Chuck Wilson
Select another critic »For 456 reviews, this critic has graded:
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54% higher than the average critic
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4% same as the average critic
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42% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 11 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Chuck Wilson's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 55 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | A Quiet Place | |
| Lowest review score: | Bless the Child | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 159 out of 456
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Mixed: 219 out of 456
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Negative: 78 out of 456
456
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Chuck Wilson
As Above, So Below is sometimes creepy but mostly silly, which is too bad because the film's cramped subterranean setting is inherently unnerving.- Village Voice
- Posted Sep 2, 2014
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- Village Voice
- Posted Mar 11, 2014
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- Chuck Wilson
Feast isn't the least bit artful, but it is gleefully gruesome, which may be all one can ask of a no-budget monster movie.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
This film looks so good, thanks to some impressive production work (nice rainstorm) as well as Andrew Huebscher's vibrant cinematography, that one wonders, as one dull scene after another rolls by, why director Andrew Putschoegl - and co-writers Large and Kyle Kramer - didn't lavish half as much attention on the script.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Filmed in Iceland, Beowulf & Grendel is beautiful, grungy and a little too tasteful for its own good. You can practically feel the filmmakers yearning to have Beowulf and Grendel go all Rambo on each other.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
In the 17-million-copy land of "Twilight," the calling card isn't blood and fangs, but the exquisite, shimmering quiver of unconsummated first love. By that measure, the movie version gives really good swoon.- Village Voice
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- Chuck Wilson
Imagine I'm Beautiful is a thematically ambitious character study trapped inside the limiting strictures of a crazy-roommate thriller.- Village Voice
- Posted Oct 16, 2014
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- Chuck Wilson
Diaz and Collette are believable as sisters, but their performances rarely surprise -- in a more interesting movie world, they'd have switched roles.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
The best news here is Adrienne Barbeau, the 1970s TV star and B-movie queen (Swamp Thing), who invests the role of Anthony's aunt with a worldly-wise sensuality that suggests a long-lost cousin of Tony Soprano.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Nearly drowns in languor, only to be saved by Milos and Isaacs, who are sexy, movie-star talented and, together, really good kissers.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
As in all his films, there's a sense that honest human emotion bores Fleder, but he gets points for packing the trial with fine character actors.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
The nonstop jumping around undercuts Meily's momentum, especially in the film's overly languorous final third. Still, there's a refreshing optimism fueling his take on working-class life, as if Meily views friendship and neighborly generosity as currencies equal to cold, hard cash.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
This low-budget horror comedy arrives via a lively trailer and a witty print ad, yet the film itself never quite takes off.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
The women are terrific -- they know a thing or two about modulating pathos -- and watching them is a pleasure, even if the lines they're speaking sound like those of a world-worried, first-time playwright.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Actress Amy Smart (Crank) has a knack for bringing a spark to mediocre movies, which she does again in this amiably dull dance drama.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
There are funny moments -- a cameo from Debbie Reynolds, an Evita sing-along -- but the film grows progressively more dispirited.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
The film moves in fits and starts, and is way too long, but it may prove memorable, if only for the sweet, marvelously inventive performance of Kevin James.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
This crazily ambitious film is saddled with a musical score that's often jarringly jolly and a screenplay so busy jumping from platoon to platoon that no single story ever takes hold. Yet, all is not lost. The photography and period detailing are excellent, and Taub, who displays real feeling for the innocent bystanders of war, finds the occasional small, surprising moment.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Perry has great casting instincts, and in Elba and Union he's matched two gifted, equally gorgeous actors, both of whom seem ready to make sparks fly. If only their director would let them.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Audiences will probably be miles ahead of the plot, but may not mind, since the cast bring a committed, lived-in quality to their performances.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Krampus, sad to say, is a disappointment. It's alternately funny and intense (don't take the wee ones), but never enough of either to form a cohesive whole.- Village Voice
- Posted Dec 4, 2015
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- Chuck Wilson
The final match stirs briefly, but when it's over, the movie's energy crashes right back down again. Disappointing.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
A tougher, more experienced director may someday force Holmes to surprise first herself, then us.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
The stark prison Sabrina and a half dozen final contestants inhabit make the torture chambers of Hostel look inviting, but to their credit (perhaps), screenwriter Robert Beaucage and director Josh Waller never sugarcoat their grim tale.- Village Voice
- Posted Jan 7, 2014
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- Chuck Wilson
The Sisters may be worth a look, however, for the work of the magnificent Bello and Tony Goldwyn, who's never been better than as the married man with whom Marcia has an affair. Their final clench is pure, guilty-pleasure melodrama, which means it's not the least bit Chekhovian.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
The film has spunk. Unfortunately, the gore comes with brutal regularity, so that, despite Farmer and Isaac's attempts to liven things up, the film still just wears you down.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Formulaic but innocuous little movie's one clever moment, a sing-off between choirs standing on their respective church steps, trying to lure in Sunday-morning worshippers.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
The film is jammed with incident and detail but there’s little flow to the storytelling.- Village Voice
- Posted Oct 19, 2017
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- Chuck Wilson
His is a valiant story, though it doesn't quite work as a nearly 90-minute documentary -- the Cadigans simply don’t have enough material.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
You have a movie with everything it needs save one crucial element: emotion.- Village Voice
- Posted Apr 13, 2016
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- Chuck Wilson
Phoenix, who initially seemed the kind of actor who was too cool, too angry, to appear in studio pap such as this, is a magnetic presence, despite the numbing pathos surrounding him, but isn't that what we used to say about Travolta?- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
One expects razzle-dazzle dance sequences to lift this movie above its clichés, but they are few and far between, which is not only disappointing, it's downright baffling.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
What's memorable here is the sparkling chemistry between Bates and Woodard, whose scenes together are a pleasure to watch, even as one thinks that their next outing should be to co-teach a master class entitled, "How To Rise Above Cliché."- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
This ensemble drama is passionately acted and nicely shot, but the storytelling of first-time writer-director Dan Kay is infused with an archaic naiveté.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
It's short, this movie, an attribute Sandler himself might take heed of, and if the teenagers in the back row are laughing harder and more often, you might at least find yourself smiling (guiltily) every few minutes.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Less about music than about the possibilities of the IMAX system itself.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
In this serviceable remake of the fondly remembered 1959 Disney comedy (which starred Fred MacMurray), an impressively dexterous Tim Allen plays Dave Douglas.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
The story may not be new, but Australian director John Polson, making his American feature debut, jazzes it up adroitly, with a nifty, staccato editing technique that suggests Madison's inner turmoil and, in the process, fills in some of the shading missing from Christensen's performance.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
The career of the lovably tense Zahn may benefit more from this movie than that of Lawrence, who’s funny, here and there, but who appears to be working at half speed.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Gibson and Good deliver such emotionally honest performances that we wish them a happy ending, no matter how many movie clichés have to be trotted out to get there.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Cox’s delivery of Churchill’s “We will fight on the beaches” D-Day speech surely ranks among the best, but it’s a problem when a narrative feature’s most powerful scenes are drawn from historical text.- Village Voice
- Posted May 31, 2017
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- Chuck Wilson
Mandoki's a pro, but a juiceless one, with only enough energy to reach the finish line, which becomes the viewer's goal as well.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
The movie deflates, but you still can't take your eyes off Gershon, who does her own singing, is fearless in the one girl-on-girl make-out scene, and is mesmerizing throughout -- an underused Barbara Stanwyck in a Gwyneth Paltrow age.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Even the director's flat-footed moves can't quell Martin and Latifah, whose combined energy is fearsome and sometimes most amusing.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Despite crisp photography and the director's gift for building a scene, the film doesn't click until the third act, when Mos Def's performance as Dre's protégé appears to energize everyone around him.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
In the end it doesn't lead to much beyond weepy melodrama. Still, McGuigan draws committed performances from a talented cast.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
The killer in this nasty yet taut slice-and-dice 'em horror flick is a collector of eyeballs, which he removes from his screaming victims with an efficient single swooping motion of his talon-like index finger. If that image makes you grin not cringe, then this movie's for you.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Eventually it all starts to feel like an extended European perfume ad: pretty but eye-rollingly pretentious.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Director Roger Christian (Battlefield Earth -- yes, that Battlefield Earth) and screenwriters Scott Duncan and Ned Kerwin have been influenced more by James Bond than El Mariachi–style spaghetti Westerns.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
This peculiar little comedy, shot on digital video, gets points for editorial pizzazz, but earns a big zero for content.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Aiming to elicit a last-minute shiver from the audience, Gaghan is likely to get instead a mood-destroying giggle.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
There’s no point slamming this fart-and-burp teen flick, since the chortles of the 11-year-old boys -- and the men with an 11-year-old's disposition -- at a recent mall screening can't be denied.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
The only thing more boring than a vampire with moral issues about biting people in the neck is a werewolf who’d rather become fully human than howl at the moon once a month.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Proteus carries an air of forced-wit experimentation that never quite gets its anachronisms in order -- this 18th-century tale features a Jeep, a radio, and female court reporters with typewriters and bouffant hairdos.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
At only 84 minutes, Phone Booth's brevity turns out to be its only saving grace.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
The director pulls back from the hotel, placing it against the skyline of our beautiful city, which appears to be waiting, patiently, for a more original exploration of its inhabitants.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Village Voice
- Posted Oct 22, 2013
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
A film where everyone -- white, black, gay or otherwise -- is equally, lovably dumb.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Coury has made a technically polished first film, but her sense of comic timing and sexual politics is strictly borscht belt.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Lotus Eaters, which McGuinness co-wrote with Brendan Grant, is maddeningly shallow—maybe that's the point—but McGuinness does have talent.- Village Voice
- Posted Apr 2, 2013
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Aided by capable if unnecessary 3D effects, Petty displays a flair for staging violent action, but he's trapped inside a broad comic set-up that doesn't mesh with the story's innate meanness.- Village Voice
- Posted Oct 15, 2013
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- Chuck Wilson
A twisted black comedy -- The accomplished ensemble meshes nicely, but the actors all look pale and exhausted, an effect that may be a byproduct of the film’s photography, which is terrible.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Rosman and Wendkos run dry of ideas in the film's inert, overextended finale, when the "Believe in yourself" speeches grow so thick that even the Duff-devoted may start rolling their eyes.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Maher's filmmaking is competent -- the sets are inventive, and all the camera angles match up -- but someone should have warned her that neither she nor her young cast is experienced enough to pull off the line “The only people buying it are the faggots.”- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
This perfectly distracting, ultimately unsatisfying film feels like a James Bond flick in which the stand-in got the lead.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
The virus is spreading, but the filmmakers don't appear fully committed to the idea of a zombie apocalypse, so no sense of dread (or suspense) ever takes hold.- Village Voice
- Posted Sep 1, 2015
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- Chuck Wilson
Begins so well that it's painful to watch it degenerate into tried-and-true frat-boy humor.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Duff, who became a teen-set role model portraying Lizzie McGuire for Disney, has sold over four million records and toured to packed houses, yet screenwriter Sam Schreiber and director Sean McNamara, both making feature debuts, set her up to sing just one song through to completion.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
What's missing is any sense of why such a handsome man is afraid of women. That makes the premise hard to swallow, especially since Harrington is too commanding to be a believable dweeb. The actor does achieve moments of pathos, only to be undone by a silly script.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
For this violent yet gore-free film, clearly designed for horny teenaged video game wizards, writer-director Kurt Wimmer stages a succession of fight sequences that pit V against helmeted thugs who appear to have raided the Star Wars storm trooper costume closet.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Beautiful in its dark, contrasting blues and blacks, Underworld is nonetheless a remarkably humorless movie, and not even the adroitly hammy Bill Nighy, as the vampire king, can leaven the overwrought seriousness of it all.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Off sorority row, the movie goes flat for increasingly long stretches, with the filmmakers displaying so little understanding of or genuine feeling for the mentally challenged that they never advance past stutter-and-stumble humor.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
One feels sympathy for the ensemble, which, absent full-bodied characters to inhabit, mug furiously, as if big gestures conjure big themes.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
This is efficient, soul-numbing moviemaking, diverting enough for blistering September afternoons when what's onscreen is secondary to how high they've cranked the air conditioning.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Sam Esmail’s first film has a visual assurance that suggests the arrival of a gifted director, but the characters he’s created are so off-putting that viewers aren’t likely to appreciate the beauty surrounding them.- Village Voice
- Posted Dec 2, 2014
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- Chuck Wilson
Writer-director Mick Garris has a real feeling for the horror master's melancholy worldview - love is loss - but he's too reverent toward the original story, the ending of which, both on the page and, now, on the screen, lands with an overly elegiac thud.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
First-time screenwriter James C. Strouse (in whose hometown the film was shot) provides so few clues to the source of Jim's malaise, or that of his entire sad-sack family, that the movie remains rudderless and not the least bit believable.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Creepy enough at first, this relatively gore-free film gradually becomes a stifling talk-fest in which superb actors drone on for so long about the nature of belief that one longs for a juror to spew a little pea soup.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
A last-minute flurry of action and a final plot twist aren't enough to redeem this busy but tedious thriller.- Village Voice
- Posted Nov 25, 2016
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- Chuck Wilson
Running Scared is decently acted and divertingly brutal, but it's also a giant step backward for its maker.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Mostly, Shafer and co-writer Gregory Hinton lack a strong-minded viewpoint, or a sense of humor, about a world in which the DJ has the power to unify, if only for a night, men of godlike beauty and the mortals who worship them.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Surely the only thing more excruciating than being trapped in a car with a bratty child is having to sit through a road-trip movie that features two of them.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Those expecting a reunion with Jackson, Travolta's “Pulp Fiction” co-star, should be prepared: They don't interact at all, which is a bit like casting Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers and not letting them dance together.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
In many ways, Marshall and Barrymore are an equal match -- while both have a flair for the small touches that build a good comic scene, each lacks the complex layering of motive and emotion that make a human life believably real.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Parkhill's heart seems to belong to 1940s film noir, where a lonely man could be driven half-mad by the sight of a mystery woman performing a hot flamenco dance, a scene Parkhill stages here to unintentional titter-inducing effect.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Scimé and Adkins have real chemistry, but the script is forever cutting back to quirky, talkative Katie, and any chance of exploring the complexities of a relationship between two men, one of whom is intractable, is lost.- Village Voice
- Posted Oct 13, 2016
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- Chuck Wilson
The cast of the original looks Shakespearean in comparison to Cook and her hapless cohorts, but to be fair, those first dead ducks had a real script to explore, which this bunch does not.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
This film is lean, tight and irredeemably vile. People are gonna love it.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
This should have been Beatty's "Wonder Boys," but the filmmakers don't seem to realize they've sent their hero on a sexual adventure that neither his heart nor his dick needs to take.- L.A. Weekly
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- Village Voice
- Posted Dec 6, 2013
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- Chuck Wilson
Immigrant is reportedly based on writer-director Barry Shurchin's own family history, but the story he's chosen to tell is so melodramatic and relentlessly grim that any passion he feels for the material isn't reflected onscreen.- Village Voice
- Posted Oct 29, 2013
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- Chuck Wilson
The cell phone reception in Dracula's castle is pretty bad, but it can't be as frustrating as trying to fathom the plot of this woefully muddled horror film.- Village Voice
- Posted Oct 29, 2013
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- Chuck Wilson
The film is sporadically amusing, especially early on. But as the gross-outs dwindle, one is left to contemplate if Stiller has always been this neckless and to wonder just why Aniston wastes her summer vacation on junk such as this.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Townsend and Aaliyah are sexy as hell, and clearly willing and able to explore the darker truths of villainy, but they can't compete against the unwieldy script.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Devotes too much time to a shrill, unfunny security guard who's pursuing the girls, but he does stage some zippy sequences, from the red-clad Julie's skateboard dash home to witty bits involving an energy-depleted electric car.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Von Trotta and co-writer Pamela Katz can't resist cutting, again and again, to Hannah and her airless musings on the story's meaning. These interludes stop the movie in its tracks and, counter no doubt to von Trotta's intentions, do a disservice to the Rosenstrasse women themselves, who shouldn't have to fight for screen time.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
There are all sorts of noteworthy people in this silly vampire epic, including acting greats Sir Ben Kingsley and Geraldine Chaplin, but the only artist this critic wants to heap praise upon is the regrettably unidentified Supervisor of Blood Splatter: Nice work, dude.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
More dispiriting than the caricatured Italian families is the sense that, by picture's end, the filmmakers have neutered Angelo, so that his sexual energy is dulled, made non-threatening -- the perfect son after all.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Despite a few manic comic episodes, writer-directors Alexandre Charlot and Franck Magnier never again capture the sense of joyous connection that can exist between child and pet.- Village Voice
- Posted Nov 5, 2013
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- Chuck Wilson
Until its dismaying final 15 minutes, this baseball redemption movie sails along on the charms of cute kids and a star who makes up in bone structure what he lacks in talent.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Full of gumption, Clarkson and Guarini soldier on, seemingy unaware that the perfectly adequate singing voices that brought them to the big screen are being drowned out, on a half-dozen same-sounding songs, by an overlayered backup group.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Led by the honorably dour Firth and the charisma-free Harington, MI-5 is convoluted and dull, though Harry's revenge against that dastardly mole is pleasingly diabolical. But it's too little too late.- Village Voice
- Posted Dec 1, 2015
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- Chuck Wilson
Lee has heaped so many social ills on his heroine that it's difficult to buy any of it, especially when the story slips into silliness involving bad guys and missing drugs.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
There's not a believable moment in all of it, but for a while the film chugs along on Ryan's innate charisma. Even so, no amount of movie-star twinkle could lighten screenwriter Cheryl Edwards' bizarre character arc, which finds Jackie turning, overnight, into a callous, possibly racist, ninny.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Shawn is clearly meant to have deep feelings, yet the filmmakers have saddled her -- and Blair -- with a shallow angst that bums out the whole movie.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Bass isn't a gifted actor, but he retains his dignity, mostly by keeping his head down and avoiding the eyes of the idiots around him.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
One almost pities the unnervingly twitchy Murphy, whose shiny makeup is dreadful, and who doesn't stand a chance alongside the focused intensity of Fanning, who commands the screen with the precision of a 30-year veteran.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Village Voice
- Posted Sep 15, 2015
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- Chuck Wilson
Menzies should be just the spark to bring Underworld back to life, but it doesn’t happen. Screenwriter Cory Goodman (The Last Witch Hunter) isolates Marius from Selene and the other major players so that Menzies is left adrift, like a great fighter without a worthy sparring partner.- Village Voice
- Posted Jan 10, 2017
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- Chuck Wilson
This time, Zombie doesn’t appear to have many deep thoughts, so Michael doesn’t just stab his victims, he slices and chomps them into gooey pulp — an overkill motif that actually feels false to the character and quickly becomes a depressing bore.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
The new thriller from Spanish writer-director Nacho Vigalondo (Timecrimes) is visually dazzling, but the story starts off silly and ends up a confusing, maddening mess.- Village Voice
- Posted Nov 6, 2014
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- Chuck Wilson
A horror movie that's not horrific enough, Soul Survivors plays like a "Twilight Zone" by way of "Touched by an Angel."- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
There is nothing sadder, either in real life or on the movie screen, than an unlikable idiot, and what we have with this dreadful comedy -- the longest 90 minutes of the film year -- is the sight of not one but two charm-free fools.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
It's all very predictable, very Hollywood. Storytelling cliché, it would seem, knows no borders.- Village Voice
- Posted Jul 23, 2013
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- Chuck Wilson
Even the easily weepy may grow impatient with the snail’s pace of this melancholy romance.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Moves slowly and deflates completely when the over-hyped family secret turns out to be a dramatic dud. Still, it's an awfully pretty movie. Let's all summer in Maine.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Judging by the stilted nature of both the dialogue and acting, that's what this film is -- a thesis project better suited to a grad-night exhibition.- L.A. Weekly
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- Village Voice
- Posted Feb 11, 2014
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- Chuck Wilson
The game of wills that ensues between the two women isn't terribly interesting, much less suspenseful, and in fact, it's not clear that director Egidio Coccimiglio and screenwriter Floyd Byars ever settled on whether they were making a thriller or a satire about food and celebrity.- Village Voice
- Posted Jun 27, 2013
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- Chuck Wilson
Director Uwe Boll (House of the Dead) pulls off a nicely staged fistfight in an open-air market at the start, but soon loses his way amid mind-glazing exposition and endless gunfire aimed at bulletproof giant lizards.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Devlin's script tips its hand so early on that Devil's Due lumbers toward a woefully flat, predictable ending, and the unwelcome promise of something truly demonic — sequels.- Village Voice
- Posted Jan 17, 2014
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
After a zippy first hour, the wackos wear out their welcome and the director, perversely, fails to show the big concert.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
As a calling card for the stylistic talents of a new filmmaker, writer-director Anna Chi's first feature is a success. As drama, it's a dud.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
To help Prinze sail past the eventually unbearable clichés of Kevin Falls and John Gatins' script, director Mike Tollin has assembled an impressive supporting cast.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Feels like a movie made by men whose world views were shaped, primarily, by "Porky's" and "American Pie."- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
This is a decidedly bizarre movie, nicely photographed and designed -- someone spent some money -- but built entirely around dialogue so stilted and unrevealing that it’s little wonder poor LaVorgna screams it.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Although Thornton and co-writer Tom Epperson are clearly trying to get to some essential truth about the ways in which machismo hinders love, their insights are scattered and pedestrian.- Village Voice
- Posted Sep 17, 2013
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- Chuck Wilson
Strictly Urban Comedy 101, as if the filmmakers had neither the inclination nor the chops to move the genre past timeworn stereotypes.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
The director and her capable cast appear to be caught in a heady whirl of New Age–inspired good intentions, but the spell they cast isn't the least bit mesmerizing.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
What they don't do often enough is battle anacondas. It's all tease and no payoff.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Screenwriters Melissa Carter and Erica Bell (Sleepover) have given Murphy -- perhaps the twitchiest actor of her generation --cutesy quirks to play in lieu of a character.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Has there ever been a more inept trio of big-city caseworkers? Go ahead, Lilith. Unleash the hounds.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Very Good Girls is a film one wants to like but can't. It just doesn't work.- Village Voice
- Posted Jul 22, 2014
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- Chuck Wilson
After a first hour that plays like a bad TV show, Sommers hits his groove with an over-the-top Paris chase sequence that, in turn, leads to an underwater finale that’s absurdly overproduced, momentarily diverting, and then instantly forgettable.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Like the film's characters, the city of Paris has been made faceless, as if it too were merely the pawn in a representational hell where light and color and shading are forbidden.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
The glitch, beyond the rote story, is that while she's an infectiously upbeat screen presence, Latifah is not, inherently, a major laugh generator, and neither, it would appear, is Fallon.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
With her long, black coat and midair karate-chop skills, Selene is more Matrix-y Neo than Count Dracula, which may explain why this movie is so brutally un-fun.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
The movie is eerily photographed (by Brandon Trost), but never suspenseful or scary, and eventually, events descend into goat-sacrificing silliness.- Village Voice
- Posted Apr 16, 2013
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- Chuck Wilson
Most of the animated sequences, capably mixed with live action, leave a bad aftertaste, particularly when the ultimate fate of one beaten and battered human bystander after another is left callously unresolved. In other words, parents beware.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Baffling too is The Rock's choice to follow up his acclaimed performance in "Be Cool" with a role that requires him to do little more than widen his eyes and grunt lines.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
The one saving grace is a sweet, affecting performance by Werner de Smedt.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
The co-directing brothers Goetz prove adept at building escape-the-bad-guy action sequences, but they continually run up against the story's Marquis-de-Sade underpinnings.- Village Voice
- Posted Jan 24, 2016
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
If your cell phone vibrates while you’re watching One Missed Call, go ahead and answer, because even a wrong number will be more exciting than what’s happening onscreen.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
First-time director João Pedro Rodrigues' unwillingness to define his hero’s background or motivations becomes more and more frustrating as the film goes on.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
- Posted Jan 13, 2011
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- Chuck Wilson
The director belabors every moment, forgetting that pulp tales need to be told quickly, lest the viewer have time to second-guess.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Queen Latifah gets co-producer and scenarist credits for this anemic comedy, and also a supporting role that amounts to the worst performance of her career.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Sometimes the predictability of a romantic comedy is reassuring, and sometimes it makes you want to scream, as with this witless wonder.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Watching the hopelessly vapid get taken out, one by one, has never been more depressing.- Village Voice
- Posted Aug 19, 2014
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- Chuck Wilson
A big-screen reality show that flashes plenty of t-- and d--- but little integrity.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
To be fair, it's not solely Cage's fault that his new film, Captain Corelli's Mandolin, is lousy -- director John Madden (Shakespeare in Love) deserves most of the heat for this listless dud.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Writer-director Matthew Weiner, creator of the magnificent Mad Men, has made a feature film — theoretically a comedy — that's just shy of terrible.- Village Voice
- Posted Aug 19, 2014
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- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
No, this isn't an adaptation of Don DeLillo’s great 1985 novel, but a muddled talking-ghosts movie.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
The only time the actors appear to have accelerated their own heartbeats is in two paintball scenes, as well as -- professionals all -- the fart-lighting contest. It's pretty pathetic.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
It’s hard to know what’s more depressing -- a senseless remake or the idea of a once-great director doing such shockingly slack work.- L.A. Weekly
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- Village Voice
- Posted Aug 31, 2013
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- Chuck Wilson
A sappy love story wherein nary a gun or action sequence is seen after the first 10 minutes.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
For trashing a classic, Tunnicliffe and his writing cohorts deserve a Grimm-style fate -- perhaps a long, slow boil in the witch’s vat?- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Full of shuttery jump cuts set to music cues so loud your heart can't help but convulse, Darkness should have been left to molder in Miramax's vast vault of horror-movie stiffs.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Aftershock is incompetently made and morally muddled, but since talent, morality, and Mr. Roth have never been on speaking terms, we're not exactly surprised.- Village Voice
- Posted May 9, 2013
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- Chuck Wilson
So dull, a road-trip movie that's surprisingly short of both adventure and song.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
McCormick and screenwriter J.S. Cardone don’t have one original thought between them, but they do appear to share an obsession with characters opening hotel-room closets in which the steel hangers gleam ominously.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
There are many things absent from this found-footage horror movie, including suspense, logic, and originality.- Village Voice
- Posted Jul 2, 2013
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- Chuck Wilson
Mostly, Lafferty is all about expletives and sexual innuendo of the frankest kind, some of it so raunchy (and unfunny) as to make one wonder if the parents of the film's many child actors bothered to read the script.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Screenwriters Andre Fabrizio and Jeremy Passmore fail to conjure a single witty line. Nor is there any finesse to be found in director Brian A. Miller’s inept staging of car chases and shoot-outs.- Village Voice
- Posted Aug 26, 2014
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- Chuck Wilson
Bad movies can be a hoot, but rather than campy, Ameer appears to be dead serious; and it's hard to feel anything but fury toward a filmmaker whose opening title sequence intersperses black-and-white flashbacks of his sexy young lovers with actual concentration-camp photos of stacked, emaciated corpses.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
Director Chuck Russell ("The Mask") and screenwriter Thomas Rickman don't need new agents -- they need backup careers.- L.A. Weekly
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- Chuck Wilson
This movie could have easily been shot as porn, a transition that would have given it a modicum of respectability and, better still, true social purpose.- L.A. Weekly
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