away.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
A clumsy and confused adaptation of Michael Chabon's 1988 novel.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
What makes Le Amiche so bracing -- so sad and, sometimes, so funny -- is that its heroines are fallible, flawed, vain and powerful, each in her own way. They often make one another miserable, but their company is always a pleasure.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
With its pointed narrative, the film makes its case with a minimum of pushiness and a subtle nod to its crowd.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The history presented in The Wind That Shakes the Barley hardly feels like a closed book or a museum display. It is as alive and as troubling as anything on the evening news, though far more thoughtful and beautiful.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Mr. Tsai's films are held together internally, and connected one to another, by an elusive, insistent logic that is easier to recognize than to describe. But once you do start to recognize it, each new movie offers passage to an exotic place that feels, uncannily, like home.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
A sizzling, artistic crackerjack and a model of its genre, pegged on a harassed man's moral decision, laced with firm characterizations and tingling detail and finally attaining an incredibly colorful crescendo of microscopic police sleuthing.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The dazzling, high-flying silliness is quite an achievement. The movie is better than it deserves to be, given its origins: a ride at Disneyland and Disney World.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
You won't come out unaffected, because the depths of intimacy that the Mexican director Alejandro González Iñárritu plumbs here are so rarely touched by filmmakers that 21 Grams is tantamount to the discovery of a new country.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Thornton's performance is lost in a film that is more of a schematic success than a dramatic one.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The picture itself is about, yes, cycles, and as tiresome as that sounds, 10 minutes into the film you'll be white-knuckled and unable to look away.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Mr. Law doesn't disgrace himself here, though he doesn't have much to do, and the director, Po Chih Leong, is deft at creating atmosphere, but it's an atmosphere we've all seen before.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Soderbergh rallies a seismic jolt of enthusiasm, and the movie is an elating blaze of flair and pride.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
When it's over, the realization of how much the movie means to you really sinks in; you can't get it out of your heart.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The directors Andrew Rossi and Kate Novack may not be great filmmakers -- it's hard to tell, based on this bare-bones picture -- but they know a great story, and more important, how to tell it.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Can't redeem the moves toward its predictable happy ending. But the movie has a protagonist who has a great time getting there.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Meet the Robinsons is surely one of the worst theatrically released animated features issued under the Disney label in quite some time.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
For a film full of murder, jealousy and fatalism, Snow Angels feels curiously small and anecdotal, and its impact diminishes as it nears its terrible conclusion.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
A comforting, sentimental tale of a kind that would be insufferably maudlin if made in Hollywood and unbearably affectless if it showed up at Sundance. Somehow it’s easier to take in French.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Its formal novelty aside, Redacted rarely hits the audience with a genuine shock or a clarifying insight. It churns through a set of ideas and emotions that are confusing and unpleasant, to be sure, but also, by now, dispiritingly familiar.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
As the director, Anne Fletcher, methodically cuts back and forth between two weddings, she makes the reasonably insightful, moderately funny point that modern American weddings, however they may strain for individuality and specialness, are all pretty much alike. The problem is that much the same could be said about modern American romantic comedies.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Gives a remarkably thorough and detailed account of the difficult conditions facing American soldiers in Iraq.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Something not seen in movie theaters for a long time: an intelligent, modern screwball comedy, a minor classic on the order of competent, fast-talking curve balls about deception and greed like Mitchell Leisen's "Easy Living" and Billy Wilder's "Major and the Minor."- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
As well done as it is, Wonderland feels predictable. There is no sad turn in these characters' lives that you cannot see coming about an hour before.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Not a great film, mainly because it can't transcend -- and, indeed, lays bare -- the intellectual flimsiness of its source. But it is, nonetheless, full of examples of what good filmmaking looks like. For all its chin-rubbing, brow-furrowing attitudes, it does not, in the end, give you much to think about. But there is, nonetheless, a lot here to see.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Mixing pop savvy with startling formal ambition, Mr. Mann transforms what is essentially a long, fairly predictable cop-show episode into a dazzling (and sometimes daft) Wagnerian spectacle.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
A lively minor addendum to the grand tradition of Italian fraternal cinema.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The modestly assembled Love Object... is only periodically derailed by its tone; Mr. Parigi sometimes overplays the humor in the midst of all the deadpan.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
He (Lenny) is completely appalling, and also completely himself, a kind of mad, disturbing integrity that is both matched and mitigated by the honesty of this lovely, hair-raising film.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
A playful parlor trick, a departure from the performance-art films that have made this director's reputation. In keeping with his lighter side, *Corpus is also fun; imagine a Looney Tunes segment or an episode of Nickelodeon's "Kablam!" directed by Red Grooms.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Its frank good humor stands in sharp contrast with the strange combination of timidity and exploitiveness of more widely distributed recent teenage comedies.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
It's more of a mash note than a formal documentary, and there's nothing wrong with that.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
What gives the movie its power is that even the most innocuous scenes in the boys' lives are shadowed by dread.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
What saves Breaking and Entering from foundering altogether in earnest self-regard is Mr. Minghella's evident affection for London, a city of inexhaustible architectural and human variety.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Pootie Tang may be raw and slovenly -- hey, it often is raw and slovenly -- but it succeeds as a laugh getter because of the spot-on satirical notes. You might say that the movie walks it like it talks it; I'm not sure what Pootie would say.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The reckoning with the past, which has occupied West German society since the 1960s, has been painful and divisive, which makes the calm, empirical spirit of this film all the more impressive.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
A sharp, small-scale comedy of male misbehavior that turns out to be one of this dreary spring’s pleasant cinematic surprises.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
In the hands of a more literal-minded filmmaker The Tracey Fragments might well have been dreary and unbearable, a chronicle of florid self-pity justified by arbitrary cruelty. Instead it is fierce, enigmatic and affecting.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
If a movie of this kind didn't traffic in overstatement, it wouldn't be doing its job, which is to provide a strong dose of simple, rousing emotion.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Its bone-deep willingness to do anything to entertain is exhausting.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
The Counterfeiters is a swift and suspenseful thriller, and perhaps a little too entertaining for its own good.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Takes all the Christmas season's bad vibes and converts them into an achingly funny and corrupt dark comedy.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
A curious, somewhat ungainly movie. But it is also rich and fascinating. At times you think you are watching a clumsy stage pageant superimposed on a documentary; it’s so stiff, and yet at the same time so real.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Even the handful of moments that are amusing feel recycled from old sketches of Mr. Murphy's.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
An instant classic, a comedy that captures the sexual confusion and moral ambivalence of our moment without straining, pandering or preaching.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
While she (Lopes-Curval) portrays the brittleness of their lives with lovely splashes of generosity, the lack of condescension doesn't change the fact that there's not much drama to be found in those very limitations; her characters don't do much beyond getting on one another's nerves.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Some of this is affecting, some of it tedious, and the film's inconsistencies of tone are made more glaring by its peculiar look.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Getting an audience so caught up is no small feat; it is a tribute to the directors' storytelling.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Not exactly uproarious. But Mr. Murphy, going back at least to his Gumby and Buckwheat days on "Saturday Night Live," has always had the ability to turn broad caricature into something stranger and more inventive.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Mr. Lin makes the anxious grasping of these kids for some kind of emotional turf -- their own need to shatter the stereotypes that bind them -- the heart of Better Luck Tomorrow, a scenario that keeps the movie's blood racing.- The New York Times
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- A.O. Scott
Mr. Soderbergh once again offers a master class in filmmaking. As history, though, Che is finally not epic but romance. It takes great care to be true to the factual record, but it is, nonetheless, a fairy tale.- The New York Times
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