Frank Scheck
Select another critic »For 2,247 reviews, this critic has graded:
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47% higher than the average critic
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6% same as the average critic
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47% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 13.2 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Frank Scheck's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 52 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | The Peasants | |
| Lowest review score: | The Haunting of Sharon Tate | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 706 out of 2247
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Mixed: 1,107 out of 2247
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Negative: 434 out of 2247
2247
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Frank Scheck
As with most found footage films, there’s a lot of tediousness, with the early proceedings resembling the sort of home movies from which anyone not directly involved would normally flee.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 17, 2014
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- Frank Scheck
Its Hitchcockian aspirations are sabotaged by a tendency towards lurid melodrama that is more laughable than chilling.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 13, 2014
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- Frank Scheck
Ultimately, there’s little to distinguish the proceedings other than their brevity. By the time the piece reaches its familiar death-strewn conclusion, with guns taking the place of swords, it has come to seem like little more than an ill-conceived exercise.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 13, 2014
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- Frank Scheck
Sluggish pacing and sub-par special effects mar this would-be epic adventure film.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 13, 2014
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 11, 2014
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- Frank Scheck
Much of what transpires is wholly unconvincing, although the proceedings are made palatable by the highly appealing performances by the two leads, who display a genuine onscreen chemistry.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 11, 2014
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- Frank Scheck
Director Won Shin-yun delivers a seemingly non-stop series of exciting set pieces that are only slightly marred by occasional visual incoherence.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 11, 2014
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 9, 2014
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- Frank Scheck
Blair Erickson’s inventive low-budget horror film doesn’t fully live up to its provocative premise, and its extensive use of the found-footage style gives it an all too familiar feel. But it offers some genuine scares along the way, as well as a terrific performance by the ever-reliable Ted Levine.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 9, 2014
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- Frank Scheck
Boasting uncommonly handsome production values and a stellar cast, the awkwardly titled The Adventurer: The Curse of the Midas Box nonetheless feels like a stillborn attempt at a franchise starter.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 9, 2014
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- Frank Scheck
While the actor lends his formidable presence to the proceedings, this rote thriller mainly succeeds in squandering his talents.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 9, 2014
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- Frank Scheck
The screenplay by Eddie and Chris Borey fails to live up to the juiciness of the original premise, lacking meaningful character development and teasing out its unveiling of its mysterious plot elements in dull, plodding fashion.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 7, 2014
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 28, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
The clunky narrative doesn’t ring true for a second, and the hackneyed dialogue is even worse.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 13, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Although diffuse at times, this documentary delivers a vibrant portrait of a fascinating subculture.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 12, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Despite its flaws and unevenness, White Reindeer at least deserves points for not providing another sugarplum-infused view of Christmas.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 12, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Featuring superb performances by the principal actors, Big Bad Wolves is mesmerizing from start to finish.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 10, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Park Hong-soo’s debut feature includes enough kinetic action sequences to satisfy genre fans even while its dramatic elements leave something to be desired.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 5, 2013
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 29, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Documenting the 2010 journey in somewhat haphazard but always compelling fashion, Pad Yatra: A Green Odyssey well reflects its subjects’ goal of merging spirituality and environmentalism.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 28, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
The proceedings are largely engrossing and the performances are mostly excellent, with especially strong turns by the female leads.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 25, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Directors Patrick Alexander Stewart, Gina M. Angelone and Mouna B. Stewart have failed to construct the often emotional personal accounts into a compelling film.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 21, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Although a bit too leisurely and featuring a few too many interminable group therapy scenes, the film nonetheless succeeds in packing considerable dramatic impact thanks to its incisive characterizations, realistic dialogue and well-drawn milieu.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 21, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Beautifully acted by the largely unknown cast, This is Where We Live is as reticent as its characters, its emotions emerging as much from what’s unsaid as expressed. Its admirably understated approach infuses what could have been an all too predictable, feel good drama with an intriguing complexity.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 21, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Its hopelessly stodgy execution will test the patience of even the most enthusiastic audiences for faith-based films.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 21, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
The filmmaker, who co-founded ADI with his wife Jan Creamer, documents the dramatic developments in compelling cinema verite fashion.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 15, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
A quietly effective thriller with a few clever narrative tricks up its sleeve.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 15, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
For all its fandom and self-indulgence, Dear Mr. Watterson does offer some insightful musings about the decline of comic strips in general, with their content ever shrinking due to the diminished state of the newspaper industry.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 14, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
What Amir Bar-Lev and Charlie Lightening’s documentary provides that hasn’t been previously available is an amusing portrait of the backstage goings-on.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 12, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Slickly executed with glossy, neon-drenched cinematography and a throbbing techno-music score, Paris Countdown sacrifices substance for stylishness, as has become the distressing tendency of so many recent crime dramas. But its fast pacing, compelling lead performances and frequent doses of action prevent boredom from settling in.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 11, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Using the plight of the hapless team and its troubled young players as a microcosm of American society in decline, Medora, inevitably bound to be compared to the more ambitious and accomplished Hoop Dreams, nonetheless scores some winning points in powerful fashion.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 8, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
The film is more impressionistic than informative, lacking the necessary dramatic structure to make it truly compelling.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 1, 2013
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 1, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Sweet Dreams delivers a rare uplifting story from a country that has seen more than its share of brutality and heartache.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 31, 2013
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 31, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
This static, talky effort ultimately doesn’t justify its feature-length running time despite some strong performances and the occasional moving moment.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 29, 2013
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 21, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Ultimately, it’s little more than a trifle that’s enlivened by the older Huston’s inevitably referential performance.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 21, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Glossier and more lavishly produced than most faith-based films, the film directed by Steve Race is ultimately undone by a relentless preachiness that gives it the feel of a two-hour sermon.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 17, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
None of the characters,--whether human, fantastical, or anthropomorphically animal—prove remotely engaging. And the cheap animation, the sort of low-grade CGI endemic to endless direct-to-video efforts, proves visually unappealing.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 16, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
While only sporadically effective in its attempt at creating a modern-day Psycho, Forgetting the Girl does manage to sustain a sufficiently disturbing mood that is not easily forgotten.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 13, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
What starts out as a reasonably effective ghost story devolves into familiar torture porn in Cassadaga, Anthony DiBlasi’s muddled horror film ineffectively blending two genre styles.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 11, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
A slight but sweet effort that serves as an excellent showcase for its Mexican star, Jaime Camil. The effortlessly charismatic performer delivers a winning performance in this romantic comedy that somehow manages to work despite its endless contrivances.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 11, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
It ultimately devolves into yet another rote horror film that in this case lives up to its name by also being seriously underlit.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 10, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
There certainly are moving moments in this inspiring if necessarily somewhat morbid travelogue... but they’re buried in the sloppiness and self-indulgence that too often marks this vanity project.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 9, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
The gorgeous physicality is more impressive than the sketchy storyline of this dance-centric drama.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 8, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
More scares are induced by the creepy soundtrack composed by Slash and Nicholas O'Toole than by the perfunctory special effects.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 7, 2013
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 7, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
The fight sequences are staged with admirable proficiency despite the often cheesy special effects.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 6, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
The film’s reluctance to fully explore its provocative moral conflict renders it terminally bland.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 6, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
It offers scant insight to go along with its simplistic homilies about the power of faith and the reassuring presence of God.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 2, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
This overly convoluted and contrived farce features a typically scenic setting and an engaging performance by Helena Noguerra in the central role but otherwise has little to recommend it.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 27, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
The film’s chief asset is Nabaway, who delivers a subtly moving and restrained performance that transcends the contrived plot mechanics. It’s a heartfelt turn that befits this well-intentioned but ultimately reductive film.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 27, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Unfortunately, the power of the message is diluted by the pedestrian filmmaking, with the overall effect resembling a compendium of public service announcements.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 27, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Naomi Watts and Matt Dillon bring impressive emotional and physical heat to Sunlight Jr., director/screenwriter Laurie Collyer’s beautifully observed character study of an unmarried couple living on the economic margins.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 27, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Wedding Palace is being billed as the first Asian-American romantic comedy and the first U.S.-Korea independent co-production. Too bad, then, that this shrill, unfunny effort from director/co-writer Christine Yoo features such broad clichés and stereotypical characters that it doesn’t exactly reflect well on the Korean-American community.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 27, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
A formulaic comedy that displays as much subtlety as its title.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 25, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
This intense drama co-starring Jeanne Tripplehorn and writer-director Leland Orser is at times too minimalistic for its own good, but it has a powerful emotional immediacy that fully grips the viewer by the time it reaches its wrenching conclusion.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 25, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
With a running time of nearly two hours the overall silliness wears thin rather quickly.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 24, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
The young dancers' undeniable skill and athleticism is squandered in this formulaic, overly familiar dance movie.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 22, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Although not wholly successful in its sociological aspirations, the film does provide both considerable laughs and food for thought.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 19, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Jewtopia feels like a failed sitcom pilot that might have been created by Jackie Mason.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 19, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
A Strange Brand of Happy is being billed as a “faith-friendly romantic comedy,” but its overall ineptness has the inadvertent impact of making you lose faith in romantic comedies altogether.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 13, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Mademoiselle C should please fashion devotees while leaving everyone else scratching their heads.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 12, 2013
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 11, 2013
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 11, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
A fully rounded and complicated portrait of both the man and a company that somehow managed to survive under devastating circumstances.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 8, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
This second feature based on a best-selling book by Jim Stovall is mainly repetitive in its themes and suffers from a melodramatic plotline and hamfisted execution.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 6, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Although its formulaic storyline...holds no surprises, the film nonetheless exerts a certain charm.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 6, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
The actress (Amanda Plummer) delivers a beautifully understated, emotive turn that gives this otherwise opaque movie some much needed heart.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 29, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
For all its thoughtful analysis, the film is more anecdotal than truly enlightening. While its cheerleading approach to the problem is admirable, it seems more designed to appeal to the heart than the head.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 29, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
There’s no denying the inherent emotional power of watching Wampler, aided by two experienced climbers, endure his arduous quest to climb a mountain twice the height of the Empire State Building.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 22, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
The filmmaker documents the proceedings in refreshingly matter-of fact-fashion, thankfully avoiding the temptation to overly sentimentalize or mine cheap humor and contrived suspense from the proceedings.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 22, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Annette Haywood-Carter’s slow-paced film features a plethora of colorful characters and incidents that register with little dramatic impact.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 21, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
While its theme of youthful empowerment inevitably strikes an emotional chord, the film never manages to achieve any dramatic steam, plodding along in mildly diverting but essentially bland fashion.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 20, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
The film doesn’t fully succeed in elucidating its complex issues. But the wide-spread problem it explores is clearly undeniable, and at the very least this rough-hewn but provocative documentary will hopefully inspire further discussion.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 15, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Watching your friends’ actual wedding videos, however painful, would be a more edifying experience than sitting through Breakup at a Wedding.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 3, 2013
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 3, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Narrated in unobtrusive fashion by Forest Whitaker and featuring a jaunty Afropop soundtrack, the film is crisp and economical, with the filmmaker carefully avoiding extraneous melodramatics. They are, after all, hardly necessary in a tale that already contains such inherently powerful drama.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 31, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
You can’t make this stuff up. But Smash and Grab: The Story of the Pink Panthers would be fascinating even if it wasn’t so timely.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 31, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
While this is indeed a likeable enough group, watching them interact with each other over the course of 80 minutes becomes a bit wearisome.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 21, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Doesn’t exactly dig very deep, but its often fascinating archival footage and stories of royal lineage dating back to the days of Queen Victoria (who bore no less than nine children) surely will delight devoted Anglophiles.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 21, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
This stupefying dull mockumentary purports to explore themes of media manipulation and political propaganda, but whatever points it’s attempting to make are buried amidst the ponderous goings-on that will result in a quick exit from theaters.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 18, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Marked by incisive characterizations and fine performances, Big Words is aptly titled, referring not only to the name of one of its lead characters but also to the torrent of dialogue driving its skimpy but evocative narrative.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 18, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Whatever suspense that might have been generated by the violently gory goings-on is dissipated by the sheer visual incomprehensibility.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 17, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
The problem is, despite the fact that the cast is filled with a gallery of veteran comic performers, few of the characters they portray are very interesting.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 17, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
While the pleasures of the brief (65 minutes) Viola are modest, it displays an imagination and stylishness that marks the young filmmaker as someone to watch.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 12, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Now that the filmmaker has reached a certain age, she no longer seems to have her finger on her generation’s pulse. Case in point: The Hot Flashes, a ribald comedy whose menopause-referencing title is all too indicative of its pandering humor.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 11, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Featuring veteran Austrian theater actor Philipp Hochmair and former circus performer Walter Saabel playing loosely fictionalized versions of themselves, The Shine of Day sporadically registers with beautifully observed moments even while suffering from its lack of a compelling narrative.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 11, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
This striking cinematic collage provides a hauntingly personal perspective on a country that has been wracked by strife from its very beginnings.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 10, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Despite its noteworthy cast who presumably had some time to fill between better gigs, this is the sort of instantly disposable B-movie effort that Quentin Tarantino would have chucked in the wastebasket after a first draft.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 10, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
By the time the proceedings reach their "Paranormal Activity"-style violent conclusion, the viewer’s interest has long since waned.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 5, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Features a top-notch cast, a few beautifully observed moments, and some amusingly bitchy dialogue. But its rambling, episodic structure and gallery of troubled characters will ultimately prove too off-putting to attract theatrical audiences.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 27, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Part somber character study and part revenge thriller, Steven Knight‘s debut feature lacks the thematic depth necessary to take it seriously while not featuring enough of the high-octane action that its star’s fans have come to expect.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 25, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
The execution, however, leaves something to be desired, as this effort seems more visually muddled and choppier than previous installments.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 13, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
A deeply dispiriting portrait of the systemic persecution of the LGBT community in Uganda, the country that seems to be ground zero for homophobia.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 13, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
This fascinating show-business documentary brings its subject to life, warts and all, in a way that would no doubt have thoroughly pleased him.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 6, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Featuring a plethora of unsavory characters, undeveloped subplots and a confusingly jagged narrative, this extremely low-budget effort is mainly notable for its willingness to get down and dirty.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 1, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Manages to be reasonably diverting even as it proves inevitably minor in its impact.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 1, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Featuring murky visuals, an even murkier narrative that lamely sputters to its conclusion, and frequently amateurish performances — the effectively low-key Isabelle is a notable exception — the film never explores its undeniably disturbing issues with enough thematic depth to compensate for its ragged execution.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 30, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Attempting to be a meditation on the nature of creative passion and the emotionally liberating effects of physical labor, Triumph of the Wall is as much of an exercise in frustration for the viewer as for its hapless protagonist.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 30, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
The sometimes forced if well-intentioned social proselytizing is alleviated by the well-drawn relationships among the central characters.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 28, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
This subtly engrossing psychological thriller plays like an intellectual version of Fatal Attraction, minus the sex and the dead bunny. And that’s meant as a compliment.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 23, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Barely managing to fill its brief running time despite its surfeit of smuttily vulgar gags, 3 Geezers! proves a less than subtle argument for euthanasia.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 22, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Might not boast stylistic expertise, but it should please aficionados while providing an entertaining primer for the uninitiated.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 22, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Lacking the objectivity or contextual analysis to more fully examine the important issues it raises, it’s a minor chapter in an unfinished story.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 18, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Equal parts thriller and feel-good inspirational tale, 33 Postcards succeeds mainly in provoking the viewer’s sense of disbelief.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 16, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Depending on your age and memory, you’ll recognize cinematic DNA from everything from "Three Days of the Condor" to the "Taken" and "Bourne" franchises in this tale of a father and daughter on the run from an evil conspiracy.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 16, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
You know a movie’s in trouble when it’s most dramatic element is the breaking of a piñata.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 9, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Despite the performer’s engaging charisma, One Track Heart ultimately lacks the contextual depth to make it more than mildly interesting.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 9, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Speaking his (Rourke) lines in an unintelligible accent that occasionally requires subtitles and wearing a white suit that never seems to get bloody even when he’s stabbing people to death, the actor brings an undeniably fascinating strangeness to the otherwise familiar proceedings.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 9, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
This farcical romantic comedy lacks the charm and star power to compensate for its contrived plotting and only mildly amusing situations.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 6, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
The film overcomes its schematic plot elements with finely observed characterizations and rich dialogue.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 6, 2013
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 2, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Playing the emotionally shut-down driver for an escort service, the actor provides what little interest there is to be found in this otherwise aimless depiction of urban alienation.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 2, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
While its blending of philosophy and B-movie conventions will produce more bemused chuckles than converts, the film certainly earns points for sheer audacity.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 1, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Although it sketchily touches on many provocative issues -- the inhumanity of this form of incarceration, the relationship between the artist and subject -- Herman’s House fails to explore them in a fully satisfying manner.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 18, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
The strained results eventually prove wearisome, although the sexy Winter is effectively scary and at times even moving as the psycho femme fatale.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 18, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
The Lords of Salem is more creepily atmospheric than truly scary and eventually lapses into silliness. But it does provide some evocatively spooky moments along the way.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 18, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
This latest installment of the horror movie spoof franchise is mainly notable for its Charlie Sheen/Lindsay Lohan cameos.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 12, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Although Graham Meriwether’s film is far less incendiary than such similarly themed efforts as "Food, Inc." and "Fast Food Nation," it nonetheless offers considerable — pardon the pun — food for thought in its exploration of modern-day cattle, hog and chicken production.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 11, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Although ragged in its presentation and frustratingly unfocused in its storytelling, Babe’s and Ricky’s Inn is an endearing cinematic valentine that pays well-deserved tribute to a vanished musical institution.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 9, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Gorgeously photographed by co-director Burke in the beautiful environs of East Sussex, England, this modest but subtly powerful piece of minimalist cinema exerts a haunting spell.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 7, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Long on mood but short on just about everything else, this would-be thriller directed by David Jacobson is as boring as it is baffling.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 7, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Its highly informative recounting of this little-known tragic tale provides a vivid reminder of the ephemerality of civilizations.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 7, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
It winds up as little more than a mildly fun spatter picture that will be best enjoyed by undemanding patrons at midnight screenings.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 4, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Despite its admittedly intriguing parts, the film ultimately feels too diffuse and self-indulgent to represent a truly incisive portrait of its subject.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 4, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
While its supernatural premise might have fueled a perfectly good Twilight Zone episode, The Brass Teapot strains to fill its feature-length running time.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 3, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Although Andre Gregory's fans will find much here to savor, this rambling and unfocused portrait smacks of self-indulgence.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 3, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Onscreen, it somehow manages to be at once wildly overblown and terminally boring.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 29, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Detour is a tautly efficient thriller that fully succeeds in making the viewer identify with its hapless protagonist’s desperate plight.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 28, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Although it has a visceral intensity, this teen-centered prison movie doesn't avoid the familiar tropes of its genre.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 28, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Although Rulin displays a compelling neurotic edge as the driven Emily, Chenoweth and Modine are unable to breathe much life into their schematic roles, while the supporting players are basically saddled with conveying a compendium of quirks.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 28, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Despite its fast pacing and well-staged action set-pieces, the film fails to make much of an impression.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 27, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Bringing a much needed personal perspective to a war that has claimed thousands of American lives, the film nonetheless suffers from a hagiographic quality that, from everything we hear expressed about its self-effacing subject, would have disturbed even him.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 26, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
This endlessly derivative, nearly unwatchable effort from debuting Italian director Christian Filipella is amateurish on every level.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 25, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Offering nary a single funny moment in its seemingly endless 84 minutes, the film...provides evidence that cinematic sketch comedy is clearly a lost art. The inevitable outtakes seen during the end credits seem to indicate that the actors, at least, were having fun. Too bad none of it managed to find its way onto the screen.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 24, 2013
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 21, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
The ideal animated film for Ron Paul to watch with his grandchildren, the bizarre Silver Circle certainly deserves points for sheer eccentricity.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 21, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Features a winning performance by Sara Rue as its titular heroine but otherwise has little to recommend it. Playing a wallflower who blossoms when she finally meets the right guy, the actress has charm to spare.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 21, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
This would all be moving enough, but the film also benefits greatly from Conde’s endlessly charismatic personality.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 20, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Trippy in the best sense, Vanishing Waves adds a healthy dose of eroticism to its familiar sci-fi genre.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 18, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
This assemblage of star-filled shorts makes for a generally rewarding grab bag.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 16, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
A modern cinematic equivalent of the sort of tired sex farces that used to populate Broadway with regularity, If I Were You simultaneously exploits and squanders the talents of its star, Marcia Gay Harden.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 14, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Part adventure saga, part elaborate home movie, the documentary showcases both the emotional and physical pitfalls faced by this emotionally fraught crew.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 13, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
This head-scratcher boasts visual imagination to spare even as its logistical complexities and heavy-handed symbolism ultimately prove off-putting.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 13, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
While its mixture of cinematic styles is awkward more often than not, Girl Rising deserves points for at least trying something different rather than relying on the bone-dry, academic approach usually employed for such informational ventures.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 10, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
The film lacks the originality or wit to differentiate it from the countless other indie romantic comedies littering our screens.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 10, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Although the overlong film skirts with hagiography, at times feeling more like a promotional DVD extra than an objective account, it nonetheless has an undeniable emotional pull thanks to its fairy tale-like narrative.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 7, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Filled with devastating statistics documenting the devastating effects of climate change on the planet, the film takes particular aim at CEOs, or “greedy lying bastards,” of the oil and gas corporations which are contributing to the crisis.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 7, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Designed as a family film adventure promoting positive values, it’s a sort of teenage "Raiders of the Lost Ark" that will provide mild diversion for very young audiences.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 2, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
A mockumentary obviously inspired by his landmark 1990 series The Civil War, misses the Christopher Guest mark by a mile.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 2, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Although directed in effectively creepy fashion by Roberto Buso-Garcia, the film’s leisurely pacing and overall restraint will likely leave genre fans dissatisfied even as its lack of depth will turn off art-house patrons.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 2, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Unfortunately, while director/co-writer Ed Gass-Donnelly displays an admirable restraint in his general eschewing of gratuitous gore, quick editing and flashy visuals, the results have a generally soporific feel.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 1, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Despite the world-changing ramifications inherent to the plot, the results are more tedious than thrilling.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 28, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
The opportunity to see the stunning footage on the big screen is not to be missed, and the narration by Daniel Craig, delivered with James Bond-style drollness, makes it as much fun to listen to as to watch.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 20, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Considering the importance of the still active 93-year-old poet’s art and social activism, the film seems slight and discursive, more of an introduction than a definitive portrait.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 7, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
You'll never play the titular parlor game again after watching Would You Rather, director David Guy Levy’s clever exercise in torture porn that manages to display as much restraint as genuine sickness.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 6, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
A rare example of a grown-up story compellingly told from the perspective of children, The Playroom is a modest gem.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 5, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Actually offers some decent scares before descending into typical horror film bombast.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 3, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
For all the impressive ease with which the filmmaker handles her tyke star, Nana never quite manages to achieve the thematic resonance to which it aspires.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 30, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
While the original version's four hours might have made for wearisome viewing for Western audiences, Herzog's 94-minute cut feels just right, fully immersing us in this rarified world without lapsing into tedium.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 30, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
The extra weight that the actor has packed on gives him an air of vulnerability that makes his character's ultimate emergence from his seemingly impenetrable emotional shell all the more moving.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 30, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Aims to be a cutting-edge portrait of cutthroat political machinations. But it's a mostly toothless affair that, like so many of our current political figures, proves alienating.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 28, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Despite the dizzying array of talent involved both in front of and behind the camera, this godawful exercise is so painfully unfunny, so screamingly bad that it immediately qualifies as one of the worst films of all time.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 25, 2013
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 11, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Essentially "Alien" set in a self-storage facility, the British low-budget horror flick Storage 24 doesn't manage to rise above the limitations of its bare-bones concept.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 10, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Ultimately A Bottle in the Gaza Sea adds little insight into a conflict that has already inspired several powerful dramas, such as the recent "The Other Son," and is sadly likely to be the subject of many more.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 7, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Interweaving clumsily staged action sequences with endless pontificating about evil mega-corporations privatizing public resources, the mediocre environmental-themed thriller A Dark Truth wears its good intentions on its sleeve.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 6, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Unlike the restrained 1974 film which cleverly relied mainly on suggestion, this version piles on the graphic, often CGI-enhanced gore.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 4, 2013
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- Frank Scheck
Unfortunately, Allegiance is less sure-footed in the filmmaking department, rendering its potentially suspenseful storyline stilted and uncompelling.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 27, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Making her feature directorial debut at the tender age of 70, veteran actress Connie Stevens delivers an obviously heartfelt but sadly unfocused melodrama in the form of Saving Grace B. Jones.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 13, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
This meta-theatrical attempt at creating a comically subversive film is far too self-indulgent to provide insight into its important themes.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 12, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
The winning performances by its two leads elevate this contrived Israeli import.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 10, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
This bloody exercise in camp quickly wears out is welcome, although its copious doses of nudity and gore, as well as its undeniably catchy title, should help it stand out on video shelves.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 10, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Patrick McGrady's documentary strains to reconcile its conflicting moods, but Fry's gushing enthusiasm for the subject is ultimately if sometimes queasily infectious.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 7, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Eventually, though, Waiting For Lightning suffers greatly from the absence of Way himself.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 7, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
This tale of a dysfunctional family whose members experience enough personal crises to fuel a dozen films is a virtual compendium of clichés, but the star's sheer likeability makes it go down as easily as a cup of eggnog.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 6, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Depictions of custody battles have become a cinematic staple, but few register with the heartfelt emotion of Any Day Now.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 4, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Mixing soap-opera melodramatics with pithy one-liners, the film never achieves a coherent tone, with the uneven performances by the ensemble adding to the problem.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 2, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Remakes of '80s-era cult-favorite horror flicks seem to be all the rage these days. But they have to be better than this formulaic effort to replace the already not-so-great originals.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 30, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Say what you will about the confused narrative, blatant borrowings and wildly over-the-top gory violence of Universal Soldier: Day of Reckoning -- at least you can see what the hell is going on.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 29, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
While the idea of a German romantic comedy may seem like an oxymoron, What a Man proves an amiable diversion that at least has the distinction of not starring Katherine Heigl or Kate Hudson.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 29, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Frequently slaughtered for consumption in Europe, their inhumane treatment as revealed here will surely prompt outrage among animal lovers as well as those concerned with health and environmental issues.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 28, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Unfortunately, the Collector simply isn't a very interesting screen villain. Clad in a black mask that reveals only his eyes and mouth, he mainly communicates by heavy breathing. It makes one yearn for the perversely witty chatter of Jigsaw.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 28, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Aggressively quirky but lacking any real wit - unless you consider a lengthy monologue about the taste of semen to be side-splittingly funny - the film based on David Gilbert's satirical novel is a non-starter.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 27, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
The film never achieves any real depth in its unabashedly admiring portrait. What might have made a mildly interesting short feels vastly attenuated even with its brief 72-minute running time.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 27, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
If the dreary Mystical Laws was designed by its creating organization as some sort of recruitment tool, then they clearly have a lot to learn from the Scientologists.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 27, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Few true-life stories are as inspiring as that of Darko Kralj, the subject of Dejan Acimovic's new documentary The King.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 23, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
The only film ever to be released with the promise of a reward--$50,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the bomber--Who Bombed Judi Bari? is an engrossing account of the case.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 18, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Ra'anan Alexandroricz's documentary uses a simple framework - a starkly photographed series of interviews with nine retired judges and lawyers instrumental in administering the often arbitrary laws - to deliver a provocative examination of the nature of justice.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 16, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
The comedy of errors surrounding the 11 years (and counting) efforts to rebuild the devastated Ground Zero site would be funny if it weren't so tragic. Filmmaker Richard Hankin manages to encompass both aspects in 16 Acres, his strikingly coherent documentary chronicling the tortured process.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 16, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Few will be unmoved by this film's subjects, including the great niece of Herman Goering and the daughter of concentration camp commandant Amon Goeth, as they relate the heavy burdens stemming from their fateful lineage.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 16, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
This version is unlikely to strike a similar chord with young audiences while severely disappointing older fans of the original.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 16, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
A quiet, nearly plot-free drama enlivened by beautifully nuanced performances by its four-person leading ensemble, In Our Nature depicts familiar dysfunctional family dynamics with a welcome lack of melodrama.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 12, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Silent Hill is not a place you want to go, and that applies for moviegoers as well as this videogame adaptation's characters.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 26, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Kate Clere McIntyre and Saraswati Clere's less than revelatory documentary that incessantly makes the point that yoga is really, really good for you.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 20, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
La Vie au Ranch boasts an undeniable authenticity. But how much you enjoy it will depend on your affection for its aimless if attractive characters.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 20, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
About as subtle as its subtitle, Gloria Z. Greenfield's documentary attempts to be both a comprehensive exploration of anti-Semitism throughout the ages and a forceful alarm about its modern-day threat. Not fully successful on either level...- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 20, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Vivid if scattershot documentary examines today's sexualized culture by focusing on three subjects.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 20, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
The resulting journey of self-discovery is not exactly profound in its revelations, but as usual with McElwee's efforts the proceedings are enlivened by his droll, witty narration, delivered in a sonorous tone.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 16, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Other than providing yet another meta-theatrical examination of the ever-blurring line between reality and artifice, Janeane From Des Moines emerges as a pointless affair.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 16, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
This Chekhovian-style comedy about a group of neurotic actors endlessly kibitzing during a weekend at a country house might have some appeal for self-absorbed thespians, but "civilians," as they're derisively referred to in the film, will find little of interest here.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 16, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
The Prosecution of an American President demonstrates that you can be deeply sympathetic to a film's arguments and still come away feeling unconvinced.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 16, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
This witlessly antic sex farce about a yuppie substance abuser coping with myriad personal issues during a stint in a rehab facility pretty much fails on every level, other than providing big-screen exposure for a passel of veteran older actors.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 15, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
This tale of an elite military unit assigned to rescue a war correspondent kidnapped by the Taliban is as frenetic and ultimately mind-numbing as a "Call of Duty" videogame, only without the thematic depth.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 14, 2012
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 14, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
The result is more promotional film - Springfield happens to have recently released both a new album and an autobiography - than intriguing sociology, although the rabidly intense middle-aged female fans on display are probably deserving of psychological study.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 12, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Not quite able to make up its mind whether it's a parody or homage, this tired exercise wastes both its gorgeous visuals and a first-rate cast.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 12, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Smiley, is unfortunately less scary than, say, the prospect of your significant other accidentally discovering your search engine history.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 12, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Least Among Saints has the strained feel of a basic cable television movie, with modest production values to match.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 11, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Few will fail to be moved by this portrait of selflessness in the face of near insurmountable odds.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 10, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
The bottom line: The impact of this forceful indictment of our healthcare system is lessened by the sheer ubiquity of similarly-themed documentaries.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 6, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
This thriller about child sex trafficking is well-intentioned but dramatically stilted.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 6, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Cogent documentary makes the persuasive argument for the role that U.S. military and corporate interests have played in the influx of immigration from Latin American countries.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 2, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Unfortunately, the thin storyline isn't substantial enough to sustain the nearly two-hour running time.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 2, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
This informative but scattershot documentary about the Occupy Wall Street suffers from a surfeit of facts and figures.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 30, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Six Million and One suggests the need for both a more ruthless editor and a well-trained family therapist.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 28, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Unfortunately, the alternately melodramatic and comic Bringing Up Bobby fails to impress, despite a showy turn by Milla Jovovich in a sharp departure from her usual zombie butt-kicking in the Resident Evil series.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 27, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
The devastating effects of head injuries in sports are detailed in Steve James' wrenching documentary.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 20, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
It's a nice little human interest story, but hardly seems worthy of this full-length treatment.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 15, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
She's (Milla Jovovich) constantly being besieged by a seemingly never-ending series of monsters, and we -- at least every couple of years or so -- are forced to sit through yet another installment of the mind-numbing series.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 14, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
The bottom line: Mirthless and unmoving drama about a depressed stand-up comedian finding a new life as a kindergarten teacher.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 13, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
If the target audience for this film were any younger, they'd be embryos.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 1, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
A stylish period thriller set in 1930's Shanghai, The Bullet Vanishes is one of the more striking Chinese imports.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 30, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Representing a sort of equal opportunity religious variation on an all-too-familiar theme, The Possession is a Jewish-themed "Exorcist" that, if nothing else, should discourage the practice of buying antique wooden boxes at flea markets.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 28, 2012
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 23, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
This is a film so bad that not only was it not screened in advance for critics, it's publicists wouldn't even provide background information. It might as well have been entered into the Witness Protection Program.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 5, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
The action sequences are strictly pro forma and -- despite the sleek killer's resemblance to the similarly lethal heroine of "La Femme Nikita" -- this dull effort lacks the excitement generated by any of its incarnations.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 2, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Clearly aiming for high artistic ground, the film doesn't even satisfy on an arousal level, with the discreet nudity and endless yakking not exactly proving a turn-on.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 20, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Primarily an actors' showcase, it does at least provide the opportunity for the virtuosic John Ventimiglia (The Sopranos) to strut his stuff in a well-deserved leading role.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 13, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
The scattershot results, while admittedly providing plenty of fascinating details, doesn't quite do its subject justice.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 13, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Although there are numerous interviews with various people both directly involved with or peripheral to the action, the most compelling figure on display is a particularly articulate coach who proves all too determined to have his protégé succeed. The fact that he works strictly on commission is certainly no small element of his zeal.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 13, 2012
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 29, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Although Martin Sulik's drama sheds light on typically unseen populations of Eastern Europe, the film, heavy on "Hamlet" allusions, may be overstuffed.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 28, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Instantly proves itself an invaluable historical document. Shot verite-style with no narration, soundtrack or other embellishments, Tahrir: Liberation Square simply depicts the events of late January and early February 2011 with a vital immediacy.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 8, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
If viewers have any remaining doubts as to whether or not the dams are a good idea, the gorgeous shots of the threatened landscapes are bound to erase them.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 8, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Much like the recent, similarly themed "Life in a Day," the results are more admirable than enlightening or even entertaining.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 4, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
The proceedings have a certain haunted quality, thanks to the dramatic setting and the stark black-and-white cinematography by Steve Cosens that fully conveys its bleakness.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 4, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
An ineffective indie variation on the sort of generic romantic comedy that should be starring Matthew McConaughey and Kate Hudson.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 4, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Predictable from first moment to last, it does at least provide a showcase for lacrosse, a sport heretofore cinematically unexploited.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 1, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Battlefield America manages to pack every cliché imaginable into its overstuffed and overlong 106 minutes.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 1, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
The sort of lumbering epic drama that went out of fashion by the late 1960s, For Greater Glory is mainly notable for shedding light on a little-known historical conflict, namely the Cristero War that took place in 1920s Mexico.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 31, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Imagine a teenage lesbian love story directed by David Cronenberg and you'll have some sense of the weirdness of Jack and Diane. Bradley Rust Gray's attempt to weave horror elements into a fairly conventional narrative yields diminishing returns in this overly stylized effort.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 26, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
The novelty of the setting ultimately proves highly effective. Shot mainly in Eastern European locations that effectively stand in for Prypiat, which is now actually a tourist site, the film is highly convincing in its verisimilitude.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 25, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
This deeply humanistic, profoundly touching work representing independent cinema at its finest should be seen by far wider audiences.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 5, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
First Position overcomes its predictable elements thanks to the inherent visual drama of watching children strain their bodies to the limit in obsessive pursuit of their goals.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 5, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
The result, Chronicling a Crisis, is an admittedly harrowing exercise in solipsism that will be of little interest to anyone besides the director's diehard fans and perhaps his therapist.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 4, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
An awkward mixture of melodrama and whimsical romantic comedy that should make the briefest of appearances in theaters before, like its main character, moving on to other planes. It might serve a valuable purpose if it at least prompts viewers to finally schedule those long delayed colonoscopies.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 4, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
This debut feature by Anne Renton doesn't quite find the proper tone to convey its heartfelt message.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 28, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
While Downtown Express suffers from a derivative storyline, it offers enough musical authenticity to provide ample compensations.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 19, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Subject matter this powerfully charged shouldn't feel like a study aid.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 18, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
It's a good thing that forgiveness is a predominant theme of Woman Thou Art Loosed: On the 7th Day, because viewers will have to look deep into their hearts to forgive this kidnapping drama for its heavy-handed melodrama and tawdry plot elements.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 15, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Directors Stephen St. Leger and James Mather fill the film's obvious narrative gaps with enough witty banter and tongue-in-cheek humor for audiences to overlook the subpar special effects used throughout.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 10, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
As with so many films of this ilk, plot holes and inconsistencies abound, with audiences likely to express in loudly vocal fashion their opinions about what the characters should or shouldn't be doing.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 8, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Despite the filmmaker's obvious good intentions in trying to impart valuable life lessons to younger viewers, We the Party suffers from any number of problems, including uneven acting (talent isn't always hereditary); stereotypical characters and situations; and a manic visual style featuring the sort of split-screen obsession that felt outdated decades ago.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 8, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
As with many films of its ilk, Surviving Progress takes on more than it can comfortably handle, veering haphazardly from subject to subject.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 8, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Despite a talented cast lead by Halle Berry, director John Stockwell fails to take more than a bite out of this lackluster shark thriller.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 29, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Filmmaker Alan Govenar misses the mark in his attempt to document the historical French dwelling of once famous beatniks.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 29, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Benasra's documentary purports to be a sociological examination of the intimate relationship between women and their shoes. But God Save My Shoes also displays a creepily fetishistic feel.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 29, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
The filmmakers, longtime music video veterans, have delivered a technically polished production that belies the film's low budget. They've also elicited mostly strong performances.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 22, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Filmmaker Julia Haslett lacks focus in her ode to the French philosopher.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 22, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
The "Dexter" star gives it his all in this indie comedy about a 35-year-old unemployed man coping with various romantic and life crises, but by the end of this terminally cute effort you'll wish that he just stop moping and kill somebody already.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 22, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Adrien Brody, delivering his finest performance since "The Pianist," plays the central role of the disaffected Henry Barthes.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 12, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
A bland romantic comedy in the Richard Curtis style, The Decoy Bride is mainly notable for its proof, if any was needed after "Boardwalk Empire," that Kelly Macdonald is a major talent.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 10, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
The formulaic script by Steve Koren doesn't manage to exploit the absurd premise with any discernible wit or invention, and the star is left floundering.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 9, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
This soapy effort about a prosperous businessman having a midlife crisis finds Perry working in the heavily melodramatic mode that marks his weakest efforts.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 24, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Martyn Burke's documentary hauntingly dissects the rise of media mortality in the war zone and the mental disorders that follow.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 11, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Presumably intended as an inspiring portrait of a private individual daring to live his dream of traveling in space, Man on a Mission instead comes across as a cautionary tale about having too much time and money on your hands.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 10, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
Starring a painfully awkward Katherine Heigl, One for the Money mostly resembles a failed television pilot.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 27, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
The good news is that it will be a good 15 years before we're forced to encounter the character again in Spring. Maybe by then he'll be less of a downer.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 26, 2012
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- Frank Scheck
More aggressively violent and thankfully less mythology driven than previous installments, Underworld: Awakening is strictly for the converted.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 20, 2012
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