Joe Morgenstern
Select another critic »For 2,688 reviews, this critic has graded:
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44% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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54% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 3.7 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Joe Morgenstern's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 62 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Drive My Car | |
| Lowest review score: | Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,446 out of 2688
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Mixed: 742 out of 2688
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Negative: 500 out of 2688
2688
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Joe Morgenstern
The concept is schematic and predictable, and watching first-rate actors - the cast includes Susan Sarandon as a local librarian - doing third-rate material is a dubious pleasure.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Aug 23, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
This nasty little bottom-feeder of a film is too condescending to be trusted, too manipulative to be believed, too turgid to be enjoyed, too shameless to be endured and, before and after everything else, too inept to make its misanthropic case.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Aug 23, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
Instead of biting wit, though, the movie settles for sketch humor, standard-brand raunch and toothless slapstick that trivializes everything it touches.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Aug 9, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
The movie perseveres with affecting, sometimes startling candor, and eventually delivers on its promise by confronting the dark fears and furtive hopes of a couple no longer young.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Aug 9, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
A solid success, primarily though not entirely because of Jeremy Renner. He's a star worthy of the term as Aaron Cross, another haunted operative who, like Jason Bourne, is as much a victim of the government's dirty deeds as a covert super-agent. But the production is impressive too.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Aug 9, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
The more these two likable people rattled on, the more I found myself thinking about the elusive distinction between characters talking genuinely smart talk and simply chattering for the camera.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Aug 2, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
The remake has no grace notes, or grace, no nuance, no humanity, no character quirks, no surprises in the dialogue and no humor.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Aug 2, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
His is a special kind of courage, and it impels him to act with special agility in a brave new world of his own making, where little tweets can challenge big lies and a blog post can echo like thunder.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 26, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
What's good in the film, which was shot superbly by Matthew Libatique, is so good - so exuberant and touching and sweet - that you want the whole thing to be perfect, but Ruby Sparks is a closed system that gradually turns in on itself. There isn't enough of someone else.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 26, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
Killer Joe is, at bottom - and I mean bottom - ugly and vile, not to mention dumb and clumsy.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 26, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
It's spectacular, to be sure, but also remarkable for its all-encompassing gloom. No movie has ever administered more punishment, to its hero or its audience, in the name of mainstream entertainment.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 16, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
The story refuses to combust; it's a strangely unsatisfying combination of bloodless observations and unresolved sexuality.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 12, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
Michael Winterbottom's films aren't always successful, but they're almost always interesting. And, in the case of this odd transplantation from Thomas Hardy's grim Wessex to the glare and blare of contemporary India, spectacular visually, though awfully somber dramatically.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 12, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
Major League Baseball has passed new rules for the Dominican system, according to the film's closing credits, rules that will limit signing bonuses. Yet the harvest will continue, and it's not a pretty sight.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 12, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
JW is played brilliantly by Joel Kinnaman, who is familiar to American audiences of "The Killing" on AMC.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 12, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
The violence is graphic, the dialogue can be awfully arch and the style is often mannered, but this long, dense adventure takes surprising side trips into thoughtfulness, ruefulness, whimsy and romance. It's high-grade entertainment sustained by a buoyant spirit.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 5, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
This hugely elaborate production is supposed to be the reboot of a foundering franchise, but rebooting a computer wipes the silicon slate clean. In the movie, what's old is old again.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 2, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
There's no trace of calculation, only artistic ambitions and hopes that have come to fruition in the year's finest film thus far.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 28, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
The process is called acting, and the man (Tatum) in the title role of Steven Soderbergh's flashy, not-so-trashy entertainment does it so well that the debate should be officially ended.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 28, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
Ted is often hilarious, sometimes sweet and, in the spirit of "Family Guy," consistently raunchy. Yet it's seriously overextended and, as the premise wears ever thinner, frantically overproduced.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 28, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
Going on too long seems to be the disease of the week; it's certainly what brings this movie down, though the going on here stems from a surfeit of implausible plot that suffocates the main characters and the excellent actors who play them.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 28, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
This is less a film in the lustrous Pixar tradition than a Disney fairy tale told with Pixar's virtuosity. As such, it's enjoyable, consistently beautiful, fairly conventional, occasionally surprising and ultimately disappointing.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 21, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
What I don't understand is why this extended piece of idiocy chose to sink its stinky teeth into our 16th president. If an axe-wielding hero was required, George Washington would have been the better choice, with the Redcoats as bloodsuckers.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 21, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
For better or worse, Woody Allen turns out a movie every year. Last year's "Midnight in Paris" was better than better; that is to say, sublime. To Rome With Love is worse than worse, as inert as its predecessor was inspired.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 21, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
Lynn Shelton's lovely tale of swirling feelings was shot in a mere 12 days, on a budget that must have been minuscule. A couple of minutes after it's started, though, you know you're in the presence of people who will surprise and delight you.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 14, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
What's not fine is the dead zone occupied by the monster of the piece, Tom Cruise's veteran rocker, Stacee Jaxx.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 14, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
The only rewards, and they are real albeit insufficient, involve watching Jane Fonda in full cry and Catherine Keener in a quieter fullness of feeling.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 7, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
Madagascar 3 is all about exuberant motion, cute characters and gorgeous colors. It aims for the eyes, not the heart.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 7, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
Prometheus, in efficient 3-D, places most of its bets on the wonders that today's visual artists and technicians can work with digital tools. This tale of an interstellar search asks cosmic questions about the meaning of life, but comes up with lame answers in a script that screams attention-deficit disorder.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 7, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
An evil spell nearly does Snow White in, but it's lifted in the nick of time. The strangest spell afflicts Kristen Stewart; she can't seem to imbue Snow White with anything more than a semblance of feeling. That spell never lifts, but it doesn't make much difference in the end because the forces of good manage to work around it.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 31, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
The film fulfills its feel-good promise, as long as it's seen as the fairy tale it was meant to be.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 24, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
The younger man's personality is all the more startling for the skill and generosity with which Mr. Brolin creates a persuasively vital K while foreshadowing the grump to come. The script explains the change in elaborate detail, but the performance defies explanation; it's mysteriously marvelous.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 24, 2012
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- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 24, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
What makes it such a singular experience is the convergence of fine acting, moral urgency and a willingness to linger on moments of great intensity.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 17, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
Sacha Baron Cohen's tosses off some sensationally funny stuff before descending into a rat-a-tat rhythm of random insult and ritual vulgarity.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 17, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
Like "Transformers," which it rivals in relentlessness, Battleship comes with its own force field, a furious energy that renders criticism irrelevant.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 17, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
This wise and funny film, in Japanese with English subtitles, works small miracles in depicting the pivotal moment when kids turn from the wishfulness of childhood into shaping the world for themselves.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 10, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
An absurdist fantasy on a solemn theme, Where Do We Go Now? suffers from a serious clash of styles, but it's also brave and startlingly funny - at one point verging on "Mamma Mia!" - when it isn't bleak or shocking.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 10, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
Amusing, in fits and spurts, and sure to make tons of money, but terribly familiar and fatigued.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 10, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
A slow start, a single star performance surrounded by indifferent acting and an onslaught of computer effects that range from seen-it-all-in-"Transformers" to a whole sky full of spectacular stuff in the midtown Manhattan climax.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 3, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
Sometime around what I guessed to be the one-hour mark in The Five-Year Engagement, I checked my watch and honestly thought the battery had given out. Five years doesn't begin to tell the interminable tale.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 26, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
The film is thin and mannered, even though many of the mannerisms are intrinsic to its shrewd vision of cult behavior. There's no arguing, though - and who would want to? - Ms. Marling's extraordinary gift for taking the camera and weaving a spell.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 26, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
Where the movie is at its best is in the comically laconic, straight-to-the-camera remarks offered by Carthage's residents. (They're played by a mix of local actors and real townspeople doing partially scripted versions of themselves.)- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 26, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
A transgenre thriller that glides effortlessly from crisp social commentary through off-kilter comedy to paranoid terror, it's on my short list of the most enjoyable movies in recent memory.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 26, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
To the Arctic 3-D is an impassioned plea for action on global warming, and the passion is intensified by the music.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 19, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
Depending on how you feel about Zac Efron, he is either a sensitive hunk or an inexpressive hunk, but definitely a hunk. Unable as I am to locate any feelings about him, I see Mr. Efron as a hunk with a problem delivering sustained dialogue in units of more than one or two sentences.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 19, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
The director, Kevin Macdonald, searches for clarity amid the contradictions of Marley's life and reaches no conclusions, but that's a tribute to his subject's complexity in a film of fascinating too-muchness.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 19, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
Here's a debut feature from Norway, a coming of age comedy so fresh and droll that the actors seem not to have been directed at all, but simply observed as they went about their odd lives.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 12, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
This time, though, the happy ending plays out in real life, while the screen version falls afoul of a laggardly pace, an earnest tone and a surfeit of domesticity.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 12, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
What makes the film enthralling is the wisdom and grace with which it addresses the twin subjects of grief and healing, and the quiet beauty of Mohamed Fellag's performance in the title role.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 12, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
The initial brilliance of the premise is eventually dulled by illogic, the whole thing proves unmanageable and the filmmakers unmanage their climactic revelation with far more zest than finesse. Still, zest counts for a lot, and resonance carries the day.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 12, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
Some of the action sequences, and a few of the performances, are enjoyable enough to make up for the dialogue, which has been upgraded to cheerfully absurd, and the plot, which has been simplified to the point of actual coherence.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 29, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
Jon Shenk's fascinating documentary feature The Island President personalizes the threat of global warming, and nationalizes it too, by focusing on Mohamed Nasheed, the former president of the Maldives.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 29, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
The film's power is undercut by its narrow geographic focus, which seems to associate bullying with conservative or working-class areas in red states. The filmmakers could easily have found similar cases involving the children of urban sophisticates.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 29, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
In The Hunger Games it's both a feast of cheesy spectacle and a famine of genuine feeling, except for the powerful - and touchingly vulnerable - presence of Jennifer Lawrence.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 22, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
One of the film's best moments of deliciousness comes with the revelation that Yoshikazu, rather than his father, made the sushi that won the Michelin inspectors over; so much for working humbly in the old man's shadow.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 22, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
Surprisingly, though, most of the material avoids the treacle zone, while Jason Segel, as the man-child in residence, gives a performance that I can only describe as gravely affecting.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 15, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
This cheerfully chaotic, gleefully vulgar action-comedy retread of the old television series has box-office success written all over it, and where's the harm? It's irresistibly funny until it isn't.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 15, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
Mr. Waititi, a popular standup comic in New Zealand, is wonderfully droll and entertaining in this acting role, which isn't all that far, geography and culture notwithstanding, from Steve Zahn at his stoner best.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 15, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
Working on a scale that's minuscule by studio standards, the Dardenne brothers have made yet another movie that does what Hollywood used to do - keep us rapt, and leave us grateful.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 15, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
It's shrill in tone, awash in unexamined narcissism - kids are just pretexts for laughs, rather than objects of love - and afflicted by explosive verbal diarrhea. There's simply no base line of normal human activity, let alone intimacy, until the anticouple finally re-examines their anticommitment credo. By then everyone has been so selfish and dislikable that our commitment to the film is lost.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 8, 2012
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- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 8, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
This new Disney film, marked by myriad lapses and marketing follies, bears the woefully familiar earmarks of a big studio production that was pulled and hauled every which way until it lost all shape and flavor.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 8, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
It is marvelously funny - a screwball comedy with more layers than a pearl - and visually sumptuous.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 1, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
Against all odds, an unquenchable artist has made yet another piece of powerful art.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 1, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
The movie's emotional content was manifest as an absence. What stayed with me most memorably was the father's insufferable bombast and the son's sad passivity.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 1, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
Quietly affecting and surprisingly dramatic, so long as you're willing to watch it unfold at its own deliberate pace.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Feb 23, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
So you think you've seen silly? And smarmy? And inept? Wait till you see Wanderlust, though that's just a figure of speech; I'm not suggesting that you actually lay eyes on this naked grab for box office bucks.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Feb 23, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
There's no deeper meaning to Steven Soderbergh's thriller than what meets the eye, yet its lustrous surfaces offer great and guilt-free pleasure.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jan 19, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
No beauty contest has ever been more bizarre than the one in Gerardo Naranjo's shockingly powerful thriller.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jan 19, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
One could argue that the target audience - black teenagers, Mr. Lucas has said - might be most receptive to a film that conveys history through contemporary entertainment. But this isn't contemporary entertainment, it's antiquated kitsch reprocessed by the producer's nostalgia for the movies of his boyhood. The story has been stripped of historical context - don't black teenagers and everyone else deserve hard facts? - and internal logic.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jan 19, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
Martius comes to a bad end, while Mr. Fiennes achieves a great beginning. As a director, his grasp exceeds his daring reach, and his performance stands as a chilling exemplar of psychomartial ferocity.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jan 19, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
The images captured by the film - dancers in theatrical sets, dancers in surreal exterior settings - are deeply scary for their loneliness and pain, and crazily thrilling for the intensity of their joy.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jan 12, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
Todd Graff's would-be inspirational film lift their voices in song that makes you smile, and squander their voices on dialogue that makes you cringe (but also smile in oddly pleasurable disbelief).- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jan 12, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
It's a genre film, not great art, though there's a good joke about art - a pricey piece of action painting, appropriately enough - but it's a thoroughly satisfying entertainment, and, in this season of lowered expectations, a nice surprise.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jan 12, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
Soon I realized that the real subject of this film, with its philosophical voice-overs by the filmmaker and its haunting shots of decayed American downtowns, is the passage of time and the toll it takes. The effect of the Super 8 is to give present moments historical weight by making them look primitive; it's a kind of instant oldening that seems to pause time if not to stop it. It's About You is an odd and touching little film. I'm glad I stuck it out.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jan 5, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
It's not fair to say that Ms. Davis steals scenes - one of the movie's strengths is its ensemble cast - but she supercharges every scene she's in.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jan 5, 2012
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- Joe Morgenstern
The members of the cast represent ensemble, naturalistic acting at its finest.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 29, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
The result is a film that may stay in the mind's eye longer than it lingers in the heart.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 29, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Meryl Streep as Margaret Thatcher is the main reason to see The Iron Lady, which was directed by Phyllida Lloyd - not just the main reason but the raison d'ĂŞtre of an otherwise misconceived movie.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 29, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Has much to recommend it - high-end craftsmanship, a singular heroine, a labyrinthine mystery, an intriguing milieu - yet lacks a vital spark.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 22, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
The motion-capture animation is spectacular..Yet the action grows wearisome as it grinds on, and the film becomes a succession of dazzling set pieces devoid of simple feelings.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 22, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
The production's penchant for contrivance is insufferable - not a single spontaneous moment from start to finish - and the boy is so precocious you want to strangle him. It's surely not the fault of Thomas Horn, the remarkable young man who plays him.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 22, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
A movie you want to like, and a movie you can enjoy if you cut its slackness some slack.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 22, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Now the two men are back, along with Irene. But she vanishes all too soon in this overproduced, self-enchanted sequel, and so does the spirit of bright invention that made the previous film such a pleasant surprise.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 15, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
I was put off by the acting, or more properly by the spectacle of good actors dutifully following leaden direction, and equally by the writing, which is as thin as the veneer of civilization it purports to peel back.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 15, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
It's not the generic plot that's so memorable, even though its convolutions are clever enough, or the cast of mostly interesting characters, but the surreal swirl of form and color that frequently fills the enormous screen.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 15, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
A cockeyed comic triumph that flashes between bright and dark like a strobe light of the spirit. And Ms. Theron, as Mavis Gary, a self-styled author rather than a mere writer, succeeds sensationally at something much harder than playing ravaged.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 8, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
This version of Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy turns on the presence of Mr. Oldman, and he is an actor of great experience and accomplishment who has finally found a film that fully deserves him.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 8, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Much of the film is banal or pretentious, or both - vacuous vignettes about emptiness. Occasionally, though, those vignettes burst into life and burn with consuming fire.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 1, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
His (Takeshi) sense of style is very much in evidence here, and so is his sense of humor.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 1, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
When bad movies happen to good people, the first place to look for an explanation is the basic idea. That certainly applies to My Week With Marilyn, a dubious idea done in by Adrian Hodges's shallow script and Simon Curtis's clumsy direction.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 28, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Represents a big growth spurt in Mr. Cronenberg's career. Its measured pace, along with a style that is sometimes austere (though sometimes anything but) repays close attention with excellent acting and a wealth of absorbing information.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 28, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Silence makes the film interesting by enticing us to concentrate in ways we're not used to, while artistry carries the day. The Artist may have started as a daring stunt, but it elevates itself to an endearing - and probably enduring - delight.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 28, 2011
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- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 28, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Rarely has a contemporary movie taken in so much life and revealed it with such depth of feeling.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 17, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Its true subject is melancholia as a spiritual state, a destroyer of happiness that emerges from its hiding place behind the sun, just like the menacing planet, then holds the heroine, Justine, in its unyielding grip and gives Ms. Dunst the unlikely occasion for a dazzling performance.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 10, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
J. Edgar, with Leonardo DiCaprio in the title role, is at war with itself, and everyone loses...Mr. Eastwood's ponderous direction, a clumsy script by Dustin Lance Black and ghastly slatherings of old-age makeup all conspire to put the story at an emotional and historical distance. It's a partially animated waxworks.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 10, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Like Crazy develops slowly, and threatens at first to be just another movie about beautiful young people in the Age of Fraught Relationships. It's much more than that, though. Without belaboring any issues, it speaks volumes about fear of commitment.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 27, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Puss made his debut in "Shrek 2," then did time in the two decreasingly funny sequels. Now he's got a movie of his own, and not a moment too soon.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 27, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
In a movie that rings false at every turn, Ms. Redgrave's Elizabeth is truly and infallibly regal.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 27, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Andrew Niccol's In Time looks great, sounds stilted and plays like a clever videogame with too many rules.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 27, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
As such, it's chilling and enjoyable in unequal measure. Entertainment predominates, but entertainment with smarts, and a well-honed edge.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 20, 2011
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- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 20, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Mr. Paine's follow-up lacks the conspiratorial drama of its predecessor, which blamed the EV1's death on the oil industry and the auto industry, tied as they were to the future of the internal combustion engine. But his new documentary is fascinating in its own right.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 20, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Ultimately an original film that forces us, time and again, to reconsider what we think we've just seen, and what we're sure we feel - not only about mere appearance, or fateful gender, but about who, under our skin, we truly are.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 13, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
The Man Nobody Knew is packed with knowledge of another sort. It amounts to an absorbing, sometimes appalling course in how U.S. foreign policy evolved and functioned following World War II.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 13, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Mr. Luchini has a touching way of opening up the repressed heroes he often plays, and Ms. Verbeke's droll manipulations - and genuine sweetness - are more than enough to justify the transformation that MarĂa and the other maids work on Jean-Louis's life.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 6, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
That's one of the puzzles of this piece. You'd think a film with talent to burn - would provide some electrifying encounters at the very least. No such luck. Words fly, some of them medium-witty, but lightning doesn't strike.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 6, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
So much movie can be made with so little plot, given sufficient humanity and dramatic tension. That's the case with Andrew Haigh's eloquent chamber piece.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Sep 29, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
A dazzling piece of filmmaking, and much of the dazzle - as well as the anguished darkness - comes from Adam Stone's cinematography, which expresses the swirling state of Curtis's mind with richly varied flavors of light.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Sep 29, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
The best parts are the in-between ones, neither laugh-out-loud funny nor overtly heart-wrenching.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Sep 29, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
The failure lies not with the film's director, Marc Forster, nor with its impressive star, Gerard Butler, but with Jason Keller's dreadfully earnest script, which charts the hero's spiritual journey, and his Rambo-esque exploits, without offering a scintilla of mature perspective on his state of mind.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Sep 22, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Never before, though, have statistics added up to such electrifying entertainment. After the mostly minor-league productions of recent months, this movie, which was directed by Bennett Miller, renews your belief in the power of movies.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Sep 22, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Few actors working today could make emotional sense of such a protean character, but Ryan Gosling does so with calm authority. He's a formidable presence in a film that grabs your gaze and won't let go except for moments when you can't help but look away.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Sep 15, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
In her casually daring - and mostly endearing - debut feature, the Norwegian director Anne Sewitsky mixes and purposely mismatches light and dark moods to tell the story of a rural wife and mother looking for happiness in the wrong places, and finally in the right one.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Sep 15, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Long after lice from her children's school infested Kate's scalp, I was scratching my head about why a 91-minute movie seemed so long. The answer came from reframing the question. Why was a string of sitcom problems stretched to 91 minutes?- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Sep 15, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
A work of fiction, Mr. Féret's film is ardent in its inventions, modest in scale, playful in its speculations about Nannerl's influence on her brother's music, and graced by the filmmaker's daughter, Marie Féret, in the title role.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Aug 18, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
In this frustrating fizzle, the friendship does keep struggling to change into a love affair. But year after year, July 15 after July 15, it's the same old same old - two increasingly tedious people talking self-conscious talk.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Aug 18, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
What's most rewarding, though, is that Mr. Senna speaks extensively and eloquently for himself, and reveals himself to be an eminently human hero. He's thoughtful, even philosophical, about decisions that deprive him of seemingly well-earned victories.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Aug 11, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Instead of plunging us into a racist past, however, The Help takes us on a pop-cultural tour that savors the picturesque, and strengthens stereotypes it purports to shatter.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Aug 11, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Judged, though, as the action extravaganza it means to be, Rise of the Planet of the Apes wins high marks for originality, and takes top honors for spectacle.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Aug 4, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Let's give this ghastly studio comedy a Truthiness in Advertising award, if nothing else.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Aug 4, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Ms. Weisz is always a strong presence, but her talents are wasted here on a naive heroine - the fictional Kathy is exceedingly slow to grasp the extent of the corruption - and a narrative style that turns the horror of the prostitutes' plight into harrowing melodrama.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Aug 4, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
A daring feature debut by Evan Glodell, Bellflower looks like it was shot with the digital equivalent of a Brownie box camera, and generates an almost palpable aura of anxiety.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Aug 4, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
The movie also fights for what it wants - to touch us in the course of entertaining us - and it succeeds, with its zinger-studded script that transcends clumsy mechanics and a spirited cast that includes Marisa Tomei as a nymphomaniacal middle-school teacher, and Jonah Bobo as a lovesick eighth-grader.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 28, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
The movie isn't deep, or particularly intricate; it doesn't play all that much with the potential for mistaken identities, and the cruelty it depicts becomes repetitive or, worse still, desensitizing. But The Devil's Double does give us indelible images of Uday's decadence - the filmmakers say they're understated - and a double dip of dazzling acting.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 28, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Cowboys versus aliens is a concept that may make you smile in anticipation, but wipe that smile off your face before buying your ticket.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 28, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
If you lop off the closing credits of Fred Cavayé's preposterously exciting - and pleasingly preposterous - French-language thriller, the running time is a mere 80 minutes. Not since "Run Lola Run" has the term been used more aptly.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 28, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Does the film add up to something more than a stunt? Maybe not. I was captivated by the several hours I recently saw of Christian Marclay's 24-hour-long "The Clock," a video mashup in which thousands of clips from hundred of movies contain watches and clocks telling the same time that spectators can read on their wrists. Life in a Day doesn't aspire to such intricacy, but it's fascinating all the same, an electronic update of Alexander Pope's maxim that the proper study of mankind is man.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 28, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
This small-scale film has more outsize ideas than it could possibly manage. Yet Mike Cahill's debut feature exerts a gravitational pull out of proportion to its size through powerful performances, a lyrical spirit, a succession of arresting images and a depth of conviction that sweeps logic aside.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 21, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Once Captain America goes off to war in his endearingly silly suit, however, the movie starts to lose its vibe.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 21, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Ms. Scott Thomas is as intelligent and attractive as ever, but the synthetic world her character inhabits can't compete with a harrowing past that depicts French complicity in Nazi atrocities.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 21, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Part 2 of The Deathly Hallows, is the best possible end for the series that began a decade ago.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 14, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Errol Morris's documentary was made, and scheduled for release, long before the News of the World story broke. The smart part is that the film dissects those excesses deftly with a quasitabloid style of its own.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 14, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
While the action flashes back and forth in increments of centuries, years or months, we're adrift in the here and now, trying to get a grip on the characters and their relationships, yet finding it loosened with every new dislocation.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 14, 2011
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- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 14, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
The movie transforms a dim idea - "Elmer Gantry" lite - into comedy that's dead in the water and as dull as it is broad.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 14, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
For the most part, though, the real people - the movers and shakers of Nim's world - are there to speak for themselves in the present as well as the past, and the main ones are, with a conspicuous exception, a sorry, self-serving lot.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 7, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Stylistic debts abound: the Coen brothers, Roger Deakins, the bleak, gothic landscapes of Terrence Malick's "Badlands" and Richard Brooks's "In Cold Blood." Through it all, though, is the original and memorable spectacle of violence expressed and repressed by the desperate hero.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 7, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Horrible Bosses has preposterousness to burn, but no finesse and no interest in having any.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 7, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
The results are startlingly original, if occasionally overambitious. This is "Tsotsi" without the feel-good glow, a tale of entrepreneurship's perils and boundless pleasures.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 1, 2011
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- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 23, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Sharp-witted, sometimes surreal and largely autobiographical French-language comedy.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 23, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
The movie has its own deficits - a lack of variety, originality, subtlety, clarity and plain old charm.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 23, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
My heart was warmed by gratuitous moments when Mr. Carrey clowns for clowning's sake - in the best of them, he makes a slo-mo entrance to a press conference, even though the camera is running at normal speed.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 16, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
This is hardly a film to recommend as entertainment. As an act of remembrance, though, it is singular and, in its way, soaring.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 16, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
It keeps you fascinated, even enthralled; elicits astonishment, even wonderment, and makes you grateful for the chance to meet someone remarkable.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 16, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Green Lantern was meant to be a sci-fi adventure, but it proves to be a genuine mystery. How could its megamoola budget have yielded a production that looks almost as tacky as "Flash Gordon" (which had the good grace to deprecate itself at every turn)?- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 16, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
The Trip is probably too long, but I have to say "probably" because I would have been happy with an additional half-hour of Steve and Rob doing more impressions.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 9, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
This new film isn't perfect, and may not be a world-changer, but it's certainly a world-pleaser.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 9, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
The film's special mixture of sadness, comedy and hope sneaks up on you and stays in your memory.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 2, 2011
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- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 2, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
This prequel draws new energy from supersmart casting, plus the shrewd notion of setting the beginnings of the X-Men saga in the early 1960s.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 2, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Daring in concept, occasionally daffy in execution and ultimately unforgettable, Mr. Malick's film offers a heartfelt answer to the question of where we humans belong - with each other, on this planet, bound by love.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 27, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Hardly a scene goes by that isn't visually striking or kinetically thrilling, and all of it enhanced by 3-D.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 27, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
What was fresh and surprising in Las Vegas turns rancid and predictable in Bangkok.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 27, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
These talented, dedicated kids aren't making believe about anything - they're making art out of shimmering illusion, intricate manipulation and blithe misdirection. (In magic, as distinct from filmmaking, misdirection is a good thing.)- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 27, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
The IMAX print I saw was so murky as to make you give thanks for the few scenes shot in simple sunlight, the 3-D wasn't worth the bother, and never before have I wanted to chloroform an entire orchestra.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 19, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
In Woody Allen's beguiling and then bedazzling new comedy, nostalgia isn't at all what it used to be - it's smarter, sweeter, fizzier and ever so much funnier.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 19, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
From time to time the movie grabs you (though the music keeps repelling you). Taking stock and letting go-of superfluous things, of worn-out love-is a strong theme. But the progression of the script is like Nick's self-help program. We're familiar with the steps.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 12, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Rather than a character rooted in some sort of reality-social, satirical, psychological, take your pick-Hesher is an abstract notion animated by false energy.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 12, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Through it all -- the free-form conversations, the brilliant set pieces, the preposterous gross-outs, the flawless performances -- Kristen Wiig's forlorn maid of honor, Annie, seeks her own destiny with a wrenchingly cockeyed passion.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 12, 2011
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- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 5, 2011
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- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 5, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Like Thor's hammer, this ersatz epic bludgeons its victims into submission. What's more, it requires them to stare at the source of their punishment through 3-D glasses.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 5, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Right makes might in Takashi Miike's excellent-and exceedingly violent-remake of a 1966 Japanese classic by Eiichi Kudo.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 28, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Go underground with magic glasses on your nose and you won't regret it.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 28, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Gets lots of mileage from a combination of high spirits, scorn for the laws of physics, readily renewable energy and an emphasis on family values-not those of the nuclear family, but of hell-raising, drag-racing outlaws who genuinely care for one another.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 28, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Morgan Spurlock has come up with a terrific idea-a movie about product placements that depends completely on product placements for its financing.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 21, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Kelly Reichardt's marvelous, minimalist epic, amounts to a master class in the power of observation.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 21, 2011
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- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 21, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Denis Villeneuve's screen adaptation of a play by the Lebanese-Canadian playwright Wajdi Mouawad tells a story-masterfully-of courage, cruelty, family mysteries and a chain of anger that can only be broken by love.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 21, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Like most other members of an excellent cast that includes James McAvoy, Kevin Kline and Tom Wilkinson, she (Robin Wright) has come under the deadening directorial hand of Robert Redford.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 14, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
I wanted to give this movie a fair shake, though I can't pretend to be an admirer of Ayn Rand's writing. But the movie, the first installment of a projected trilogy, doesn't give the book a fair shake.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 14, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
The production eventually succumbs to motion overload-so many characters darting off in so many directions that the ending turns unfocused, even flat. But watching them go by is great fun, and there are worse things than a movie that can't stop moving.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 14, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Almost everything about Cary Fukunaga's version of the Charlotte Brontë romance is understated yet transfixing, mainly-although far from exclusively-because of Mia Wasikowska's presence in the title role.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 10, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
There's nothing to be said in favor of sitting through garbage, and this movie is awash in the stuff, both figuratively and literally: One of its main locales is a vast garbage dump.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 10, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
This tedious retelling of the venerable fairy tale-"Twilight" with Oedipal kinks-takes place in a medieval village that is plagued by a werewolf, and that looks like a shtetl settled by California actors.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 10, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
I can't pretend to understand the intricacies of the Buddhist belief system that informs the surreal story, or the fantasy system in which Boonmee, embodying Thailand, recalls his nation's history and shimmering myths. Yet no effort of understanding is needed to be moved by Boonmee's descent into a limestone cave shaped like a womb.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 3, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Two movies for the price of one, though only one of them-a fragmented romance within a ponderous parable-qualifies as a bargain.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 3, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
I've made a good case for seeing Rango, and why not; an eye feast is still a feast in this lean multiplex season. Be advised, though, of the film's peculiar deficits. The narrative isn't really dramatic, despite several send-up face-offs. It's more like a succession of picturesque notions that might have flowed from DreamWorks or Pixar while their story departments were out to lunch.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 3, 2011
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- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Feb 24, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
More than anything, Of Gods and Men is a drama of character, and warm humanity.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Feb 24, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
One's confidence in factuality is weakened by a cliché-ridden narrative that reads Ma di Tau's mind during her buffalo hunt, and by incessant manipulation of the imagery-not only the use and abuse of slo-mo, but digital enhancement of colors in concert with an almost obsessive concentration on stalking and killing.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Feb 17, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Deeply felt convictions and first-rate craftsmanship-craftswomanship, in the case of the Spanish director, IcĂar BollaĂn-win out over contrivance in this parallel drama of exploitation in the New World discovered by Columbus, and in the Bolivia of 2000.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Feb 17, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
All of the nonsense piled on nonsense does provide some measure of pleasure. Unknown gets better by getting worse.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Feb 17, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
This drama, directed by Pablo Trapero, is violent, and unconcerned with easy redemption. That makes it hard to watch, though fascinating for its performances, and the bottomless corruption it portrays.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Feb 10, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
One difficulty with this film is that Doug is the least vital of the three main characters; he has mastered mildness as a second language. Another is the zone in which the film operates, equidistant between droll and dull. If that's a comfort zone for you, Cold Weather may be worth a look-see.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Feb 10, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
The main thing about Cedar Rapids is that it makes you laugh-often and out loud.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Feb 10, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
This lively little film, a comic take on Shakespeare's tragedy, is really entertaining.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Feb 10, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Lest my own reaction be misconstrued, let me explain that I didn't like a single one of these insufferable narcissists, the kid included.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Feb 3, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Sanctum is far from a good movie, just as 3-D is far from the movie industry's savior. But it certainly looks good, and watching it through those plastic glasses reopens your eyes to the promise of the third dimension.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Feb 3, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Mr. Hopkins gives the production what he was hired for. Whenever you wonder how much longer he can trade on Hannibal Lecter's special zest, the same answer comes up-a lot.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jan 27, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Mr. Statham, the specialist in English tough guys who was so affecting in "The Bank Job," has more to offer than The Mechanic has the grace to receive.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jan 27, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Ivan Reitman directed, with great verve and unflagging finesse, from a terrifically funny script by Elizabeth Meriwether.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jan 20, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Most of those hardships are familiar to movie lovers; that's a reductionist view of a serious and ambitious production, but it is, after all, a movie on a screen. (And a movie with a dreadfully clumsy ending.)- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jan 20, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
The filmmakers can't keep the strands of their clumsy plot straight, but they create brilliant images and manipulate them with blithe abandon.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jan 20, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Words of wisdom keep popping up in My Dog Tulip with gratifying regularity. They're more likely to gratify dog lovers than anyone else, but that's a large group to which I belong.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jan 15, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
The film's only unqualified success is the end title sequence-because it's genuinely stylish, because it looks like it was shot in genuine 3-D and, most of all, because it's the end.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jan 13, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Mr. Cage's knight ends up playing second banana to a digital devil. Welcome to the January dead zone.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jan 6, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
Country Strong comes to spontaneous life from time to time, despite maudlin devices and manipulative set pieces.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jan 6, 2011
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- Joe Morgenstern
The safe course is to recommend the film, which seems pitilessly long at 147 minutes, only for the transcendent quality of Javier Bardem's performance.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 30, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
Mike Leigh's latest film preserves the mystery of why another marriage has flourished over decades. That's not the stated subject of Another Year, but it's at the center of this enjoyable though insistently schematic comedy.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 30, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
Here's one vote for the most affecting, anguishing, revealing and prophetic scene of the movie year-and yes, it's all of those things at once in a powerful film that alternates between moments of earlier happiness and later pain.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 30, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
Remaking a cherished movie is not, to borrow a fancy phrase from the dialogue, malum in se - wrong in itself - but there are always losses along with the changes and gains.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 23, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
Exquisite images, poignant humor, echoes of cinema history and a sense of having watched genuine magic.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 23, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
It's easy to speculate that the loving Cleo and the frequently absent Johnny are stand-ins for Ms. Coppola and her own famous father, but Somewhere needn't be seen as a film Ă clef. The movie stands on its own terms as a slow-burning drama of life in a Hollywood purgatory where you can not only check out but leave.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 23, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
The 3-D is cheesy (2.2-D at best) the gags are gross (Gulliver urinates on an 18th-century palace to extinguish a fire) and the production abandons all hope of coherence when the hero fights a climactic battle with a giant robot out of "Transformers."- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 23, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
It's dispiriting to see how little attention the filmmakers have paid to the dramatic - read human - possibilities of the original, or how much they've been overwhelmed by technology's demands. It's as though rogue programs took over the production.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 16, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
Nicole Kidman places the bereaved heroine of Rabbit Hole in a nether land between life and not-quite-life. Her beautiful performance transcends the specifics of the script, which David Lindsay-Abaire adapted from his play of the same name.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 16, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
No need to belabor the awfulness of this film, a romantic comedy devoid of romance - instead of chemistry there's the flow of reverse magnetism - and lacking in comic timing, let alone comic content.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 16, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
The basic problem is the script, which is credited to three writers plus the director - seldom a good sign. Never mind that it's a retread of "Planes, Trains & Automobiles" minus the trains, and minus John Candy.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 15, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
Who knew that Unstoppable would be sensational? Talk about well-kept- and welcome-surprises. Tony Scott's latest thriller turns out to be pure cinema in the classic sense of the term. It's a motion picture about motion, an action symphony that gives new meaning to the notion of a one-track mind.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 14, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
It's a portrait, by turns chilling, thrilling, mysterious and terrifying, of a woman who refuses to be terrorized.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 14, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
Pathos isn't Ms. Dunham's bag. What makes her film fascinating is the delicate mood it sustains.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 12, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
No screen portrait of a king has ever been more stirring-heartbreaking at first, then stirring. That's partly due to the screenplay, which contains two of the best-written roles in recent memory, and to Mr. Hooper's superb direction.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 11, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
The film is picture-book pretty and fairly conventional, except for the 3-D, which is emerging as a convention in its own right. Still, the prettiness comes with brains, and the whole production, like those newly eye-catching models of American-made cars, bespeaks resurgent confidence.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 9, 2010
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- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 9, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
While the film handles itself well in the ring, it's brilliant in the arena of a blue-collar family that brutalizes its younger son and best hope for worldly success in the name of sustaining him.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 9, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
This woefully botched mystery-adventure-thriller-caper-romance-comedy, or whatever it was meant to be, is no fun at all.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 9, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
The result is a queasy combination of speculation and dramatic invention with the ring of half-truth, though the co-stars, Ryan Gosling and Kirsten Dunst, add as much color as they can - not much - to a monochromatic script.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 9, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
For all his years doing "E.R." and other top-line TV series, Mr. Wells hasn't yet tailored his techniques to the big screen.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 9, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
What's worse, some mysterious movie curse has turned the three once-lively adventurers into wood.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 8, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
Merits admiration as an ambitious debut feature, though the impact of its splendid cast is blunted by the awkward structure of its screenplay.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 7, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
I Love You Phillip Morris is tragedy, or something close to it, decked out in comedy's clothes.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 6, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
Aronofsky blurs the line between reality and fantasy, turning the film into a gothic horror show that is fascinating and disappointing in equal measure. What's resplendently real, though, is the beauty of Ms. Portman's performance. She makes the whole lurid tale worthwhile.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 6, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
Plays like "Norma Rae" on blood thinners. The movie is by no means bloodless; every once in a while a stirring scene comes along, though it's seldom a scene labeled as stirring by William Ivory's formulaic script and Nigel Cole's insistent direction.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 18, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
How you feel about Paul Haggis's new film may depend on your contrivance threshold.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 18, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
Say what you will about Eliot Spitzer, he's a marvelous subject for a documentary, and Alex Gibney has made a film worthy of him.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 11, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
This production is a mess for many reasons, most of them having to do with its frantic efforts to be funny.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 11, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
It's exciting, stirring, often funny, sometimes lyrical and unusually thoughtful. And, with that one egregious exception, genuinely pleasurable.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 4, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
Most of the scenes depicting the couple's domestic life are borderline-banal, and they miniaturize the political drama that plays out partly in public, partly in the shadows but almost always in a middle distance just beyond emotional reach.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 4, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
The only reason to see it is Riz Ahmed's performance as Omar, the supposed brains of the operation. Mr. Ahmed reminded me a bit of Robert Carlyle. He's dynamic, quick-tongued and intense. And much too classy for this tatty room.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 4, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
What brings Monsters down from its extremely low perch is a conspicuous lack of monstrosity.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 28, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
Once Lisbeth has her day in court, though, the buildup pays off and then some.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 28, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
This dreary drama telegraphs every punch, emotion and plot point with a dedication that would have done the old Western Union proud.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 28, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
This one is both demanding and extremely rewarding, because it's really a meditation on violence.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 21, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
You keep rooting for the child to get a new pair of lungs, but all of the beatings, betrayals and bitter ironies leave a bad taste in your head.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 21, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
Some of the movie's most stirring scenes take place during Betty Anne's prison visits, when the laughter has stopped and her innocent brother contemplates his shattered life.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 21, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
Either you buy their Vaseline-lensed visions of the hereafter, or you watch in stony silence, as I did, wondering why there's no one to care about.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 21, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
The story's literary underpinnings are hilariously represented by the denizens of a seedy writers' retreat situated near Tamara's old house, which she has come back to reclaim after her mother's death.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 20, 2010
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- Joe Morgenstern
Ms. Judd commands the screen with consistent authority, and Mr. Freeman brings expansive humor to the role of a self-styled wildcard who's still dangerous in court.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The essence of this inventive though erratic animated feature is joyous music and eye-popping motion.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Along the way Dori Berinstein's cameras catch gallant theater people doing what they've done since Sophocles was a pup: rehearsing, revising, worrying, learning, stretching, struggling to bump things up from good to wonderful and constantly, fervently hoping.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Howard, and the screenwriter, Akiva Goldsman, have used the book as nothing more than their jumping-off point for an erratic work of fiction that's part mystery thriller and part Hollywood schmaltz.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Even in the month of January, traditionally a time for movie lovers to expect the worst, this cheapo feature, directed by Shawn Levy, takes the stale cake for witlessness.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Diane Keaton has the crucial role, and she makes the most of it.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
News management is the main issue. Control Room shows how coverage is tailored to fit the audience, both by al-Jazeera and its Western counterparts.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The movie isn't all bad, and it's sure to succeed with its target audience.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
For a while Green Zone generates genuine excitement, as well as plenty of provocation--a fatuous surrogate for Ahmed Chalabi, a pervasive scorn for American planning--but then goes off its own reservation into a won't-fly zone of awkward preachments and hapless absurdities.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Spectacular for its humanity, austere beauty and heart-stopping urgency.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
It doesn't make Cars a bad picture -- the visual inventions are worth the price of admission -- but it constitutes conduct unbecoming to a maker of magic.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
This is Coupland's first screenplay, and it shows -- in a cheerfully discursive quality, but also in a reliance on gestures, contrivance and dialectic speeches rather than dramatic development and conflict.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The movie itself is grotesque, and may drive you nuts as it makes you laugh, mostly at the stupidity of the thing.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Steven Soderbergh's new film is a puzzle wrapped in a mystery inside a perversity. The puzzle is Mr. Soderbergh's approach to what might have been an intriguing experiment, rather than the off-putting one it turned out to be.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Better than a feelgood movie, it's a feelgreat movie -- genuinely clever, affecting when you least expect it to be and funny from start to finish.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
How could a major studio -- in this case 20th Century Fox -- put its name on a production with a dim-bulb, tone-deaf script that piles howler on howler? Why couldn't someone save poor Ms. Carey from herself?- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Mr. Akin's film is so full of life that it leaves you breathless.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Operates in an orbit somewhere between Oliver Sacks and Lewis Carroll. I can't remember when a movie has seemed so clever, strangely affecting and slyly funny at the very same time.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Dopamine could do with a bit more of whatever hormone governs pacing, but Mr. Decena is a director with a future. He knows how to connect with his actors.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
A bizarre conflation of chick flick and "A Christmas Carol."- Wall Street Journal
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- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The most disturbious part of Disturbia is how engaging this teenage thriller manages to be, even though it's a shameless rip-off of "Rear Window."- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
These young men and women aren't in it for the money, or the glory; they only want to save lives and heal wounds. That's another kind of glory.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
That's what is missing from The Longest Yard most egregiously. Charm has been kept on the bench.- Wall Street Journal
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- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The denizens of Judd Apatow’s Funny People have been pulled every which way to fit a misshapen concept, yet they remain painfully unfunny, and consistently off-putting.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Mr. Luchini gives one of the best performances of the year, in one of the best movies of the year.- Wall Street Journal
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- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
A fine, heartfelt film, sometimes harrowing in its violence but blessedly free of pretension or bombast, even though it aspires to -- and achieves -- the stature of a classic Western.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Cadillac Records may be a mess dramatically, but it's a wonderful mess, and not just because of the great music. The people who made it must have harbored the notion, almost subversive in a season of so many depressing films, that going out to the movies should be fun.- Wall Street Journal
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