J. Hoberman
Select another critic »For 976 reviews, this critic has graded:
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39% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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58% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 0.3 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
J. Hoberman's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 66 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Alphaville | |
| Lowest review score: | A Hole in My Heart | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 590 out of 976
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Mixed: 312 out of 976
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Negative: 74 out of 976
976
movie
reviews
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
In its compassionate absurdism and underlying dark humor, the movie seeks to reestablish contact with the Czech new wave.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Fun and smart, but undeniably thin, the first installment of Tarantino's action epic is a fanboy fever dream. The clichés are out in maximum force, tempting any critic fool enough to go one-on-one with the master. (The prize: a Ph.D. in Tarantinology.)- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A kindred exercise in ensemble cheer and cozy humanism -- not as sentimental as it might be but cheerfully affirmative in dispelling the darkness of its premise.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A fable for our reality-TV reality, Nina Davenport's Operation Filmmaker is as much virus as video documentary. This essentially comic tale maps a contagion of mutual exploitation that seems to have burnished the careers of everyone involved.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Performance seems more like eye candy than castor oil in the brave new world of "Freddy Got Fingered."- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Authentically British or not, Intimacy is squarely in the indigenous kitchen-sink style -- a far cry from the absurdly chic, sentimental pseudo-worldliness of something like "An Affair of Love."- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Not just a walk in the park with Mel and the guys (in this case a large cast of mainly Mexican Indians speaking present- day Yucatec), this lavishly punishing picture is the third panel in Gibson's "Ordeal" triptych. The Martyrdom of the Braveheart and The Passion of the Christ have nothing on The Misadventures of the Jaguar Paw.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Bana, who appears in nearly every shot, talking all the while, gives a remarkably mercurial performance.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
You can call me fanboy, but this is the best anime I've ever seen.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Henry Fool, which runs a leisurely and ultimately tiresome 138 minutes, is so self-conscious it feels uncomfortable in its own skin. [23 Jun 1998]- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
John Turturro, who, given the most romantic role of his career, fully inhabits the ungainly Luzhin.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Immersed in popular culture, War and Peace makes it clear that India's nuclear mania appeals not only to religious chauvinism, primitive nationalism, and a desire for modernity but, even more dangerously, to a festering sense of inferiority.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
What's fascinating is how the various issues - religious or practical - are played out in these two quite different families, yet always come down to irreconcilable differences between rebellious women and their stiff-necked, controlling men.- Village Voice
- Posted Dec 27, 2011
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- J. Hoberman
With very few strong characters and a great many middle shots, Pulse sometimes plods--it's the price of Kurosawa's restraint and his indifference to structure.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
An art film without the NYFF imprimatur, Heaven is a peculiar amalgam -- a Miramax package (without the hype), directed by German hotshot Tom Tykwer under the eye of Anthony Minghella, from a script with which the late Krzysztof Kieslowski had planned to inaugurate a new trilogy named for the Divine Comedy.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Banal big-budget adaptation of Robert Ludlum's 1980 espionage thriller.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
- Posted Apr 5, 2011
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- J. Hoberman
Jarecki's film forcefully argues that the much abused word FREEDOM cannot paper over the conflicts between capitalism and democracy.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Sardonic as it may be, Tales From the Golden Age is basically affirmative - its true subject is resilience. Romania suffered under a regime of dangerous stupidity. Drawing on popular memory, Mungiu has orchestrated a contribution to local folklore, a suite of stories in which those rendered witless by oppression were compelled by circumstance to live off their wits.- Village Voice
- Posted Aug 23, 2011
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- J. Hoberman
Certainly not as incredulous or mocking as it might have been. If anything, the mood is apprehensive. But it's depressing that--Carter aside--the filmmakers failed to find even one liberal believer.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The movie's bold visual and psychological patterns, as well as its heavy immersion in the natural world, imbue Malli's journey with a folktale quality.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
As its title jokingly implies, this is a more grown-up version of Aniston's long- running TV vehicle--complete with the star herself as eternal ingenue.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Agently attitudinous, generally zippy urban fairy tale about pop stars and the hangers-on who coddle (or prey upon) them, Tom DiCillo's Delirious is a mild "Midnight Cowboy," a minor "King of Comedy," and mainly a vehicle for Steve Buscemi as a lower Manhattan–based paparazzo.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Opens with a montage of the press in full operational mode, spewing out newspapers all but automatically for a fleet of waiting delivery trucks. It's a system at once efficient and cumbersome, ultra-modern yet quaint, that suggests nothing so much as a herd of dinosaurs, oblivious to the threat of impending extinction.- Village Voice
- Posted Jun 14, 2011
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- J. Hoberman
A movie as laconic as its hero, Ghost Dog is nonetheless diminished by its most un-Zen-like attachment to this underlying sentimentality.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Although not as radically defamiliarizing as Jim Jarmusch's avant-western "Dead Man," Jesse James has the feel of an attic ransacked for abandoned knickknacks.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
From mid-movie on, confusion escalates (along with one's incredulity).- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
- Posted Feb 1, 2011
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Impressively pulled together on a modest budget, Moon has a strong lead and a valid philosophical premise but, despite Bell's fissured psyche, the drama is inert.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Nossiter has an eye for stray details and a knack for relaxing his subjects- although the scene with the naked guy trampling his own grapes may make you sorry that you ever gave up drinking Ripple.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Predicated as it is on Huppert's pensive, provocative blankness, the action moves a bit slowly, although, as is often the case with Jacquot, events make more sense after the movie is over.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A fierce dance of destruction. Its flame-like, roiling black-and-white inspires trembling and gratitude.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
If Moore is formidable, it's not because he is a great filmmaker (far from it), but because he infuses his sense of ridicule with the fury of moral indignation. Fahrenheit 9/11 is strongest when that wrath is vented on Bush and his cohorts.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Moving from cafés to poolrooms to movie theaters, it's the prototypical male ensemble film.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Does attest to the once-upon-a-time existence of a Hollywood counterculture, but it's so reverentially heavy-handed in evoking the era that it can't help playing like "Forrest Gump" without Tom Hanks.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
At the heart of the movie are the prolonged, increasingly violent, self-criticism sessions - an escalating, claustrophobic, paranoid reign of terror, staged in near-darkness and shown in close-up.- Village Voice
- Posted May 24, 2011
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- J. Hoberman
An Israeli movie with neither politics nor religion--and only one casual, if fraught, mention of the Holocaust--bespeaks an underlying desire for normality that's as poignant and fantastic as Keret and Geffen's modest, shabby Tel Aviv settings.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Forget "Irreversible," this is the season's most piercingly feel-bad movie.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Ostensibly a conventional tale of triad loyalty, As Tears Go By announced the presence of a genuine Hong Kong new wave—as well as an ambitious cineaste.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Given its boundless sarcasm, running-jumping- standing-still ambience and hyperbolic Guignol violence, Lock, Stock aspires to be something like the Beatles meet the "Wild Bunch." Too bad it doesn't have even a rubber soul.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Downfall may be grimly self-important and inescapably trivializing. But we should be grateful that German cinema is more inclined to normalize the nation's history than rewrite it.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Solaris achieves an almost perfect balance of poetry and pulp. This is as elegant, moody, intelligent, sensuous, and sustained a studio movie as we are likely to see this season -- and in its intrinsic nuttiness, perhaps the least compromised.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Rudo y Cursi is as fatalistic as any film noir, but it's played for cartoonish screwball comedy. At once smooth and frantic, filled with cozy clutter and vulgar jive, the movie subsumes its moralizing in frat-house entertainment.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Trust never seems dated and, as a youth film, it may even be usefully pedagogic. [30 July 1991]- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
This malevolently gleeful satire...is extremely funny, surprisingly well- acted, and boldly designed...at least until its steel-and-chrome soufflé falls apart.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Sophie's (or is it July's?) coy narcissism becomes a criticism of itself, and her "sadness" turns into something truly sad. In short, I have seen The Future and it's heartbreaking.- Village Voice
- Posted Jul 26, 2011
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- J. Hoberman
Tian's movie seems to be among the finest expressions of the Chinese new wave.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
However glitzy, clever, and luridly philosophical, Demonlover is still mainly an old-fashioned thriller.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
World Trade Center is Stone's rehabilitation. It's not just courage that's honored, it's God's Will. It isn't only men who are saved, it's their families -- and their family values.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The movie is a drama of faith, a Tibetan monk's search for the reincarnation of his beloved master Lama Konchog.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
It's a pleasingly Hollywood notion that plays well with Rubbo's interpolated quotes from "Shakespeare in Love."- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Where Judgment Day exhibited the profligate sprawl of a military operation, the leaner, less grandiose Rise of the Machines has the feel of a single Hummer careening through an earthquake in downtown Burbank.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Grey isn't the first porn actress to go straight, but she may be the first to allegorize her own situation--projecting an on-screen self-confidence that’s indistinguishable from pathos.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Afterschool, the almost frighteningly accomplished first feature made by Antonio Campos when he was 24, is high school as horror show.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Auto Focus doesn't really go anywhere, but then neither does any form of obsessive-compulsive behavior -- which may be Schrader's point.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Steamboy doesn't have the deep melancholia or the visionary élan of last year's Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence. Consistent in its graphic invention from first to last, however, it's a sensationally designed piece of work. (The retro stylistics are comparable to Brazil, David Lynch's Dune, and The Iron Giant.)- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The movie is a sweeping, hectic docudrama that would have been immeasurably helped by the use of informational intertitles.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Manages to have its cake and eat it too -- debunking the Berlin image even while reveling in it.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Naomi Watts is a tremendous movie actress. She need only sidle on camera and glance over the terrain to claim the scene. What's her secret? Like the great Isabelle Huppert, Watts doesn't radiate feelings so much as she absorbs them.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A cut above last season's best studio offerings. The performances are well turned out. The morality is stylishly gray. The attitude is almost fashionable.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A voracious vacuum cleaner of a movie --hoovering up a hundred years' worth of junk with the same monotonously unmodulated hum.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Satisfying as it is to at last have Nixon as a Disney character, Hopkins's overheated, self-consciously self-conscious performance doesn't get the overall nuttiness of Nixon's unctuous rage, his iron-butt single-mindedness. [26 Dec 1995]- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Basically an experimental psychodrama, Epidemic has a pleasingly slapdash, underground quality that recalls early Fassbinder and Wenders -- although, with its cynical premise and frequent infusions of Wagner, it exudes the prankster snarkiness characteristic of von Trier.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A fabulously fond and entertaining tribute to the quick-witted Lower East Side kid.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
His (Weir) hardship drama is stolidly old-fashioned, more extreme travelogue than exercise in visceral horror.- Village Voice
- Posted Jan 18, 2011
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- J. Hoberman
Delicatessen may be junk food, but it's served with the discretion of nouvelle cuisine. [07 Apr 1992]- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
One of the best titles in movie history and a cast to match.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
That this mime show works better than it should is, in a sense, the ultimate dis.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
There's a palpable avoidance of risk as this new mythology is wheeled gingerly into the marketplace and carefully positioned to zap your pre-sold brain...Solid but uninspired, Harry lacks brio. It's respectable and a bit dull.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Like everything Jarmusch, The Limits of Control is calibrated for cool.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
This first feature is shot "first person" and is first and foremost a concept -- at least as interesting to think about as to actually watch.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Deb Ellis and Denis Mueller's fond portrait, less documentary than infomercial, is unrelentingly and in the end self-defeatingly positive--albeit effective in showcasing Zinn's charismatic personality.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The Decomposition of the Soul is a deliberately confining movie, but unlike "The Lives of Others," it offers no closure.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
About halfway through I began to imagine it as it might have been directed by Douglas Sirk as a vehicle for Jane Wyman and Rock Hudson.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Hand it to Lawrence and Christian. Jindabyne is a soberly, if sluggishly, crafted movie in which the bitterness never stops.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
After a most promising beginning, Velvet Goldmine's progress grows increasingly labored, stumbling around the structural roadblocks Haynes has erected in its path.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
If scandal, sleaze, and celebrity worship are our national religion, then John Waters is an American prophet.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Totally convincing in a physically demanding role, Collette carries the movie on her shoulders -- and that weight is what it's all about.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Everything Must Go, which is ostensibly set in Scottsdale, Arizona, has a generic resemblance to broken-heartland movies like "Up in the Air" and "Cedar Rapids," although this suburban meltdown is more depressed than either.- Village Voice
- Posted May 10, 2011
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- J. Hoberman
At once distanced and heedless, Lies manages to be lighter and less pretentious than any description suggests. The movie's playful aspect can't be denied.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The last-minute combination of Greek tragedy and Janis Joplin is so genuinely startling that, had the movie been shorted by a third, it might have turned everything around.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
This moody, rapturous adaptation of Pierre, Herman Melville's gothic follow-up to "Moby Dick," is never less than seriously romantic.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Like the shelter for which it is named, Panic Room is an efficiently tooled construction (albeit one whose success is overly predicated on its villains' single-minded idiocy). But unlike the eponymous treasure trove, there's nothing inside.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
An insufferable exercise in cutie-pie modernism, painfully unfunny and precious to a fault.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Filled with vivid cameos and set to an infectious soul beat that effectively covers the underlying hum of calculated precision.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
To call this story unbelievable is to say the very least. If it's a hoax, Bruce is a fantastic actor (but then, the movie suggests, so are we all). If not, you may wonder less about Bruce's personality than his condition.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
There isn't a bankable Hollywood director with a flintier sense of aesthetic integrity.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
This promising first feature is nearly as apt to use the power of suggestion as to ladle up the gore, triumphantly creepy, and just arty enough to have secured a slot in last year's New York Film Festival.- Village Voice
- Posted Feb 15, 2011
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- J. Hoberman
A deceptively modest fable of innocence abroad that resonates with the situation within Israel and without.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The Pillow Book's pretentions are boundless, for all its desperate fashion and layered imagery, it's a staggering bore-as vacantly petulant as Kate Moss's stare. [10 Jun 1997]- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A graceful, charming, and sometimes witty confection -- at least for its first hour.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Steadily building in intensity from sluggish interest to mild excitement, Cold Weather is a slight movie with a long, circuitous fuse-and that's the point.- Village Voice
- Posted Feb 1, 2011
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- J. Hoberman
As entertainment goes, however, this desert spectacle is no "Aladdin"-- despite the impressively strong graphics of the vast urban spaces.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Ideas beam out from Astra Taylor's engaging new philoso-doc Examined Life; the viewer basks in the intelligence on-screen and, occasionally, soaks up the rays.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
For all the tumultuous entrances and flouncing exits, the eight principals manage maybe three laughs among them.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
What exactly is JCVD? Comedy? Confession? Confusion? No one will ever mistake these backstage shenanigans for "Irma Vep." But as a self-regarding expression of masculine angst, it's a Damme sight more fun than "Synecdoche."- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Ghosts of Cité Soleil is a prismatic, jagged, none too coherent travelogue.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Not for nothing is this movie opening on Good Friday. It can be as boring as church. There's no snake in Bettie's Eden and no narrative to Harron's movie. It's more of an altar piece: Our Lady of the Garter Belt, the Fastidious Bettie Page.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Romanek's movie is a bit too pat and pleased with its undeniable ambitions, but the setup resonates with quiet desperation. There's not a single vicarious glorch.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Borders on the risible but, because Sokurov is Sokurov, this exalted, wacky scenario--which uses Lisbon as an imaginary Russian seaport--is amazingly staged, inventively edited, and rich in audio layering, with camera placements that sometimes verge on the Brakhagian.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
It’s the tension between Sellers’s inane tact and the general tastelessness of his surroundings that gives the movie its zing.- The New York Times
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- J. Hoberman
A sustained immersion in gorgeously austere street photography and casual portraiture, the images punctuated by bits of black leader and gnomic intertitles, the action propelled by sweetly pulverized music and an effortlessly layered soundtrack of enigmatic conversations. Poetry is really the only word for it.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Blackboards is both shrill and soporific, and because everything is repeated five or six times, it can seem tiresomely simpleminded.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Doesn't coddle the audience. But neither does it play fair. The narrative takes several fast turns and stops short with the sudden introduction of new material; the exposition is hurried and lazily predicated on characters' thinking aloud.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Every Bolivian sequence has its Cuban parallel, which is why Che's two parts are best seen together. Guerrilla may be the more realized of the two--and could certainly stand on its own--but it is only comprehensible in the light of The Argentine. Elevating Guerrilla to tragedy, The Argentine puts some hope in hopelessness--and even in history.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Kaboom does have an excellent punchline, although even at 86 minutes it feels too long-mainly because Araki can't help letting his camera linger over his performers. Hard to blame him-he's assembled the best-looking cast in town and it's largely his gaga appreciation that makes the movie so much fun.- Village Voice
- Posted Jan 25, 2011
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- J. Hoberman
Lookin' for sin, American-style? Try Hell House, which documents the cautionary Christian spook-a-rama of the same name.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Lacking any equivalent to the Sadean excess of Ellis's prose, it is also further evacuated of purpose.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Team America is at once grandiose and tacky, elaborate and deflationary.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Frears might have accelerated the comic pacing, but the story is a good one and events come nicely to a boil.- Village Voice
- Posted Oct 20, 2010
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- J. Hoberman
Pale by comparison to an action thriller like "Children of Men" or gross out eco-catastrophe like "Land of the Dead," squandering its ready-made zombie scenario.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Initially engrossing, The Dancer Upstairs slackens in its second half.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
In a Kafkaesque turn of events, Reems was the fall guy--facing prison, he became a Hollywood cause célèbre. Inside Deep Throat includes footage of him partying with Jack and Warren and debating Roy Cohn on TV.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
One of the most oppressive accounts of life in a military detention since Jonas Mekas's "documentary" version of The Brig or Peter Watkins's Punishment Park.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Snazzy, mawkish, and practically Pavlovian in recycling all requisite late-'60s images. Given its subject, though, this David Leaf–John Scheinfeld production is not only poignant but even topical.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
In the spirit of its title, Nothing but the Truth pivots on a plot twist that's both good and fair. And kudos to the ever-earnest Beckinsale for surviving a prison brawl as splatterific as anything Mickey Rourke had to endure in "The Wrestler."- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
It's a measure of the movie's success that one oscillates between two despairs-noting the abject failure of the system and the utter futility of revolt.- Village Voice
- Posted Jan 4, 2011
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- J. Hoberman
Grass's relentless hard sell ultimately grows wearisome. Although only 80 minutes, it ends, and not a moment too soon, with a pot legalization rally that might well be reproduced outside the theater.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
An effectively involving journalism-cum-conspiracy yarn with a bang-bang opening and a frantic closer.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Historical forces and famous ghosts jostle past each other in this evocation of mid-1930s New York like harried commuters at Grand Central Station.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Gatlif's latest celebration of gypsy soul, sets a modest sliver of narrative in a fabulous widescreen landscape and surrounds it with a permanent party.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A bracingly no-nonsense, highly professional policier—as proudly old-fashioned as its curmudgeon hero.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A more materialist (and successful) ensemble film than the mystical "Babel," in that everyone is connected through the same economic system, Fast Food Nation is exotic for being a movie about work.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Film Socialisme deflects interpretation but, so long as one subscribes to the William Carlos Williams injunction "No ideas but in things," it's filled with sensuous pleasures.- Village Voice
- Posted Jun 1, 2011
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A sort of parody "Apocalypse Now," complete with listless coochie dancers entertaining the Burmese troops, the movie finds its own heart of darkness once Rambo drops the doctors in Burma.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
This deliriously downbeat vehicle for the postpunk diva Björk has generated the controversy the Danish dogmatist has relentlessly court.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Enjoyable if light, until it becomes apparent that Breillat is not simply waxing narcissistic but fashioning a simultaneous critique, explication, and demystification of the lengthy, near-single-take defloration that is Fat Girl's centerpiece.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Grounded in Fessenden's handheld camera, stuttering montage rhythms, and time-lapse photography, the engagingly primitive animated special effects contribute to a mood that's sustained through the surprisingly somber conclusion.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The unnecessarily emphatic ending suggests that Secretary's makers are a bit anxious to demonstrate they've whipped a potentially grotesque, spanks-for-the-memories scenario into the season's most romantic love story -- which is, in fact, what they've done.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A movie of cornball sentiment, humorously anachronistic dialogue, and expensive Colonial Williamsburg sets.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Sarah Silverman's cartoon bunny rabbit smile could make her the poster child for orthodontia, but it's her timing that's the real thing of beauty.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Unpretentiously poetic and casually stylish, yet perversely precise. Reconstructing the past, Carri seems to suggest, is akin to grabbing the water in a flowing stream.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Steeped in metaphor as it is, Panic offers a more naturalistic analysis of male midlife crisis than the grotesquely overpraised "American Beauty."- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Too bland and fustily tasteful to be truly prurient, Sade moves along at a reasonable clip, goosed by claps of gothic lighting, solemn chords, and amplified sound effects.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Basically, Epstein and Friedman are feel-good filmmakers-their Ginsberg has one of the shortest, most successful bouts of psychotherapy in history. But is it really necessary to affirm the poem's ecstatic footnote ("Holy! Holy! Holy!") with a montage of smiling reaction shots?- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A linguistic stew with a zesty, homemade flavor that belies its carefully researched preparation.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Burdened by a convoluted script and an ensemble-proof leading lady, the director fails to illuminate a particular corrupt system.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
This is Oliver Stone country, but Broomfield's self-effacing affect is more Woody Allen,- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A master of smash-mash montage and choreographed chaos, Greengrass is the best action director working today, adroit at producing the sense of everyone converging and everything happening simultaneously.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
However cloying, the movie creates a powerful vortex. It's surprisingly visceral-at times almost thrilling.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A better-than-competent period evocation that allows the director to flaunt his knowledge (and perhaps vent some of his own bitterness) regarding Hollywood.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Call it a mental workout that (although considerably less arduous than reading Sartre) some might find exhausting and others exhilarating. Aurora is not a movie to make you glad that you exist; it's a movie that makes you aware that you do.- Village Voice
- Posted Jun 28, 2011
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- J. Hoberman
Less a tale of desperado lovers than a cruel story of youth, Tout de Suite is framed largely in close-up, with few transitional shots and a narrative that grows increasingly fragmented.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A grimly suggestive and unexpectedly tender bedroom farce, Billy Wilder's Kiss Me, Stupid is a true film maudit.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The Dreamers is bad, but unlike the similarly camped-up "Little Buddha" or "Stealing Beauty," it's not exactly boring.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The Coens return to familiar territory with the parody thriller Burn After Reading, a characteristically supercilious and crisply shot clown show filled with cartoon perfs and predicated on extravagant stupidity.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
John Sayles's Amigo aspires more to educate than entertain, but it's no less engrossing for that.- Village Voice
- Posted Aug 16, 2011
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- J. Hoberman
Absorbing even in its incoherence,V for Vendetta manages to make an old popular mythology new. Impossible not to break into a grin: It's the thought that counts.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Props then to Affleck. Coulter contrived a neat behavioral trick by inducing his star to play a comparably big-jawed bad actor. Surrounded as he is by canny professionals--Lane, Hoskins, Smith, and Jeffrey DeMunn as an unctuous glad-handing agent--it's an unexpectedly touching performance.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A well-wrought indie written and directed by Goran Dukic, has to be the kewpie doll of current zombie flicks: Its walking dead are a bunch of attractive slackers whose wounds are largely internal. They've got attitude.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Entertaining if cornball, lacking the cold-eyed nastiness of something like Mike Nichols's "Closer," The Dying Gaul is tricked out with strident montage sequences and tremulous Steve Reich music. It's already drowning in an icky sea of language when Lucas makes a stretch for Greek tragedy and sends the whole Malibu playhouse abruptly crashing down.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
See it if you must, but don't forget to pack the Air Wick. These breezy doings are mustier than a Glitter Gulch casino at 4 a.m.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A creepily effective button-pusher that owes a bit to the original "Cape Fear" both in Sam Raimi's ruthless direction and Keanu Reeves's unexpectedly robust performance as the most violent redneck peckerwood in a steamy Georgia town.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Increasingly violent (although always distanced), The Outskirts is at once appalling and bleakly humorous.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Yes, there's something terribly familiar about this historical fantasy. As we now know, and Willmott is well aware, the South actually did win the Civil War.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Where The Matrix was a heady cocktail of gnostic Zen Philip K. Dick cyberpunk '60s psychedelic bull, well spiked with high-octane digitally driven Hong Kong action pyrotechnics, those elements reloaded soon separate out. The refreshing draft of effervescent movie magic leaves a sludgy sediment of metaphysics.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Ace in the Hole is a movie about the fascination of disaster that is itself a fascinating disaster.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
To cut to the chase, Robert Bresson's heart-breaking and magnificent Au Hasard Balthazar (1966) -- the story of a donkey's life and death in rural France -- is the supreme masterpiece by one of the greatest of 20th-century filmmakers.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Mumford is good for a few chuckles and not nearly as egregious or cloying as it might have been.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
From the cast and location to the attitude and premise, many things in The Ice Harvest are inescapably reminiscent of the Coen brothers. But as a director, Ramis is far less flashy and not nearly as pleased with himself. This is one of the most sustained movies of the year, as classic in its structure as "Double Indemnity" or "No Exit."- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The Kidman character is an exotic--and even unlikely--creature, usefully fueling Penn's annoyed but fascinated incredulity.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A tour de force for Streep, who gives her character an unexpected measure of depth.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
This smoothly odious piece of work, written by Frank Cottrell Boyce and directed by Michael Winterbottom, posits the self-consciously repellent Plummer as a sort of Valerie Solanas-inflected version of the Florida serial killer Aileen Wournos. [7 May 1996]- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The emphasis in this surprisingly cheerful film is on the resilience of the living.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Unknown Pleasures suggests a coolly formalist reinvention of neorealism. The film is both distanced and immediate -- a fiction with the force of documentary.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Single-dad sitcom is not Sir Ridley's forte but, anachronistically evoking the ring-a-ding-ding ambience of "Auto Focus" and "Catch Me If You Can," his mise-en-scène is as impeccable as Roy's pad.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Alternately grueling and soporific, Quitting is a movie about addiction that demands the viewer also give something up.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Swank and splashy as it is, Frida leaves the lurking suspicion that Taymor might have preferred to stage her pageant as a puppet show.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The spectacle of pretty people floating languidly across the screen notwithstanding, Laurel Canyon is short on conviction and long on contrivance. McDormand, however, has a ball.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Terror is existential in this highly intelligent, somewhat sadistic, totally fascinating movie.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The movie is characterized by its crisp, cutting, classical framing, and comic timing. The style and approach recall classic Albert Brooks. Indeed, the beleaguered, cuckolded Joel would have been a great role for the young Brooks--adding a certain self-aggrandizing je ne sais quoi or a neurotic zetz that the appealing, but bland, Bateman lacks.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
It's genuinely elemental, embarrassingly sincere. You can't accuse Gallo of pandering to anyone but himself. Not just a one-man band, he is his own entourage -- and likely to remain so. And that anguished solipsism seems to be, at least in part, the movie's subject.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A highly personal movie, Go Go Tales finds Ferrara in a frenzied yet pensive mode.- Village Voice
- Posted Jan 4, 2011
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- J. Hoberman
Loevy, who made this documentary with an Israeli and Palestinian crew, supplies a self-conscious voice-over.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
For passion, originality, and sustained chutzpah, this austere allegory of failed Christian charity and Old Testament payback is von Trier's strongest movie--a masterpiece, in fact.- Village Voice
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- The New York Times
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- J. Hoberman
Dull, if not devoid of wit, this shaggy dog longs to frisk through the back alleys of history, but scarcely manages more than a modest, snoozy charm.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Both frustrating and fascinating, Yuen's documentary is something of a stray footnote. It requires not only the context of the yang ban xi but the perspective of other movies on the subject of entertainment and utopia.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A tricksy meta-thriller that, replete with the requisite homage to "Vertigo," sustains its dreamlike glide through a succession of cheesy coincidences and voluptuous cheap effects.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The Coens are uncharacteristically restrained. Indeed, given that the crime comedy is their preferred genre, The Ladykillers is remarkable mainly for its timidity.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The Decay of Fiction is less a narrative than a monument. In its abstract movie-ness, this 74-minute carnival of souls exudes a wistful longing to connect, not so much with Hollywood history as with the history of that history.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Carrera's filmmaking is more workmanlike than stylish, but Padre Amaro is richly character driven and, for all its insolent, grotesque humor, straightforwardly humanist in its psychology.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
That Reconstruction is even remotely involving is due to the quality of its acting.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
It's not the least of Afghan tragedies that this noble warlord would be consigned to the dustbin of history.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
- Posted Mar 2, 2011
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- J. Hoberman
Blind Mountain forces its way through numerous illogicalities and several plot lapses to a violently abrupt ending.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
This absorbing essay amply demonstrates that, as with any sort of racial-nationalist paranoia, anti-Semitism has very little to do with actual Jews and everything to do with imagined ones.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The Anchorage uses a narrative structure introduced to more powerful effect 35 years ago in Chantal Akerman's Jeanne Dielman.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Perhaps that's the problem. Mel's character isn't on Prozac, but the movie is-a succession of bland camera setups, cued to a highly conventional score. Would that the direction were half as nutty as the script or as wacked-out as its star!- Village Voice
- Posted May 3, 2011
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- J. Hoberman
Jagged and jokey, filled with glam young people, lyrical Canto-Pop, and narrative non sequiturs, Time and Tide is Tsui's version of neo-new wave.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
I'd have welcomed more archival footage (Pennebaker did, after all, document Otis Redding's epochal performance at the Monterey Pop Festival), but that would be asking for another movie.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A vaguely absurd epidemiological thriller filled with elaborately superfluous setups and shamelessly stale James Bond riffs.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A superbly crafted science-fiction fairy tale that's both Grimm and grim.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A compelling if not altogether convincing tale of mad love and divine redemption, adapted from the prize-winning novel by Castellitto's wife, Margaret Mazzantini.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Although hardly flawless, Eastwood's biopic is his richest, most ambitious movie since the "Letters From Iwo Jima" – "Flags of Our Fathers" duo, if not "Unforgiven."- Village Voice
- Posted Nov 8, 2011
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The “intellectual banalities” that bored Crowther are so insistently contemporary that “Alphaville” could have been made in 2023. If by some time-traveling Borgesian twist of fate it were, Godard’s film would have been my candidate for the year’s best.- The New York Times
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- J. Hoberman
It can feel a bit slight and, given the epic sweep of its subject's life, somewhat underplotted. But there's no denying the incendiary power of Ramos's performance -- he's present in nearly every scene. The movie is as much the story of his transformation into Madame Satã as it is João Francisco's.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
In its costumes, line readings, and structure, the movie faithfully preserves the stage production -- a provocative, if meretricious, evening of theater that ends in a paroxysm of LaButality with a bear swipe to the spectator's head. It is, however, more difficult to rattle a movie audience -- at least with words -- and, despite its streamlined presentation, The Shape of Things is not nearly as effective on-screen.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Everything about this berserk, essentially static procedural is just crazy enough to be true. In any case, Herzog has gone beyond Good and Evil to reinvent himself as a candidate for the wiggiest director of comedy in America today.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
May be as gimmicky as Ozon's other features, but it's also more resonant and even haunting.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
What it lacks, perhaps unavoidably, is a sense of the cosmic Now; the movie recovers, without exactly illuminating, a "long, strange trip" that seems all the stranger as it recedes into the past.- Village Voice
- Posted Aug 2, 2011
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- J. Hoberman
Despite its cheesy blood and thunder and ludicrous "Sunshine Makers" metaphysics, this is the funniest apocalypse I've seen since George Romero's "Land of the Dead."- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Demme's documentary portrait, Jimmy Carter: Man From Plains, has no surfeit of good intentions. In fact, running over two hours, they're nearly suffocating.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
One of the few Hollywood movies to ever acknowledge the Desert Storm "experience," Sam Mendes's Jarhead is both fastidiously grueling and perversely withholding.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
What's surprising is the atmosphere of sweet reason--elatively speaking--that distinguishes Kill Bill Vol. 2 from its bloody precursor.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Life Is Beautiful is funny (kinda) and even tasteful (sorta). But in its fantasy of divine grace, it is also nonsense.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Dutiful as it is, Jonathan Demme's Beloved doesn't succeed so much as it abides…it moves in leisurely fits and--unencumbered by style or narrative complexity--never loses its forward momentum.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The movie turns terminally wearisome and even anti-climactic with the triumph of the brain-lodging "Je T'aime" (which, alone among the movie's numbers, is heard in its original version) and Gainsbourg's descent into alcoholic dissolution.- Village Voice
- Posted Aug 30, 2011
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
His (Nelson) timing is off and his bullshit detector nonexistent. I don't much care for the Coens, but the sad truth is that their cynical nihilism is a lot less spurious than Nelson's earnest sentimentality.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
An abundance of dull exposition building up to the son's attempt to cap his father's whoppers climaxes with a tedious flurry of Fellini-esque endings and Spielbergian fillips. The magic doesn't work twice -- or even once.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Alternately grandiose and abject, Bandini is a sort of underground man, and if no more miscast than usual, heartthrob Colin Farrell miserably fails to convincingly render Bandini's neurosis.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
This broadly acted first feature is exceedingly direct, appropriately sordid, and at times, almost delicate.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
An intelligent, viscerally intellectual exercise in ensemble acting and associative montage, enlivened with some terrific visual and dramatic ideas.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Filled with flashy sight gags, overwrought performances, and madly overlapping dialogue.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Playing the young Coleman with the requisite intelligence and ambiguity, Wentworth Miller contributes the sole viable characterization.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Costa-Gavras provides a post-war postscript to make clear that honesty is punished; cynicism survives.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Less monster than monstrosity—albeit, as superfluous sequels go, not on par with the memorably idiotic "Godfather III."- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
As a movie, King of Hearts is more pageant than story. As a cultural artifact, however, the movie is less a relic than a symptom.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Late in the day, Code 46 bursts its chemical chains to become a convincingly irrational love story.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Black nationalism lives and breathes in this remarkably fresh documentary - a standout in last spring's New Directors/New Films - assembled by Göran Hugo Olsson.- Village Voice
- Posted Sep 6, 2011
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- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
An enjoyably overwrought meditation on the consequences of celebrity and the vicissitudes of fandom, Backstage stars Le Besco as the schoolgirl acolyte of Emmanuelle Seigner's pop diva, a singer-songwriter and high priestess of cheese.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Making Viktor a Middle Eastern, a South Asian, or even a Bosnian tourist would have given this trite exercise an edge--and a measure of human pathos.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
X-ploitative though it may be, the spectacle of a man beaten and tortured to death seeks to be an object of contemplation. Serious questions are raised.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
As over-emphatic as one might expect from the ham-fisted Guy Ritchie, this resurrection of the world's most famous detective is a dank, noisy affair.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Has the grace to send the audience out with a piece of Waters-written rap.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A timely--if tepid--fantasy of American vengeance on the Qutbian extremists of Saudi Arabia.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
In its post-Vietnam cynicism, Buffalo Soldiers feels almost avant-garde.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Exceedingly slow setup and even more tediously static sequence that effectively terminates the movie well before its official running time.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Disney's big-screen expansion of their hit TV show is nirvana for the pubescent crowd.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
But the ickiest thing about Fever Pitch is its reverential Field of Dreams music.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Waters's far-from-phallocratic sexual democracy is not so much hilarious as goofy and more rousing than arousing.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Bill Maher's one-man stand-up attack on religious fundamentalism is a dog that has more bark than bite--a skeptical, secular-humanist hounding of the hypocrites, amusingly annotated with sarcastic subtitles and clips from cheesy biblical spectacles.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Annenberg's attitudinous Shakespeare riff is a unique blend of psychodrama, ethnographic experimentation, and high-concept hustle.- Village Voice
- Posted Jul 8, 2011
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Watchmen is neither desecratory disaster nor total triumph. In filming David Hayter and Alex Tse's adaptation of the most ambitious superhero comic book ever written, director Zack Snyder has managed to address the cult while pandering to the masses.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
An elegantly constructed if misleadingly titled class lecture.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The Rum Diary could use a shot of the mania that fueled Terry Gilliam's "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas." As deadpan as he is, Depp could use a crazed Benicio Del Toro to complement his cool.- Village Voice
- Posted Oct 25, 2011
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- J. Hoberman
Hereafter is not just a stretch for Eastwood, it's a contortion. The irrationality of the premise is exceeded only by the strategic irrationalities of the plot.- Village Voice
- Posted Oct 21, 2010
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- J. Hoberman
Best appreciated as hilarious pulp metaphor, which, not coincidentally, happens to be one of the screenwriter's specialties.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The result is contrived, but compelling--as is the movie's high-powered humanism.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Larry Clark's latest finds the grizzled shock-meister in a thoughtful mode and a mellow mood.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
For all its flaws, Max does propose a credible young Hitler, played by Noah Taylor as an unpleasantly opinionated, arrogantly ascetic, defensively vain autodidact with a diffident sneer and a bottomless well of grievance to draw upon.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The Fog is more spooky yarn than streamlined scream machine; it’s the sort of crowd pleaser best enjoyed with an audience.- The New York Times
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- J. Hoberman
The first half has a nifty B-movie feel--it's a canny little movie with a big, big theme.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A philosophical gross-out comedy rudely presented from the perspective of a sullen, sexually curious 14-year-old.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The Eagle is full of action and fleet of foot-it's a movie of smoky, lowering battlefields and trippy, space-bending flashbacks, pausing only for admiring location shots of Scotland's wild, craggy vistas.- Village Voice
- Posted Feb 8, 2011
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- J. Hoberman
There's more than a bit of Charlie Kaufman to the heady premise, although the scenario doesn't double back on itself--except perhaps in the joke of having Schwartzman's actual mother, Talia Shire, play his mother on-screen.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
DiCillo overburdens When You're Strange, which is narrated by Johnny Depp, with a cliché barrage of achronological news events, including an unconscionable use of Robert Kennedy's death agony, but the archival Doors footage he has assembled is anything but banal.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Like any self-respecting Ferrara film, 'R Xmas has its intimations of hellfire, yet it's a weirdly benign Christmas fable -- something like "Miracle on 134th Street."- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Neil LaBute on his worst day couldn't devise a scenario so primitive in its psychology and predictable in its sense of sin.- Village Voice
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