Joe Leydon
Select another critic »For 872 reviews, this critic has graded:
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65% higher than the average critic
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4% same as the average critic
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31% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 8.6 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Joe Leydon's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 57 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | No Greater Love | |
| Lowest review score: | Movie 43 | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 363 out of 872
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Mixed: 380 out of 872
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Negative: 129 out of 872
872
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Joe Leydon
This nostalgia-drenched rockumentary remains a hugely entertaining treasure trove of witness-at-creation anecdotes and enduringly potent ’60s pop hits.- Variety
- Posted Mar 12, 2015
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- Joe Leydon
The naturalistic style of the storytelling is stealthily enthralling, as is the lead performance by Margita Gosheva as a provincial Bulgarian schoolteacher who is slowly, inexorably driven to the edge by crushing debt.- Variety
- Posted Mar 2, 2015
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- Joe Leydon
Ganem has sufficient verve and appeal to sustain interest in both of her characters, and the sporadic tweaking of telenovelas and the fans who love them is often quite clever.- Variety
- Posted Mar 1, 2015
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- Joe Leydon
The line between priggishness and creepiness is repeatedly smudged by multihyphenate Rik Swartzwelder in Old Fashioned, a faith-based drama that looks as lovely as an expensive greeting card, but moves as slowly as a somnolent turtle.- Variety
- Posted Feb 17, 2015
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- Joe Leydon
Both fascinating as a glimpse at the not so distant past, and provocative as an account of what arguably was an early step in the decline of political discourse on television.- Variety
- Posted Feb 1, 2015
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- Joe Leydon
The five leads earn kudos for their ability to come across as something approaching credible.- Variety
- Posted Feb 1, 2015
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- Joe Leydon
Even though it’s easy to identify all the recycled elements — bits and pieces of several inspirational-teacher scenarios, ranging from “To Sir, With Love” to “Stand and Deliver” — in this “based on a true story” concoction, there can be no denying the feel-good effect of the finished product.- Variety
- Posted Jan 17, 2015
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- Joe Leydon
Preservation ultimately impresses as an arrestingly suspenseful thriller that takes clever narrative twists and turns while moving through familiar territory.- Variety
- Posted Jan 8, 2015
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- Joe Leydon
As Red Knot (very) slowly unwinds, Thirlby conveys an impressive range of emotions through the eloquence of her facial expressions and body language. Like Kartheiser, however, she labors under the burden of playing a role that is more a vague concept than a fully developed character.- Variety
- Posted Dec 8, 2014
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- Variety
- Posted Sep 30, 2014
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- Joe Leydon
The cinematic equivalent of a modestly amusing shaggy-dog story that meanders toward a clever punchline.- Variety
- Posted Sep 25, 2014
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- Joe Leydon
La Scala is able to maintain interest and sustain narrative momentum throughout his fantastical narrative, even while he covers overly familiar territory. In this, he gets immeasurable aid from the sincere performances by his game cast.- Variety
- Posted Sep 18, 2014
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- Joe Leydon
A potentially gripping story of empowerment through armed resistance is almost totally undermined by studied, self-conscious storytelling.- Variety
- Posted Sep 13, 2014
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- Joe Leydon
Born to Fly teasingly suggests that some displays of avant-garde virtuosity could be enjoyed equally by venturesome aesthetes, dance enthusiasts and devotees of World Wrestling Entertainment.- Variety
- Posted Sep 9, 2014
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- Joe Leydon
All things considered, The Identical might have worked better as a TV miniseries, a format that would allowed the filmmakers to give equal time to Hemsley’s story.- Variety
- Posted Sep 4, 2014
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- Joe Leydon
Connor and co-director Michael Worth allow Fort McCoy to proceed at an unhurried pace, giving Stoltz ample opportunity to subtly convey undercurrents of guilt and anger percolating beneath his character’s affable exterior.- Variety
- Posted Aug 14, 2014
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- Joe Leydon
The mix of raucous buffoonery and violent mayhem isn’t exactly seamless, and the laugh-out-loud moments come with conspicuously less frequency during a third act that suggests a rough draft for “Bad Boys 3.”- Variety
- Posted Aug 13, 2014
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- Joe Leydon
The film deserves more than just a passing grade, and is a good deal better than any plot synopsis might make it sound.- Variety
- Posted Aug 8, 2014
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- Joe Leydon
Premature winds up resembling nothing so much as the coarsely smutty teen-sex comedies that abounded throughout the ’80s in the wake of “Porky’s.”- Variety
- Posted Jul 2, 2014
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- Joe Leydon
For the most part, however, D’Souza gives the impression of someone obsessed with whitewashing any and all dark chapters in U.S. history books. There are times when his defenses and rationalizations come across as almost laughably facile.- Variety
- Posted Jun 30, 2014
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- Joe Leydon
The pic is less than fully satisfying as a conventional performance cavalcade, but sustains considerable interest as a behind-the-scenes overview of a musically and culturally diverse event.- Variety
- Posted Jun 7, 2014
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- Joe Leydon
Tureaud and Salzberg achieve their potent impact through the straightforward (but clearly admiring) observation of men who band together in battle and, in the film’s emotionally stirring final scenes, mourn their fallen comrades.- Variety
- Posted Jun 5, 2014
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- Variety
- Posted Apr 10, 2014
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- Joe Leydon
A sci-fi thriller as generic as its title, Alien Abduction generates only low-voltage shocks.- Variety
- Posted Apr 10, 2014
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- Joe Leydon
Kakkar and Pastides generate a rooting interest in their characters, with compellingly persuasive performances.- Variety
- Posted Apr 7, 2014
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- Joe Leydon
Scripter Wittliff and Spanish helmer Emilio Aragon (“Paper Birds”) hit the sweet spot between galloping and sauntering while unfolding the movie’s plot, an interlocking chain of coincidences, encounters and colorful supporting characters that often recalls the twisty storylines of Elmore Leonard.- Variety
- Posted Apr 1, 2014
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- Joe Leydon
Equal parts suspenseful road movie, persuasively detailed period drama and emotionally resonant coming-of-age story, The Retrieval is an outstanding example of regional indie filmmaking accomplished with limited resources and an abundance of skill.- Variety
- Posted Mar 28, 2014
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- Joe Leydon
The performances are perfectly attuned to the material, with Koechner dominating his every scene as a kind of demented ringmaster, and Healy adroitly demonstrating the potential for both humor and horror in a character with nothing left to lose.- Variety
- Posted Mar 27, 2014
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- Joe Leydon
Aiming more for bemused chuckles than for convulsive laughter, Plotnick and his actors deftly evoke a faux Me Decade ambiance throughout Space Station 76.- Variety
- Posted Mar 18, 2014
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- Joe Leydon
The final destination is entirely predictable — right down to the deus ex machina reappearance of an erstwhile antagonist — but the trip itself is never less than pleasant, and often extremely funny.- Variety
- Posted Mar 10, 2014
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- Joe Leydon
The pacing gradually accelerates after a leisurely first act, so that The Attorney easily sustains interest, and often stirs emotions.- Variety
- Posted Feb 10, 2014
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- Joe Leydon
The four leads are nothing if not game, and actually earn respect, along with a fair amount of sympathy, for their uninhibited willingness to go to extremes. But there are limits to what they can do to dispel the overall sense of mounting desperation as the gross-out tomfoolery grows ever more tedious.- Variety
- Posted Jan 30, 2014
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- Joe Leydon
The term “freewheeling” does not begin to describe the slapdash, anything-goes quality of the screenplay co-written by Troma mogul Kaufman.- Variety
- Posted Jan 10, 2014
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- Joe Leydon
A modestly inventive but curiously bloodless version of the Bard’s timeless tragedy.- Variety
- Posted Jan 10, 2014
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- Joe Leydon
A slickly entertaining piece of work that will doubtless delight the young pop star’s fan base, and possibly engage curiosity-seekers who have heretofore remained immune or indifferent to Bieber Fever.- Variety
- Posted Dec 26, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
An ingeniously simple setup is cunningly exploited for maximum suspense in Hours, a slow-building, consistently engrossing drama.- Variety
- Posted Dec 16, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
Hopelessly stagebound, despite halfhearted efforts to open up what’s basically a talky two-hander, and risibly pretentious in the manner of soft-core porn that’s no sexier than glossy ads for expensive perfume.- Variety
- Posted Dec 13, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
Even when judged by the standards of broad farce, however, Expecting repeatedly strains credibility and defies logic in ways too glaring to ignore.- Variety
- Posted Dec 9, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
There doesn’t appear to be any purpose at all to the random exchanges and interactions that pass for a plot.- Variety
- Posted Dec 6, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
It seems even more slapdash and desperately unfunny than their earlier work.- Variety
- Posted Nov 14, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
Filmmakers Andrew Cohn and Davy Rothbart uncover and illuminate a strain of stoic resilience that could be the last best defense against bottomless despair. Unfortunately, as Medora repeatedly suggests, that invaluable resource may not be inexhaustible.- Variety
- Posted Nov 8, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
Moderately interesting as a once-over-lightly political history lesson best suited for home-screen consumption.- Variety
- Posted Nov 7, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
Working from a script by Lou Berney, which in turn was adapted from a novel by Turk Pipkin, director Tim McCanlies maintains an even hand throughout, so that neither the moments of broad comedy nor the stretches of tearjerking sentimentality get out of hand.- Variety
- Posted Nov 6, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
Despite the bumpy pacing and the routine plot elements, writer-director Le-Van Kiet periodically generates a sense of palpable trepidation during what might best be described as a worst-case scenario about post-partum depression.- Variety
- Posted Oct 28, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
Hellbenders becomes what it intends to burlesque, and that’s not so damn funny, even with 3D gimmickry.- Variety
- Posted Oct 21, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
Director Vincenzo Natali (“Splice”) is more effective at sustaining clammy suspense than hiding all the holes in Brian King’s script. But top-billed Abigail Breslin (“Little Miss Sunshine”) is effective enough to generate a rooting interest in the plucky protagonist of the piece, and to sustain interest when narrative logic turns fuzzy.- Variety
- Posted Oct 21, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
The road to hell is paved with well-intentioned clunkers like I’m in Love with a Church Girl, a strenuously sincere but tediously schematic and heavy-handed attempt at cinematic proselytizing for Christianity.- Variety
- Posted Oct 21, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
Sufficiently sweet to serve as a date movie for all ages, Lost for Words comes across as almost subversively retrograde in its old-fashioned approach to charting the slow blossoming of a cross-cultural romance.- Variety
- Posted Oct 21, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
First-time feature helmer Nate Taylor, working from an adroitly constructed screenplay by Peter Moore Smith, skillfully evokes a clammy sense of dread in this stealthily suspenseful indie.- Variety
- Posted Oct 10, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
Will Wallace's turgid indie tells an earthbound and anemic story about an orphan's progress in small-town Texas.- Variety
- Posted Oct 10, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
Beautiful lensing by Mauro Brattoli and an evocative score Steve Poltz enrich the pic’s flavor as a document of, and a tribute to, an iconic cowboy’s indomitable spirit.- Variety
- Posted Oct 7, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
The makers of Grace Unplugged deserve at least some credit for resisting temptations toward melodramatic excess.- Variety
- Posted Oct 6, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
A lightly engaging bilingual trifle that benefits greatly from the charm of lead player Jaime Camil, a Mexican TV and film star who evidences smooth self-assurance at the wheel of what could be his crossover vehicle.- Variety
- Posted Oct 5, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
Costa-Gavras develops such a propulsively suspenseful pace — with no small assist from Armand Amar’s mood-enhancing Euro-tech score — that his drama comes across as the cinematic equivalent of an engrossing page-turner you might purchase off the rack at an airport newsstand.- Variety
- Posted Oct 4, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
Too many stretches of Wedding Palace are so garishly lit and broadly overplayed that they seem more cartoonish than the actual animated sequences that pepper the live-action production. That’s a pity, since this indie romantic comedy is not without its minor charms during its infrequent quiet moments.- Variety
- Posted Sep 29, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
An initially intriguing but ultimately exhausting tale of grieving parents left quite literally dazed and confused in the wake of their young son’s death.- Variety
- Posted Sep 29, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
Charged by alternating currents of nostalgic bemusement and wistful melancholy, TV Man: The Search for the Last Independent Dealer evinces all the amiable enthusiasm and discursive rambling one might expect from a do-it-yourself labor of love.- Variety
- Posted Sep 6, 2013
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- Variety
- Posted Sep 5, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
Instructions Not Included is a sporadically amusing but unduly protracted dramedy that slowly — very slowly — devolves into a shameless tearjerker during its third act.- Variety
- Posted Sep 5, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
Despite an effective Jim Caviezel, this anecdotal drama never rises above the level of lightly likable.- Variety
- Posted Aug 22, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
Stevens offers a couple of revelations that bring the documentary to a dramatically and emotionally satisfying conclusion — and, not incidentally, leave a viewer with the pleasing sensation of discovering a worthy individual.- Variety
- Posted Aug 17, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
“Portrait” abounds in the sort of ironies and contrasts that can make a biodoc fascinating even to auds totally unfamiliar with its subject.- Variety
- Posted Jul 11, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
Deftly balancing twin goals of informing and entertaining, the pic matter-of-factly details the various ways that marketers, multinational corporations, police departments and government-run intelligence-gathering organizations obtain and exploit info.- Variety
- Posted Jul 8, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
Once you get past an incredibly self-indulgent intro — an uncomfortably long mash-up of comedy sketch and road-trip-with-entourage doc that seems simultaneously apologetic and arrogant — you can enjoy approximately an hour of boisterously freewheeling and unabashedly raunchy funny stuff in Kevin Hart: Let Me Explain.- Variety
- Posted Jul 8, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
There’s something curiously underwhelming about the blood-soaked mayhem on display in Hatchet III.- Variety
- Posted Jun 13, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
Each member of the ensemble offers a vividly detailed performance resounding with emotional truth, delivering lengthy swaths of LaBute’s sometimes savagely furious, sometimes shocking funny dialogue with pitch-perfect degrees of intensity.- Variety
- Posted Jun 10, 2013
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- Variety
- Posted May 18, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
Boasts way better production values than the penny-pinching 1981 original and conceivably could delight genre fans who have never seen the first version or its previous remakes/sequels. But it’s bound to play best with those who catch Alvarez’s many wink-wink allusions to Raimi’s picture.- Variety
- Posted Mar 10, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
Neatly balancing brightly sentimental comedy with slightly edgier funny business, The Incredible Burt Wonderstone pulls off the impressive trick of generating laughs on a consistent basis while spinning a clever scenario about rival magicians waging a Las Vegas turf war with a wide multi-demographic appeal.- Variety
- Posted Mar 10, 2013
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- Variety
- Posted Feb 19, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
The helmer generates suspense with shrewd pacing, deft emotional manipulation and efficient use of familiar tricks -- jittery editing, flickering lights and unsettling sounds -- common to haunted-house pictures.- Variety
- Posted Feb 3, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
An appalling misfire that tries and fails to evoke the anything-goes spirit of such '70s sketch-comedy concoctions as "The Groove Tube" and "Kentucky Fried Movie."- Variety
- Posted Jan 26, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
Agreeably amusing but unduly extended, Matru ki Bijlee ka Mandola suggests what might have resulted had Rodgers and Hammerstein lived long enough to attempt a Broadway musical about the Occupy Wall Street movement.- Variety
- Posted Jan 16, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
The hit-to-miss ratio is less than impressive throughout A Haunted House, a frenetic and freewheeling satirical comedy that only sporadically scores a bull's-eye while aiming at easy targets.- Variety
- Posted Jan 11, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
A boisterously Tarantinoesque mash-up of cliches, archetypes and bodacious craziness in the tradition of Southern-fried '60s and '70s drive-in fodder, The Baytown Outlaws is the sort of cartoonishly violent and swaggeringly non-PC concoction that defines guilty pleasure for many genre fans.- Variety
- Posted Jan 10, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
While there's something undeniably fascinating about the way Fairhaven repeatedly avoids predictable payoffs for portentous dramatic setups, narrative momentum is conspicuous by its absence.- Variety
- Posted Jan 10, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
Helmer John Luessenhop ("Takers") and a small army of scripters go back to the bloody roots of the long-running franchise to concoct a better-than-average horror-thriller that relies more on potent suspense than graphic savagery or stereoscopic tricks.- Variety
- Posted Jan 4, 2013
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- Joe Leydon
A slickly produced and brazenly clever piece of work that could attract a cult by sheer dint of its ingenious nastiness and self-aware snark.- Variety
- Posted Dec 18, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
The picture all too obviously recycles bits and pieces from "Madagascar," "The Lion King" and other made-in-America toons. Unfortunately, much gets lost in the translation.- Variety
- Posted Dec 6, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
Trouble is, apart from some modestly inventive carnage and an undeniably humorous hambone turn by Malcolm McDowell, there's really nothing here to make genre fans dash through the snow (or maneuver through traffic) to megaplexes before the low-budget, high-concept Canadian production's Dec. 4 homevid release.- Variety
- Posted Dec 2, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
A slickly produced, unabashedly celebratory picture about professional skateboarder Danny Way.- Variety
- Posted Dec 2, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
When a documentary begins with its subject using his crutch to deliver a vicious blow to the director's nose, it's reasonably safe to expect less-than-smooth sailing ahead.- Variety
- Posted Nov 26, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
Even by the freewheeling, mood-swinging standards of Bollywood, the pronounced disparity between the pre- and post-intermission halves of Jab tak hai jaan is more than a tad jarring. Indeed, viewers may feel they've been treated to an oddly matched double bill -- a delightfully vivacious romantic dramedy, followed by an Old Hollywood sort of psychological melodrama.- Variety
- Posted Nov 20, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
Writer-director Ciaran Foy skillfully taps into primal fears and urban paranoia to keep his audience consistently unsettled in Citadel, an intensely suspenseful horror-thriller.- Variety
- Posted Nov 6, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
Although it traffics freely in stereotypes and sitcom-style one-liners, Gayby is never less than likable.- Variety
- Posted Oct 10, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
Affecting performances and effective storytelling are the hallmarks of Fat Kid Rules the World.- Variety
- Posted Oct 1, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
There's something perversely fascinating about helmer John Hyams' freewheeling yet deliberately paced mashup of noirish mystery, splatter-movie intensity, first-person-shooter vidgame and "Apocalypse Now"-style surrealism.- Variety
- Posted Sep 30, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
Despite the considerable impediment of a premise arguably even sillier than that of the original "Red Dawn," helmer Dan Bradley's long-delayed remake of John Milius' 1984 kids-vs.-Commies adventure delivers enough thrilling action sequences and rock-'em, sock-'em fantasy-fulfillment to amp its B.O. potential.- Variety
- Posted Sep 30, 2012
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- Variety
- Posted Sep 19, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
This enervating muddle of paranormal nonsense manages the difficult feat of seeming frenzied and lethargic all at once, while building toward the sort of ludicrous cop-out climax that often incites die-hard genre fans to shout rude things at the screen.- Variety
- Posted Aug 24, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
While it's highly unlikely that anyone predisposed to championing Obama would be won over by the sound and fury here, there's no gainsaying the value of "2016" as a sort of Cliffs Notes precis of the conservative case against the re-election of our current U.S. president.- Variety
- Posted Aug 20, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
The script is so thinly written that the main characters are defined almost entirely by the actors playing them. Fortunately, seasoned pros Slater, Rhames and Cromwell are able to flesh out their boilerplate parts.- Variety
- Posted Aug 5, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
Yet another attempt to mix raunchy excess and romantic-comedy sweetness in an anything-goes raucous farce, The Babymakers offers a few big laughs between ho-hum stretches of frenetic vamping.- Variety
- Posted Aug 2, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
The interaction among opposites inspires an abundance of predictable race-based jokes, many of which have the saving grace of actually being funny.- Variety
- Posted Jun 29, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
A picture so thoroughly generic as to suggest a contraption assembled from spare parts with the aid of a how-to manual.- Variety
- Posted Jun 8, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
An engrossing and satisfying picture, one that can be enjoyed even by people who have never before heard of its subject.- Variety
- Posted Jun 5, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
Despite enough good intentions to pave a four-lane highway, the ardently sincere but dramatically unfocused For Greater Glory plays like a multipart miniseries that has been hacked down to feature length.- Variety
- Posted May 31, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
Scattered stretches of suspense and a few undeniably potent shocks are not enough to dissipate the sense of deja vu that prevails throughout Chernobyl Diaries, a wearyingly predictable thriller about "extreme tourists."- Variety
- Posted May 25, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
First-time feature helmer Brian Crano maneuvers some tricky tonal shifts with impressive ease in A Bag of Hammers, a droll, quirky comedy with a pleasant amount of heart.- Variety
- Posted May 8, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
The picture could provide modest amusement for indulgent viewers with a taste for tales of loquacious killers and not-so-innocent bystanders.- Variety
- Posted May 5, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
Despite the over-familiarity of its once-trendy time-tripping plot structure, 96 Minutes maintains a brisk pace and generates a satisfying degree of suspense with its credibly contrived tale of disparate lives forever changed by a violent carjacking.- Variety
- Posted Apr 23, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
This handsomely produced but ponderously uplifting trifle should be flagged for excessive schmaltz and offensive illogic.- Variety
- Posted Apr 16, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
Devotees of folk and bluegrass -- and, of course, diehard Nickel Creek fans -- are the natural audience for this leisurely paced documentary.- Variety
- Posted Apr 11, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
Newcomer Rachel Hendrix grabs attention and sustains sympathy as a lovely yet troubled 19-year-old student determined to unlock the secrets of her past after learning the circumstances of her birth.- Variety
- Posted Mar 22, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
This filmed-in-Texas road movie finds a smooth groove between self-conscious quirkiness and broadly played farce.- Variety
- Posted Mar 12, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
Good Deeds is relentlessly unsurprising in its plotting and borderline comical in its melodramatic flourishes.- Variety
- Posted Feb 24, 2012
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- Variety
- Posted Feb 14, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
While the sheer novelty of a feature about lacrosse may be enough to generate some audience curiosity about A Warrior's Heart, this respectably crafted but thoroughly predictable indie rarely deviates from the gameplan followed by countless other dramas about self-absorbed young hotheads who get a shot at redemption on the playing field.- Variety
- Posted Feb 11, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
Slow-burning buildup, lack of explicit mayhem and overall low-tech approach may strike cineastes as amusingly quaint.- Variety
- Posted Jan 29, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
Once again, Beckinsale brings an impressive physicality and subzero cool to her portrayal of Selene.- Variety
- Posted Jan 20, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
The picture's dialogue-heavy stretches and ambiguous finale could leave ticketbuyers impatient for less chatter and more chomping.- Variety
- Posted Jan 19, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
Plodding and repetitive in its efforts to maintain pressure-cooker intensity, The Divide resembles nothing so much as an extended "Twilight Zone" episode as it brings a sci-fi twist to a familiar scenario about stressed characters who bring out the worst in each other while trapped in close quarters.- Variety
- Posted Jan 7, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
Despite the palpable air of deja vu that hangs over it like a light fog, The Devil Inside generates a fair amount of suspense during sizable swaths of its familiar but serviceable exorcism-centric scenario.- Variety
- Posted Jan 6, 2012
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- Joe Leydon
The Darkest Hour turns out to be a modestly inventive and involving variation on a standard-issue sci-fi doomsday scenario.- Variety
- Posted Dec 26, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
Despite a few continuity problems, this rough-edged, low-budget drama impresses with spot-on performances, perfect-pitch dialogue and an overall sense that something bad might happen at any moment, unless something worse happens first.- Variety
- Posted Nov 7, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
Family-friendly and abounding in uplift, The Mighty Macs is an undemandingly pleasant indie drama.- Variety
- Posted Oct 18, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
Much like its predecessors, Paranormal Activity 3 is a slow-building, stealthily creepy supernatural thriller that takes a teasingly indirect approach to generating suspense and escalating dread.- Variety
- Posted Oct 2, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
Moviegoers devoted to faith-based fare will flock to megaplexes for Courageous, easily the most polished production so far from brothers Alex and Stephen Kendrick, the prolific and increasingly accomplished filmmaking pastors at the Sherwood Church of Albany, Ga.- Variety
- Posted Oct 2, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
Earnest and understated, Weekend has the intimate look and feel of a two-character stage play that has been opened up -- but only slightly, with minimal addition of supporting players -- for a mostly faithful filmization.- Variety
- Posted Sep 17, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
Mark Landsman's spirited Thunder Soul offers a heaping helping of uplift while documenting the past triumphs and recent reunion of a predominantly black Houston high school's singularly accomplished jazz stage band.- Variety
- Posted Sep 17, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
Helmer Joel Schumacher and a game cast headed by Nicolas Cage and Nicole Kidman do their damnedest to build and sustain suspense while trying, with some degree of success, to breathe fresh life into a formulaic, even generic scenario.- Variety
- Posted Sep 14, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
For most of its running time, Fordson wanders far from the gridiron to offer overall impressions of a close-knit community of Arab-Americans who, in the wake of 9/11, often have found themselves targeted and stereotyped as militant Islamists or worse.- Variety
- Posted Sep 6, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
There's a potentially fascinating and appreciably more concise 60-minute documentary to be found somewhere amid the uneven and unfocused 88-minute hodgepodge that is Echotone.- Variety
- Posted Sep 6, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
Despite stretches of skillfully sustained suspense, Apollo 18 ultimately comes across as little more than a modestly clever stunt.- Variety
- Posted Sep 2, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
An improbably effective and affecting mix of raw emotions and exciting smackdowns.- Variety
- Posted Aug 29, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
A lightly enjoyable road picture about a circuitous road to redemption, Black, White and Blues offers simple, down-home pleasures while spinning an undeniably familiar but emotionally satisfying tale.- Variety
- Posted Aug 20, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
Good intentions can't breathe fresh life into cliches or dispel the overall impression of schematic didacticism.- Variety
- Posted Aug 15, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
This latest entry in the 11-year-old horror series duly adheres to tradition by providing inventively grisly demises for various characters.- Variety
- Posted Aug 11, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
Some movie buffs will be amused to note slight but perceptible plot similarities between Daylight and, of all things, "The Tall T," Budd Boetticher's classic 1957 Western. To their credit, the filmmakers more or less acknowledge the influence in the closing credits.- Variety
- Posted Jul 16, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
Slickly produced and blatantly manipulative, Bannon's hagiographic tribute is a celebratory cavalcade of career highlights and glowing testimonials that doubtless will please Palin's devoted followers, appall her fiercest critics -- and, perhaps, occasionally surprise the undecided.- Variety
- Posted Jul 12, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
The biggest laughs and most intriguing revelations are provided offstage in this slickly produced documentary, as O'Brien -- often pushing himself to the point of exhaustion before, during and after performances -- plays for keeps while playing for laughs.- Variety
- Posted Jun 19, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
A technically proficient and aggressively unpleasant suspenser about sadistic home invaders.- Variety
- Posted Jun 12, 2011
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- Variety
- Posted Jun 1, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
Although it's very much a contemporary yarn, there's a distinctly '70s feel to much of Beautiful Boy.- Variety
- Posted May 29, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
Serves up a bland recycling of cliches and archetypes from just about every youth-skewing, dance-centric picture to hit the megaplexes since "Flashdance."- Variety
- Posted May 14, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
Charged with alternating currents of teen angst, sardonic wit, nervous dread and impudent sensuality, Daydream Nation suggests "Juno" as reimagined by David Lynch, or a funnier, sunnier "Donnie Darko."- Variety
- Posted May 2, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
A sluggish, charmless misfire in which even the most appealing players -- must try too hard to make anything close to an engaging impression.- Variety
- Posted Apr 30, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
Another lumpy mix of broadly played ethnic comedy, deadly serious soap operatics, and aggressively rousing religious uplift. Picture may help him reconnect with faithful fans.- Variety
- Posted Apr 23, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
Exceptional performances by two femme leads and sensitive but unsentimental storytelling throughout.- Variety
- Posted Apr 15, 2011
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- Variety
- Posted Apr 12, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
Despite a few grace notes and mildly clever twists, this handsomely produced indie is such a grating turnoff throughout its first third that its minor virtues may be discovered only by insomniac latenight cable viewers.- Variety
- Posted Apr 4, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
A hagiographic portrait of the standup comic and social satirist who never quite reached beyond cult status in the U.S., American: The Bill Hicks Story might have impressed more of the unconverted had it included more performance footage of its subject.- Variety
- Posted Apr 4, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
A modestly engaging domestic drama that earns few points for originality but rewards aud attention with persuasive performances, outbursts of robust humor and a vivid yet understated evocation of time and place.- Variety
- Posted Mar 21, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
Blessed with fine performances, credible dialogue and slick production values that belie a reportedly paltry budget, The Grace Card ranks among the better religious-themed indies released in recent years.- Variety
- Posted Feb 25, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
Kind of a drag when it resorts to frantic slapstick and tired action-comedy tropes, but modestly engaging during stretches that suggest the project would have worked better as an exuberant musical.- Variety
- Posted Feb 18, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
Evan Ross impresses with an implosive performance as Tariq Mahdi, a moody young African-American.- Variety
- Posted Feb 12, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
Based loosely and playfully on Jane Austen's "Sense and Sensibility," From Prada to Nada is a predictable but pleasant comedy.- Variety
- Posted Jan 28, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
While marred by cheap tricks and borderline camp, picture comes off as a largely low-key, intelligent effort.- Variety
- Posted Jan 25, 2011
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- Joe Leydon
There's more mood than matter here, but suspenseful atmospherics effectively distract from minor plot holes.- Variety
- Posted Dec 12, 2010
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- Joe Leydon
What it doesn't have, to its credit, is a neat conclusion. In the end, the film appears to suggest that Aura likely will feel free to keep searching for herself, repeating mistakes and making new ones, because she has all the time in the world.- Variety
- Posted Dec 11, 2010
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- Joe Leydon
A visually inspired multi-genre amalgamation, a borderline-surreal folly that suggests a martial-arts action-adventure co-directed by Sergio Leone and Federico Fellini.- Variety
- Posted Dec 6, 2010
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- Joe Leydon
An underwhelming and derivative sci-fi thriller that's only marginally more impressive than a run-of-the-mill SyFy Channel telepic.- Variety
- Posted Nov 12, 2010
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- Variety
- Posted Oct 21, 2010
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- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Silly script, broad slapstick and overstated lead perfs by B-team cast might be acceptable to target audience.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Freeway is roadkill. The directorial debut of screenwriter Matthew Bright ("Gun Crazy") is a sophomoric and morally repellent mix of fractured fairy tale, juvenile social satire, bloody mayhem and overstated B-movie melodrama.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
If John Cassavetes had directed a script by Eric Rohmer, the result might have looked and sounded like Mutual Appreciation.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
The Prisoner is in many ways a justifiably angry film, simmering with moral outrage. But it is also -- surprisingly, maybe even amazingly -- hopeful.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
It's meant as high praise to say that, very early in Robots, the extraordinary starts to seem perfectly ordinary.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Jack Frost is a slickly packaged and engagingly sentimental fantasy-comedy that stands out as one of the season's most pleasant surprises. Pic offers a shrewdly balanced mix of humor, high concept and heart tugging, along with some amusingly impressive special effects.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
A well-intentioned misfire featuring 3-D CGI animation that recalls lesser vidgames of the mid-1990s.- Variety
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- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
More hagiography than history, Heather Rae's long-in-production portrait of Native American activist and poet John Trudell has the uncritically admiring feel of authorized biography.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Throats are ripped, heads are crushed and limbs are severed with brutal efficiency throughout See No Evil, but that's not nearly enough to dispel the sense of deja vu that pervades this generic slasher thriller.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Brimming with heart and humor -- Drumline is a formulaic crowdpleaser set in the competitive world of university marching bands at predominantly black universities.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Seriously hampered by glaring inconsistencies of tone and intent, and often feels like a series of highlights carved out of a much longer epic.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
A wildly uneven but compulsively watchable mix of high camp and grand passions, soap opera and softcore sex. Very much in the deliriously lewd style of Pedro Almodovar.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Mix "Night of the Living Dead" with Sam Raimi's "Evil Dead" movies, then add a hefty dose of "Beavis and Butt-Head"-style silliness, and you have "Tales From the Crypt Presents Demon Knight," a fang-in-cheek horror thriller that likely will please fans and turn off non-devotees.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Entirely comfortable as the crude character he has honed in countless stand-up routines and TV appearances, Larry the Cable Guy sustains a level of likeability that enables him to get away with a lot more than he has any right to. But, he remains very much an acquired taste.- Variety
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- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Mexican helmer Carolina Rivas obviously intends her slow-paced and contemplative doc as a testimony to the indomitability of the human spirit under dire circumstances.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Far too aggressively seamy (and ferociously foul-mouthed) to please diehard fans of traditional sagebrush sagas, this misfire offers nothing in the way of wit, innovation or even marquee allure to interest auds accustomed to edgier revisionist oaters.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Key to drama's success is the artful underplaying by Kurt Russell in the lead role of Herb Brooks.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Unquestioning agitprop for vegetarianism, hemp fiber, solar energy, sustainable organic living and other causes espoused by actor-activist Woody Harrelson.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Strong performances, a few dramatically potent scenes and a vividly specific evocation of locale barely offset hackneyed and muddled elements in a script that plays like a first draft.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Obviously the product of minimal effort by all parties involved, Strange Wilderness is a slovenly, slapped-together stoner comedy.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Modestly amusing in fits and starts, Fired! proves most potent when on-screen interviewees are playing for keeps, not for laughs.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Outrageously over-the-top gore doubtless will scare off all but the heartiest genre aficionados.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
At once raucously free-wheeling and meticulously contrived, picture satisfies as a boys-gone-wild laff riot that also clicks as a seriocomic beat-the-clock detective story.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
By turns whimsically humorous and intelligently sentimental, but also infused with a pungent air of working-class realism.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Riveting portrait of a straight-talking, tough-loving Benedictine nun in charge of a South Bronx home for recovering substance abusers.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Perfectly harmless, often humorous, featherweight confection -- think "Serendipity" re-imagined as a teen-skewing Saturday morning sitcom.- Variety
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- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
A slackly paced but modestly diverting trifle, with cameos by recording artists Beck, Beth Orton and Hank Williams III to elevate the hipper-than-thou quotient.- Variety
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- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
This Dog won't hunt. Although well crafted and handsomely mounted, pic lacks sufficient sizzle.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
It's obviously intended as a star vehicle, but Broken Bridges turns out to be a rattletrap jalopy for country music performer Toby Keith.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Grotesquely smutty and obnoxiously overbearing, this is a pitiful excuse for a comedy.- Variety
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- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Despite these flashbacks, however, God Spoke never really delves into the reasons and/or motivations behind Franken's transformation from monologist and sketch-comedy performer to political pundit and liberal activist. Indeed, even during intimate moments, Franken rarely comes across as someone given to explaining himself.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Since the new pic contains little that's genuinely amusing or minimally original, it likely will fail on its own merits.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
A lightweight but likable fantasy that offers a playfully feminist twist to Arthurian legends.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Quickly devolves into a standard-issue crime drama laced with routine martial artistry.- Variety
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- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Despite game efforts from a first-rate cast and acres of impressive production values, Event Horizon remains a muddled and curiously uninvolving sci-fi horror show.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Manages to amuse as a cleverly concocted hybrid of conventional romantic comedy and mistaken-identity farce.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Well positioned to slake the thirst of action fans for world-class, slam-bang rough stuff.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
By turns defiant and apologetic, gleefully raunchy and anxiously defensive.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Most successful when it is engaging, not uproarious. Glossy amusement is an updated remake of a well-regarded 1950 Brit comedy-drama starring Alec Guinness, improbably retrofitted as a star vehicle for Queen Latifah.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Lightweight but likable romantic comedy about two mismatched gay singletons who are, of course, made for each other.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Toddlers and pre-teens will be entertained, and parents will be pleasantly surprised, by this more-than-just-bearable musical road movie.- Variety
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- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
The documentary works best when it simply offers a concise and cogent account of epochal events.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
The tone of Reel Injun is respectfully serious, though well short of angry, while focusing on how the stereotypical depictions of marauding redskins affected the self-images of Native Americans.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Trendy influence of insidiously creepy Japanese horror pics is felt in almost every frame of Boogeyman. The effectively atmospheric and unusually involving thriller tells the story of a distraught young man's protracted duel of wits with the eponymous evildoer.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Much like a botched souffle that fails to rise, Simply Irresistible is a bland confection that remains doggedly earthbound while attempting flights of romantic fantasy.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Might be extremely effective while preaching to the converted, but it's no great shakes as secular entertainment.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
A genially haphazard but frequently amusing neo-stoner comedy that plays like "Cheech and Chong Go to Animal House."- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Shamelessly sappy and emotionally manipulative, Patch Adams is an aggressively heartwarming comedy-drama that may be roasted by critics but embraced by ticketbuyers.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
It's an unabashedly corny but occasionally stirring dramedy based on the true-life story of scrappy young baseball players from Mexico who, in 1957, scored an improbable string of successes while playing their way from a Monterrey sandlot to the Little League World Series.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
A lavishly mounted and appealingly old-fashioned swashbuckler with nary a trace of wink-wink irony or revisionist embellishment.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Provides enough cheap thrills and modest suspense to shake a few shekels from genre fans before really blasting off as homevid product.- Variety
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- Variety
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- Variety
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- Variety
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- Variety
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- Variety
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- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Ingeniously nasty and often shockingly funny as it incrementally worsens a very bad situation, then provides a potent payoff with the forced feeding of just desserts.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Aimed squarely at adolescents who might find "Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure" too intellectually taxing.- Variety
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- Variety
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- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Seldom has a pic been more appropriately titled than Disaster Movie, yet another frantically unfunny free-form farce.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
A spectacularly trashy and aggressively flashy motorcycle melodrama in which computer-enhanced action scenes, unbound by gravity or logic, are choreographed, photographed and edited to resemble video-game stratagems.- Variety
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- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Indeed, you could argue that weighty questions about the nature of evil and the allure of sin figured more prominently in the similarly titled "Se7en," one of several other, better suspensers dimly echoed here.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Sometimes shaky, sometimes smooth handheld DV lensing (by Drews and Krybus) gives the pic an immediacy that greatly enhances its dramatic and emotional impact.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Picture benefits greatly from appealing performances by Jennifer Aniston and Steve Zahn, who deftly apply darker emotional shadings to their characters when necessary, and equally fine work from a small ensemble of solid supporting players.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Engaging lead performances and snatches of witty repartee help lubricate the creaky plot mechanics in Weather Girl, a lightly amusing but thoroughly predictable dramedy.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
There’s barely enough plot for a half-hour episode of a weekly TV series spinoff. And there’s even less here in terms of acting, writing and filmmaking polish to appeal to anyone over the age of 10.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Emerges as a formulaic thriller that plays more like direct-to-video fare than a megaplex-worthy feature.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Amiably slapdash docu about The Comedians of Comedy tour mixes on-stage performances, backstage bull sessions and downtime tomfoolery to generally satisfying and frequently hilarious effect.- Variety
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- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
This undistinguished picture qualifies as an endangered species. As a digital babysitter, however, it may prove sufficiently efficient to generate fair-to-middling homevid sales.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Lofty ambitions and unaffected sincerity are not quite enough to sustain The Keeper: The Legend of Omar Khayyam, a reverentially pokey drama that plays less like a conventional movie than a lengthy series of hagiographic historical tableaux.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Imagine a '30s screwball comedy played to a sensuous Brazilian beat and you're ready for Bossa Nova, a delightfully amusing romantic roundelay.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
A glossy teen-weepie romance that often plays like an inspirational indie skewed toward Christian niche market.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
The fragrant aroma of magnolias is undercut by the distinct smell of mothballs throughoutThe Loss of a Teardrop Diamond, an admirably earnest but curiously flat attempt to film a long-unproduced scenario by Tennessee Williams.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Even though it sprints along a well-trod path through familiar territory, Saint Ralph remains surprisingly compelling.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Only small children with limited attention spans will be impressed by the lackluster kung-foolishness in 3 Ninjas: High Noon at Mega Mountain.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Generates genuine suspense as it follows a group of American actors in the former Soviet Union during a fateful period of the Perestroika era.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
There's a provocative premise at the heart of Master of the Game, but uneven acting, indifferent direction and melodramatic dialogue blunt pointed ironies.- Variety
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- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
A low-key charmer that's bound to enchant small children and amuse their parents during many hours of repeat viewings.- Variety
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- Variety
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- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
The Legend of Ron Jeremy is, at a brisk 75 minutes, long enough to get the job done.- Variety
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- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Unvarnished verisimilitude, visceral impact and vividly evoked emotional and physical extremes distinguish Hooligans, the impressive debut feature by German-born helmer Lexi Alexander.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Picture shrewdly shuffles together attractive young leads, cagey screen vets and a fantasy-fulfillment scenario in a slickly polished package that should appeal to anyone who's ever dreamed of beating the odds.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Richly amusing and sporadically insightful as it offers an up-close-and-personal view of Ivan Thompson, a self-proclaimed "cowboy cupid" who plays matchmaker between American men and Mexican women.- Variety
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- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Nacho Libre strikes a delicate balance of whimsy and absurdity that may surprise auds primed to expect wall-to-wall slapstick.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Has the unmistakable look and feel of a micro-budget indie produced for a small circle of friends, many of whom are listed in the credits.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
There is a great deal more style than substance here. The special effects experts and the other members of the technical crew do their considerable best to give their various hacking sequences the look of warp-speed sci-fi fantasy.- Variety
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- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Amusing indie comedy blithely blurs the line between risque and raunchy, often to hilarious effect.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
One of the summer's more pleasant surprises. A silly bit of tiptop tomfoolery with cross-generational appeal.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Solid performances, handsome production values and a few genuinely creepy scenes are not enough to save Godsend.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Offers a largely satisfying mix of broad slapstick, seriocomic sentimentality and mostly amusing satirical thrusts at easy targets.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Sandler (never making a false step while maneuvering though vertiginous mood swings) and Cheadle (deftly commingling instinctive decency with quiet desperation) are individually excellent, and bring out the best in each other. And the picture itself transcends its real but relatively minor flaws to score a satisfyingly potent impact.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
An extremely enjoyable neo-screwball comedy about attractive opposites on the road.- Variety
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- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Destined to be better remembered for its grisly billboard imagery than for its relatively tame torture-porn tropes, Captivity is a thoroughly nasty piece of work that nonetheless earns credit for generating modest suspense after a predictable but effective plot twist around the 50-minute mark.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
With equal measures of prickly wit, gleeful pride and bemused gratitude, Charles Nelson Reilly looks back at his life, and invites his audience to share the view, in this thoroughly engaging filmization of his one-man stage show.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
This family affair is a squeaky-clean cable-ready comedy, unabashedly retro fluff.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
A star vehicle composed of second-hand parts that nevertheless gets great mileage (and big laughs) from its recycled plot.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
An impressively polished documentary by Bob Hercules and Cheri Hughes. Perhaps even more thought-provoking than its co-helmers intended, pic is bound to spark conversations and debate.- Variety
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- Joe Leydon
Too narratively disjointed to achieve maximum impact, but too emotionally potent in fits and starts to be dismissed out of hand. Ultimately, Over the GW resembles nothing so much as a rough draft for a more conventional feature.- Variety
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