Eric Kohn
Select another critic »For 1,258 reviews, this critic has graded:
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74% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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24% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 10.7 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Eric Kohn's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 76 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Creative Control | |
| Lowest review score: | Rings | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,073 out of 1258
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Mixed: 162 out of 1258
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Negative: 23 out of 1258
1258
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Eric Kohn
Over the course of 106 minutes, Rumsfeld's rambling assertions grow exhausting, particularly because Morris never manages to direct them toward a larger argument.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 17, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Unfortunately, the unbridled shock value isn't matched by a similar investment in other ingredients that might have made this low rent B-movie worthwhile.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 17, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
A totally wacky head-trip with midnight movie sensibilities and a daring avant garde spirit, Glazer's movie is ultimately too aimlessly weird to make its trippy narrative fully satisfying, but owes much to Johansson's intense commitment to a strangely erotic and unnerving performance unlike anything she has done before.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 17, 2013
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- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 16, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Though it lacks a cohesive means of fusing together its interlocking vignettes, Palo Alto effectively showcases the despair and sophomoric rebellion of teen life with a mature eye that clearly establishes a new filmmaker to watch.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 16, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
No stranger to crafting excessive anticipation, Reichardt has funneled that skill into thriller clothing. However, like all of her output, nothing is as simple as it looks.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 16, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
It's impossible to look away -- not only because the sense of anticipation is so vivid, but because there's no other way to follow the bizarre plot than keep with it.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 16, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
If Joe marks a new beginning for some of its characters, the same description applies to its director and star.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 16, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Though suffering from dry patches and a fairly mannered approach, The Invisible Woman eventually makes its way to a powerful final third documenting an ultimately tragic romance in deeply felt terms.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 15, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
An uneven, intermittently thoughtful but largely preachy overview of WikiLeaks' rising influence that has less of an issue determining Assange's character than it does with telling a compelling story.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 15, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
It tries to have some bite to its will-they-or-won't-they scenario but ultimately winds up toothless.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 15, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
The story arrives at a satisfying emotional conclusion with wonderfully thoughtful ramifications.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 15, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
While both pieces of the entire package generally work independently of each other, they have just enough ingredients to necessitate a viewing of the whole thing.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 15, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
The narrative only really stumbles because its tone never manages to convince on the level that McConaughey's performance eventually does. With its subdued approach, Dallas Buyers Club stops just short of an emotional payoff.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 14, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
As a whole, Begin Again is a fairly mannered treatment of an expressive medium.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 14, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
It's less of a showcase for Bateman's ability to direct comedic storytelling than simply to make people laugh, which makes Bad Words a sufficiently vulgar playground.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 14, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
A distinctly uneven but imminently watchable theatrical showcase in which cinematic and stagy devices go head to head with no clear winner.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 13, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
The grim subtext of The Wind Rises goes largely unacknowledged, leading to a gaping hole in this otherwise beautifully realized narrative that celebrates the power of curiosity as a motivating force.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 11, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
It's hard to imagine Captain Phillips in the hands of any other filmmaker -- and Captain Phillips in the hands of Greengrass looks exactly like anyone familiar with his work would expect. It does justice to the material even while playing too conscientiously by the book.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 6, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
There's a certain elegant simplicity to the movie's execution that maintains a spirit of familiarity but also keeps the material afloat.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 3, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Gravity lets you visit space without sugarcoating its dangers. It's a brilliant portrait of technology gone wrong that uses it just right.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 3, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
More than a powerful elegy, 12 Years a Slave is a mesmerizing triumph of art and polemics: McQueen turns a topic rendered distant by history into an experience that, short of living through the terrible era it depicts, makes you feel as if you've been there.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 2, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
In its revelations of Salinger's flaws, the documentary capably strips away the fanaticism associated with his books to create the impression of a human being.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 2, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Before all else, Villneuve's grim chronicle of the fallout when two young girls vanish in a small town succeeds at crafting one powerfully suspenseful moment after another.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 1, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Make no mistake: Mickle wants to make you jump and scream, but death only arrives in this movie once its world comes to life, which makes each sudden turn all the more intense.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 29, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
A labyrinthine descent into the grotesque extremes of a Disneyfied society, Escape From Tomorrow is surreal for many reasons and wholly original because of them. It's also a daring attempt to literally assail Disney World from the inside out.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 19, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
The Butler carries an authenticity that sustains it through its cloying stretches.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 8, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
If Elysium is the brainiest Hollywood movie of the summer, it's also the most conflicted one.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 5, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
This tame exercise never quite jives and sometimes just bombs with one-note melodrama, but always maintains Thornton's conviction about the material.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 2, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Anchored by a funny and especially credible performance by newcomer Miles Teller, Ponsoldt's follow up to his alcoholism portrait "Smashed" has all the hallmarks of a bittersweet teen drama with flashes of realistic comedy on par with "Say Anything" and "The Breakfast Club."- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 31, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Instead of commenting on the vapidity of the film industry, Paul Schrader's miscast, poorly executed and utterly soulless drama is an example of the failing art form it seeks to indict. Though it has real ideas, Schrader and his team never manage to put them into action.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 30, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
In "Adventureland" and this summer's "The Way Way Back," disillusioned teens have worked through their issues in the weeks leading up to college by taking on quirky summer jobs. However, Carey's wacky sensibilities retain a notably fresh quality by using the same framing device as an excuse to bat around one funny idea after another. The story transcends the derivative scenario through a noticeable lack of verbal censorship.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 26, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
In constructing its gripping overview, After Tiller maintains a generally straightforward roundup of talking heads, but its unassuming construction gradually generates an authoritative voice. Only once the arguments have been plainly established does the emotion truly take hold.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 25, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
More traditional in terms of atmosphere and plot, Drug War nevertheless features a tense, unstoppable momentum, a morally ambiguous protagonist and hugely involving action scenes.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 23, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Despite its shortcomings, The World's End glistens with a comedic energy not present in equivalent mainstream blockbusters.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 21, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Dealin' With Idiots is powered by a cast of terrific character actors.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 19, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Whether Girl Most Likely intentionally satirizes its upending of conventions or suffers from a half-assed screenplay, the resulting hodgepodge at least livens up a clichéd premise.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 19, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Blue Jasmine belongs to Blanchett, who appears in almost every scene and frees it from the limitations of Allen's style, pushing it to far sharper results than any of the more traditional movies, good and bad, that he's churned out in the past dozen or so years.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 19, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Combing a memorably gritty Ryan Gosling performance with the breakneck tempo of the getaway cars his character handles for hire, Refn churns out a hyperactive love letter to road rage with unapologetic glee. It's a total blast.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 19, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Wan seems to critique the third act failings of The Conjuring during the alarmingly superior first half.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 17, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Big Words at times seems like it's heading towards a microbudget version of "Hustle and Flow," but Drumming aims for a much smarter and subdued look at the various regrets and hang-ups haunting men of a certain age. Their blackness is only one piece of the puzzle.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 16, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Given the saturation of the found footage horror genre, Cordero's approach delivers a much shrewder alternative that goes beyond the power of suggestion by rooting its otherworldly fears in authenticity.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 15, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Killing Season is like the Saturday morning cartoon version of a terrible movie: still bad, but at least colorful enough to go down easy.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 11, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Too in love with itself to ever totally go off the rails, Pacific Rim doesn't qualify as the first full-on dud of del Toro's career, but it's hard not to get the sense that something's missing.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 8, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
A Band Called Death lacks the thrill of mystery but makes up for it with pathos.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 27, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
With a keen eye for the capacity of fine art to address a complex range of attitudes and experiences, Museum Hours effectively applies Cohen's existing strengths to a familiar scenario and rejuvenates it by delivering a powerfully contemplative look at the transformative ability of all art.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 25, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
The conflict in The Attack is less about the reasoning behind immoral behavior than the problems involved in any cursory understanding of it.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 24, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
As a statement about the fixed nature of cinematic tropes, Redemption provides a compelling supplement to Statham's current stardom.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 24, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
World War Z may wear its intellect proudly, but also consciously translates the zombie premise into a safer context for wider audiences. It's not the smartest zombie movie ever made, but might be the most commercial one.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 18, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
A gleefully over-the-top celebration of silliness too in love with its outrageous characters and premise to make them gel. Scene after scene features a self-satisfied kookiness akin to spending time with a terrible comic unwilling to give up the mic.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 14, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
While certainly the most dazzling Superman movie to hit the big screen, the 143-minute Man of Steel is also the longest, and it only justifies that heft because it leaves room to keep the effects coming.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 10, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Monsters University, the latest Pixar offering, charms in an excessively familiar way that illustrates a troublesome eventuality: Pixar has lost its edge.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 9, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Taking its time to let the world take shape, Short Term 12 builds to an involving series of mini-climaxes without tidying up every loose end.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 7, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Directed by Blume's son Lawrence, this gentle drama based on Blume's 1981 novel works surprisingly well considering the numerous trappings of the material, while demonstrating exactly why it's so difficult to bring Blume's work to the screen.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 6, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
V/H/S 2 smartly contextualizes its nightmarish cavalcade of violence by acknowledging the luxury of enjoying it from a distance.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 6, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Smart in spite of its irreverence, "Future Folk" is the weirdest, most enjoyable fusion of genres you'll see this year.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 6, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
The movie makes a strong case against the captivity of killer whales under sub-circus conditions, but the stance is made even more horrifying because so little has changed in the history of the organization. Blackfish is less balanced investigation than full-on takedown of a broken system.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 4, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
The cumulative effect is occasionally dizzying but transparent, a frantic attempt to cram themes into cinematic conceit.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 2, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
While not designed to entertain on the level of style and spectacle that one expects from a Bond film, this tense period drama from the director of "Man on Wire" presents a far more credible take on the daring exploits of British agents.- IndieWire
- Posted May 30, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Kechiche excels at capturing his protagonist's emergence in the world.- IndieWire
- Posted May 27, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
At times a rich, intimate observation of emerging sexuality, the movie also maintains a quiet, observational rhythm that peaks around wintertime when things grow dark for the character and then more or less watches her grow up.- IndieWire
- Posted May 27, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Though slow-going for much of its running time, Arbor's delicate tale culminates with a frighteningly choreographed tragedy, but tacks on a beautifully evocative and mostly wordless epilogue that carries the semblance of progress.- IndieWire
- Posted May 27, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Farhadi's new movie confirms his unique ability to explore how constant chatter and anguished outbursts obscure the capacity for honest communication.- IndieWire
- Posted May 26, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
If you can groove with Jarmusch's patient, philosophical indulgences and the wooden exteriors of his characters' lives, the movie rewards with a savvy emotional payoff about moving forward even when the motivation to do so has gone.- IndieWire
- Posted May 26, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Gray's fifth directorial effort is a conflicting experience admirable and powerfully executed in parts, cold and meandering in others.- IndieWire
- Posted May 26, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
A straightforward tale of overcoming personal and professional challenges with no fancy dressing, Grigris goes down easy but offers nothing remotely fresh.- IndieWire
- Posted May 26, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
With its palatial setting, Borgman shows how money can buy luxury, but it can't salvage the corruption that comes from within.- IndieWire
- Posted May 25, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Bogged down by flashbacks and flash forwards, The Bastards pointlessly mixes up its ingredients, creating a distancing effect from the tangible sadness at its core. The result is the rare case of a movie that confirms its maker's skill while wasting it on useless ambition.- IndieWire
- Posted May 25, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
The movie is an impressively realized work of minimalist storytelling that foregrounds Redford's physicality more than any other role in his celebrated career. His performance defines the movie to an almost shockingly experimental degree.- IndieWire
- Posted May 25, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Paul's increasingly hectic attempts to retrieve the book dominate the movie so heavily that it leaves little room for considering how this effort fits into the rest of his world.- IndieWire
- Posted May 23, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
It's a sad, thoughtful depiction of midwestern eccentrics regretting the past and growing bored of the present, ideas that Payne regards with gentle humor and pathos but also something of a shrug.- IndieWire
- Posted May 23, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
The story works wonderfully as an idea, but Kore-eda never quite manages to infuse it with the same depth of feeling his main character goes through.- IndieWire
- Posted May 23, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
A wholly original and thoroughly surprising fusion of sensory overload and liberal philosophy bound to confuse and provoke in equal measures.- IndieWire
- Posted May 22, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
The movie is like one thin satiric lark inexplicably slowed down to the point of lethargy.- IndieWire
- Posted May 22, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
In the Fog develops an unearthly spell that largely makes up for its cerebral pace.- IndieWire
- Posted May 20, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
An ode to art for art's sake, Inside Llewyn Davis is the most innocent movie of the Coens' career, which in their case is a downright radical achievement.- IndieWire
- Posted May 20, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Coppola presents a smart cross-examination of the impact of media exposure on fickle young minds. While the ambitions of its young thieves often blur together and lack precise definition, The Bling Ring is the director's breeziest work, allowing the story to glide along with the ease of a heist movie.- IndieWire
- Posted May 16, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
By the standards of Jordan's earlier films, "Byzantium" is unquestionably a minor achievement, but its technical specs help flesh out a thick environment that elevates the proceedings to a lyrical plane.- IndieWire
- Posted May 12, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Berberian Sound Studio constructs a perpetually strange, unseemly series of events overshadowed (and sometimes consumed by) the spooky movie-within-a-movie that hangs over every scene.- IndieWire
- Posted May 10, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
As a conversation starter, The World Before Her gets the job done. By virtue of the topic and interviews, Pahuja showcases plenty of tensions between old world values and idealistic goals. That's hardly enough to make its narrative persistently alluring or emotionally sound.- IndieWire
- Posted May 7, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Luhrmann's The Great Gatsby has the hallmarks of a contemporary Hollywood spectacle. It's missing the explosions, but make no mistake: Gatsby is one glitzy misfire.- IndieWire
- Posted May 6, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Nothing about Dead Man's Burden reeks of homage to oaters of yore -- instead, Moshé has made a legitimate entry in a genre he clearly adores.- IndieWire
- Posted May 2, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Though ultimately unsuccessful, it valiant reaches for a funky, wild critique of hedonistic sluggards wandering through society with no clear direction. But more than anything else, it delivers Keanu in his element.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 26, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
As slickly paced as a big-studio espionage movie, it nearly succeeds as a pure adrenaline-rush thriller. In the end, the problem isn't that there's too much plot, but rather a certain dramatic illogic.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 26, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Just as the frequent cutaways from sexual activity tone down the titillation, Lovelace never garners the energy to construct a fully involving melodrama, rarely rising above Lifetime movie standards. Given the material, the irony here is that the filmmakers play it too safe.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 23, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Swanberg once again shows a capacity for capturing small moments that exist outside the direction of the plot. At the same time, the effective fragments of "Drinking Buddies" take his oeuvre in a new direction by accumulating into a reworking big picture.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 23, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Passion simultaneously parodies its plot while elevating it to a strangely involving exercise in cinematic drama. The filmmaker has either lost control of the material or maintains the same calculation of his protagonists. But the entertainment value associated with that uncertainty is the essence of his career.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 23, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Computer Chess excels at conveying the frustrations of feeling trapped by forces beyond one's control, the complexities of humanity irresolvable by any neat code.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 22, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Heinzerling's beautifully shot, painfully intimate look at the aging couple's struggle to survive amid personal and financial strain is both heartbreaking and intricately profound. This is a story about creative desire so strong it hurts.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 21, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
The movie contains an epic scope that feels out of sync with the smallness of its plot; you get the idea by the first act and then Laurence's world simply hangs there for another two hours like a slo-mo shrug.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 15, 2013
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- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 15, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Zombie's witches aren't as scary as the credible psychopaths he has portrayed before, but The Lords of Salem contains enough frenzied imagery in its climactic moments to make the spell linger.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 14, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
The issue with Post Tenebras Lux is that the narrative, not the filmmaker, feels dispiritedly half-baked.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 12, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Kim's movies are generally grim, disturbing affairs, but "Pieta" leaves much to the imagination in favor of its unsettling implications.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 12, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
The filmmakers have crafted seriously derivative fun that plays like "Scream" molded with "Cabin Fever" in the twisted universe of "Final Destination." It's a familiar ride, but a relentlessly wild one as well.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 10, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Black Rock never reinvents the rules, but it understands them just well enough to make its bloodless stabs at ingenuity stand out.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 10, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Crystal Fairy has little to say beyond Cera's capacity to transform into an amazingly uncomfortable screen presence, something we already knew.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 9, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
He's still cultivating his storytelling abilities, but Wheatley has clearly found his sweet spot: a darkly funny place with serious potential.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 9, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Aftershock has no earth-shattering revelations to make its mayhem stand out in the wreckage.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 8, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Writer-director Todd Berger, improving his technique with his second feature-length credit following "The Scenesters," combines enough energetic performances with charged wit to make this one doomsday comedy that earns the right to its familiar backdrop.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 7, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
At times Midnight's Children balances off its earnestness with a sweeping view of history and tangible human drama, but the allegorical qualities of Rushdie's novel fail to translate as anything but a shrill, on-the-nose instance of thematic overreaching.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 1, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
If nothing else, Blancanieves offers an excellent case for revisiting the early days of cinema -- and for recognizing how much has been lost in its absence. While "The Artist" recalled the silent film industry, Blancanieves solely pays tribute to the art.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 27, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
In its wonderfully irreverent way, Wrong makes it clear that this reality is never to be trusted as anything more than a succession of strange moments that coalesce into an abstract representation of the subjectivity that traps us all. This is the essence of new film noir, which challenges our perceptions through a series of compellingly ambiguous moments.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 26, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Atmospherically, Spring Breakers is an elegant evocation of noir storytelling, littered with misdeeds with girls and guns at every turn.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 26, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Boyle's filmmaking style has a marvelous rhythm that weaves pop sensibilities into fluid and persistently exciting narrative experiences; he shakes these ingredients like colored sand in a jar, leading a fascinating degree of discombobulation.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 26, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Eventually suffers from a lack of new ideas beyond its initial premise that finds the two brothers inadvertently swapping roles. Once that happens, the movie takes one bland twist after another.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 26, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Chapiron stubbornly avoids an uplifting message, portraying his dangerous setting as a demonstration of virility that leads to madness.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 25, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
As Love Is All You Need goes through the motions of drawing its central couple together, Bier delivers nothing more than a well-made, strictly middlebrow entertainment with a bittersweet polish that's easy to enjoy and forget in equal measures.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 19, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
The movie is constantly at war with attempts to provide an honest portrayal, almost as if its subject were reaching beyond the grave to steer any negativity back in the direction of a hagiography.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 18, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Playing make believe with murderers, Oppenheimer risks the possibility of empowering them. However, by humanizing psychopathic behavior, The Act of Killing is unparalleled in its unsettling perspective on the dementias associated with dictatorial extremes.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 18, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Moors isolates a well-known drama with the fleeting nonfiction prologue and explores it from the inside out: It's not an attempted reenactment, but it does aim to get at certain truths.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 18, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
A stitched-together combo of outlaw energy and bittersweet romance that gives the impression of Little Rascals in the big city. Like the graffiti art it documents, it's a lovingly handmade affair.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 15, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Xavier Dolan's I Killed My Mother marks the emergence of an exciting new filmmaking talent. The Montreal actor, a mere 20 years old, displays a startlingly mature perspective on human behavior in his triple threat position as writer-director-star.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 13, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
The reality-show aesthetic pervades the movie as well. Garrone's roaming camera style draws you into each moment with extreme close-ups and long takes that wander through each scene and get lost in it. Luciano's plight is crushing because Garrone renders it with such detail.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 10, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Fruitvale is largely sustained by Jordan's career-making performance and the way Coogler uses it to analyze his subject...It's a fascinating investigation into the contrast between media perception and intimate truths.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 10, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
An ode to the strength of onscreen horror even in its less inspired state, the new Evil Dead primarily succeeds at illustrating how the originals have managed to stand the test of time.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 10, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Call it a Shakespearean catharsis or just call it a lark -- either way, the movie represents Whedon's least essential work, regardless of the material's inherent comedic inspiration.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 7, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Stories We Tell marks the finest of Polley's filmmaking skills by blending intimacy and intrigue to remarkable effect.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 7, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Too late, At Any Price displays the presence of a skilled filmmaker capable of using ambiguous pauses and representational imagery to convey the issues of greed and other covert desires. Until then, it's a slovenly affair only distinguished by its name cast.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 3, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
That the movie succeeds both as a high-stakes crime thriller as well as a far quieter and empathetic study of angry, solitary men proves that Cianfrance has a penchant for bold storytelling and an eye for performances to carry it through.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 3, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Marred by excessive sentiment, it has a buoyancy and a hook that makes it stand out -- but they're elements that would help it kill on Broadway (as it already has on the Australian stage) a lot better than it does onscreen.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 3, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
To the Wonder renders the familiar terrain of romantic dysfunction on a grand scale. Malick haters may not change their tune, but at least they can admit that To the Wonder maintains a consistent thematic focus.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 3, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Small touches point to a slightly better movie hiding beneath most of the routine, particularly the respectable finale that stops just short of the clichéd resolution expected of it. On the whole, however, The Way, Way Back dances to a tune we've heard too many times before.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 26, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
There are powerful ingredients here, certainly enough to create a deeply felt work, but The End of Love lacks the additional layers of storytelling necessary for Webber to make the audience feel as close to the material as he does to his son.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 26, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
A viscerally charged movie that foregrounds surface tensions and gripping performances, Ginger and Rosa is the filmmaker's most accessible and technically surefooted work to date.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 25, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Mungiu's method creates the feeling of being submerged in a maze of confrontations and chatter, but the build-up gets so tiring that the concluding scenes come as a relief instead of a payoff.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 21, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
At times, Frances Ha strains from emphasizing the characters' snarkiness and disregarding plot. By routinely going nowhere, however, the movie eventually finds a distinctive voice that carries it through.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 19, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
This could be a recipe for excessive self-indulgence, but the meta quality of Red Flag is entirely irrelevant to its low key charm and persistent irreverence -- anchored, as always, by Karpovsky's loopy screen presence.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 19, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Rubberneck has more in common with the growing Karpovsky oeuvre than it may appear -- and even inadvertently critiques it.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 19, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
With a dense, often impermeable style and a mentally unstable protagonist, Simon Killer is like watching the disturbed anti-hero of "Afterschool" all grown up.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 10, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Intermittently action-packed and lethargic, the movie dances around formula. By delivering an expressionistic character study with bursts of intensity unlike anything else in his oeuvre and yet stylistically representative of its entirety, Wong practically has it both ways.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 10, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Before Midnight is the rare cinematic achievement that implicates alert viewers in its mission to understand the mysteries of intimate connections.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 10, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
While not his best work, Like Someone in Love is a nimble expression of Kiarostami's appeal: He remains one of the few directors capable of pulling you into a narrative and making you question its motives at every turn.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 8, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
The scenes pile up with frenetic intensity; as with Soderbergh's other recent exercises in the suspense genre, no single cutaway goes wasted.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 5, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Upstream Color is routinely confusing but not oppressively so; its final exquisite moments explain little yet still manage to invite you in.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 5, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
More blatantly an exercise in style than anything on par with the director's crowning achievements, and suffers to some degree from the predictability of its premise.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 5, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Byington excels at turning the edict that time waits for no one into a sensory experience. No matter how sly it gets, Somebody Up There Likes Me still retains that fundamental truth.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 1, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
The problem with Outside Satan is that the filmmaker has remained faithful to expectations without enlivening them. It's a curious exercise unworthy of his expertise, but then he may realize as much.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 15, 2013
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- Eric Kohn
Hooper's approach comes across as the equivalent of sitting in the front row of a stage play while the entire cast leans forward and blares each song into your eardrums.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 23, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Overlong and unfocused in parts, Salles' adaptation nonetheless holds together about as well a movie can when the odds are so heavily stacked against it.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 20, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
The movie's stakes are alternately personal and political, but Petzold's skill truly comes into focus in the tense climax, when those two aims come together with a powerful act of defiance.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 20, 2012
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- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 20, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Although not exactly heartwarming, Amour has a more contained vision of human relationships than Haneke's previous films without sacrificing its bleak foundation. It's his most conventional movie about death -- and the most poignant.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 20, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
This is still a pretty familiar journey that's easier to pity than hate -- much like Caplan's character.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 13, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
By making the inanimate animate, they make nature come to life, and so does Convento.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 12, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
At times more in line with "Blazing Saddles" than the grimly bawdy qualities that define many bonafide oaters, Django Unchained erupts with a conceptual brilliance from the outset that never fully meshes with its clumsy storyline. Nevertheless, it's a giddy ride.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 12, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Happy New Year provides a rare glimpse into the darker ramifications of war that rarely take center stage in the national dialogue. This struggle has nothing to do with political motives or tactical movements, but rather the battle to retain sanity against impossible odds.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 11, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Promised Land can't help but preach its cause in obvious ways that continually hold back an otherwise well-acted, swiftly paced drama.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 6, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Whereas "45365" took the form of a scattered collage, with disconnected events and a vast ensemble of characters stitched together to represent a year of activity, Tchoupitalas brings greater clarity to a similarly diffuse canvas by situating it around a trio of innocent observers.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 6, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
The actor's pathos and deadpan skills are buried in the material, which also suffers from a continuous lack of inspiration. It's high-minded entertainment with low ambition.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 6, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
It's a period piece composed of familiar pieces, none of which have much to say beyond surface elements that have been explored countless times before. Using a typical coming-of-age mold, Chase turns cultural ephemera into formula.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 4, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
If you're willing to just go with it, An Unexpected Journey is a competent ride, but as a whole it lacks purpose, giving the impression of a television program in its later seasons still chugging along while full aware that it has peaked. Needless to say, "Hobbit" fans will find plenty to soak in; others may get the feeling of being bludgeoned by deja vu.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 3, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Welcome to the world of white people problems, ground zero for the strain of American comedies that Apatow does best. But does he really?- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 3, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
It's an unflinching update to media scholar Neil Postman's prophetic claim about the deadly impact of television on cultural identity: Smartphones in hand, we face the danger of filming ourselves to death.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 29, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
The movie isn't political so much as philosophical, trashing the notion of the American dream as anything more than fodder for an endless rat race.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 29, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
The whole thing is a fairly yawn-a-rific affair until the vengeful prologue establishes a wicked role reversal, hinting at the better movie that filmmakers more interested in storytelling would have made.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 29, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Even as California Solo plays like a track we've heard before, it's still worth a listen.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 29, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
A bonafide family drama, proof that the noir has humanistic roots. It left me feeling thankful for persistent movie traditions.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 28, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Beware of Mister Baker won the Grand Jury Prize at the SXSW Film Festival earlier this year, perhaps because it was the best embodiment of a recent trend in the non-fiction realm.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 27, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Bigelow delivers an acute realization of the mission's execution that's eerily in sync with the way it played in the popular imagination. Visually, the events unfold as a mashup of shadowy movements with flashes of green night vision. It's simultaneously predictable and tense.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 27, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
While its main characters are tough-minded, Rust and Bone is itself pure heart.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 23, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
With an editing approach that seamlessly blends past and present, Central Park Five contains a fluid, engaging storytelling that does away with the dry voiceover commentary and theatrical music choices that typically account for the narrative flow of most Burns films.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 20, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Gibney's narrative drags to some extent when the focus widens to explore the Vatican's overall policy for covering up sex scandals, but he successfully demonstrates the systematic failure of a system designed work flawlessly on the basis of spirituality that never existed in the first place.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 15, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Dickinson's hauntingly naturalistic look at disgruntled young adults trapped in the country following an urban disaster plays like "Martha Marcy May Marlene" transported to a post-apocalyptic survival narrative -- with lots of yoga and sex.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 15, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Wright's extraordinary long takes draw you into the universe of Anna Karenina with a seamless approach that a straightforward literary adaptation could never accomplish.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 15, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Hitchcock largely succeeds at pulling back the veil on his off-camera personality. To a larger degree, it reveals the level of influence of his devoted wife and screenwriter Alma (Helen Mirren) on both his personal life and career.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 12, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
At two and a half hours, Lincoln contains only a single battle scene in its opening seconds. The rest is pure talk, a keen dramatization of Doris Kearns Goodwin's tome "Team of Rivals," that delivers an overview of Lincoln's crowning achievement in chunks of strategy talk.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 8, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
In Another Country is a paragon of any given Hong movie's intrinsic charms, and yet it also manages to break from the pattern by including an English-speaking character as one of its leads.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 8, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Cafe de Flore constantly hovers on the brink on some revelation it never quite arrives at.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 8, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
The story retains an inscrutable tone that sometimes makes its emotional qualities feel remote, but it still delivers a powerful message about the challenge of self-diagnosis by rooting it in universal experience- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 4, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
A surprisingly enjoyable tongue-in-cheek New York comedy from "Clueless" director Amy Heckerling, Vamps teeters on the brink of not quite working and yet still routinely lands its laughs.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 1, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Guided by an over-the-top Nazi hunter played by Judd Hirsch (clearly enjoying himself), Cheyenne begins a road trip through Middle American that goes nowhere, and Penn's mopey has-been routine starts to feel like a bad joke that just keeps getting worse.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 1, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
The mystical allure of this long-awaited "lesbian werewolf movie" turns out to have more value than the real thing.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 1, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
The Bay manages to scare up a real fear of environmental neglect. It's quite possibly the first example of jump scares used in service of activism.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 1, 2012
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- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 1, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
It's a familiar mold: the perils of suburban discontent have been so thoroughly explored that The Details plays like a hodgepodge of familiar circumstances on an assembly line to disaster.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 30, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Beneath the pixelated gags, the stakes are relatively familiar. However, much of the humor in Wreck-It Ralph riffs on the nostalgia associated with real games.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 29, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Recording "Body and Soul" with Bennet only a short period before her death, Winehouse's simultaneously effusive presence not only illustrates her fragility but stands in sharp contrast to the stable work ethic that Bennett has cultivated over the course of his 60-year career.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 27, 2012
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- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 27, 2012
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- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 23, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Baring all and radiating an affability that defines the movie's tone, Hunt delivers her finest performance since "As Good As It Gets."- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 18, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
There's no doubting that Holy Motors is an ungodly mess of images and moments, some more alluring than others, but it sure leaves a mark.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 17, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Slickly paced and carried by mature performances, Flight embodies one of the finer strains of Hollywood filmmaking in recent years.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 14, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Winstead's performance provides a trenchant wakeup call even when the movie can't keep pace.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 11, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Most segments have a fair share of cheap scares, but they also delve into the art of the build-up, as if delivering a series of grim jokes with bloody punchlines. Consider it a 21st-century take on "Tales from the Crypt."- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 4, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Sister may not arrive at a happy ending, but the lack of resolution -- capped off by the powerful last image --completes its journey to a place of rousing emotional clarity.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 4, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Lee Daniels' The Paperboy is a rare case of serious commitment to outright silliness.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 4, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
A personal work not because the director chooses to make himself a part of the story, but rather because he implicates all of us in it.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 4, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
In its finer moments, however, Lee translates the book's wondrous prose into grand visual conceits meant for the big screen. Posited as a story that "will make you believe in god," instead it has the power to confirm one's faith in the cinematic experience.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 28, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Hyams delivers a remarkably satisfying action-thriller hybrid that constantly pushes ahead. It's one of the best action movies of the year simply because it keeps hitting the right beats.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 26, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Burton's id explodes onto the screen with a plethora of demonic mutated critters.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 22, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
The movie makes up for uneven dialogue and pacing issues through sheer horrific imagery.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 22, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Fitfully uneven, Dredd is nevertheless an intriguing consolidation of action-movie excess -- and even makes a solid case for its aesthetic appreciation.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 20, 2012
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- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 18, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
By virtue of its style and high stakes scenario, End of Watch is impressively tense, but then so are most episodes of "COPS," which don't suffer from the forced melodrama found here.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 12, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
It suffers from the greater problem of emphasizing a feel-good plot within the context of mass destruction.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 12, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
While Francine distinguishes itself with atmospheric strangeness, Cassidy and Shatzky never create a satisfying whole.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 11, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Equally a slick political thriller, intelligent period piece and sly Hollywood satire, Ben Affleck's Argo maintains a careful balance between commentary and entertainment value.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 10, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Tom Hanks' appearances come across like scene changes between unfunny sketches on 'Saturday Night Live.'- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 10, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
A less controlled and slapdash character piece than "In Bruge," McDonagh's new movie benefits greatly from a plethora of one-liners that toy with crime movie clichés in the unlikely context of writerly obsessions.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 9, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
There's a adrenaline rush even in the problematic finish, an eagerness that drives the filmmaking so that Looper is thrilling to watch even when it falls apart.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 7, 2012
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- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 6, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Sachs skillfully explores dangerous extremes -- not only drug addiction, but the slipperiness of attraction.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 4, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Nobody else could fit the role of a crestfallen rocker that Paul Dano embodies in director So Yong Kim's remarkable For Ellen.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 1, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Ornette isn't just a love letter to the liberty of jazz rhythms; it excels at expressing them.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 30, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
The closest Brügger comes to explaining his style is an early statement on the duality of his mission to go "beyond all moral boundaries known to man while still being a respectable member of society." It's a goal enacted less with a coy wink than with a violent elbow jab to the ribs.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 28, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Unfortunately, Lawless lacks the same darkly energizing spirit that made "The Proposition" such a revelation: It has plenty of gunplay, scowling showdowns and dust-caked setpieces, but little in the way of dynamic filmmaking to imbue those elements with life.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 28, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
A gigantic physique hides the fragile man beneath and Matthiesen ably follows the journey of that persona as it tunnels through mounds of muscle to reach the surface. In essence, the lion finds his courage.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 23, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Produced by Keanu Reeves, this talking heads survey of the transition from shooting on film to digital video is against all odds an imminently watchable overview, and not only because Reeves has decent interview skills.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 16, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Since 2005's "A History of Violence," Cronenberg has ventured beyond the grotesque allegorical interests of his earlier movies, a shift that has led some longtime fans to assume he has softened up. As an enjoyably peculiar anti-capitalist indictment, Cosmopolis proves otherwise.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 16, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
It's a movie that must be seen, processed and discussed, perhaps the first of its kind to transform the audience into a focus group.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 16, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
While visually scrumptious, the movie struggles to reach a greater profundity that it never quite obtains, but its childlike emulation of a grand tragedy is indelibly precious.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 16, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Beloved never really earns its sprawling timeline, eventually getting bogged down with too many developments and overstaying its welcome. For a movie where people intermittently burst into song, the plot is oddly one-note.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 16, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
As ghost stories go, this one's done just well enough to provide reminders of how it has been done better.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 16, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Robot and Frank succeeds where "Ted" fails because, unlike McFarlane, Schreier and Ford render the relationship between the human character and the robot in largely credible terms.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 14, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Sleepwalk With Me calls to mind Judd Apatow's "Funny People" for its focus on the eccentric, obsessive nature of the wannabe comic's mind.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 11, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
It's painful to watch Red Hook Summer stumble, because the man behind it has tried so hard to get his groove back. However, it's energizing in the fleeting moments when he does just that.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 9, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Even when it stumbles, however, 2 Days in New York retains an airy vibe, reflecting its dogged intention to charm its viewers. But seeing as "2 Days in Paris" never felt especially irksome, this affable sequel deserves the same insouciant shrug.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 9, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Unlike the polished universe of Pixar's "Brave" or countless other recent CGI efforts, ParaNorman maintains a delicate, handcrafted look that underscores its ideas.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 4, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Any bona fide sushi fan stands to benefit from the general wake up call that "The Global Catch" provides in ample doses.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 2, 2012
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- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 2, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
The whole thing is a step above studio romantic comedies, but that's not saying much.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 2, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
For a quarter of a century -- unbeknownst to most Americans, including Rodriguez's original producers -- the singer landed a massive following in the country where his humanitarian outlook provided an escape for many disgruntled youth struggling under apartheid, elevating him to the stature of a "South African Elvis."- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 26, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
With an eye for gritty, shameless fun, Friedkin unleashes the play's guilty pleasure center. Friedkin holds nothing back, but it's Letts' rambunctious plotting that enables the director to chart a path to the wild climax.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 26, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Recently released from jail, Ai's full story remains to be told, but Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry competently summarizes his lasting relevance, regardless of what may happen next.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 26, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
For American audiences, each gag has added appeal because it contains an uneasy humor that's often explored but never fully exploited in these parts.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 24, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Kazan has fun with a silly premise and smartly plays it straight when the occasion calls for it, while keeping the cutesy, fantastical extremes of the material at bay. It's less fairy tale than shrewd exaggeration on the pratfalls of desire.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 23, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Slickly made if not particularly stylish, the movie maintains its entertainment value for picking ideal models of American excess.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 19, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
With its lethargic pace, Hara Kiri may disappoint more often than it delights, but the payoff is extreme in more ways than one.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 19, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
If you've never heard of LCD Soundsystem or cared much for the group's work, Shut Up and Play the Hits still manages to explore the prospects of fame and contemporary rock music's lasting relevance.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 17, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
A spectacular noir epic that's equal parts murky, bloated, flashy and triumphantly cinematic. Four years after Nolan's "Batman Begins" sequel "The Dark Knight" rattled audiences with a similar audiovisual overload, the new movie falls into the same rhythm and remains viscerally satisfying even when the story falters.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 16, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
While overlong and occasionally too reliant on a formulaic set of motives to drive the action forward, Easy Money retains its suave composure right through the engrossing finale.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 11, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Stone's uneven direction veers from near-amateurish genre antics to an enjoyable awareness of those same standards.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 3, 2012
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- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 28, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
If nothing else, this memorable effort eloquently displays Hushpuppy's fragile understanding of her world, where the only certainty is that nothing lasts forever. That makes "Beasts" into a gigantic triumph even when it falls apart.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 25, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
It pitches a tone between comedy and tragedy that holds unique appeal.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 19, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Even Allen himself, appearing in front of the camera for his first role since 2005's "Scoop," looks a little lost in the mess.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 15, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
The filmmaker's first-rate access feels like a kind of desecration.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 12, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Extraterrestrial can be forgiven the tangents into melodrama due to Vigalondo's seamless ability to navigate those soapy waters.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 12, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Duplass' feisty energy is matched by DeWitt's constant smarminess, while Blunt's shy, fragile behavior balances off the forceful personalities surrounding her.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 10, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Prometheus is an unquestionable good time, one of the best big-screen science fiction accomplishments since 'Avatar.'- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 6, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Pattinson portrays the monotonous Georges Duroy in two equally dry modes: scowls and smirks.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 5, 2012
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- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 4, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
A barrage of screwing with interludes does not yield a cohesive movie. Watching Sexual Chronicles of a French Family, the one-note idea grows increasingly evident, as does its absence of fresh ideas.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 2, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Even when that story drags, Moonrise Kingdom could be appreciated on mute.- IndieWire
- Posted May 21, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Transitioning back into a scripted dynamic after his quasi-documentary performance excursions with "Bruno" and "Borat," Baron Cohen loses none of his edge, combining slapstick inspiration and social commentary into a hilariously provocative blend.- IndieWire
- Posted May 14, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Despite the ongoing momentum, Sleepless Night never loses touch with its story.- IndieWire
- Posted May 8, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
I Wish embraces blissful ignorance, even celebrating its child characters' naivete.- IndieWire
- Posted May 7, 2012
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- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 17, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Viewed as a single experience, Oki's Movie is a curious oddity worthy of multiple viewings and lengthy contemplation, but its tricky formalism makes it less overtly satisfying on an emotional level.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 17, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Lockout consists of disciplined action pastiche, but much of its thundering engine borrows from better movies.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 10, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Post Mortem portrays the specter of dictatorship through the lens of one man's private hell.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 9, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Keyhole never comes together, but that's part of Maddin's creed. He makes movies about movies to express his love for movies, which is to say he makes movies about himself.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 3, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
One development gets short-shifted: the onslaught of studios drowning out what made the Con so attractive in the first place.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 2, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
American action movies are almost entirely defined by cutaways, blaring music cues and grunts. The Raid: Redemption, a hyper-energetic Indonesian martial arts movie, delivers an effective rebuke to that meek norm. Bones break, blood flows and swift, excessively complicated fight choreography puts virtually everything released in North America since "The Bourne Ultimatum" to instant shame.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 21, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
The long take pulls you into the realism of the moment, heightening any sense of unease already established by the story. In Silent House, directors Chris Kentis and Laura Lau ("Open Water") exploit the hell out of that uneasiness and keep pushing its limits.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 7, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
With its persistent inventiveness and a lack of unearned sentimentality, the movie provides an antidote to a lot of lazily produced dramas about death, American or otherwise.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 5, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
The Snowtown Murders manages to become a compelling exercise that excels at making horrible acts look shockingly listless.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 29, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
The Forgiveness of Blood examines the barriers of ritual and the passage from youth to adulthood in Albanian society with the perceptive detail of a grand literary feat. At the same time, it retains the simplicity of a parable.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 24, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Alternately mortified and charmed by the unhinged lifestyle, the film goofily celebrates the idea of a societal escape before drowning its idealism in a puddle of half-formed jokes.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 22, 2012
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- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 13, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
The beautiful desolation of Bombay Beach makes it difficult to describe as a documentary. Alma Har'el's directorial debut takes a nonfiction setting and displays its haunting qualities in poetic terms.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 13, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Over time, Holland's approach pushes beyond despair and turns into a pure exercise in grim atmosphere, shifting from a story of staying alive to a closeup of a private hell.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 8, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
You've never seen anything like Chico & Rita, simply because that jubilant palette and likeminded jazz soundtrack embraces its predictability with such vitality.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 7, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
West, who demonstrated a penchant for extensive build-ups in "The House of the Devil" and "Trigger Man," continually makes it unclear if the inn actually harbors a ghost or if his heroine (Sara Paxton) has simply imagines it. Both she and her hilariously frazzled co-worker (Pat Healy of "Great World of Sound") want to believe in supernatural affairs for the thrill factor alone.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 29, 2012
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- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 16, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Pummeling forward from its first diner-set fight scene to a sweeping final showdown on the beach, Haywire is a literal blast.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 16, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
The Divide manages to transcend its numerous flaws while indulging them: No matter where it falters, the underlying purpose stays put.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 14, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Imagine "Harold and Maude" directed by Eric Rohmer with shades of film noir and doused in philosophical chatter enhanced by ample white wine. But Domain isn't pure formula, because the subversion of expectations is its centerpiece.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 11, 2012
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- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 5, 2012
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- Eric Kohn
Nuri Bilge Ceylan's mesmerizing Once Upon a Time in Anatolia plays like "Zodiac" meets "Police, Adjective."- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 31, 2011
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- Eric Kohn
If "Extremely Loud" came out in the weeks or months following 9/11, more audiences (and critics) might find an excuse to appreciate the way its soul-searching protagonist works through his grief. Ten years later, his struggle actually feels outrageously old-fashioned.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 26, 2011
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- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 26, 2011
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