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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- J. Hoberman
The least one can say for this costume action flick is that it hits bottom immediately.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Meta-documentary to the end, Empathy takes its leave by pretending to spy on one patient with his ear to the closed door, eavesdropping on another patient. How did watching the movie make me feel? Interested, amused, and um, empathetic.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Despite a backbeat of perky music and the sarcastic voiceover meant to lubricate the action, The Men Who Stare at Goats lacks pizzazz. The movie isn't funny enough to work as farce, but it's far too dippy to take seriously.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Has little to offer beyond muzzy kismet and generalized amnesia, a bit of National Geographic and a lot of cocktail jazz.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Inexplicable as it is, the Joan of Arc story encourages contemplation of ourselves as a species. The Messenger is more apt to prompt meditation on the nature of show business.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Flapping like a scarecrow in the wind, Battle in Seattle is too frantic to make more than a transitory impression, yet too responsibly hackneyed in its characterizations to achieve pure tabloid hysteria.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Art School Confidential is replete with humorous detail--in that respect, the student art projects are particularly fine--but it's the attitude that rules.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Neither comedy nor tragedy, the movie is closest to genteel soap opera.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Short, sweet, and hardly ever cloying, The Treatment is largely dependent for its success on the quality of its performances--most surprisingly, Eigeman's.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Funny as it is, Brüno could not be as shockingly uproarious as "Borat." No matter how well retold, a joke necessarily loses explosive force the second time around. But a great gag is a thing of beauty forever--so, too, a comic performance.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
This redux is a rare device: a TV remake for the big screen that works on its own terms.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A handheld and grainy exercise in cine-stupefaction...too spastic to connect...the movie just flails the air.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Superbly shot around Prague -- From Hell is even more stylish than gruesome -- it has the lush decrepitude of an autumn compost heap or an old Hammer werewolf flick.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
In the absence of any greater cultural context, the ritual reiteration of Greenberg's greatness grows wearisome.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Doesn't dawdle and, despite some eye-rolling dialogue, is a generally amiable time-trip.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Broad but thin and more bleak than uproarious--a humorously downsized homage to foundational '70s classics like "Dirty Harry" and, especially, "Taxi Driver."- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Raking over the same clichés as "Almost Famous," Rock Star is far less reverential -- it isn't burdened by generational nostalgia and doesn't take itself too seriously.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Although a marked improvement over Algrant's nightmarishly whimsical debut, "Naked in New York," People I Know is perfumed less by the sweet smell of success than the musty aroma of the Miramax vault.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Overwrought and often hysterical, filled with distracting montages and portentous drumbeats, the documentary feels as cheesy as its subject.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Like more than one recent movie, Alice seems a trailer for a Wonderland computer game--and it is. The final battle is clearly designed for gaming. So, it would seem, is the character of actualized as well as action Alice.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Flawed but engrossing thriller. Highly atmospheric, it gets its charge by dramatizing religious millennialism in a region that is the world epicenter of irrationality.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
This tweener goddess--a virtual Batcave of handy accessories packed in her shoulder bag--may prove too annoying for general audiences, particularly as Roberts plays her comically straight.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Almost despite itself, this is a deeply pessimistic movie.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
An unappealing, conventional, and somnolent piece of work in which, as glumly directed from David Levien and Brian Koppelman's corny script, every scene feels like it's being played for the second time.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
It's obvious that Amer and Usman labor under the burden of making humor at once insider-cool and outsider-friendly. And it's hard to finesse "offensive" from a defensive crouch.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
If the point of "A Dirty Shame" was that nothing human is foreign to John Waters, Palindromes seems to suggest that, for Todd Solondz, everything human is.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Dern and Macy give doughty performances in schematic roles, but glasses or no, these have to be two of the least Semitic-looking actors in American movies.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
This withholding actor's (Affleck) impish smile and mild, pale-eyed stare--not to mention the Clintonesque hoarseness with which he spins his convoluted lies--are sufficiently convincing to keep The Killer Inside Me from being just a steamy, stylish, punishing bloodbath.- Village Voice
- Posted Jul 27, 2014
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- J. Hoberman
The performances are broad; the comedy is mainly slapstick. The politics are nationalist and vaguely left-wing.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The cheesy disco action scenes are topped only by the movie's ripe double entendres and continual cheesecake.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Martin Rejtman's 1999 "Silvia Prieto" fashioned a deadpan farce from the aimless circulation of objects and identities around its unsmiling title character. The Magic Gloves, the Argentine writer-director's 2003 follow-up, is a similarly absurdist smart-com featuring another depressed protag navigating a yuppie Buenos Aires milieu.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The only conceivable reason to immerse oneself in this inexplicable release is, of course, Huppert. Gravely, she accepts the challenge of delivering a coherent performance in a wildly incoherent role.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Although frequently funny, Be Kind doesn't have the same pathos as "The Science of Sleep." (Nothing approaches the loneliness projected by Gael GarcÃa Bernal and Charlotte Gainsbourg.)- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Broderick is a genuine trouper, hoofing his way through his big numbers, while Lane's antics are difficult to resist.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
It's unpretentiously low-tech and humorously offbeat. And against all odds, the filmmaker emerges as a star.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
At once chintzy and grandiose, awash in battlefield sentimentality and platoon clichés.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
As much as I enjoy Spidey's high-flying Cheez-Doodle swoops through the skyscraper canyons of a digitally rearranged midtown Manhattan, I get no kick from his angst, especially since in this incarnation, as opposed to the '60s comic book version, he's more innocuously depressed than defensively paranoid.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
From the end to the beginning--or is it from the inadvertently ridiculous to the would-be sublime?--Noé's stunt is an exploitation movie with a gimmick, not to mention a vacuous philosophy.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
In the grand finale, Abramoff fantasizes about using a Senate hearing to blow the whistle on the entire corrupt establishment. His rant offers a clue to how this otherwise pointlessly manic movie might have honed its political edge.- Village Voice
- Posted Dec 14, 2010
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- J. Hoberman
This is a serious movie and, gliding around the center of power, a stylish one. But, like its protagonist, The Walker is unable to close the deal.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Solemn, flashy, and flabbergasting, The Fountain--adapted by Darren Aronofsky from his own graphic novel--should really be called The Shpritz. The premise is lachrymose, the sets are clammy, and the metaphysics all wet.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The Phantom Menace is simply a billboard for itself. Anyone who sees it will be experiencing it for the second time. The hype was not about the movie, the hype was the movie.- 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
As an action flick, Shaft is clumsy out of the gate and overfond of hurtling stuntmen through windows.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Roger Avary's crisp adaptation imbues the copious bad sex and general befuddlement of Bret Easton Ellis's solemn, echt '80s Bennington novel with a playfully obnoxious energy that is often funny and -- almost fun.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A misguided tribute to the woman his (Shainberg's) film identifies among "the greatest artists of the 20th century."- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The leanest and meanest of Solondz's misanthropic comedies, feasts on the anguish of adolescence and confusion of college -- white suburban-style.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Thanks to Egoyan's trademark mix of detachment and prurience, the fun is more cheesy than queasy.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Niccol has no gift for comedy. His ongoing exploration of modern celebrity results in an industry satire that's less funny than half-empty and hyper-designed.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Dramatically inert but a minor techno-miracle, Range's movie is a faux documentary with fake talking heads and seamless digital effects.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
However flavorsome though, The Good German is seriously deficient in the stars' star power and narrative excitement. The movie is lovingly framed, carefully lit, and fatally insipid. The direction is slack; the pacing is perfunctory.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Given the movie's graphic pizzazz, the best hippie wisdom Bridges might offer the viewer is: Turn off your mind, relax, and float downstream.- Village Voice
- Posted Dec 14, 2010
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- J. Hoberman
Opening too late for the election but still one the year's most politically relevant movies, Condon's earnestly middlebrow biopic is an argument for tolerance and diversity.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Boxing Gym is a companion piece of sorts to "La Danse: The Paris Opera Ballet," Wiseman's previous doc that played Film Forum last fall. It's not simply that boxing and ballet are understood as kindred activities. Boxing Gym is itself a dance movie-which is to say, a highly formalized exercise in choreographed activity.- Village Voice
- Posted Oct 21, 2010
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- J. Hoberman
Antichrist, which, above all, wants to make pain visceral, is less successful at projecting authentic experience--the shock tactics are ultimately numbing.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The film seems dimly aware of its own ridiculousness, but it lacks the constitution for self-mockery.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
However cool, Smith's lovable braggadocio and Lee's practiced deadpan don't exactly make them Laurel and Hardy.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Although the action set pieces are impressive, the exposition is sluggish. For all the posh dollies, high angles, and Venetian-blind crisscross patterns, The Black Dahlia rarely achieves the rhapsodic (let alone the delirious).- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
This is the first movie I've ever seen -- porn included -- in which a guy gets coldcocked with a dildo.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The irrepressible Walken smiles benignly down on his colleagues, secure in the knowledge that his antics have capsized sturdier vessels than this. Playing a supposed health-food nut, he enters the movie chewing and doesn't stop until he's devoured every scene down to the props.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A loud and frequently funny clown show, Full Throttle is less a grim demolition derby than a day at Coney Island, punctuated by the clatter and screams of the Cyclone.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The campaign's latest scare doc takes its title, Bush's Brain, and much of its argument from the portrait of political operative and bogeyman Karl Rove published last year by a pair of Dallas newsmen.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Although largely devoid of dramatic interest, Journeys With George does convincingly document the horror of life within the campaign "bubble."- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A ridiculous soft-core kung-fu porn film about a ridiculous hard-core one, Orgazmo is the kind of movie that improves according to the lateness of the hour.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
If nothing else, Brother confirms Kitano's stature as the most original purveyor of on-screen mayhem since Sam Peckinpah.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
There's basically only one reason to see Olivier Assayas's self-consciously hypermodern, meta-sleazy, English-French-Chinese-language globo-thriller Boarding Gate, and her name is Asia Argento.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
No less than the rankest demagogue, The Matrix Revolutions insists on the primacy of faith over knowledge. Once it locks and loads, however, the triumphant visuals short-circuit anything resembling abstract thought.- Village Voice
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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
A movie of many stupid pet tricks and one basic joke: As in the original, Elle's intelligence is consistently -- if understandably -- underestimated.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
This showbiz Rashomon has continuity, as well as credibility, problems.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Pegged to the 10th anniversary of the Gulf War victory celebration, a fiesta that lasted nearly three times longer than the fighting itself.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The response for anyone familiar with the original Psycho is likely to be restricted to a narrow range between briefly enjoyable déjà vu and mild disappointment. The movie lacks the chutzpah to even be a travesty.- 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
Becalmed or bobbing along, they remain balseros -- but then, as this engrossing documentary suggests, so are we all.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
This is a movie about the nature of acting -- or, more specifically, the nature that creates an actress -- centered on what appears to be a spectacularly unconvincing title-role performance.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The movie rises to another level whenever its star has a chance to cut loose -- leading the ensemble in a conga line, winning a sack race in slow motion, torching the Whos' Christmas tree while screaming, "Burn baby burn."- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
10 on Ten is less illuminating than pedantic, as well as tediously self-absorbed.- 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
The script is worse than slack, and despite its lurid premise, Bully doesn't have "Kids" tabloid immediacy.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Lovingly detailed but unaccountably clumsy, obviously ambitious, and unfortunately chintzy. It's also genuinely anachronistic.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
It's Rambo with a split hero -- Morse absorbing punishment and Crowe wreaking vengeance.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
An affable action hero in search of the planet's arch supervillain, Spurlock is less irritating than his obvious model, Michael Moore, but also less politically astute; assuming the role of a faux-naïf stranger in a strange land, he's more benign and not nearly as funny as unacknowledged analogue Sacha Baron Cohen.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The vision of America as a vast, ratings-driven amateur hour is not without promise, but Weitz's movie, named for the most popular TV program in its parallel universe, is disappointingly soft in its individual characterizations.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Primordial and laconic, this remarkably assured debut feature has the elegant simplicity of its title.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The Situation, Philip Haas's deftly paced, well-written, and brilliantly infuriating Iraq War thriller is not only the strongest of recent geopolitical hotspot flicks but one that has been designed for maximal agitation.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
"Every work of art is an uncommitted crime," Theodor Adorno once wrote. This one is more of a botched misdemeanor.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Carnahan does have an oddball sense of comic timing; what his picture lacks in hilarity it recuperates with a well-developed, albeit mumbling, sense of the absurd.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The chaos is convincing, but, less ruthless than Steven Spielberg, Bay eschews D-day panic and mutilation.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
An overtly saccharine fairy tale of abandonment that is subverted by its own comic brutality. It's oddly affecting...which is to say, sad in a way that its maker might not have intended.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Professional obligations required that I endure it, but there's no reason why you should.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Shows Rock suffering from premature Robin Williams syndrome. He's yet to express the full ferocity of his comic talent on the screen and he's already doing penance by going for the warm and fuzzy.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Girl 6, the goofy phone-sex comedy that he directed from Suzan-Lori Parks's script, may be incoherent, but it's never boring. Juggling a dozen or more subplots and letting them drop wherever they fall, the movie gives the impression of having been invented as Lee went along. [26 Mar 1996]- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
In its willful, self-involved eccentricity, Southland Tales is really something else. Kelly's movie may not be entirely coherent, but that's because there's so much it wants to say.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A sweet, dumb pup of a movie, not unlike its eponymous hero, The Wendell Baker Story frisks along sniffing the sidewalk.- 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
This lusty, heartfelt movie has a near Brueghelian visual energy and a humanist passion as contagious as its music.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
For all its fussy lighting, upside-down camera angles, and overwrought impressionism, Youth Without Youth is essentially playful. It's also pleasantly meandering in its largely faked locations, and drolly matter-of-fact about its mystic visions.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Home Room is badly acted and, running well over two hours, often mind-numbingly ponderous. Depressed rather than hysterical, it's in every way less clever and more literal-minded than "Zero Day."- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
This ponderous, didactic weepie aspires to "Titanic" stature even if the only ship it sinks is itself.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Costner himself is the doggedly humorless heart and soul (and brains?) of this monumentally maudlin picture.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
In Jackson's hands, The Lovely Bones is doubly appalling. Part Disney's "Alice in Wonderland," part Fritz Lang's "M," the movie is horrific yet cloying, alternately distended and abrupt, sometimes poignant and often ridiculous.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The Allen persona has always blurred the distinction between his art and his life. Still, one would scarcely expect Allen's attempt to satirize daily life in the National Entertainment State to be this tired, sour, and depressed.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Almost desperate to show it gets its own point. What's funny is that the joke--"Invasion of the Body Snatchers" reconfigured as anti-feminist backlash--was scarcely fresh when Bryan Forbes shot the first movie version nearly 30 years ago.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
It's a Jerry Bruckheimer art film, perhaps the most extravagantly aestheticized combat movie ever made.- 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
The result is explicit, if less than hilarious. The Hebrew Hammer lacks the edge of Adam Sandler's "Chanukah Song," although as anti-seasonal fare, it would make a suitably unbearable double bill with Terry Zwigoff's "Bad Santa."- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The best one can say for Christopher Hampton's dispirited adaptation of Joseph Conrad's The Secret Agent is that this weirdly sentimental movie might direct new attention to Conrad's corrosive novela satire. [12 Nov 1996]- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Renaldo & Clara is almost petulant in its demand to be taken seriously as film, and as such a good deal of it is dreadful. [30 Jan 1978, p.26]- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The self-conscious acting and use of direct address bespeak an aesthetic less orthodox Dogme than MTV's Real World, with a nod to Jerry Springer.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Sodden mess, a mutation-invasion movie that passes "Attack of the Killer Tomatoes!" going south.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Much of the movie is dull, and as it has been dubbed into English, the blah-blah is impossible to ignore.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The Man Who Cried is like a Yiddish generational tearjerker told from the perspective of the lost child rather than that of the bereaved parent.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
This modern-day vampire story is purposefully shocking in its eroticized gore, if unintentionally dull in its lack of poetic frissons.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The Green Hornet provides a half-hour's worth of mildly entertaining travesty before collapsing in a clamor of bombastic action sequences and lame wisecracks.- Village Voice
- Posted Jan 12, 2011
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- J. Hoberman
Death to Smoochy is often very funny, but what's even more remarkable is the integrity of DeVito's misanthropic vision.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Certainly Sandler's most ambitious work. It's not just a bid for respectability but a genuine allegory.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
None of the principals is remotely likable--although Kingsley does appear to enjoy swanning around the great Southwest like a low-rent Anthony Hopkins.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Made with considerable wit and style, Horn's thoughtful celebration of the era and its most uncanny diva could function as the show's ("East Village USA") supplement.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Gaudier than a Hindu-temple roof, louder than the Las Vegas night, Speed Racer is a cathedral of glitz.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
At once simple-mindedly didactic and utterly chaotic, Steal This Movie! is interspersed with fake headlines and botched history.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Hamming shamelessly as Berowne, Branagh is overseasoned for his part ... he's as desperate as a veteran social director at a Catskills hotel about to fold.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
As this movie knows what it is, Scooby-Doo's a relatively painless 85 minutes.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Wit is in short supply -- although this journey to the end of the night derives a certain amount of punkish energy from its crude editing, cruddy-looking close-ups, strident soundtrack, and overall volatility.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Halfway through, De Palma literally explodes his narrative to orchestrate a superb deep-space float-opera replete with runaway modules, high-tech lassos, dramatic self-sacrifice, and, in the most surprising maneuver, a montage-driven modicum of actual suspense.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Aspires to be both stylish and coarse, camp and vulgar -- which is pretty much how Bette Midler plays it.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Intermittently, in attempts to articulate a coherent argument, Collateral Damage shifts from pulse-pounding mode to something more migraine-conducive.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Closer to Sturges than Capra, the movie means to satirize the TV-fueled carnivalesque nature of American electoral politics but only demonstrates the TV-fueled debasement of American commercial comedy.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Trash Humpers projects a cranky resignation to the world as it is; still, it's picturesque.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Very Bad Things is a guy film, and, as such, it's a dog. The gross-out humor lacks edge, the guilt never kicks in, and the outrages are predictable. It's one flat brewski.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The grim finality of the ensuing pietà suggests the last act of Hamlet or, rather, Hamlet 2--so embarrassing that, for the first time, I wanted to avert my eyes from the screen, although that might have also been because Repo! appears to have been shot with a cell phone.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
An unrelentingly crass and confrontational barf bomb that makes Lars von Trier's "The Idiots" look like the philosophical experiment that it is.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Floating on the surface of confusion, Gunner Palace has a raw home video quality that's often quite beautiful. Much of the movie is hardly more than an immersion in sights and sounds. Vivid as it is, Gunner Palace is dominated by what isn't shown. It's the human face of Abu Ghraib.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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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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- J. Hoberman
Director Lee throws cold water on his own overheated fantasy scenario by having Mackie mope through every scene. What's fascinating is how She Hate Me perversely trumps its own perversity.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Anatomy of Hell gives a feminist twist to a French literary tradition that goes back to the Marquis de Sade. It's also svelte, assured filmmaking.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Even sillier than it is cynical, Drop Dead Gorgeous is a tiresome tale.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
A mishmash of life-insurance commercials and Ronald Reagan campaign spots, this sexless orgy of self-congratulation is designed to make you feel good about Hollywood, America, and Jim Carrey -- not to mention the nation's motion picture exhibitors, who are praised at one point as the antithesis of Soviet Communism.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Gilliam has suffered more than his share of butchered projects, but with this exercise in kamikaze auteurism, he appears to have made exactly the mess he wanted.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Shot in a style that might be termed Americana gravitas, September Dawn has the ham-fisted lyricism of political ads and pharmaceutical commercials. The schematic script is further burdened with heavy ironies and hackneyed dialogue.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The wildest thing about this movie is its faith that what kids (and parents) really want for Christmas is a Nutcracker version of the Final Solution.- Village Voice
- Posted Nov 23, 2010
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- 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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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
For a disposable entertainment, Shockproof has an intensity that sticks to the mind--yours, mine, or Richard Hamilton's.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
The Last Bolshevik, considered by some to be Marker's masterpiece.- Village Voice
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- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Thanks to his mastery of montage, Buñuel naturalizes Dalí's images into a duplicitous rhythm of normality and outrage. The film suggests instances of sex and violence far more extreme than any actually represented while contriving effronteries so offhanded you can't believe you've actually seen them.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
More concentrated and svelte than its precursor, Once Upon a Time II also has the benefit of fights staged by Master Yuen Wo-Ping that show Jet Li -- another camera-age hero -- to even greater advantage.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Gets better as it goes along, building up to a prolonged shipboard finale.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Enigmatic from the get-go, The Fall of Otrar builds to a series of spectacular battle scenes, but the mood is never less than sardonic.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Tightly framed and tightly wound, Mary is a claustrophobic, incandescent, nutty 83 minutes with everyone in the cast teetering on the ledge of madness.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Visionaries' heedless montage brought back the sense of crazy possibility that excited me when, as a teenage kid from Queens, I first encountered Mekas's world.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Not only a nifty late noir but a model of economical filmmaking--well-sketched atmosphere, deft characterizations, and a 78-minute running time.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Excavated from the deep '50s, Michelangelo Antonioni's Le amiche (known in English as "The Girlfriends") is an unexpected treasure.- Village Voice
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- J. Hoberman
Turning the Arab Spring into an invented revolution even as it presents specific incidents from an actual one, The Uprising demands an active viewer. Throughout, there are multiple things to consider.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 9, 2020
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