David Rooney
Select another critic »For 1,353 reviews, this critic has graded:
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54% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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44% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 1.9 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
David Rooney's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 67 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | The Hand of God | |
| Lowest review score: | The School for Good and Evil | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 836 out of 1353
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Mixed: 433 out of 1353
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Negative: 84 out of 1353
1353
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- David Rooney
An all-access pass to an artist embarking on a new path, this is entertaining stuff – funny, disarming, even poignant. It's also jammed with terrific music.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 30, 2013
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- David Rooney
Dave Grohl has more than clout in his corner in his terrifically entertaining documentary Sound City. He brings elements that can't be faked -- passion and heart -- to this lovingly assembled insider account of what it feels like to make real handcrafted rock music.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 24, 2013
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- David Rooney
Even if some of them are playing hackneyed gangster-film types, the strength of the actors makes it almost possible to forgive the formulaic plotting and artificially movie-ish developments. Candis and Justin Wilson's screenplay stretches credibility thinner and thinner as the story advances.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 15, 2013
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- David Rooney
Meryl Streep gives a fully realized portrait of British Prime Minister Thatcher in a biopic that values character over context.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 27, 2011
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- David Rooney
Elizabeth Olsen steps onto the radar as a seriously accomplished actor in this mesmerizing drama, which also marks an assured feature debut for writer-director Sean Durkin.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 16, 2011
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- David Rooney
While this psychosexual twaddle will no doubt have its admirers, it seems a long shot to attract a significant following or herald the arrival of a director to watch.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 10, 2011
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- David Rooney
While Brawl in Cell Block 99 remains gripping and unpredictable throughout, the two-and-a-quarter-hour running time does feel a tad bloated, and the movie might benefit from being trimmed by 20 minutes or so into a tauter edit.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Variety
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- David Rooney
It recovers from an opening that's a little oblique to grow progressively more seductive as the two lost central characters become entwined.- Variety
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- David Rooney
But despite less-than-ideal casting of the male roles, and a tendency to soften the Pulitzer Prize-winning work's thorny humor with a more sober tone, director John Madden has woven together an elegant, intelligent drama of a breed increasingly rare in mainstream American movies.- Variety
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- Variety
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- David Rooney
The film is powered by a superbly controlled performance from Javier Bardem. While it lacks economy and could have used a firmer hand in shaping the key central relationship, this intelligent, arrestingly sober drama packs a cumulative punch.- Variety
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- Variety
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- David Rooney
As lethargic as the characters it portrays, the film requires greater staying power than many audiences will possess.- Variety
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- David Rooney
This fascinating portrait of an eccentric visionary and his chaotic triple family life is an accomplished, enormously satisfying non-fiction work.- Variety
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- David Rooney
A one-joke affair about conjoined twins that feels like it bypassed the scripting stage and was filmed directly from the pitch, the comedy remains resoundingly unfunny.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Problematically structured, overly protracted and lacking in narrative fluidity.- Variety
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- David Rooney
What might have been a cinephile's wet dream turns out instead to be seductive, stimulating and sodden, in that order, in the three-chapter reflection on love and desire.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Audience patience undergoes a far more brutal butchering than anything onscreen in Delphine Gleize's wildly over-reaching feature debut, Carnage.- Variety
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- David Rooney
For much of its running time, Zama is merely remote and enervating, too accurately reflecting its protagonist’s predicament.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- David Rooney
Young male auds should warm to its cool criminal ethos, sharp dialogue, charismatic cast and wry humor.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Compelling 24-hour odyssey into the life of a world-weary Gotham publicist, driven by a vivid performance from Al Pacino.- Variety
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- David Rooney
The script here just doesn't have sufficient smarts to pull off Elle's political triumph. But Witherspoon again makes a valiant show of selling it.- Variety
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- David Rooney
In the central role, Castellitto's powerfully focused performance manages to keep the complex drama grounded.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Ambling drama shows an exasperating lack of economy and a weakness for diatribe dialogue, but becomes progressively more involving after a laborious start.- Variety
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- David Rooney
As an eco-political inquiry, the film is compelling even if its grounding in scientific fact could be more solid.- Variety
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- David Rooney
This obsessive love story about a guy seeking closure after being dumped by his Latino boyfriend awkwardly juggles screwball and noir elements with macabre black comedy in a mix that calls for a far lighter, more stylish touch than the obvious one at work here.- Variety
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- David Rooney
A bland road movie running on empty. It's depressing to see a deluxe cast wasted on such by-the-numbers material -- from predictable plot to fabricated Hallmark sentiment to strenuous milking of warm-and-fuzzy laughs from the irrepressible spirit of three women whose youth is behind them.- Variety
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- David Rooney
A moderately successful attempt to ape the standard Hollywood teen movie.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Underproduced and compromised by an uneven script and a tendency to descend into melodrama, the DV-lensed feature nonetheless is well acted and directed with confidence.- Variety
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- David Rooney
A bigscreen feature executed with a cookie-cutter small-screen sensibility, this often charming but untextured fact-based period piece is buoyed along by the redoubtable Judi Dench.- Variety
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- David Rooney
This skillfully acted, handsomely crafted frock piece toys cleverly with gender confusion and sexual identity.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Consistently fascinating material provides an uncommonly eloquent, provocative statement against globalization that's sure to stimulate thinking audiences.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Despite a series of disclaimers about the treatment of Jews in the 16th century, there's even less disguising onscreen than onstage that this is an uncomfortably anti-Semitic play and somewhat problematic for contempo audiences.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Writer-director Joshua Marston's strikingly confident debut maintains an unblinking focus and sustains an almost unbearable level of tension.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Numerous filmmakers have attempted to dramatize the terrorist activity that gripped Italy in the 1970s, but few have done so with the unsettling power of Marco Bellocchio's Good Morning, Night.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Full of surprising warmth and charm, unexpected plot turns and droll characters that bounce off each other in refreshing ways.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Full of surreal occurrences and bizarre, sometimes overly precious humor that may make it too rarefied an exercise for wide acceptance.- Variety
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- David Rooney
There’s a light touch in evidence, balancing the bleakness with odd lyrical moments and unexpected humor and tenderness that infuse the gentle drama with a bracing freshness.- Variety
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- Variety
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- David Rooney
While the direction is a little anonymous and could use some verve, the comedy-drama gets by thanks to a solid script, witty dialogue and engaging performances.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Elegant and unsentimental, this is a minor-key, wintry ensemble piece with an emotional hold that sneaks up on you.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- David Rooney
Material that might have turned to standard dysfunctional family treacle in other hands is given stirring poignancy, warmth and emotional insight in Shona Auerbach's assured first feature.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Story of a still-grieving widower and his two troubled teenage sons is distinguished by its emotional integrity, sustained mood of aching melancholy and superbly understated performances.- Variety
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- Variety
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- David Rooney
While it tips its hat to screwball comedy, Puccini for Beginners owes more to contemporary sitcom. It also has way more in common with "Sex and the City" than "The L Word." None of that is entirely a bad thing in a film that never really soars but has enough breezy humor.- Variety
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- David Rooney
This contemplative drama about a tough ex-cop tying up the loose ends of his life and taking his terminally ill wife on a farewell journey is pure poetry.- Variety
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- David Rooney
The gifted repertory company again creates an amusing gallery of incisively observed characters, riffing off each other with enjoyment levels that frequently prove contagious.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Restrained, affecting and tenderly observed with a distinctly female gaze, the film takes some time to locate its center as an intimate drama of resilient sisterhood. But the delicacy of the bond etched between Fishback's Angel and her 10-year-old sibling, played by captivating discovery Tatum Marilyn Hall, keeps you hooked into this melancholy but hopeful story of fractured family dynamics.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- David Rooney
The material is at heart an intimate allegorical fairy tale about rarefied philosophical concerns.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Provides powerful drama thanks to its trenchant core story and harrowing re-creation of the brutal chaos of war.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Clever but distancing, this existential comedy bounces along on the backs of its tasty cast, witty writing and stylistic verve.- Variety
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- David Rooney
A witty script and strong performances hoist Metroland beyond the confines of its rather standard, TV-style approach.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Monsters and Men is a robust ensemble piece in which every performer finds subtle shadings in characters fully embedded in a realistic milieu. It's a smart, urgently relevant movie that marks an impressive upgrade from his acclaimed short films for writer-director Green.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- David Rooney
Dowd's graciousness and enthusiasm, and the enormous respect afforded him by industryites on record here, make this a thorough and satisfying acknowledgement of one man's unique contribution to popular music.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Not quite a documentary, it's more like a musical travelogue that doesn't quite sustain feature length and seems ideally suited to a shorter TV version for music webs.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Joyously re-creates the brief but resplendent reign of the legendary freakadelic drag troupe.- Variety
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- David Rooney
This slight but appealing film's funky eccentricity feels a little contrived at times.- Variety
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- David Rooney
The well-structured film goes beyond issues of sexuality, giving nuanced consideration to broader questions of love and loss, family and friendship, trust, lies and deception.- Variety
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- David Rooney
While the filmmaking is raw, undisciplined and groaning under a cargo of self-conscious quirks, it scores points for originality and wacky creativity- The Hollywood Reporter
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- David Rooney
This feels like short film material stretched exasperatingly thin but nonetheless casts a certain sad spell, graced by moments of droll observational humor.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Provides deeply humanistic insight into the complexities of the Middle East conflict that political analysis or front-line news coverage often lacks.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Leads Jean-Pierre Bacri and Emilie Dequenne establish an awkward yet tender odd-couple dynamic, their accomplished work serving to distinguish the familiar material.- Variety
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- David Rooney
In terms of sustaining a narrative using only FaceTime, Skype, Facebook, video downloads and various other web pages and social media platforms, Profile is quite impressive up to a point. In terms of coherent plotting and plausibility, not so much. That means that as the storytelling falls apart, the online framework devolves into a labored tech gimmick, and a visually tiresome one at that.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- David Rooney
Middleton's polished writing and amusing observations about the anxieties most people encounter when definitively farewelling their youth help compensate for her standard-issue direction.- Variety
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- David Rooney
While the director's penchant for extended silences and stagy character positioning make it all seem rather studied, the drama nonetheless is compellingly unsettling.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Its powerfully visual storytelling delivers great rewards as the meditative drama moves into increasingly complex, at times confrontational territory.- Variety
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- David Rooney
The whole spirit of rebellion, passion and protest that should be a driving force for the characters plays more like a cultivated affectation.- Variety
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- David Rooney
An elegant but empty and frustrating meditation on desire, obsession, love and possession, The Captive intellectualizes those subjects almost beyond the level of art-film parody.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Overlong and unwieldy grab-bag of vintage monster-movie elements starts intriguingly as a snowbound deep-woods chiller, but gradually dissolves into a mess of other-worldly invasion and military counter-offensive.- Variety
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- David Rooney
A pedigree cast elevates old-fashioned material and lackluster screenwriting.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Much of the film plays awkwardly, its tone veering undecidedly between volatile drama and contemplative psychological study.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Jolie is even hotter, faster and more commanding than last time around as the fearless heiress/adventuress, plus a little more human. The less welcome news is that most of the same shortcomings that cramped the first installment are still dogging the sequel, which delivers on action but dawdles through downtime.- Variety
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- David Rooney
A well-meaning but schematic drama about three generations of Chinese women in America.- Variety
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- David Rooney
This one comes up short in terms of visual flair. But it delivers amusingly observed characters, consistent laughs underscored by the poignancy of unfulfilled existences and winning performances from a terrific cast captained by Jennifer Aniston.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Hoge shows no particular directorial style, bringing a bland, anonymous look to the generic Southern California suburban locations.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Refreshingly devoid of flashiness or artificially pumped-up action, this consistently gripping, well-constructed police thriller… showcases a tightly controlled performance from Kurt Russell.- Variety
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- David Rooney
The clear ambition here is to recapture the raw, explosively violent atmosphere of such hallmark 1970s shockers as "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre" and "The Hills Have Eyes." Nice try, but no cigar.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Director Chris Columbus has pasted the grungy "La Boheme" update onto film with slavish respect for the original material but a shortage of stylistic imagination and raw emotions.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Tough, cogent and resonantly chilling, this slow-burning drama continues the vein of harsh realism seen in recent Gallic cinema including "La Vie de Jesus" and "More Than Yesterday."- Variety
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- David Rooney
The brooding, well-constructed drama gets considerable mileage out of the schizoid twin dynamic.- Variety
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- David Rooney
While Muccino has refined his technique over four features and has developed greater insight, his characteristic tendency toward hysteria remains. This keeps the drama fast and compelling, but also makes it slightly wearing at times.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Pic's distinguished by a flawless cast, a gentle spirit of rebellion and a smart script by first-time screenwriter Michael Arndt that knows never to push its character quirks too hard.- Variety
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- David Rooney
While it's a little shapeless and dramatically overwrought, the film remains entertaining thanks to its fascinating subject, sharp visuals and fiercely proud central performance.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Brit filmmaker Sue Clayton's muddled feature bow is full of intriguing ideas and incidental charms that fail to come together into a cohesive whole.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Though it's decidedly for perverse palates, some kind of cult audience seems assured for this one-note onslaught, which exercises a bizarre fascination despite its excesses.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Evokes the mythic feel of Sergio Leone Westerns. Despite a convoluted plot that begs for cleaner lines, the wild shoot-outs, cartoonish violence and charismatic cast should lure action fans to theaters.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Spanish writer-director Cesc Gay and Argentine co-director Daniel Gimelberg cook up one or two agreeably tart episodes in this uneven pic, but ultimately, it plays like "Four Rooms" without a budget.- Variety
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- David Rooney
A drama that steadily succumbs to self-conscious artiness, drunk on its own sense of contrived poetry and cloudy existential reflection.- Variety
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- David Rooney
The film lacks the accompanying media spotlight that boosted the Moore release and therefore appears unlikely to reach beyond a liberal audience with an already vehement aversion to Fox News' partisan coverage.- Variety
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- David Rooney
This is arguably Hurt's best role in years, and he bites into it with relish, managing to seem both manipulative and vulnerable, dour and droll at the same time.- Variety
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- Variety
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- David Rooney
This visually impressive yet emotional frigid fable could perhaps more accurately be tagged "The Bipolar Express."- Variety
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- Variety
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- David Rooney
The two appealingly played central characters and the film's enjoyable evocation of the 1970s and '80s keep it buoyant and diverting.- Variety
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- David Rooney
The spirit of the late Federico Fellini -- with whom Benigni talked of doing the project together -- surfaces repeatedly. But that spirit fails to enliven a film substantially lacking in personality, energy, magic and humor.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Somewhat haphazardly organized yet fascinatingly detailed and enriched by the candor and dignity of its shockingly deprived interview subjects.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Strikes a delicate balance of comedy and pathos with an uplifting final act that delivers a resoundingly satisfying emotional payoff.- Variety
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- Variety
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- David Rooney
Superficial but entertaining new pic offers equal parts freshness and kitsch appeal set to a pulsating Latin soundtrack.- Variety
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- David Rooney
The comedy-drama hinges on the captivating dynamic between the two men, combining gentle humor and charm with a melancholy undercurrent of yearning.- Variety
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- David Rooney
The whimsical ugly-duckling fable becomes more uneven as it proceeds, straining too hard to manufacture its quirky charms.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Soberly and intelligently examines the fear, frustration, anxiety, animosity and boredom of waiting to advance into the terrifying other world that lies over the lip of the trenches.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Humor is inconsistent, and the film suffers from lack of shape and fluidity, playing more like a series of disjointed sketches. But there are more than enough high points to compensate.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Working predominantly in English for the first time, the French director has crafted an absorbing tale about the merging of fiction with reality, propelled by contrasting performances from Charlotte Rampling and Ludivine Sagnier.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Ochsenknecht and Wohler are a strong double act, displaying exemplary comic timing and making the brothers a problem-plagued but likable pair.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Mullan's increased maturity as a director is evident in his skill at manipulating light and dark dramatic tones, and shifting between moods of anger and plaintive melancholy.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Although amusing as often as not, the material remains more comedy-sketch fodder than a fully developed feature.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Whatever valid points are being explored are hopelessly clouded by the film's unwavering earnestness as it descends into silliness and excess.- Variety
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- David Rooney
The impressive filmmaking craftsmanship and sharp storytelling skills make this two-hour-plus epic fly by.- Variety
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- David Rooney
This sassy if wildly uneven comedy navigates the treacherous high school jungle that separates cool cliques from wannabes, wading through some nasty behavior before delivering its moral message.- Variety
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- David Rooney
A thoroughly entertaining comedy about love, lawyers and fat divorce settlements. While a slight imbalance in the romantic formula stops it just short of truly soaring, the crackling dialogue and buoyant wordplay make this a delightful throwback to classic screwball comedies.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Despite some hazy plot points, the tough, compelling drama comes together quite satisfyingly, standing alongside 1996's "The Funeral" as perhaps the most controlled and cohesive of Ferrara's uneven work of recent years.- Variety
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- David Rooney
First-time feature director Rob Marshall and Oscar-winning "Gods and Monsters" screenwriter Bill Condon have spun the dark tale of two murdering floozies into a widely palatable entertainment, but the long-gestating film comes up short in rhythm and personality.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Somewhere along the line, the comedy turned from dark and playful to mean-spirited and sophomoric. A waste of the considerable appeal and comic talents of leads Ben Stiller and Drew Barrymore.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Ambitiously structured in non-chronological fragments that form a fascinating puzzle, this raw drama about grief, guilt and redemption becomes ultimately overextended and overwrought in its final stretch.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Starts out bracingly but gradually loses focus. Ecuadorian writer-director Sebastian Cordero's screenplay trades in underdeveloped conflicts and blank characters, hinting far too early at the killer's probable identity.- Variety
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- David Rooney
A Lifetime movie on crack, The Quiet dredges up every lurid cliche from the well of teen hormonal havoc in a tale of dysfunctional family meltdown that seems unsure whether to push for suburban-Gothic psychosexual excess or tongue-in-cheek malevolence.- Variety
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- David Rooney
This artless, unpolished venture adds a heavy sex-and-skin factor to a poorly defined game show, lurching awkwardly between exploitative voyeurism, maudlin confessions and self-consciously risque titillation.- Variety
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- David Rooney
The story rarely gets fired up to "maximum thrust," to use the rocket-speed parlance of its heroes.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Endowed with captivating simplicity, gentle humor, rich humanity and infectious generosity of spirit.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Smart assembly of terrific archive footage is matched by spirited interviews with the tough old broads today.- Variety
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- David Rooney
By turns spiky and lyrical, this unsettling drama will be anathema to many audiences, but is bound to be a provocative, talked-about release.- Variety
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- David Rooney
A fairly sustained barrage of broad undergraduate humor and gross-out gags that should tickle young auds looking for unsophisticated laughs.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Theater veteran Recoing is utterly compelling. Both the script and the resourceful, subtle actor provide enormous insight into the troubled character.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Newcomer Luca Guadagnino deserves credit for his choice of an unconventional model, by Italian standards, for his English-language debut feature, but it's a model in which approach and material are at odds. [22 Nov 1999, p.87]- Variety
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- David Rooney
This is a strange, ultimately quite distressing story touched by tragedy, told by Wardle with great skill and compassion in a brisk, consistently absorbing package.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- David Rooney
Dramatically pallid and unconvincing. Despite being written for her, the director's "Irma Vep" muse Maggie Cheung seems oddly miscast here and is ill-served by an emotionally underpowered screenplay that rarely gets beneath the surface of the character's problems.- Variety
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- David Rooney
A thoughtful, restrained, refreshingly nonjudgmental melodrama that reflects on interesting questions regarding sexuality, identity and self-acceptance.- Variety
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- David Rooney
The spirited comedy ultimately kneels before an all-embracing deity, which could appease the God squad provided they get through all the wickedly funny zealot-bashing that comes first.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Mike Leigh is at the peak of his powers with Vera Drake, a compassionate, morally complex drama that stands easily alongside his best work, "Secrets & Lies" and "Topsy-Turvy."- Variety
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- David Rooney
While staccato dialogue and edgy confrontations have always been the wordsmith's forte, the precision-tooled mechanics of an elaborate crime caper have not, and the physical direction here could use some muscle.- Variety
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- Variety
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- David Rooney
A highly charged, coolly assured directorial bow graced by riveting work from a trio of accomplished leads, Little Odessa immediately etches a firm place on the map for 25-year-old New York newcomer James Gray.- Variety
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- David Rooney
While Second Best is mildly engaging thanks largely to an appealingly self-effacing turn from Joe Pantoliano, writer-director Eric Weber's script could have used an extra polish or two.- Variety
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- David Rooney
While the premise has possibilities for some creepy, pulpy fun, writer-director Robert Parigi brings too little style or humor, instead going a more obvious, overwrought route.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Made with the same jewel-like meticulousness and very Gallic sense of style that set Tran’s debut so far apart from other Asian offerings, the new feature again boasts boldly creative craftsmanship in every frame. The film is disappointingly compromised, however, by needlessly convoluted, often pretentiously enigmatic plotting, placing a considerable blight on its commercial potential.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Gritty and compelling as Monster is, the script's not entirely satisfying elaboration of the central relationship and Ricci's somewhat ungiving performance limit the material to that of a superior telemovie rather than something emotionally richer, like "Boys Don't Cry."- Variety
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- David Rooney
The film's chief shortcoming is perhaps its failure to convey a stronger, more atmospheric sense of the repressive 1970s Catholic school environment that breeds the titular boys' rebellion and wild flights of fancy.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Stars Zellweger and McGregor are too knowingly nudge-wink in their performances, too much contrived constructs to become real characters, let alone fuel the romantic comedy engine and make an audience care much whether they end up together.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Rendered deeply moving by the director's peerless capacity to combine humor and compassion with honesty and despair.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Washout. Lacking the mojo even to be offensive in its stereotypical view of gays and women, this excruciating cocktail of sitcom plotting and gross-out humor makes a clunky cheesefest like "The Love Boat" look like breezy, sophisticated fun.- Variety
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- David Rooney
A thoughtful, melancholy story of love, loss, pain, betrayal and the lingering after-effects of tragedy, The Door in the Floor is an intelligent, impeccably acted, unsentimental drama.- Variety
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- Variety
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- David Rooney
While devotees expecting Moretti's wry worldview may feel shortchanged, others will find this a profoundly moving experience, giving it fuel to cross borders into the arthouse niche.- Variety
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- David Rooney
This is a compassionately observed story told with unimpeachable naturalism and without a grain of sentimentality, propelled by a remarkable performance from Charlie Plummer that's both internalized and emotionally raw.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- David Rooney
An appealing female cast gives the hollowly formulaic Mona Lisa Smile more dignity than it perhaps deserves, yet it's Julia Roberts in an ill-suited starring role that represents one of the film's chief shortcomings.- Variety
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- David Rooney
While it veers heavily toward pretentiousness, this striking metaphysical mystery is intensely compelling, conjuring a mood between European high-arthouse and the unsettling psychological horror of "Rosemary's Baby."- Variety
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- David Rooney
A stunningly crafted work from first-time feature director Nicole Kassell.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Choreographed by long-term Li collaborator Corey Yuen, the martial arts confrontations supply plenty of spark, though they lack the more exhilarating stylistic flourishes of those in "Romeo."- Variety
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- David Rooney
While it plays more like stage or TV sketch-comedy shtick than film material, this modest, visually unimposing production remains entertaining thanks to its ironic observations and winning sense of folly.- Variety
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- David Rooney
The bad news, however, is that after an intriguing opening stretch, and despite Jeremy Irons' potent lead performance, the overlong film becomes repetitive, flat and often dull.- Variety
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- David Rooney
The execution is so amateurish and the script so witless the filmmakers appear to be having a far better time than the audience.- Variety
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- David Rooney
A disjointed story of self-discovery, courage and redemption somewhat incongruously billed as a salute to Akira Kurosawa.- Variety
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- David Rooney
The glue that holds the sweet teen-fantasy together is star Anne Hathaway, who continues to evolve into a luminous young lead.- Variety
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- David Rooney
This exceedingly long-winded but classy drama could appeal to the same strain of infrequent, regional moviegoers looking for righteous entertainment that flocked to "The Passion of the Christ."- Variety
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- David Rooney
The film's unhurried pace will target it for discerning audiences only, but its wry humor and coolly amused observation of contemporary Japan should score with smart urbanites.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Largely overcomes key cast weaknesses to deliver a jazzy, darkly textured rendering of the ghetto pulp of late African-American ex-con author Donald Goines.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Sensitive direction and a touching performance from Emile Hirsch in the title role help counter some dramatic naivete and awkward, at times unintentional, humor in The Mudge Boy.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Frequently hilarious but ultimately is a protracted one-joke affair that strays into undisciplined chaos.- Variety
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- David Rooney
The film goes more and more off-kilter, with its jumble of black comedy and bloodshed and its mild-mannered protagonist embroiled in violent crime making it an unsophisticated foray into Coen brothers territory.- Variety
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- David Rooney
An enjoyable throwback to the occult psychological horror-thrillers of the late 1970s. While it flirts often with campy excess, the film remains compelling thanks to its chilly mood, stylish visuals and polished production values.- Variety
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- David Rooney
While it has about as much depth and nuance as the bubblegum Sino-pop tunes that pepper its soundtrack, Formula 17 is a fresh, sweet-natured affair with an attractive young cast that should play to the gay-teen niche.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Despite Everett's command in the central performance and a script liberally sprinkled with amusing bons mots, The Happy Prince generates only faltering dramatic momentum and a shortage of pathos.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- David Rooney
An ensemble drama laced with lighter moments that depicts the vitality, resilience and moral dilemmas of the people of Tel Aviv, the film is absorbing and at times moving.- Variety
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- David Rooney
A richly textured drama with an angry poetic edge that gets inside the obsessive subculture of New York graffiti artists, Bomb the System signals the arrival of a talented filmmaker in NYU film graduate Adam Bhala Lough.- Variety
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- Variety
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- David Rooney
It takes chutzpah to borrow from comedy maestros Billy Wilder and Blake Edwards, and Nia Vardalos would seem an unlikely candidate to get away with it unpunished.- Variety
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- David Rooney
While the film feels overlong at two hours 20 minutes, there's a seductive stillness to its enveloping mood.- Variety
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- David Rooney
This slow but brilliantly sustained journey into madness is fronted by a remarkable performance from Ralph Fiennes and superb backup from Miranda Richardson in a triple role.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Hereditary takes the core haunting element of a spirit with a malevolent agenda and runs with it in a seemingly endless series of unexpected directions over two breathless hours of escalating terror that never slackens for a minute.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- David Rooney
A model of poise and restraint, the film flows in a way that is deliberately undramatic, but made no less involving by the dreamy gentleness of its approach.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Philip Seymour Hoffman and John Hurt give compelling performances... But the coldly unrewarding drama is as distant and joyless as its protagonist, representing a disappointment for director Richard Kwietniowski.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Given a lift by its folksy soundtrack of toe-tapping Ceili dance tunes, the film is handsomely produced and engaging enough, but never more than that due to a weak dramatic arc and soft conflicts in Nicholas Adams' script and to John Irvin's functional direction.- Variety
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- David Rooney
A flawed and overlong but ultimately affecting account of one man's struggle to regain control of his life.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Playing a Big Tobacco lobbyist, Aaron Eckhart puts his golden news-anchor good looks and smooth conviction to better use than in any pic since his breakthrough film, "In the Company of Men."- Variety
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- David Rooney
This melancholy, insightfully scripted coming-of-age drama is moving without being manipulative and makes an assured calling card for writer-director Karen Moncrieff.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Rippling with psychological complexity and sneaky humor, this is a rich character study that takes constantly surprising turns.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- David Rooney
A highly accomplished, compact feature, which, while it may be light on depth, is rich in humor, rhythm, energy and inventiveness.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Already gasping for breath in its opening scenes, picture takes two bleak, unyielding hours to finally expire.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Like the symmetrical word that supplies its title, the mordant comedy-drama recovers ground to become a boldly intriguing if not entirely satisfying subversion of American family values.- Variety
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- David Rooney
A tortured reflection on the complex relationship between love, sex, desire and obsession, distinguished by courageously raw performances from leads Mark Rylance and Kerry Fox.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Plenty of vile little secrets and ghastly urges are explored in the stylishly made Asian-fusion horror triptych.- Variety
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- David Rooney
The resourceful actor (Depp) invigorates Secret Window with a playful personality and wryly humorous aplomb not front-and-center in the script, making the psycho-suspenser more compelling than it might otherwise have been.- Variety
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- David Rooney
The frequently confusing story does eventually pull together; but there's still a lack of any strong emotional center, and the character gallery remains over-populated.- Variety
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- David Rooney
An engrossingly detailed if perhaps inevitably enigmatic portrait of the elusive, outrageous provocateur.- Variety
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- David Rooney
The tireless volley of ideas and inventions make this a delight that should connect with kids and adults in both dubbed and original-language versions.- Variety
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- David Rooney
The unfocused writing makes the film increasingly less convincing as it stumbles toward an awkwardly structured resolution -- closing on a conga line that makes "My Big Fat Greek Wedding" seem cutting-edge.- Variety
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- David Rooney
An entertaining, deeply respectful assessment of the directors and actors who rode the countercultural wave of the 1970s.- Variety
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- David Rooney
An entirely schematic treatise on maternity and conflicting cultures. A subject perhaps far more suited to documentary treatment, this numbingly earnest effort will be a laborious delivery for IFC.- Variety
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- Variety
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- David Rooney
Delves far more deeply into grisly physical manifestation than psychological motivation, making it seem something of an actorish vanity piece. But the drama is directed with arresting spareness and control.- Variety
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- David Rooney
An affable but undernourished romantic comedy that fails to match the freshness of the actress-producer and writer's previous collaboration, "Miss Congeniality."- Variety
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- David Rooney
While it's stylishly designed and shot in startling colors on digital high-definition cameras, this feels like yesterday's futuristic news, and it's more likely to surface as a video/DVD curiosity than a theatrical draw.- Variety
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- Variety
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- David Rooney
While it's clear where the filmmaker's sympathies lie, the view presented is relatively balanced.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Starts out on an exhilarating high but gradually loses steam, Janice Beard 45 WPM tries hard to overcome its inconsistency with relentless whimsy.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Delivers continuous pinpricks of irreverent humor and subversive cultural commentary.- Variety
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- David Rooney
The mesmerizing performance of Phillip Seymour Hoffman as the celebrated writer dominates every scene, while director Bennett Miller and screenwriter Dan Futterman's penetrating study enthralls in every aspect.- Variety
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- Variety
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- David Rooney
The lure of Halle Berry as the leather-clad feline should help this mangy misfire claw out a decent opening before a quick slink to DVD.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Its honest, unshowy performances and textured depiction of life in a working-class community in a nowhere Southern Illinois town make this modest indie feature an affecting experience.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Meandering melodrama about gay relationships, friendship, loneliness and the elastic notion of family is considerably overlong and hampered by too many superfluous scenes.- Variety
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- David Rooney
A Thanksgiving family reunion comedy that sparkles with acerbic wit, original characters and genuine heart.- Variety
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- David Rooney
An eloquent expression of both unorthodox romance and bitter disillusionment with the hypocritical institutions of family and society.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Writer-director Douglas McGrath's boldest stroke is to impose a more overtly gay interpretation on a central relationship in which the attraction was generally supposed to be unspoken.- Variety
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- David Rooney
A staggeringly flat sequel that trades filmdom for the music bizbiz and could hardly be less cool.- Variety
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- David Rooney
May not quite gain entry to the hallowed pantheon of interstellar cheese of a "Battlefield Earth," but it's not far behind.- Variety
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- David Rooney
This supposed comedy of manners about Americans in Paris feels artificial at every turn, its characters so devoid of backstory and nuance their behavior often makes little sense.- Variety
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- David Rooney
But behind its slick veneer and the glibness of its preposterous premise and dark twists, there's a yawning absence of charm or substance in this London-set love triangle, as well as a lack of chemistry between its three leads.- Variety
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- David Rooney
The film sways awkwardly back and forth between prickly humor and pathos, rarely ringing true in either register.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Consummately crafted and stunningly shot in magnificent locations deep in Brazil's remote northeastern badlands, the film unapologetically courts the commercial curve of the international arthouse arena with its rustic exotica and sensory overload of poetic imagery, giving it something of a grandiose air.- Variety
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- Variety
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- Variety
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- Variety
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- David Rooney
This oddball tale of a small-town gangster's troubled girlfriend hovers uncertainly on the edge of an absurdist universe.- Variety
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- David Rooney
The film is shocking and upsetting, but never truly gets under the skin the way this kind of material often can. Whatever reservations are prompted by Haneke's approach, his direction is controlled and edgy. [20 May 1997, p.52]- Variety
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- David Rooney
Exhaustively informative and powerfully emotional.- Variety
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- Variety
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- David Rooney
Despite a soulful leading performance from Max Minghella, pic feels insubstantial, echoing without equaling both the coolly ironic edge and heart of "Ghost World" and the incisive art-world outsider portrait of the director's docu feature, "Crumb."- Variety
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- David Rooney
Occupies wavelengths too remote to be tuned in by audiences other than diehard Asian esoterica enthusiasts.- Variety
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- David Rooney
The film appears consistently poised to go deeper but instead hangs back, making it less substantial than it might have been. Yet the sweet-natured story's gentle humor and poignancy should draw appreciative audiences.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Driven by soulful performances and by a genuine sense of wonder for the unpredictable permutations of love and family.- Variety
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- David Rooney
The film's appealing characters and amusing situations prevail over its general shortage of energy.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Richly human in focus, the drama steadily cranks up its political and emotional charge.- Variety
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- David Rooney
The film's transitions between periods are not entirely seamless and its discourse often becomes didactic. However, the depth and intelligence it brings to issues of black politics and sexuality could help carve an appreciative theatrical audience in upscale gay and/or urban niches.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Plays like an aggressively heart-tugging, exceedingly vanilla Disney telemovie.- Variety
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- Variety
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- David Rooney
A slender but appealing divertissement about a has-been auteur attempting to remake the French silent classic "Les Vampires," the film's wry digs at the institution of Gallic art movies and at the anarchic confusion of the filmmaking process should amuse hip fest audiences.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Unclassifiable cult figure Takashi Miike's films invariably have their share of weirdness and perversity, but Gozu arguably outweirds all previous efforts in the prolific Japanese director's eclectic canon.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Land gives the drama some poignancy, revealing the pain, anger, envy and longing of a girl burdened by life's imbalances. But her character exists in a vacuum, surrounded by stock figures and unconvincing actors.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Finally. After "The Phantom of the Opera," "Rent" and "The Producers" botched the transfer from stage to screen, Dreamgirls gets it right. Bill Condon's adaptation of the 1981 show about a Motown trio's climb to crossover stardom pulls off the fundamental double-act those three musical pics all missed: It stays true to the source material while standing on its own as a fully reimagined movie.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Despite an excessively meandering final act, the drama's three intertwined stories have a cumulative impact, their affecting sadness matched by meticulously composed visual poetry.- Variety
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- David Rooney
An exhilarating retelling of a 1950s tabloid murder, it combines original vision, a drop-dead command of the medium and a successful marriage between a dazzling, kinetic techno-show and a complex, credible portrait of the out-of-control relationship between the crime’s two schoolgirl perpetrators.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Crialese's first feature in his native Italy is a small but distinctive drama that displays a firm command of his cast, an arresting visual sense and an admirable avoidance of facile sentiment or cliche.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Craftily combining elements that speak directly to three different generations, this accomplished ensemble piece is shaping up to be the surprise homegrown hit of the season.- Variety
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- Variety
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- David Rooney
Far from abandoning his trademark humor, however, the writer-director skillfully enlists it in the service of an emotional story, charting the heroine's journey from loss and torment to rediscovered strength and hope. Propelled by stellar performances and a script that resonates with intelligence, subtlety and surprises, this is by far Almodovar's best film in years.- Variety
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- David Rooney
As both political satire and noirish murder mystery, this Newmarket pickup may be too meandering and unemphatic for wide consumption.- Variety
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- Variety
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- Variety
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- David Rooney
Result hovers a little uncertainly between dark comedy and urban drama, but remains compelling thanks to its gritty narrative texture, nervous energy and loose, jumpy structure, which fit well with the DV-shot production's no-frills approach.- Variety
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- David Rooney
With less than five minutes of screen time but with more humor and sassy attitude than the remaining cast combined, Missy Elliott separates hip-hop royalty from riff raff in the otherwise lackluster Honey.- Variety
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- David Rooney
The intimately personal chronicle is more impressive for Famiglietti's disarming self-exposure than for any fully formed cinematic style or consistency of tone, but the modest production has a genuine, warm spirit.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Beautifully acted by Rachel Weisz, Rachel McAdams and Alessandro Nivola as the three points of a melancholy romantic triangle, this is a deeply felt drama that exerts a powerful grip.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Variety
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- David Rooney
Has a patched-together feel, and its aims as human drama, social documentary and vigilante movie are never quite reconciled.- Variety
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- David Rooney
While another director might have imbued the story of a Sicilian boy awakened to his parents' involvement in child abduction with more emotional weight and thematic depth, Salvatores' classically illustrative treatment should open arthouse doors for the visually sumptuous production.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Signals a talented newcomer in writer-director John Simpson and boasts a gripping central performance from popular British comedian Lee Evans.- Variety
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- Variety
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- David Rooney
A massive undertaking and an accomplished piece of filmmaking in a solid tradition of intelligent, meticulous literary adaptations.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Director Matteo Garrone's measured approach and soulfully humane focus combine to dignify the characters, allowing the tale of solitude, longing and sorrow to inch quietly under the viewer's skin.- Variety
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- David Rooney
This superbly acted drama’s refusal to serve up tidy epiphanies might leave you wanting more. But the inchoate nature of the central characters’ self-reflection is partly the point in a smart movie with a lot on its mind.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Variety
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- David Rooney
Almost as much an art piece as a film, this playful Prohibition-era tale is visually inventive and initially amusing but, at feature length, becomes somewhat wearing in its cacophonous eccentricity.- Variety
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- David Rooney
An unexpected departure off the map, flinging together elements of Alpine musical, ghoulish Jan Svankmajer-style claymation and a family portrait so hokey it makes the Brady Bunch look hip.- Variety
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- David Rooney
The broad comedy is somewhat strained and obvious, and the hyper-real atmosphere encourages the cast to slice the prosciutto a little thickly. But the film's sweet-natured ingenuousness proves reasonably contagious.- Variety
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- David Rooney
A mildly diverting farcical caper... stretches a thin idea even thinner, but it offers enough puerile fun and well-executed gags to lure fans of the 1989 predecessor back to theaters before a more robust future on homevideo.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Minor-key and subdued to a fault, the drama nonetheless builds emotional involvement by infinitesimal degrees through its acute observation of characters and social context and its ultra-naturalistic performances.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- David Rooney
Despite its crude, willfully naive style, this comedy of transgression, judgment and revenge becomes steadily more appealing as it progresses.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Lapses into melodramatic self-importance and gratuitous stylistic flourishes that take the audience out of the action -- are outweighed by the steadily amplified emotional power of this ultimately moving drama.- Variety
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- David Rooney
This kind of episodic chain of interlocking encounters has become a formulaic favorite in American indie cinema, and Mattei's take on the genre is narrow and schematic.- Variety
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- David Rooney
An ultimately moving drama about a displaced people. But its emotional kick is muffled by long-windedness, sentimental overkill and an overpopulated character gallery.- Variety
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- David Rooney
Over-plotted and at times incoherent but never dull, this is a stylishly designed, highly entertaining bloodbath full of offbeat comedy and inspired musical moments.- Variety
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