Jeannette Catsoulis
Select another critic »For 1,835 reviews, this critic has graded:
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47% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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50% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 7.4 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Jeannette Catsoulis' Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 58 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | 10 Cloverfield Lane | |
| Lowest review score: | The Tiger and the Snow | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 801 out of 1835
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Mixed: 718 out of 1835
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Negative: 316 out of 1835
1835
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The best, perhaps the only reason to see The Artist’s Wife is Lena Olin, an actor incapable of giving a so-so performance.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 24, 2020
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Sweet but ho-hum adaptation of Wendy Orr’s novel, a comedy-adventure that never quite finds its tone.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Sometimes dreamy but mostly dissatisfying, “Walk With Me” offers no clarity for the curious. We can enjoy the meditative mood, but understanding its underpinnings would require more than this idyll of silence and stillness provides.- The New York Times
- Posted Aug 17, 2017
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Falling with a thud between two stools, it has neither the zip nor the zaniness of farce nor the airy vivacity of the best romantic comedies.- The New York Times
- Posted May 4, 2017
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Ms. Nichols is consistently appealing in the kind of role Zooey Deschanel has pretty much cornered, and Philippe Rousselot's nighttime shots of highway tragedy are dreamily atmospheric. If only Roger Towne's screenplay had focused less on the metaphysical import of Lyman's savior impulses and more on the physical rewards of his salvaged life.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 22, 2011
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
I Am Woman, a pleasant, yet disappointingly trite biopic of the singer Helen Reddy, has a flatness that’s difficult to ascribe to any one element.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 10, 2020
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The Citizen is a heartfelt plea for charity, tolerance and all-around loving kindness — admirable aims sadly shackled to Sam Kadi’s inexpert direction.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 26, 2013
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Belaboring the cartoon connection, the director leaves the family struggles that enrich Mr. Suskind’s 2014 book of the same title stubbornly veiled.- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 30, 2016
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Crowding the screen with jarring sounds and disturbing visuals, Bateman experiments with so many cinematic frills and fancies that Munn’s touching work is too often obscured.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 28, 2021
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
In its quest to give us a little bit of everything, it finally delivers not nearly enough of anything.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 20, 2026
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
A movie that reveals its toxic intentions only gradually. Until it does, there is much to enjoy in the prickly odd-couple relationship of Henry (Billy Crudup) and Rudy (Tom Wilkinson), successful writing partners and longtime friends.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Sentimental and a little corny in parts, “Percy” is protected from bathos by Walken’s proudly minimalist performance as an intensely private man reluctantly drawn into an uncomfortably public fight.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 29, 2021
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- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 10, 2013
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
What we need is for the writer and director, David Pomes, to wallow less in aimless dialogue and lowlife sordidness. What we need is a point.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 15, 2011
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Everyone's Hero enters multiplexes already shadowed by tragedy. And while that may not be the best start for a kiddie feature, the movie's sentimental provenance could earn it a critical pass it doesn't deserve.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Ms. Bledel works her “Gilmore Girls” charm to the hilt, but no amount of cerulean-eyed sparkle can transcend this level of thudding mediocrity.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
More successful at conjuring atmosphere than at plot, We Go Way Back is nicely acted but frustratingly slight.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 28, 2011
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Essentially the story of a young woman coming into her power, Gretel & Hansel is quietly sinister, yet too underdeveloped to truly scare. Together, Jeremy Reed’s production design and Galo Olivares’s photography weave a chilly spell that’s regrettably undermined by the opacity of the storytelling.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 30, 2020
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The romance may be risible, but the scenes of mass panic and political desperation are slickly disturbing.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 5, 2013
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The animation is uninspired (with so much ice, the creatures need to be twice as good-looking), and the story is humdrum. (The saber-toothed tiger learns to swim!)- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Helena From the Wedding has a little more to offer than many films of its type.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 11, 2010
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
A muddled supernatural thriller that fails to capitalize on either its horrific prologue or eerie location.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 12, 2013
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Slow and sincere, The Debt bites off more plot than it can dramatically chew, its characters — especially the go-between played by the excellent Argentine actor Alberto Ammann — diluted by political maneuvering.- The New York Times
- Posted Jul 7, 2016
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Sparing with scares and judicious with gore, the director, Ben Ketai (working from a screenplay by Patrick J. Doody and Chris Valenziano), proves better at summoning atmosphere than developing characters.- The New York Times
- Posted Jul 24, 2014
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Well acted and sporadically amusing - especially when Olivia Wilde's profanity-spewing stripper is around - Butter alternates between looking down its nose at Midwestern passions and cooing over smugly liberal values.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 4, 2012
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
What’s left is a baroque pantomime, a heavy-handed satire of intolerance whose fun fades faster than the livid bruises on Judy’s face.- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 4, 2020
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
This saga, set in Berlin, is more committed to its bloodletting than to any of its characters.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The movie is too juvenile and too timid to acknowledge the real-world chill of its online cabal of murderous social misfits.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 11, 2024
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Propelled by an eccentric cast of characters and increasingly seamy locations, Fix dashes headlong through Los Angeles with a little charm and a lot of verve.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The film's sweetness is endearing but too featherweight to engage.- The New York Times
- Posted Jul 26, 2012
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The movie offers too little of Crash's justly revered lyricism and too much of his self-mutilation and manufactured chaos.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
At once comic, tragic and goofily romantic, and resting too often on Odd’s clarifying narration, this young-adult lark breaches the nonsense barrier with some regularity.- The New York Times
- Posted Feb 27, 2014
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
With a little more shading and originality, 13 Minutes might have pushed beyond its familiar Nazi tropes to shape something more immediate and infinitely more potent: an ominous portrait of radicalization.- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 29, 2017
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
It's tough to care about characters who spend most of their lives obsessing over the violent deaths of others.- The New York Times
- Posted Jul 26, 2012
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
With its oversimplified emotions and dumbed-down depiction of the creative process, this inoffensive time-filler dissolves in the mouth like vanilla pudding.- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 7, 2018
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Frozen camera setups and blurry night-vision images raise goose bumps without the assistance of eerie music or showy effects, though the strain of stretching the gimmick to a second movie is palpable.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 22, 2010
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The movie's good intentions are consistently undermined by its simplistic notion of redemption, and its inspirational thrust is diluted by an epilogue that suggests the program still has a ways to go in the life-altering department.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The Little Hours is saved from ignominy by two brief standout performances.- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 29, 2017
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Trouble makes a whole lot of noise without saying very much. The direction is wooden and the cinematography dull, leaving the solid cast (including Julia Stiles as a daffy clerk and Jim Parrack as her knuckle-dragging boyfriend) to shoulder the weight.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 4, 2018
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
John Conroy’s cinematography hustles and heaves, straining to inject a vitality that the story too often lacks. Yet whether in the kaleidoscopic warmth of Jamaica or the gray chill of London, Yardie’s sunlight-filled songs will make your toes twitch.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 14, 2019
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
It’s all very heady and voluptuous, but it’s also painfully superficial.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 19, 2015
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
On one level, a stereotypical mash of Greek cruelty, queer poetry slams and rabid activist rhetoric. But beneath the tired crudeness and college-romp clichés, the movie is gently perceptive about the malleable nature of sexuality and the barriers we construct to hide our confusion.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Battling downpours and an abundance of nighttime shadows, the cinematographer Benjamin Kracun adds a classy, coppery richness where he can. But “Echo Valley,” directed by Michael Pearce (whose 2018 feature debut, “Beast,” mingled equally dissonant themes with far greater dexterity), is ultimately undone by Brad Ingelsby’s distracted script.- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 12, 2025
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Sono’s visuals, sizzlingly realized by the cinematographer Sohei Tanikawa, lack neither brio nor imagination. But the ludicrousness of the plot severs any emotional connection to a story whose apocalyptic stylings (the Ghostland of the title is a nuclear wasteland) gesture toward Japan and America’s painful history.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 16, 2021
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Bereft of chuckles or even a substantial story, this maudlin musical fable never escapes the drag of a lead character with supporting-player energy.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 27, 2025
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
This disordered portrait seems heavily influenced by its equally jumbled setting.- The New York Times
- Posted May 14, 2015
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Gamely navigating a script that ushers her from seaside despair to hilltop elation, Watts gives a touching and blessedly understated performance, assisted by Sam Chiplin’s warmly expansive cinematography. As for the bundle of scene-stealing magpies (patiently trained by Paul Mander) who collectively bring Penguin to life, they’re a delight.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 27, 2021
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
A disappointingly shallow story in which only the dead are named, and the living are reduced to stereotypes.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 4, 2011
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Roth is never less than a treat as a woman whose veil of class and privilege is being slowly lifted to reveal her misplaced loyalties. The Crimes That Bind might feel leaden, but Alicia’s transformation feels lighter than air.- The New York Times
- Posted Aug 20, 2020
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Or maybe not: Committing completely to Carl’s wobbly perceptions, the filmmakers mire us in a hackneyed swamp of narrative uncertainty.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 7, 2017
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Good Ol’ Freda celebrates an intensely private witness to four of the most public lives in pop-culture history.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 12, 2013
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The movie’s biggest entertainment, however, is not the market-share rivalry between MakerBot Industries, in Brooklyn, and the younger Formlabs, in Boston, but its fearless dive into dweeb-culture head space.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 25, 2014
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Despite excellent stunt work and a too-brief appearance by Orlando Jones as an unflappable cop, the movie -- unlike Mr. Douglas’s hairdo -- never rises above mediocrity.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Though the themes of Burden feel uncomfortably current, their execution is leaden and dismayingly artless.- The New York Times
- Posted Feb 27, 2020
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Embracing outraged victimhood the way Angelina Jolie embraces a close-up, Ms. Basinger, doing double duty here as an executive producer, appears oblivious to the script's idiocies.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
As a sales pitch for an undeniably popular program, Q Ball (filmed in 2018) builds a crescendo of hope and good will. Anyone seeking a more substantive conversation on life beyond the basket, however, will have to look elsewhere.- The New York Times
- Posted May 23, 2019
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Brooklyn 45 is overlong, repetitive and at times wearyingly stagy. The actors, though, can’t be faulted, convincingly turning unappetizing characters into broken people trying to move on from a war that keeps pulling them back in.- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 8, 2023
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Shot with some wit and considerable speed, its short, sharp beatdowns are a refreshing change from the bloated action sequences favored by some of Mr. Kang’s genre contemporaries.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 11, 2013
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The style is stilted, the look rudimentary, with Abhilasha Dewan’s cheeky animation supplying an occasional visual lift. Yet as Wilson’s former errand boy guides us around her onetime fiefdom — conjuring an area fizzing with smut until doused by Giuliani — we may sense the milieu, but its matriarch remains stubbornly indistinct.- The New York Times
- Posted May 23, 2024
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Though thematically vague, thinly plotted and without a reliably sympathetic soul to cling to, the movie has a mutinous energy and an absurd, knockabout charm.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 19, 2017
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Tasteful to a fault, Berlin 36 turns real-life controversy into disappointingly tepid drama.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 15, 2011
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Though the developing bond between the two men — one of whom is virtually nonverbal — is credible and even touching, the storytelling is too oblique to reel you in.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 21, 2013
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Placing sex and gender identity at the center of almost every conversation, the writer and director, Eric Schaeffer, is so keen to demythologize that the film’s potentially most affecting moments are too often smothered by the hackneyed characters and setups that surround them.- The New York Times
- Posted Feb 5, 2015
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Quaintly old-fashioned in style, plot and special effects, this familiar tale of female derangement and institutional abuse is too tame to scare and too shallow to engage.- The New York Times
- Posted Jul 7, 2011
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Having devoted much of their lives to combating lupine myths by introducing Koani to wonder-struck schoolchildren, Mr. Weide and Ms. Tucker are ill served by a director who reduces the anti-wolf lobby to caricature and the debates over reintroducing wolves to the Northern Rockies to grossly biased clips.- The New York Times
- Posted Aug 16, 2012
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
A smoothly efficient popcorn picture...Though Scodelario is spunky and game in what must have been an extremely uncomfortable shoot, the script (by the brothers Michael and Shawn Rasmussen) is airless and repetitive.- The New York Times
- Posted Jul 12, 2019
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Well-intentioned but philosophically timid, For My Father wants to meditate on the moral reshuffling that can accompany imminent death. But the director, Dror Zahavi, is ill served by a screenplay (by Ido Dror and Jonatan Dror) too attracted to coincidence and too repelled by the existential brink.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
If you can resist the urge to run for the exit, you may leave the theater feeling a lot more hopeful than when you went in.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Your enjoyment of Paper Heart will hinge almost entirely on your receptiveness to Ms. Yi and the extreme iteration of social awkwardness she represents.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Purports to be a documentary about the American public school system. In reality, however, it’s a bludgeoning rant against a single state — New Jersey — which it presents as a closed loop of Mercedes-owning administrators, obstructive teachers’ unions and corrupt school boards.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
A forest of talking heads and pointing fingers, The Empire in Africa is a noble but failed attempt to explicate the tragedy of the 11-year civil war in Sierra Leone.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Despite a plot (by Ben Hopkins) bursting with double- and triple- crosses, the movie feels programmatic, its characters bland cogs in a Rube Goldberg machine.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 23, 2026
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
At its grungy heart, Alessandro Celli’s Mondocane is about the dissolution of a friendship. Yet this cynical, near-future crime thriller, with its Hunger Games morality and Mad Max aesthetic, is too busy glamorizing cruelty to allow its central relationship to resonate.- The New York Times
- Posted May 19, 2022
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The gently nostalgic mood and sleepy pacing effectively erase the movie’s necessary edge.- The New York Times
- Posted Feb 2, 2017
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Relies less on the novelty of its premise than on the positioning of solid actors in minor roles (including Melissa Leo and Martin Donovan as the tortured parents of a murdered child) and the intelligence of its star.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
If making a decent movie required only good intentions, then Pray for Japan would be off and running. As it is, though, this muddled collage of random impressions and personal histories, emerging from last year's destruction of the Tohoku coastline by the earthquake and tsunami, doesn't document a tragedy so much as repeat a mantra.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 16, 2012
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Featuring the usual fractured visuals, generic victims and pinballing cameras — both hand-held and mounted on bike helmets — Exists nevertheless has an unusually dreamy opening and a few surprisingly entertaining tweaks.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 23, 2014
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Though buoyed by Anthony Marinelli’s moody score and Denis Maloney’s gutsy cinematography, Self-Medicated suffers from severe dramatic droop.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
An unabashed sales pitch for international adoption, Thaddaeus Scheel’s Stuck aims for the heart much more than the mind.- The New York Times
- Posted Feb 21, 2013
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Radiating a distinctly retro vibe, this throwaway thriller from the German director Christian Alvart tosses a bone to Renée Zellweger, who chews it to a nub as Emily Jenkins, a harried social worker.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
While Silverstein’s commitment to authenticity is admirable (she spent years visiting backyard rodeos across Texas, talking with the participants), her narrative is too tamped-down and languorous to catch hold.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 30, 2020
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Information leaks into the film via the radio and a few flashbacks, but Wrecked is mostly free of dialogue - and, unfortunately, suspense.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 31, 2011
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
We get little more than a bland romance, smoothly professional special effects and a story that’s finally too predictable to raise the heart rate.- The New York Times
- Posted Feb 24, 2022
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Best enjoyed as a sampling of Ms. Zorrilla's combustible energy and still dazzling screen presence.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The Hitman’s Wife’s Bodyguard is loud, lazy, profane and well nigh incoherent. It’s also at times quite funny, with a goofy vulgarity that made me giggle.- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 17, 2021
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Soon becomes tiresome, but it’s emblematic of a film that is dancing as fast as it can to entertain.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Kyle Warren’s screenplay is potent enough to generate several moments of suspense, and Watts, an exceptional actor sidelined too often by poor choices, is not the problem here. That would be the decision to jettison the children’s most creative cruelties — and consequently much of the movie’s tension — and a director, Matt Sobel, who’s determined to steer the audience toward a specific interpretation of events.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 15, 2022
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Fat, Sick may be no great shakes as a movie, but as an ad for Mr. Cross's wellness program its now-healthy heart is in the right place.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 31, 2011
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Form and content fight to the death in Wondrous Oblivion, Paul Morrison's defiantly gauzy tale of racial friction in 1960s England.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Existing outside of time and place, The Other Lamb is a gorgeous revenge fable with an excess of atmosphere and zero subtlety — a mallet wrapped in gauze and girlish laughter.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 2, 2020
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Has a friendly, blue-collar vibe (Cody is an ex-fish-sorter from the Shiverpool, Antarctica) and some sly, low-key humor. Nevertheless, a moratorium on penguins might be called for, despite the inevitable anthropomorphic void.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Free of blood, bruises and visible trauma, DOA revels in its fakery. And though the film presents more exuberant female flesh than hiring day at Hooters, it's strictly for titillation.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Offered only hints of life away from the barre or of Sy’s relationship with his coolly poised benefactress, viewers will see either a very fortunate young man or a beautiful protégé, dancing as fast as he can to please everyone but himself.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Drawing on a fascination with cults and utopian communities, the director and co-writer, David Marmor, has created a mildly entertaining survival story whose depiction of psychological indoctrination far outstrips its generic dips into torture.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 23, 2020
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
A gay tragedy in three acts and more than a dozen excellent songs, House of Boys conveys an emotional honesty that overrides its dated style.- The New York Times
- Posted Jul 28, 2011
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Wrapped in drab visuals and a doomy atmosphere, Absolution paints a world where lowlifes rule and neither doctors nor priests can be trusted. Yet there are moments when the beatdowns pause and a misty melancholy shines through.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 31, 2024
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Glinting white vistas and endless light blanket On the Ice, a frigid drama that's tough to warm up to.- The New York Times
- Posted Feb 16, 2012
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
A “Decalogue” for special-ed students, The Ten leans too often toward the bizarre and the bewildering. And though rough sex is a recurring motif, the movie’s overall tone is less blasphemous than raunchy.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
There is something cozy and a little claustrophobic about Henry Jaglom's indulgent Hollywood satires.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 7, 2010
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Clogged with court transcripts, medical records and repetitive (if moving) patient testimony, Burzynski tickles the mind only at the cost of trampling the eyes.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Why, then, do we care not one bit when Pulitzers are won and bullets unsuccessfully dodged? The answer lies partly in Mr. Silver's refusal to elucidate the racial politics or engage with the world outside the film's incoherently chaotic bubble.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 21, 2011
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Leaving aside its cheesy, colorized dramatizations, Jon Brewer’s movie offers a strangely bifurcated portrait.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 2, 2020
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Little more than an archipelago of historical set pieces linked by a syrupy causeway of sentiment, JK Youn’s Ode to My Father may have slain them in South Korea, but its packaged pain and bullet-point structure are likely to leave Western audiences cold.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 8, 2015
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Pitching uncertainly between cute and creepy, engaging and weird, this farcical story draws energy from a wickedly eccentric Ann-Margret, having a high old time as Ben's doting mother.- The New York Times
- Posted Jul 14, 2011
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- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The upshot is a gentle, gossamer movie that, like its soundtrack, goes down easy and is almost instantly forgotten.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 8, 2018
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
A charmingly sentimental but ultimately pointless hommage to the sci-fi classics of yesteryear, Alien Trespass proves only that while styles and technology have moved on, the affection for corn is everlasting.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Despite the film’s sketchy aesthetic and barely animate lead, its tone is carefully contrived: I’ll wager no one in your circle is as dryly funny or spontaneously surreal as Harmony’s nonsupport group.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
She’s Missing is slow and dreamy and frustratingly opaque. Yet it has a potent sense of place and an ominous atmosphere of impermanence.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 19, 2019
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The writer and director, Mark Goffman, sticks to a no-frills style that makes the film feel longer than its 1 hour 24 minutes.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 21, 2011
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
With its bleak, yearning tone and defiantly cloudy color palette, “England Is Mine” has a pleasingly granular feel for its era and location. But its imagining of Morrissey as a self-pitying narcissist, a curiously passive intellectual who can’t get out of his own way, soaks the movie in a wearying inertia.- The New York Times
- Posted Aug 24, 2017
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Mr. West retains his signature restraint and slow-burn approach to brutality. Missing, however, is his typically skillful manipulation of tension, partly because his tone veers so often from jokey to reverential, from winking at the western to making a sacrament of it.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 20, 2016
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
It’s all ridiculously romanticized and self-serving. But the performances are so good (Mr. Greyeyes, in particular, is a miracle of intelligence and dignity) and Michael Eley’s vistas, shimmeringly shot in New Mexico, are so stunning, it feels churlish to resist.- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 28, 2018
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
A documentary that purports to chronicle the sober and urgent work of those who ferret out human-rights abuses, but instead plays like a portrait of a rather glamorous marriage.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 21, 2014
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Everyone’s sorry about something in Forgiveness, a glum drama about the way repentance can do more damage than the sin that precedes it.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Distracted by Confederate flags and twerking women, the directors, Andrei Bowden Schwartz and Sam Jones, make only a halfhearted attempt to illuminate a disappearing subculture.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 10, 2020
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- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Corfield is fine in a role that gives her little opportunity to do more than run and fight, but a woman this empowered removes the question mark from her survival — and the tension from the movie.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 3, 2019
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Though Jessie Buckley, as Wynne’s suspicious wife, and Rachel Brosnahan, as an amusingly pushy C.I.A. operative, add welcome jolts of female energy, The Courier is essentially the story of an extraordinary male friendship. The men’s mutual compassion peaks too late to save the picture, but is no less moving for that.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 18, 2021
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
This direct-to-streaming bauble benefits from two leads whose charm effortlessly outshines the material.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 28, 2024
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- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Spurred by the medical and emotional problems of her own three children, Ms. Abeles embarked on a deeply personal inquiry into the insanely hectic lives of too many of our offspring.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Despite its sense of dead-end desperation, Stray Dolls is made worthwhile by the richness of Shane Sigler’s nighttime cinematography and the consistent empathy of its tone. Sinha, herself a first-generation immigrant, isn’t about to judge anyone for reaching.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 9, 2020
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
A lesbian-foodie fairy tale that keeps its appetites well under control. The title may hint at naughty pleasures, but the director, Pratibha Parmar, is more interested in pappadams than passion.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
This scattershot investigation of the effects of Internet pornography on female behavior only ruffles the surface of a complex issue, one that demands a much larger sample than three white, educated women.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 18, 2012
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
How to Talk to Girls at Parties is a kitschy, spaced-out oddity. The energy peaks and droops, pogoes and flatlines, with Sandy Powell’s kooky costumes doing much of the visual heavy lifting.- The New York Times
- Posted May 24, 2018
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Narrated, rather annoyingly, by the Canadian actor Ryan Reynolds, Huntwatch feels dismayingly one-sided. Yet as we hear of animals being skinned alive and see a bludgeoned pup linger in agony, any pro-hunt argument seems emphatically beside the point.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 13, 2016
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Despite frequent flashbacks and Bobby Bukowski’s richly dimensional photography, the movie has a static, stagy look that amplifies the oppressiveness of its increasingly unpleasant exchanges.- The New York Times
- Posted May 4, 2017
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Though the spaces between the funny voices are filled with verdant hillsides and vanilla beaches that stretch the length of the frame, there’s an occasional sour edge to the comedic sparring.- The New York Times
- Posted Aug 10, 2017
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Despite a wonderfully eerie atmosphere, this moody examination of guilt and mourning is too generic to scare and too predictable to surprise.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 10, 2022
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Gloomy and vague, Run Rabbit Run is a moody, noncommittal tease replete with the usual spectral signifiers: clammy dreams, scary drawings, unsettling masks. Snook does everything but rend her garments in a performance that only emphasizes the busy vapidity of Hannah Kent’s script.- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 29, 2023
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Ms. Weisman offers a deluge of information. But for those not already versed in the lingo or the people involved, the movie plays like a blurry primer to an anarchic, mysterious world.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 16, 2014
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Belle and Sebastian fans will be fully sated; everyone else might feel as if they’d consumed a meal consisting entirely of meringue.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 4, 2014
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Feels passé and lacks a charismatic lead. Too bad Daniel Radcliffe is an only child.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The result is a talky, predictable, less-audacious-than-it-thinks romantic comedy.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 8, 2012
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
In a movie as happy to resurrect characters as rub them out, nothing is of consequence, and the glibness grows numbing.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 20, 2017
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Korean director Hong Sang-soo unleashes yet another emotionally stunted antihero in Night and Day, a rambling study of male arrested development.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
A brief appearance by Joey Lauren Adams adds a welcome warmth to the standard therapist role, but otherwise all is bewilderment and repetition.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 8, 2012
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
For all its flaws — and they are legion — King of Thieves wraps you in a fuzzy blanket of familiarity.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 24, 2019
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The High Note is pleasant enough but disappointingly timid and thoroughly implausible.- The New York Times
- Posted May 28, 2020
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
A mildly engaging lowlife odyssey that struggles not to choke on its own style.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 17, 2013
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Falling back repeatedly on in-your-face symbolism — especially with regard to the specter of decline — Mr. Salvadori seems content to idle in neutral.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 9, 2015
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
For all its many irritations, You Wont Miss Me has undeniable punch, a frayed energy that feels janglingly unstable. Is Shelly crazy or just a pain in the neck? We're not really sure, and neither is she.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 9, 2010
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Unless you're among those who still drop acid as a midnight-movie apéritif, your enjoyment of this retro oddity remains far from guaranteed.- The New York Times
- Posted May 18, 2012
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
A mood board of mashing, slashing, snapping and splintering, this feature, directed by Xavier Gens, is revenge-movie cliché ground down to the studs.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 4, 2024
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The film takes 70 minutes and a lot of silly chatter to conclude what every woman well knows: wearing hooker heels will have most men eating out of her hand. Or, if she's lucky, licking her aching feet.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 29, 2012
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Ms. Basinger commits to her disturbed character. But the script (by the director, Anders Morgenthaler) makes Maria’s behavior so reckless — at times, she’s practically begging to be mugged or worse — that we have no chance of sympathizing with her.- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 11, 2015
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
While there is much to admire in this scrappy, micro-budgeted debut feature, its sci-fi shenanigans are too convoluted and its visuals too claustrophobic to sustain interest.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 25, 2022
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Embracing a structure that implicitly acknowledges the complexity of the issue, Ms. Marson nevertheless contributes to the film’s general fuzziness by failing to clarify the legal and moral guidelines that govern these kinds of prescriptions.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 30, 2016
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
This first narrative feature from Gabe Klinger seduces with breathtakingly gorgeous visuals that feel both achingly nostalgic and elegantly modern. These often ravishing aesthetics and stylistic quirks act as soft restraints, keeping us watching despite a near-total absence of story and a thinly disguised attitude of male entitlement.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 16, 2017
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
In the lulls between bouts of yammering, however, the director, Johannes Roberts, concentrates on building a solid atmosphere of desperation.- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 15, 2017
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Fans typically expect well-executed jump scares, fun plot twists and the occasional rubbery monster. What they probably don’t expect is the sophisticated allegory that Imaginary appears to be flirting with — and comes close to pulling off — before losing its nerve.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 7, 2024
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
At its best when merging shocks with social commentary, this halting compilation improves significantly as it nears the end of the alphabet.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 7, 2013
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The swings from goofy to gory and jokey to tragic cancel one another out, and Mr. Diliberto’s near-constant voice-over is irksome. As is the pivotal romance.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 5, 2015
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Directed with extraordinary empathy by Aaron Katz (who also wrote the story), Dance Party, USA is an admittedly slight movie, but one that is given heft by a yearning tone and a camera fascinated by the emotional shifts and shadows on a young person's face.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
There’s a pleasing humility and introspection to this Bruce — a ruler no longer sure if his patriotic purpose is worth the carnage. His joints may be stiffer than his resolve; but, in placing the warrior temporarily aside, Macfadyen and his director have helped us more clearly to see the man.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 23, 2020
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Mr. Arcady’s reliance on heavy-handed melodrama, on screaming women and on worried-looking men, winds everything so tightly that the anguish plateaus and the characters begin to seem like chess pieces in an argument.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 23, 2015
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
A sugary, aggressively anthropomorphized story of one avian interloper and a whole bunch of human obsessives.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 25, 2010
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The Milk of Sorrow is constrained by a rarefied screenplay and a near-mute central performance.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
This stylistic restraint may help deflect accusations of exploitation (though the film's two pivotal sex scenes both feel uncomfortably extended, the initial crime lasting a squirm-inducing six minutes), but it also impedes our connection with the victims.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
As an interrogator Ms. Ismailos is no Torquemada; she lobs softballs that her subjects genially accept.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
A weird, erratic and occasionally insightful experiment that, unlike its indefatigable star, never quite finds its zing.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 26, 2019
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
A circular firing-squad of full-on crazy, Chris Morris’s The Day Shall Come barges into American counterterrorism tactics with sledgehammer satire and a numbingly repetitive plot.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 26, 2019
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Documents courage, but steers clear of character.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
At least 30 minutes and several scams too long, the plot passes from amusing to confounding long before the final double-cross.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 1, 2012
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
In “Chapter 3,” the violence has been supercharged, and so has the virtuosity. At a certain point, though, the carnage becomes deadening, its consequences no more than soulless tableaus of damage that encourage disengagement.- The New York Times
- Posted May 16, 2019
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
By restricting himself to showing how well Mr. Robbins does his job, Mr. Berlinger mainly reveals how narrowly he has done his own.- The New York Times
- Posted Jul 12, 2016
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
A well-meaning but inexpertly dramatized account of the roundup of 13,000 Parisian Jews in the summer of 1942.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 16, 2012
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The pace is patient, the acting solid and the special effects emphasize craft over flash as the characters rejigger our perceptions from one scene to the next.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 1, 2016
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Saw IV is bloody proof that Jigsaw may be dead, but his well of corporeal abuses has yet to run dry.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
While at times fascinating, this trudge through statistics, graphs and grainy film of cholesterol bubbles and arterial plaque may challenge even the most determined viewer.- The New York Times
- Posted May 6, 2011
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
While you don’t require familiarity with the dozen or so earlier titles to enjoy this one, you do require a sense of humor that’s easily triggered and a gag reflex that isn’t.- The New York Times
- Posted Aug 16, 2018
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
With its sticky pacing and divinely unsubtle soundtrack (though The Cranberries’ “Zombie” is always excusable), Army of the Dead is an ungainly, yet weirdly mesmeric lump of splatter-pop filmmaking.- The New York Times
- Posted May 20, 2021
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
An ultra-low-budget ghost story with an off-kilter sensibility that initially intrigues but ultimately fizzles.- The New York Times
- Posted May 4, 2017
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Somehow, Penn never allows Clark’s inappropriateness to become predatory, and Johnson’s marvelously expressive features reveal details the dialogue declines to provide. Yet if there’s a finer point to any of this — beyond yes, talking to strangers is sometimes beneficial — it eluded me.- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 27, 2024
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
What some may see as an examination of loss and legacy, others will view as a portrait of psychological coercion: overbearing men riding roughshod over the wishes of a grieving woman.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 28, 2017
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Grim, intelligent and vividly photographed by the director’s father, Philippe Lavalette, Inch’Allah works best when the camera alights on Ava and Rand, whose marvelously mobile faces convey all the complexity that Chloe lacks.- The New York Times
- Posted Aug 15, 2013
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Horror without suspense is like sex without love: you can appreciate the technicalities, but ultimately there’s no reason to care.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The result is a frustratingly superficial look at a smart, driven and sometimes frightened young man who always felt as though he were "racing against time."- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 1, 2012
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Freeman, never the most animated of performers, gives his specific brand of passive British miserabilism free rein. But it’s Melissa Rauch, as Charlie’s safely dull, place-holder girlfriend, who steals the show.- The New York Times
- Posted Aug 8, 2019
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
While intellectually laudable, Mr. Kelly’s determined objectivity is so distancing that it takes an inherently intriguing story (based on a 2011 article in The New York Times Magazine) and sucks the life out of it.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 26, 2017
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
However crucial and opportune in its truth-seeking and depictions of political trickery (Burns could hardly have known his film would plop into theaters alongside the impeachment hearings for President Trump), The Report is too often dramatically frozen, its emotions stubbornly internal.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 14, 2019
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Structured around a countdown to the ultimate prize, the story is a soapy slog of sabotage and betrayal. Sex and drugs are as prevalent as pliés, the absence of a likable character as irksome as the constant conniving.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 23, 2021
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
A muddled mélange of black comedy, revenge thriller and feminist lecture, Promising Young Woman too often backs away from its potentially searing setup.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 24, 2020
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The combined skills of the director, Gonzalo López-Gallego, and his cinematographer, José David Montero, can’t surmount a story that gives us no one to invest in.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 15, 2016
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Though not without its charms -- the scenes in Mumbai are comically chaotic -- Offshore might have raised more chuckles when it was made, in 2006, than in the economic chill of 2009. And not only in Michigan.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
With its achingly slow build and understated performances, The Clovehitch Killer strains to surmount its lack of urgency.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 15, 2018
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The characters don’t have conversations so much as helpfully recite their back stories, and the long-buried secret is soon so obvious that the movie’s last-act hysteria feels forced and a little ridiculous.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 26, 2017
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Mr. Johnson doesn’t give fateful weight to the breadcrumbs that guide James forward. Glancing encounters and faltering conversations unfold lightly and with a visual seductiveness that the cinematographer, Adam Newport-Berra, crescendos in the film’s drifting, transformative middle section.- The New York Times
- Posted Feb 19, 2015
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The result is a narrow, albeit intriguing window into a technological revolt that deserves a more far-reaching film than this one.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 10, 2013
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The plot of Mars owes at least as much to bodily fluids as it does to science fiction.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 7, 2010
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- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 7, 2016
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The subsequent slaughters are inventive, the pacing lively and the cat-and-mouse structure entertaining; but the rodents themselves are — aside from their suave leader, played by Seann William Scott — such misogynistic morons that Becky’s predominance is never in doubt.- The New York Times
- Posted May 25, 2023
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
What makes the journey compelling is the relaxed chemistry between the young actors and an insistently apprehensive tone that pervades even the most prosaic exchanges.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Working with four interchangeable Deweys, the filmmakers create a sufficient number of lively stunts to keep the kiddies amused, though the film's wittiest moment -- a canine parody of Dudley Moore's first glimpse of Bo Derek in "10" -- will be appreciated only by their parents. In trying to straddle both age groups, however, Firehouse Dog proves decidedly less nimble than its furry star.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Audiences will be either captivated or irritated, depending on their tolerance for high-concept whimsy and high-energy theatrics. By the end of the wake itself, they may be wishing Binew’s illness were running ahead of schedule.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Vaughn and Newton prove remarkably effective at selling the benefits of their alternate packaging. Their efforts, however, are too often diluted by the film’s lazy plotting and Millie’s hackneyed emotional baggage.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 12, 2020
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Hectic and harebrained, this galloping French thriller tosses a potpourri of plot points - crooked cops, sleazy gangsters, stolen drugs and an underage hostage - into a packed-to-the-gills nightclub, and stirs. Repeatedly.- The New York Times
- Posted May 10, 2012
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- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 13, 2011
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Like most of LaBute’s work, Out of the Blue is talky, sparsely staged and presented with his signature detachment. The two leads are fine.- The New York Times
- Posted Aug 25, 2022
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
As the film picks up speed it also accrues a socially progressive agenda. If only this were half as well developed as the female leads.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Technically innovative but narratively moribund, Metropia is all stasis and shadows. Perhaps Mr. Saleh could have listened to a lighter voice.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Playing like a mashup of tropes from far superior small- and large-screen entertainments (Scandal, House of Lies, Ides of March), this clunky feature from Bill Guttentag is satire at its most soft-bellied and toadying.- NPR
- Posted Jan 24, 2013
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
By anyone's reckoning, Predators is a middling 1980s B movie; too bad this is 2010.- NPR
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
You may see scarier movies this year, but none so redolent of decomposition.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Creepy, silly, startling, irritating, and black-vomit-and-multicolored-urine disgusting, The Oregonian wears out its welcome within 30 minutes.- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 7, 2012
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Even those viewers who share the film's conviction that preparing a collection for New York Fashion Week is inherently fascinating may lose interest long before the final frock is fitted.- The New York Times
- Posted Feb 3, 2011
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
We learn so little about these characters or the forces that shaped them that we’re never drawn into their drearily blinkered world.- The New York Times
- Posted Aug 1, 2019
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
After setting up a potentially powerful study of damage and delusion, Pearce (whose 2018 feature debut, “Beast,” signaled an unusual talent) remains torn between science fiction and psychological fact.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 10, 2021
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
A dreary pileup of hard-luck monologues and run-down locations, Mark Webber’s Flesh and Blood straddles the line between fact and fiction with exhausting earnestness and a fatal dearth of narrative.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 9, 2017
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Preachy and pretty, Heaven is a classy-looking product with a vanilla flavor and a pastel palette.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 16, 2014
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
We've heard it all before, if not in the schoolmarmish tones of Glenn Close, whose patronizing narration ("The earth is a miracle") makes the film feel almost as long as the life of its subject.- The New York Times
- Posted Feb 3, 2011
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- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 26, 2012
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Filmed in and around New Orleans, “The Visitor” isn’t a terrible movie, just a tired one.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 7, 2022
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Burdened by a ludicrous script and messy direction, Ms. Kirkland — a headstrong veteran performer who is nothing if not game — has proved that she can play this kind of role in her sleep. If only the movie around it were worthy of her efforts.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 11, 2014
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Razooli wants us to see the fantastical narratives children conjure to manage real-world uncertainties, but his vision lacks focus.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 21, 2024
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- The New York Times
- Posted May 2, 2019
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
As he proved in his 2017 drama, “Harmonium,” Fukada excels at unfurling near-hysterical narratives in restrained, sometimes icily sterile scenes. But while the earlier film pulled us in, this one repels, its cloudy colors and depressing mood making us long for a single moment of joy.- The New York Times
- Posted Jul 30, 2020
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
In trying to have it both ways, Brice has created a messy, overstuffed parody of moral policing that squanders the promise of its cleverly executed opening.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 7, 2021
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Favoring the superficial over the substantive, The Gospel of Eureka keeps skirting opportunities to excavate experience.- The New York Times
- Posted Feb 7, 2019
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
A movie that, for all its operatic allusions and actorly expertise, feels dismayingly passionless.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 13, 2018
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
This archipelago of maneuvers, however jaw-dropping, never coheres into a real movie.- The New York Times
- Posted Feb 23, 2012
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
A Michael Keaton outing is always cause for celebration, no matter how ramshackle the vehicle ("First Daughter," anyone?) or paper-thin the role.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
More tired than the fantasy it promotes, A Previous Engagement aims at middle-aged women with the subtlety of a pitch for bladder-control medication.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Concocted with heaps of style but only a smattering of substance, Benjamin Dickinson’s sophomore feature, Creative Control, is as brittle and unwelcoming as its characters’ surroundings.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 10, 2016
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
In David Blue Garcia’s Texas Chainsaw Massacre the blade is more active than ever. But while Leatherface, the homicidal head case who fashions masks from the skin of his victims, might be busier, his ability to scare has waned considerably.- The New York Times
- Posted Feb 18, 2022
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Uninvolving and cliché-ridden (even shape-shifters, it seems, deserve a falling-in-love montage), Blood & Chocolate is "Romeo and Juliet" with fewer manners and more exotic dentition.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
An extravagantly corny ode to the collapse of the Cleveland mafia in the 1970s.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 10, 2011
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Law (and his director, Karim Aïnouz) might be laying it on thick, but his grotesque tyrant is the only thing lifting this dreary, ahistoric drama out of its narrative doldrums.- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 13, 2024
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Despite solid acting (including John Cusack as a plainclothes detective), Arsenal is hobbled mainly by its director’s histrionic tendencies.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 5, 2017
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- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 18, 2022
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
A balloon of cuteness that makes you yearn for a pin, What If is Saturday night comfort food for those who need to believe that even the most curdled among us can find a mate.- The New York Times
- Posted Aug 7, 2014
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Torn between the maternal and the cosmic, the tactile and the unearthly, Proxima feels as unsettled as its heroine.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 5, 2020
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Mr. Banker teases us with a dizzy, dislocating shooting style that throws up a succession of eerily arresting images. Even so, his film never overcomes the fact that watching drugged-out wastrels is rarely interesting — unless, of course, you’re one of them.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 24, 2013
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Like Vic’s snails, who must be starved before they can be consumed, Deep Water feels like a movie that’s had everything of interest well and truly sucked out.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 17, 2022
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Even more inadvisable was the decision (whether made by Mr. McLean or his backers) to transform the mercurial psychopath Mick Taylor (a truly menacing John Jarratt) into a roguish cartoon.- The New York Times
- Posted May 15, 2014
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Another ruin-and-rehab tale, one that initially tantalizes then flatly disappoints.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 5, 2019
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
A damp-eyed comedy whose banal title isn’t the only thing needing improvement.- The New York Times
- Posted Jul 9, 2015
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
This poor-surfers-make-good drama from Morgan O’Neill and Ben Nott relies more than it should on toned thighs and taut gluteals. Be grateful; there’s nothing to see on dry land that’s anywhere near as compelling.- The New York Times
- Posted Aug 1, 2013
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Playing characters with no real substance, the actors struggle to develop a sense of shared peril.- The New York Times
- Posted Aug 28, 2014
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Trapped for the most part in featureless rooms, a stellar cast — including Jodie Foster, Benedict Cumberbatch and Shailene Woodley — deliver dull speeches and sift through redacted documents, brows furrowed and lips compressed.- The New York Times
- Posted Feb 11, 2021
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- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 6, 2013
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Dignified to a fault and crammed with historical worthies (like a pre-deportation Emma Goldman), this dry tour of union hall strife and kitchen table sentiment wears its sympathies proudly.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 10, 2014
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Crisply shot and surprisingly well acted, Mother's Day suffers from an overly long script (a tornado hovers off screen to no apparent purpose) and annoying glitches in continuity.- The New York Times
- Posted May 3, 2012
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Smothering insightful moments in verbal and musical treacle (courtesy of Harriet Schock’s sticky songs), Mr. Jaglom displays an endearing lack of cynicism but an equal lack of discipline.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
A modern-day noir weighed down by redundant narration and a forced plot, The Girl Is in Trouble feels like a tug of war between the actors, who understand the need for lightness, and dialogue that emerges in expository clots.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 2, 2015
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The Cleanse” embarks on an allegorical journey with only the vaguest notion of a destination. As a result, the movie feels frustratingly repetitive — a single joke repeated ad nauseam.- The New York Times
- Posted May 3, 2018
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
It feels like an artifact from a particularly contentious past, a stale corn chip trampled into Party-convention carpeting.- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 25, 2020
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Despite Ms. Janssen's fine taste in music - it's lovely to hear Jorma Kaukonen's "Genesis" on the soundtrack - her film's downfall was ensured by a leading lady who will always be more credible chasing zombies than the American dream.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 27, 2012
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
There’s a riveting story lurking inside Holly, a documentary-fiction hybrid about sex trafficking in Cambodia. It’s just not the one the filmmakers want to tell.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Essentially, we’re watching dead people refuse to lie down, yet the acting isn’t terrible, and Scott Winig’s photography is satisfyingly bleak and grimy.- The New York Times
- Posted Jul 17, 2014
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
This drippy dramedy embraces every inappropriate-oldster cliché with depressing calculation.- The New York Times
- Posted Feb 24, 2011
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Narratively and emotionally, this weirdly becalmed trifle by Maria Sole Tognazzi ends up almost exactly where it started.- The New York Times
- Posted Jul 17, 2014
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
To experience Chimpanzee, the latest piece of gorgeously shot pablum from Disneynature, is to endure an orgy of cuteness pasted over some of the most asinine narration ever to ruin a wildlife movie.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 19, 2012
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
A muddled morality tale more interested in coming of age than getting of wisdom.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Written and directed by Brit McAdams, Paint is a comedically inert parody of male privilege that’s all sight gags and very little substance.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 6, 2023
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Self-satisfied and too slick by half, Boundaries projects a sheen of artifice that deflects any genuine engagement with the story.- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 21, 2018
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Written and directed by Sean Mullin, a comedian and onetime Army officer (he plays a comic in the film), Amira & Sam is more successful as a portrait of veteran alienation than as a romance.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 29, 2015
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The performances are desultory, the musical score bullying and the drama — aside from the game-changing placement of inconvenient shrubbery — as predictable as Tom senior’s steadily sprouting beard.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 13, 2017
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Offsetting its outlandish premise with believable performances, Rage (Rabia) delivers a heavy-handed metaphor for immigrant invisibility.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 29, 2011
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The audience, given not an ounce of human warmth nor one person to care about, finally has no choice but to cheer for the anonymous cyberbully who wants them all dead.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 19, 2015
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Whether on a Middle Eastern battlefield or the streets of New York, characters converse in stilted, expository mouthfuls that smother emotion.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
A soggy string of Hallmark moments designed to interrogate the value of the objects we cherish, the movie is front-loaded with major stars and squelching with sentiment.- The New York Times
- Posted Feb 15, 2018
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Despite some snappy ideas (an aggressive advertising drone pushing products as answers to the family’s every problem), Bigbug is overdressed, overlong and diminishingly amusing- The New York Times
- Posted Feb 11, 2022
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
This gentle comedy, while entirely unmemorable, releases a genuine warmth that deflects harsh judgment. It doesn’t, however, excuse characters that are little more than props for embarrassing fashion or delivery systems for dated slang.- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 5, 2014
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The Tomorrow Man is a cloying, at times disturbing tale of two dotty seniors whose eccentricities unexpectedly mesh.- The New York Times
- Posted May 21, 2019
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
The most depressing thing about this series is not the creativity of the bloodletting but the bleak view of human nature.- The New York Times
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- Jeannette Catsoulis
Plays less like a documentary than an E! exposé of lowlife skulduggery.- The New York Times
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