Jen Chaney
Select another critic »For 98 reviews, this critic has graded:
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41% higher than the average critic
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4% same as the average critic
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55% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 10 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Jen Chaney's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 56 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | North by Northwest | |
| Lowest review score: | Love the Coopers | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 42 out of 98
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Mixed: 35 out of 98
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Negative: 21 out of 98
98
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Jen Chaney
If Harden weren’t such a naturally magnetic presence, The Black Sea would not work nearly as effectively as it does. But he’s fascinating and unpredictable to observe, carrying the entire film on his shoulders as if it weighs nothing at all.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 21, 2024
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- Jen Chaney
Harold and the Purple Crayon makes the classic Hollywood mistake of taking a story that was lovely because of its concision and simplicity and turns it into a movie that is overly long and complicated for no good reason.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Aug 2, 2024
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- Jen Chaney
What made the first two so successful — Beverly Hills Cop III is not canon in my world — is that they also functioned as delivery systems for Murphy’s charms as a total ham willing to freak out or speak in a parade of goofy voices for the sake of getting a laugh. Axel F does that too, but more than anything, it’s a reminder of how fun it can be to watch a Beverly Hills Cop movie.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 3, 2024
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- Jen Chaney
The movie is not demanding anyone feel that way nor straining to jerk tears out of its audience. It is matter-of-fact, even when those facts aren’t necessarily flattering to its subject.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jan 4, 2024
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- Jen Chaney
The most compelling moments come from watching Braun and Jones advancing toward and retreating from each other. It doesn’t sound quite right to say they have good chemistry; it’s more accurate to say that both actors understand how to make the lack of chemistry between their characters real and tangible.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 19, 2023
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- Jen Chaney
This one is a celebration of Cassandro, and like so many great sports movies before it, it’s an underdog story. But it’s one steeped in the grittiness of reality that avoids leaning too hard into easy sentimentality.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 15, 2023
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- Jen Chaney
The scenery in My Big Fat Greek Wedding 3, largely shot in Corfu and Athens, is gorgeous but everything else about the film’s construction is an absolute mess.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 7, 2023
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- Jen Chaney
This isn’t an organic continuation of Giselle’s story so much as an uninspired knockoff of the original, yet another attempt to use existing IP to attract viewers and subscribers besotted by the prospect of watching something familiar on a Friday night.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 18, 2022
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- Jen Chaney
We get a reboot that takes no risks and steers away from the uncomfortable sexual jolts of its predecessor. This movie doesn’t raise hell. Honestly, it barely raises heck.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 12, 2022
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- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 21, 2022
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- Jen Chaney
The movie Honk for Jesus: Save Your Soul belongs to Regina Hall. By the end, she has seized it with both hands thanks to a performance that, especially in the film’s second half, is explosive, multi-layered and, unfortunately, much more purposeful than the film itself.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 2, 2022
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- Jen Chaney
The whole movie-making story line is the most fun part of A New Era and gives Fellowes, who wrote the script, and director Simon Curtis an opportunity to do what Downton Abbey has always done best: explore class distinctions and how those boundaries are constantly changing.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted May 19, 2022
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- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Dec 22, 2021
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- Jen Chaney
In its subtext, this movie tells us that nothing is as good as you might hope. That’s true of the era that Tony would later, wrongly, glorify. And it’s true of a movie that is fascinating to study and consider, but not nearly as good as the television series that made us wish for this movie to exist.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 30, 2021
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- Jen Chaney
The result is a piece that’s more personal, but also not as rigorous and objective.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 30, 2021
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- Jen Chaney
This film ultimately doesn’t reach its full potential in part because it can’t settle firmly enough on a vibe or viewpoint. It ping-pongs between buoyant caper, farce, and female empowerment drama without ever lingering long enough in a single zone to make an impact.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 10, 2021
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- Jen Chaney
Tina is sweeping, fascinating, and, because of Turner’s participation, deeply personal.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 24, 2021
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- Jen Chaney
It’s obvious that Poehler and her colleagues have taken great care to impart all the right civic and social lessons, and that’s good. But watching Moxie, you wish they could have exhaled more and allowed more unresolvable messiness to infiltrate the movie’s spaces.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 3, 2021
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- Jen Chaney
This is a rock documentary that doesn’t just recount a band’s rise, breakup, and successful reunion, though it does do that. It invites its audience to see the band’s success from a deeper, more contextualized point of view.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Dec 12, 2020
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- Jen Chaney
If your mind has opened even a little by the time American Utopia is over, that is a testament to what publicly presented art can do and why its absence is so deeply felt right now.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 14, 2020
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- Jen Chaney
A movie about such a pivotal figure who fought, and still fights, so hard for gender equality should spark some intense emotion, especially if you’re a woman. Weirdly, The Glorias never does that.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 30, 2020
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- Jen Chaney
Class Action Park tries with only partial success to capture the dissonance between the funny war stories told about that hazardous site and how awful and tragic it was that young people lost their lives there.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 7, 2020
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- Jen Chaney
A 90-minute kid- and grown-up-friendly work of cartoon comedy that’s as consistently delightful and clever as the series always was.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Aug 26, 2020
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- Jen Chaney
This engaging, sturdily guided film from director Alison Ellwood (American Jihad, Laurel Canyon) argues forcefully that there is more depth and value to a group that fought and celebrated, broke up and reconciled, burned out and rocked hard for four decades.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 31, 2020
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- Jen Chaney
How pleasurable to once again escape to this thoroughly ridiculous, richly rendered place and live there, if only for a couple of hours until the credits roll.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 10, 2019
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- Jen Chaney
Fyre director Chris Smith (American Movie and The Yes Men) has experience crafting stories about guys with big dreams and the capacity to pull off long cons, and he has a great instinct for finding the most damning anecdotes.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jan 16, 2019
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- Jen Chaney
As is often the case in documentaries like this, absorbing all those details as part of one, tightly edited story gives them an impact they lack when digested in individual pieces over time.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Aug 18, 2017
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- Jen Chaney
It’s as if the film is taking after its own heroines: aspiring to something bigger than it should, and too often looking awkward in the process.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 22, 2016
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- Jen Chaney
After paying good money to take your family to see this film, you may be dealing with some anger-management issues of your own.- Washington Post
Posted May 19, 2016 -
- Jen Chaney
Despite an army of appealing actors in its large ensemble cast, the rom-com Mother’s Day is startlingly unappealing. Clumsily edited and culturally tone deaf, it’s more obsessed with the titular holiday than even most mothers would find reasonable.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 28, 2016
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- Jen Chaney
The genius of Zootopia is that it works on two levels: It’s a timely and clever examination of the prejudices endemic to society, and also an entertaining, funny adventure about furry creatures engaged in solving a mystery.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 3, 2016
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- Jen Chaney
You and your kids could probably craft a richer, more exciting polar bear adventure using nothing but Klondike bar wrappers and the power of the imagination.- Washington Post
- Posted Jan 15, 2016
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- Jen Chaney
Even McAvoy’s reincarnation-obsessed Frankenstein can’t breathe vitality into this shallow adaptation, which careens from moments of horror to serious drama to attempts at comedy that don’t quite land.- Washington Post
- Posted Nov 24, 2015
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- Jen Chaney
East Side Sushi includes a number of moments that are a little too on-the-nose in their eagerness to convey the obstacles.... But Lucero compensates for such missteps with subtly persuasive visual choices and narrative restraint.- Washington Post
- Posted Nov 12, 2015
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- Jen Chaney
Love the Coopers is one of the most jumbled, tonally misguided holiday movies in recent memory. It is an insult to tidings of comfort as well as joy, and a complete waste of the time and talents of its ensemble cast.- Washington Post
- Posted Nov 12, 2015
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- Jen Chaney
Big Stone Gap suffers from some hokey moments, including an ending that’s both implausible and too heavy on the sap.- Washington Post
- Posted Oct 8, 2015
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- Jen Chaney
With its appealingly conflicted hero and generous sense of humor, Meet the Patels has the breezy touch of a scripted romantic comedy.- Washington Post
- Posted Sep 17, 2015
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- Jen Chaney
Riley doesn’t merely make a fine nonfiction film about the life and legacy of the late conflicted artist. He virtually resurrects him.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 13, 2015
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- Jen Chaney
Perhaps Sneakerheadz needs a sequel, one that more directly interrogates the shoe manufacturers themselves about the hazards of pumping up so much hype about their product.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 13, 2015
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- Jen Chaney
Paquet-Brenner has assembled a talented cast.... Yet he elicits mostly unmemorable performances from just about everyone involved.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 6, 2015
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- Jen Chaney
As with other Aardman productions, the greatest delights derive from relishing the details of the clay figures and intricate sets, crafted by the studio’s master model builders.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 5, 2015
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- Jen Chaney
After spending time with all nine of these sometimes-gutsy, sometimes-conflicted women and men, it’s impossible not to feel a deeper appreciation for their struggle to feel like the skin they live in is genuinely their home.- The Dissolve
- Posted Jun 30, 2015
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- Jen Chaney
Visually striking, meticulously rendered, a tiny bit pretentious, and emotionally inscrutable.- The Dissolve
- Posted Jun 9, 2015
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- Jen Chaney
Sunshine Superman, a portrait of BASE jumping founding father Carl Boenish, effectively captures the irrepressible energy of a man who never tired of taking flying leaps. But it also does something even rarer for the documentary genre: It demands to be shown on an IMAX screen.- The Dissolve
- Posted May 19, 2015
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- Jen Chaney
Unfortunately, this procedural/character study unfolds in a manner that feels more generic than genuinely deep.- The Dissolve
- Posted May 13, 2015
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- Jen Chaney
I Am Big Bird breezes by a couple of opportunities to dig deeper into thornier subject matter, but those minor oversights don’t hurt the film in any significant way.- The Dissolve
- Posted May 5, 2015
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- Jen Chaney
As illuminating as that article may have been, though, Emptying The Skies, a documentary based on Franzen’s story that borrows its headline as its title, ultimately makes a more searing imprint on the psyche.- The Dissolve
- Posted Apr 21, 2015
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- Jen Chaney
These guys are so fascinating, in fact, that it feels like In Country could and should have gone longer than 80 minutes so that the movie could delve more deeply into their psyches and provide more context behind how these reenactments were born.- The Dissolve
- Posted Apr 8, 2015
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- Jen Chaney
Yes, the whole movie feels overstuffed and overlong, and the non-action scenes are often dragged down by stilted dialogue. But Furious 7 buzzes with a frenetic energy so contagious, there’s no sense in resisting it.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 2, 2015
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- Jen Chaney
By building the documentary around an ensemble cast, Lears and Blotnick demonstrate, in terms of content as well as filmmaking, that the voices of a few can galvanize the voices of many.- The Dissolve
- Posted Apr 1, 2015
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- Jen Chaney
The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge Out of Water is like the family movie equivalent of a Krabby Patty: It tastes fine and will satisfy some cravings. But it’s ultimately a product cranked out to make money and keep our consumer-driven society, much like Bikini Bottom’s, chugging along without significant disruption.- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 5, 2015
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- Jen Chaney
What’s truly regrettable about The Wedding Ringer is that, at certain moments, it almost succeeds as a heartfelt comedy about male friendship in which its two stars, Josh Gad and Kevin Hart, get to demonstrate that they can act.- Washington Post
- Posted Jan 15, 2015
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- Jen Chaney
What transpires in this adequately acted, uninventive film fails to add any fresh twists to the cash-vs.-conscience formula.- The Dissolve
- Posted Sep 23, 2014
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- Jen Chaney
My Old Lady isn’t the tart slice of dessert that its initial scenes suggest it might be. In fact, it only becomes truly compelling in its second half, as Horovitz drives toward darker material and farther away from the light.- The Dissolve
- Posted Sep 9, 2014
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- Jen Chaney
The prevailing tone throughout Innocence is as somber as the onset-of-twilight blues and grays that dominate the movie’s color palette. All that seriousness ultimately doesn’t blend well with a narrative that marinates in the preposterous.- The Dissolve
- Posted Sep 1, 2014
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- Jen Chaney
It becomes clear that this isn’t just a documentary that seeks to demystify green burials. It’s one that tries, and largely succeeds, to demystify the process of letting go of life.- The Dissolve
- Posted Aug 13, 2014
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- Jen Chaney
What is often surprising in this entertaining and fluidly acted portrait of females in flux is the specific way things get messy.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 31, 2014
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- Jen Chaney
One could describe Boseman’s performance in Get on Up as electrifying, and that would not be wrong. But it’s more accurate to say that watching Boseman transform into James Brown, who died in 2006 at 73, is like watching a dude invent electricity while the idea for electricity is still occurring to him.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 31, 2014
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- Jen Chaney
As a tightly constructed look at the more serious symptoms of Peter Pan syndrome, The Almost Man mostly works. The fact that it departs from the usual vehicles for good-natured, non-threatening Vince Vaughn jackassery is refreshing, albeit in an often jarring, disturbing way.- The Dissolve
- Posted Jul 30, 2014
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- Jen Chaney
The Disney animators still take great care to capture the majestic beauty in the jagged landscapes and towering conifers of the Yellowstone-esque Piston Peak Park. Unfortunately, the same contours and shading don’t apply to the characters.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 17, 2014
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- Jen Chaney
A Five Star Life steers away from pat answers and stereotypically Hollywood conclusions, a narrative direction that’s all the more refreshing with a woman in the lead role. But in its second half, Tognazzi’s movie derails as it starts trying to hammer home its points with too much force.- The Dissolve
- Posted Jul 16, 2014
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- Jen Chaney
It’s a perfectly pleasant cinema-studies seminar, but one that stops just short of teaching its students anything truly insightful.- The Dissolve
- Posted Jul 15, 2014
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- Jen Chaney
Momoa does capture some scenes of genuine warmth and beauty that suggest he has the potential to develop a filmmaker’s eye for visual poetry.- The Dissolve
- Posted Jul 9, 2014
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- Jen Chaney
To Pond and Marcolina’s credit, this isn’t just a character study of an ever-adventurous klepto-gran. The documentary also raises questions about whether a professional liar can ever really stop lying.- The Dissolve
- Posted May 28, 2014
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- Jen Chaney
Wolf — who wrote Teenage with Jon Savage, author of “Teenage: The Creation of Youth Culture 1875-1945” — deftly weaves together various media in a way that breathes its own youthful, stream-of-conscious life into the documentary genre.- Washington Post
- Posted May 22, 2014
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- Jen Chaney
The movie plays out like an improbably plotted work of overly aggressive schmaltz.- The Dissolve
- Posted May 20, 2014
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- Washington Post
- Posted May 8, 2014
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- Jen Chaney
Decoding Annie Parker could have shown much more effectively and deeply that the fight against an often ruthless disease can be won by women attacking it from multiple sides. Instead, it sticks mostly to one track, taking audience members on a journey that, sadly, via the movies or their own lives, they already may know a little too well.- Washington Post
- Posted May 1, 2014
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- The Dissolve
- Posted Apr 15, 2014
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- Jen Chaney
This film can’t decide whether it’s a Noah Baumbach-ian character study or an episode of NBC’s Revolution.- The Dissolve
- Posted Apr 2, 2014
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- Jen Chaney
It doesn’t provide enough rigorously reported context about what happened in 1991 to feel like anything close to a definitive portrait of the Anita Hill vs. Clarence Thomas saga.- The Dissolve
- Posted Mar 19, 2014
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- Jen Chaney
The film captures its lush, leafy settings with an understated evocativeness that fully immerses the audience in its sense of place. The problem is that the movie ultimately leans too heavily on that sense of understatement, failing to let genuine, unexpected emotion fully break through to the surface.- The Dissolve
- Posted Mar 18, 2014
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- Jen Chaney
As directed by Perry, The Single Moms Club goes for a mix of escapism and reality-based drama and winds up with a movie that can only be enjoyed via the running, snarky commentary that will inevitably scroll through most audience members’ heads as they watch.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 15, 2014
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- Jen Chaney
Need for Speed is a piece of auto-collision pornography that weighs down its car-flip-and-massive-fireball money shots with a preposterous plot involving vehicular manslaughter vengeance.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 13, 2014
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- Jen Chaney
The Bag Man is always teetering on the edge of amateurish absurdity, before being tugged back from the edge by its actors.- The Dissolve
- Posted Feb 26, 2014
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- Jen Chaney
Thanks to remarkable access to her subject, and a refusal to turn away during even the most personal moments, Karasawa has made something deeper: a portrait of Stritch just as the aging process is beginning to punch holes in her concrete dam of a personality.- The Dissolve
- Posted Feb 20, 2014
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- Jen Chaney
Hall and Hart have appeared together in several movies, including 2012’s Think Like A Man, but have never been paired as love interests. Here, they lock into a manic, improvisational groove from minute one.- The Dissolve
- Posted Feb 13, 2014
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- Jen Chaney
In a movie like this, where plot points are practically an aside, the characters’ depth and the dialogue quality are what give it potentially memorable zing. Cavemen is not only zingless, it practically pulls a muscle attempting to generate some.- The Dissolve
- Posted Feb 4, 2014
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- Jen Chaney
Nearly every one of the film’s attempts at comedy is clichéd, tasteless, or forced—sometimes all three at once.- The Dissolve
- Posted Jan 28, 2014
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- Jen Chaney
Lacks a sense of structure and purpose, ambling from one tense conversation to the next without effectively making a impact.- The Dissolve
- Posted Dec 4, 2013
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- Jen Chaney
Angels Sing is a heartfelt but less-than-polished piece of work that isn’t for everyone, particularly those who can’t suspend the disbelief required to accept preposterous plot developments, or the sight of Lyle Lovett wearing a variety of snowman sweatshirts. But graded on a Christmas-movie curve, it actually isn’t bad.- The Dissolve
- Posted Oct 30, 2013
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- Jen Chaney
Plush fails to be a turn-on: It’s all surface and zero substance, with limp attempts at shock value.- The Dissolve
- Posted Oct 14, 2013
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- Jen Chaney
As a stand-alone documentary, it begs for more conflict and a broader canvas from which to explore the contemporary theater scene.- The Dissolve
- Posted Oct 8, 2013
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- Jen Chaney
It’s an air-kiss of a movie, one that places a non-contact peck on either side of its subject’s mouth, then breezes off before a serious conversation can begin.- Washington Post
- Posted Sep 27, 2013
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- Jen Chaney
What Mickle really gets right, and what makes this far and away a more artful and effective work of skin-crawly horror than its predecessor, is atmosphere.- The Dissolve
- Posted Sep 26, 2013
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- Jen Chaney
As an enjoyable documentary about the history behind a surprising game-changer of a song, this film works well. But it misses the opportunity to take its material to the next level and say something bigger.- The Dissolve
- Posted Sep 11, 2013
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- Jen Chaney
Its ongoing reveal of interconnected, rough-edged characters, as well as a tone that’s a twangy, noirish brew of the Coen brothers, Alfred Hitchcock, and Winter’s Bone, are ultimately what make the movie unsettling and absorbing.- The Dissolve
- Posted Aug 25, 2013
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- Jen Chaney
This movie’s pleasures are less about its villains and more about the interplay between Pegg and Frost.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 22, 2013
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- Jen Chaney
This is a film about people whose stories are still being written, and who, despite their palpable sense of exhaustion, are still seeking healing and hope. There are no Hollywood endings here. That’s just the truth, which Gurchiani has proved she’s committed to capturing.- The Dissolve
- Posted Aug 7, 2013
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- Jen Chaney
Even likable actors can’t obscure the fact that, holy gods on Mount Olympus, this thing is a slog, a movie that dutifully hits its plot points involving prophecies and fleeces without evoking a whiff of spirit or imagination.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 6, 2013
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- Jen Chaney
A derivative but nevertheless good-hearted movie that’s peppered with enough clever touches to engage adults as well as moviegoers of the smaller, squirmier variety.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 16, 2013
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- Jen Chaney
Under the direction of Susan Seidelman—who first focused on a lost woman with identity issues in 1985’s Desperately Seeking Susan—the leads in The Hot Flashes come across as one-dimensional, pseudo-feminist clichés whose conversations seem contrived and whose jokes land with the thud of airballs clunking on hardwood.- The Dissolve
- Posted Jul 11, 2013
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- Jen Chaney
The fact that this overlong, often preposterous comedy succeeds at all (which it does, only occasionally) proves that the Vaughn/Wilson charm can still work a measure of magic.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 6, 2013
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- Jen Chaney
Like its predecessors, doesn’t need CGI, 3-D glasses or even praise from film critics. It just needs to please its audience with amped-up, old-school thrills that make its target demo whoop and holler with every zoom, smash and ka-BOOM. Consider this review a declaration that it does just that.- Washington Post
- Posted May 23, 2013
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- Jen Chaney
A film in search of a tighter edit and a stronger point of view. It meanders from scene to scene, calling to mind the images of leaking faucets and dribbling IV fluid that appear here in close-up.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 25, 2013
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- Washington Post
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- Jen Chaney
Although undeniably a western, Stagecoach transcends the genre, as both a character study of the relationships among a socially mismatched crew of stagecoach passengers and an action movie about their attempts to avoid the dangerous Geronimo and his Apache tribe. And that action, by the way, is impressive, even by today's standards. [28 May 2010, p.WE37]- Washington Post