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
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- By Critic Score
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- Joe Morgenstern
Between the two performances there's not a false note. Between the father and son there's an unbreakable bond. Though civilization has ended, love and parental duty shape the course of this fable, which is otherwise as heartwarming as a Beckett play shorn of humor.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The screenplay, by William Monahan, is simply sensational. Scenes play brilliantly. Feelings flow like molten lava. The dialogue overflows with edgy wit and acidulous arias of imprecation.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
If the movie gets by, as it surely will during the current entertainment drought, most of the credit should go to a couple of performers (Latifah/Keaton) who come from different traditions, yet share a gift for breathing life into moribund material.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Seldom has a film explored such exotica as Valentino's world -- the gowns, the galas, the villas, the private jets -- with such a sense of momentous drama behind the glitz.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Despite a synthetic optimism in the script, the movie's pervasive bleakness is relieved only by some bright performances.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Once Nacho gets the wrestling bug, though, it's all about Jack Black the irrepressible clown, and the comedy dies a slow death for lack of fresh ideas.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The kind of movie they don't make any more -- a seriously beautiful, deliberately paced drama that meanders for a while at the pace of a summer romance, then explodes with phenomenal force.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Every sport, and every sports film, must have its superman. The role is filled here by Laird Hamilton, who, we are told -- and, more astonishingly, shown -- took "the single most significant ride in surfing history." Seeing is believing.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
I can't pretend that the third episode instilled a fever in my blood, but it didn't leave me cold. For the first time in the series I felt I'd seen a real movie.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Domino is a new definition of a snuff movie. It snuffs out every vestige of feeling.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Through it all, though, Kurt Russell gives Dark Blue a bleak integrity -- funny word, given the circumstances -- that almost serves as its redemption.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The Class is clearly a microcosm of contemporary France, beset by social and economic tensions. More than that, though, it's a saga of education's struggles in many parts of the modern world. If only the film were pure fiction.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
In fairness, the movie is good for more than a few laughs, but little substance lurks beneath the antic poses and frantic shenanigans in this remake of the classic 1955 English comedy.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
A first-rate action thriller, a vivid evocation of urban warfare in Iraq, a penetrating study of heroism and a showcase for austere technique, terse writing and a trio of brilliant performances. Most of all, though, it’s an instant classic that demonstrates, in a brutally hot and dusty laboratory setting, how the drug of war hooks its victims and why they can’t kick the habit.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The most surprising thing about Alice in Wonderland is its general lack of surprise.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Basically a soulless slasher flick, and one that demeans its gifted performers.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
A deeper problem in The King Is Alive is an almost total absence of spontaneity.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The movie isn't terrible -- a few clever notions snap to life and pay off, at least modestly -- but it's dispirited and eventually dispiriting, a force-fed farce that falls far short of fascination.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Has density enough for several films. What's missing is spontaneity, and variety. And, throughout most of the narrative, velocity.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The latest in a series of stiletto-sharp social comedies by the French filmmakers Jean-Pierre Bacri and Agnès Jaoui.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Ever since the movie made a brief appearance late last year to qualify for Oscar consideration, Mr. Caine's performance has been hailed as the best of his career, and surely that's true.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
This ostensibly simple film evokes whole lives in 96 minutes, and does so with sparse dialogue.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
It's short, taut, nicely shot, well-acted, astutely directed, specific where it might have been generic, original enough to be engrossing and derivative enough to be amusing.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
I can't say I was scared, but I wasn't bored. By way of full disclosure, Warner Bros. provided free popcorn at the screening. I gobbled up every greasy morsel.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
What's new here is a severe deficit of style, or even craftsmanship, both in the action sequences and what passes for human interludes.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
I do wish Mr. Robbins's one-note co-stars had been worthy of his performance, and that some of the melodramatics hadn't been quite so slapdash.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
At least Miss Pettigrew Lives for a Day has the good grace to go wrong quickly, you don't have to sit there squirming with doubt.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Shall We Kiss? gives us storytelling as art. Emmanuel Mouret's romantic drama, in French with English subtitles, is expert, intricate, ineffably droll, ultimately provocative and entirely enchanting.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The book presented several special, perhaps even insuperable, problems for adaptation to the screen, and the movie, which was directed by Robert Benton from a screenplay by Nicholas Meyer, hasn't solved them.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
More unfortunately still, the elements of the story fit poorly, like a Tucker decked out as a sexmobile.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The main reason to see Bandits is celebrity actors riffing with each other. That's not a bad reason, though. These two actors are also skillful comedians.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Stylish, highly accomplished and, thanks to its severely restrained palette, mostly off-putting.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Never before, not even in the claustrophobic submarine epic "Das Boot," has a physical point of view so completely dictated a philosophical point of view.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Certainly trashy, but, stripped of Mr. Diesel's services and directed by John Singleton, it's a no-go Yugo in muscle-car sheet metal.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
I'm still left, though, with an unshakable sense of Up being rushed and sketchy, a collection of lovely storyboards that coalesced incompletely or not at all.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Fascinating not only for its portrait of an emergent--and endearing--superstar, but for the evolution of three teammates the young LeBron came to love, and the hard-driving coach who evolved with them.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The movie is much too long, but mostly, and sometimes very, entertaining.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
A visionary tale -- bleak but visionary all the same -- of a fragile civilizing impulse crushed by family loyalty and a lust for revenge in the vast Outback of the late 19th century.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
This is not a simple picture. It's serious, disarmingly funny at times and certainly ambitious, yet diminished by some of the traits that have made the standard Sandler characters so popular.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
You may see The Orphanage for what it is, an enjoyable contraption, without believing a bit of it.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Most of all, though, I wondered how much longer people will pay to see a walking, running, driving, diving, punning, smirking, swimming, skiing, shooting, parachuting corpse.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
A phenomenal debut feature with a terrific title, David Michôd's Animal Kingdom is both a study in Darwinian survival-in this case survival of the shrewdest-and a group portrait of ruthless predators in the underworld of Melbourne, Australia.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Instead of scintillation, the movie gives us a succession of discrete set pieces, as if the action takes place in rooms but not in the halls connecting them.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Coco is played by Audrey Tautou, and she's phenomenal--self-contained, tightly focused, sparing with her smiles, miserly with her joy, often guarded to the point of severity, yet giving off a grave radiance at every moment she's in front of the camera.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Certainly grows in its own right, into a coarse-grained summer vaudeville that could have been much smarter and sharper without losing its target audience.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
It's basically a cheerful slob job, one of those slapped-together features so often embraced by teenagers with more disposable income than discernible taste.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Goes from good to great in 90 minutes, and then it's over, except that it's really not, because this small masterwork grows even deeper and more affecting as it takes up permanent residence in your memory.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Adaptation, like "Being John Malkovich" before it, is far from a well-made film, even on its own flaky terms. But it's a brave, sometimes brilliant one, with a phantasmagoric ending, full of love and hope, that defeats prose description. Never was an adaptation more original.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
What's wrong with this picture? Nothing, as long as you don't expect more than a tossed-off goof.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The extraordinary cast includes John Travolta, Amy Irving, William Katt and Nancy Allen. Mario Tosi did the elegant cinematography.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Don't miss an opportunity to see Mad Hot Ballroom, though. It will sweep you off your feet.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The studio, like plucky Harry, passes with flying colors. The new one, directed by Mike Newell from another astute script by Mr. Kloves, is even richer and fuller, as well as dramatically darker. It's downright scary how good this movie is.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Still, Eat Pray Love preaches a sermon it doesn't practice-the need to open one's self to the world. In a pictorial sense this is exactly what Liz does; she vacuums up the transformative essence of three continents. Yet the world gets weirdly short shrift because this transcendently narcissistic movie is, in a narrative sense, almost entirely about Liz and the movie star who plays her.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
After covering much of its ground at a stylish canter, The Other Boleyn Girl finishes at a plod.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The only parts of the film that ring true -- and they sometimes ring touchingly true -- are the ones that give Mr. Allen simple human themes to work with.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
In one sense, Neil Young: Heart of Gold is just a simple concert film -- no cutaways during the music for interviews, no cameras swooping and soaring on giant booms. But simplicity in this case also means no barrier between us and the people on stage, as they sing some of the most soul-stirring pop songs I've seen performed in a very long time.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Lost in La Mancha, a documentary about a movie that never got made, is more involving -- and heartbreaking -- than many movies that do get made.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
This time the filmmakers seem to have forgotten everything they knew, and have endeared themselves only to Ms. Moore, who walked away from this ghastly fiasco with more money than most people could earn in two lifetimes.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
I can't begin to count the ways in which The Savages pleased me, but the very best of them is the way Tamara Jenkins's comedy stays tough while sneakily turning tender.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Magic suffuses this film -- performances that approach perfection, or achieve it, moments of exceptional grace as a troubled family plays out a contemporary version of a classic immigration saga, healing itself in the process.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The sparkle is what's been missing in the star's (Cage) recent performances. What's not to love in a movie that transmutes Terence's moral squalor, and the squalid state of post-Katrina New Orleans, into darkly comic gold?- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
It's not a great film, but there's something to be said for a cool-button treatment of a hot-button issue.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Jennifer Aniston brings a needed liveliness to Derailed, though not enough to go around.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Bears no resemblance to the smarmy fraud that Roberto Benigni perpetrated in "Life Is Beautiful."- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
This horror-free horror flick sent me wandering through my own memory warehouse, where, at every turn, I bumped into images from similar -- and mostly superior -- entertainments.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Certain words should be reserved for special occasions. "Abysmal" is one of them, and Georgia Rule is as special as such occasions get.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Why didn't Mr. Jordan spend more time grounding his self-enchanted script in some semblance of reality? Unlike "Splash," this film finally goes plop.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
On screen it looks crazed, but the comic energy is huge, if indiscriminate, and Mr. Sandler's performance -- think Topol doing Charles Boyer -- can be as delicate as it is gleefully vulgar or grotesque.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
A gross-out saga that sentient adults should avoid like the plague.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Pay real money to see this feeble fiasco only if you're in the mood for "Groundhog Day" without the laughs.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
An absolute stunner, a feature-length animated documentary, from Israel, in which the force of moving drawings amplifies eerily powerful accounts of war, shaky remembrance and rock-solid repression.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Isn't the best romantic comedy one might wish for, but it's more than good enough.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
A wispy, fundamentally sentimental tale about a nice girl who has to support herself by working as a phone-sex siren, Spike Lee's movie takes the better part of an hour to get started. Once it does it still can't dramatize the script's one good idea. [2 Apr 1996, p.A12]- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
It isn't a great film, or even a greatly original one. Still, it has many grace notes, and interesting oddities.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
This shabby enterprise gets so many things so wrong that it freezes your face into a cringe.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Genuinely and irresistibly inspirational.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The immensity encompasses such variety, subtlety and intimacy that you may find yourself yearning for more.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The movie's real star is the cinematographer, Elliot Davis -- his images carry more emotional freight than all the performances put together.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
A feature-length documentary, by Dayna Goldfine and Dan Geller, of absolutely breathtaking sweep and joyous energy.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Relevance can't rescue this would-be epic from the swamps of inertia, absurdity and sentimentality.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
To fill the downtime between commercials, there's a fitfully entertaining adventure.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
It's thanks to her (Leoni) that we stay tuned to Mr. Allen's comic premise long after it has gone from delightfully outrageous to off-puttingly preposterous.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
I'm still smiling as I recall Jess, the soccer star-to-be, standing behind her straitlaced mother in the kitchen and casually bouncing a head of lettuce on her knee.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The best of Up in the Air--meaning most of it--is right up there with the fresh and sophisticated comedies of Hollywood's golden age.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
A good subject has been ill-served by Ms. Greenwald's cliched script and clumsy direction.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The film as a whole measures up to Forest Whitaker's performance...one of the great performances of modern movie history.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Mr. Spielmann's film is full of surprises and, in its distinctive way, full of life.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Hotel Rwanda isn't impersonal, even though it only hints at the story's full horror. It's stunning.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
There are remakes and there are remakes. I don't want to belabor the flaws and sexual excesses of the original; its great strength was its explosive energy. Still, this one investigates the unfulfilled potential of the first one so thoroughly, and develops it so audaciously, that it qualifies as a brilliant reinvention.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Aspiring to pure action -- several very long passages are wordless -- the movie ends up teetering on the brink of self-parody.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Nothing to write home about, though nothing to stay home about either, especially if you're a dyed-in-the-polyester Powers fan.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Tetro turns out to be not one movie but, at the very least, two--a Fellini-esque (or Coppola-esque) concatenation of drama, dance and opera (with a nod to Alphonse Daudet), and a modest, appealing coming-of-age story that involves Maribel Verdú (from “Y Tu Mamá También”) as Tetro’s girlfriend.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
In case you were holding your breath, Renée Zellweger's Bridget Jones is still sweetly earnest, chronically overweight and swinging once again from lovestruck to lovelorn.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
This debut feature left me in a state of movie euphoria. Who could have guessed that such a discomfiting premise would blossom into a deadpan-hilarious and yet deeply affecting story about a singular glitch in the human condition?- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Many movies these days are too long; this one, at 90 minutes, feels too short. That's because its purpose is so sharply defined: a tight close-up, in black and white, of a single, seminal moment -- a black and white moment -- in American history, and American journalism.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Quite remarkably, though, its clear-eyed view of an unprecedented American tragedy leaves us with emotions that audiences of those earlier days would readily recognize -- love of country, bottomless grief, an appreciation of life's preciousness and fragility. A film that can do this and also teach is to be cherished. And seen. It's time.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
World Trade Center shows us many things we already know, though with impressive flair, then plunges underground for an unconvincing drama based on a multitude of facts. It's upbeat, all right, but badly off kilter.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
As the hilariously foul-mouthed, sweet-souled Dr. S, he (Wayans) slaps Marci X to life every time he's on screen.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
An exhaustive and exhausting dissection of a relationship that was never all that promising in the first place.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The idea goes only so far--roughly halfway through the 98-minute running time--in staining narrative clarity. Daybreakers finally comes up with some comments on the predatory practices of Big Pharma, but that's an awful comedown from the blood-rushing brilliance of the early scenes.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The whole enterprise rests on Mr. Crowe's armor-clad shoulders, and he carries it remarkably well.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
This hugely entertaining thriller is what's needed to banish a winter-long case of movie blues.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Before Wanted reaches the end of its wild course, the violence that's been nothing but oppressive becomes genuinely if perversely impressive; the ritual carnage becomes balletic carnage (railroad cars included); the Walter Mitty-esque hero, Wesley, played by James McAvoy becomes a formidable enforcer of summary justice, and Mr. McAvoy, most memorably the young doctor in "The Last King of Scotland," becomes a certified star.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Despite its cargo of meaning, 3-Iron feels marvelously weightless, like the lovers as they stand on a scale that the hero has fixed.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
That's not to say that this first visit to a live-action Narnia on screen isn't enjoyable, or promising for the future of what will surely be a successful franchise. But there's not a lot of humor along the way, and the epic struggle between good and evil plays out in battles more impressive than thrilling.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Both magical and consistently joyous. The director, Robert Altman, and the writer, Garrison Keillor, have, against all odds, transmuted the fatigued public radio institution into a lovely fable about mortality, fleeting fame, fondness for the past and the ineffable beauty of life in the present.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Déjà Vu is pretty dazzling, as action adventures go, even when it's wildly, almost defiantly, implausible. Movies can make us semi-believe the damnedest things.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
In this second installment of the trilogy, lithe bodies endowed with superior brains do all sorts of spectacular things, but the movie has the dead soul of a video game.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
A sudsless soap opera with human misery as a backdrop for romantic banality.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Bring Zoloft and a tank of oxygen to Closer, an airless, ultimately joyless drama of sexual politics.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The cast is entertaining, though with an asterisk, and the special effects are often spectacular, though sometimes not.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
I can't say anything nice about Flipped, a painfully clumsy adaptation of a tween novel by Wendelin Van Draanen.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Extraordinary Measures requires extraordinary tolerance for bathos, bombast and plain old unpleasantness.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The near-miracle worked by Mr. Boyle, whose exuberant style brings several saints to scruffy life, is a movie that's joyously funny and hugely inventive -- occasionally to the point of preciousness -- yet true to the spirit of the saintly little kid at its center.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
A ponderous pirate saga, 168 minutes long, with more doldrums than "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner." Those doldrums are relieved from time to time by spectacular effects.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
It's loud, raunchy, semicoherent and stuffed to the bursting point with heavy weaponry and car chases, most of which involve a red, cocaine-covered Prius that's been pressed into service as a police car. But Adam McKay's comedy of chaos, which he wrote with Chris Henchy, can also be very funny.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Pleasing moments don't add up to a feature film, even though this one strives desperately for substance and coherence by slathering its slender story with treacly family values.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Charlotte Rampling is the best reason, though far from the only one, to see Swimming Pool, a mesmerizing mystery, plus a wonderfully sensuous fantasy.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Ms. Clarkson's performance as Juliette, the fashion-writer wife of a United Nations functionary, is the film's reason for being. She makes yearning palpable. She turns mysterious silences into a language of love.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Gets to be dislikable in its glib feelgoodness. The movie's many excellent actors do too much acting with too little conviction in scenes that rush through perfunctory setups to deliver pat payoffs.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
It's really dumb, even though it starts promisingly and continues, in a self-infatuated way, to consider itself quite bright.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Shrewdly reconceived, powerfully acted and hugely entertaining.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Still, the action is ponderous too. Mr. Morel is no Kubrick, or Tarantino, just as Mr. Travolta's caricature of John Travolta is no Travolta.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
I found the film borderline bleak, and borderline predictable, at least in its resolution, yet admirable as well. Winter Passing almost always operates on the right side of the border, the full-of-life side where compelling characters live with urgency and intensity.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Most of the prime goofiness is given over to Vassili and Konig sharpshooting at each other while the battle rages. The movie's a red elephant.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Spellbinding on its own terms, a modernist fable with a madly romantic soul.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
We saw what Mr. Gordon-Levitt could do in such diverse films as "Mysterious Skin" and "Brick," and in the TV sitcom "3rd Rock From the Sun." But this performance is something else. It's unforgettable.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The world didn't need a superficial big-screen adaptation of a rich, dense book that's about, among many other things, the passage of time. The perplexity is why the film is so lifeless and remote.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Earth eloquently shows the struggle, life doing what it must to sustain life. The spectacle is stirring.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Amazingly and incessantly funny, a free-form riff on Hollywood shenanigans, the film noir genre and film in general.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The gadgetry is absolutely dazzling, the action is mostly exhilarating, the comedy is scintillating and the whole enormous enterprise, spawned by Marvel comics, throbs with dramatic energy because the man inside the shiny red robotic rig is a daring choice for an action hero, and an inspired one.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
If Lords of Dogtown accomplishes nothing else, it shows how hard writing a fiction film can be, and what a vast artistic distance can stand between a bad fiction film and the first-rate documentary that inspired it.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Every action adventure needs a memorable villain, but no movie needs the strident intensity of Mr. Dafoe, who either has no interest in, or no grasp of, the sort of charmingly malign wit that Gene Hackman brought to "Superman," or Jack Nicholson to "Batman."- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Declarative sentences are as scarce as detectable feelings in this stylish, emptyish thriller -- it's Tarantino with the vital juices left out.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
By the end, though, the production is engulfed by barely controlled frenzy -- all decor and no air, music as lo-cal ear candy, scenes as merchandise to be sold, people as two-dimensional props.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
You could make a case for this as a feature-film version of the FCC's fairness doctrine, but it feels more like a blandness doctrine, a pulling and hauling of the tone-deaf script, which is credited to Matthew Michael Carnahan, to the point of perfect vacuousness.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
A romantic comedy of grace notes and mini-epiphanies -- mini, that is, except for Ms. McDormand's Jane, who is memorable to the max.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Fur starts stylishly, and confidently, but the film dwindles down to a chamber piece in a claustrophobic chamber. Enter at your own risk.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The star of this fantasy adventure for young audiences is a charmer from the moment she is hatched (from a huge blue egg that starts to rock like a Mexican jumping bean). Her name is Saphira, she speaks with the voice of Rachel Weisz, and it doesn't matter that she's too young to breathe fire -- at first -- or that she waddles a bit on the ground, because she lives and breathes the joy of flight, which is exactly what was missing from most of Harry Potter's solos on a broom.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Recreates the Taliban era with chilling details and startling beauty, and follows its terrified heroine on a journey that no child should have to take.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Calling Joe Carnahan's movie heartless implies that this auteur of affectless anarchy might have meant to invest it with detectable human feelings, and failed. Better to call it heart-free.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
After two flat-out triumphs in a row, "All About My Mother" in 1999 and last year's breathtaking "Talk To Her," Pedro Almodóvar hasn't done it again. Yet lesser Almodóvar -- in this instance "Bad Education" -- is better than most of the movies we see.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
It's a violent roundelay that throbs with scary energy, startling characters (almost all male) and marvelous, scabrous language.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The big news in Blade II is that there's something worse than vampires, but is there something worse than Blade II?- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
If only the showmanship were equal to the scholarship. As beautiful as the film is (despite notable variations in the quality of the cinematography), it is also sluggish, underdramatized after that initial suspense, and for the most part emotionally remote.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Didn't see through it, though I had a rough sense of what was coming, and didn't have all that much fun. I did enjoy the movie's cheerful preoccupation with style.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
It's a fascinating story, but Mr. Nichols and his actors never stop reminding us how fascinating it is. With the exception of Mr. Hoffman, a master of understatement, everyone acts up a storm, yet context is lacking.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
It's a new and inspired vision of a familiar state of being -- teenage anomie amidst the crumbling wreckage of a middle-class American family. In the space of 78 minutes, Mr. Van Sant and his cinematographer, the peerless Christopher Doyle, manage to suffuse that state with haunting sadness, ubiquitous danger, pulsing power and flickers of hope.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
It's a powerful polemic in its own right, despite some maddeningly glib generalizations, a documentary that functions as a 2½-hour provocation in the ongoing debate about corporate conduct and governance.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Challenging and fascinating -- everything you didn't know you didn't know about Derrida's life and work.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Only Le Carre fans with tin ears and clouded eyes will fail to note the film's sour tone, crude performances and drab look.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
To enjoy what's enjoyable in The Fighting Temptations, you've got to take in the music and shut out the words -- not the lyrics of the wonderful songs, but the dialogue stuffed into actors' mouths.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The film makes its case graphically, to say the least, yet muddies its bloody waters with an excess of artifice and a dearth of facts.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
This beautifully strange and affecting comedy, which Agnès Jaoui directed from a screenplay she wrote with her husband, Mr. Bacri, is about men who are weak and insecure, and one woman, Agathe, played superbly by Ms. Jaoui, coming to terms with the price of being strong.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
I found Hustle & Flow hard to get into at first, if only for its dialogue. But DJay's turf turns out to be everyone's turf -- a jagged landscape of hopes, disappointments, folly and fulfillment.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
It's hard to say if Volver is a great film -- hard because every woman and girl in it is so damned endearing (the men are either impediments or bystanders to the real business of life) -- but safe to say it's right up there with Mr. Almodóvar's best.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Movies like this have been around forever too. They're a normal condition of winter's doldrums, which, in the fullness of time, will pass.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The narrative engine leaves the rails when Irving, like Hughes, plunges into paranoia (though Irving actually is the object of a high-level plot) and the style turns to the sort of intensely manipulated surrealism that Charlie Kaufman practiced, not successfully, in "Confessions of a Dangerous Mind."- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
There's nothing wrong with the structure of Heartbreakers, but David Mirkin's direction is woefully clumsy -- and the movie's tone is nasty.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Here's an entertainment to warm the heart of anyone who grew up (or failed to) on the formative joys of action movies.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
A small independent feature that's everything an independent feature -- small or big -- should be.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Yes, of course this is fairly old-fashioned entertainment, but it's really, really entertaining.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The worst movie -- all right, the worst allegedly major movie -- of our admittedly young century. More stupefying follies may come, but it's impossible to imagine how they'll beat this one for staggering idiocy, fatuousness or pretension.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
You may wonder if this screen version of the book of the same name is as unfunny and strangely mushy as it seems, but trust your instincts.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
For all its energy, fine performances and dramatic confrontations, Friday Night Lights substitutes intensity for insight, dodging the book's harsher findings like a dazzling broken-field runner.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
A saga of static set pieces and strenuously clever notions, this is a fiasco of a film if ever there was one.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Everything that was modest, soundly grounded and therefore horrifying about the 1971 rodentarama that starred Bruce Davison is now insistent, Grand-Guignol-intense and therefore shrug-offable when it isn't downright awful.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
A wickedly astute and beautiful comedy of manners-cum-murder mystery, it's too dense, and occasionally confusing, to grasp fully the first time around. How lucky, then, that it's also too much fun to see just once.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Much of Summer Hours, which was shot by the excellent Eric Gautier, feels like a Chekhov play and resonates like a Schubert quartet; it’s a work of singular loveliness.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Living in Emergency is anything but bleeding-heart propaganda.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Full of entertaining vignettes that eventually make a happy mockery, as they're meant to do, of the tragedy vs. comedy dialectic.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Heart-breakingly awful -- slow, lugubrious, and misconceived to the point of baffling amateurism.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Stepping is everything in Stomp the Yard, and, dare I say it, a stepping stone to DJ's redemption. The movie itself is redeemed -- slightly -- by its almost touching devotion to the hoary Hollywood traditions of college movies with battling frats, as well as its earnest endorsement of education.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
I watched the film in an agitated space between engrossed and aghast.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Every now and then, though, a movie comes up with a scene of surpassing stupidity, and then builds from that defining moment to a climax of perfect ineptitude. Life or Something Like It is such an achievement.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
It's formula stuff, to be sure, but full of feeling for the sweep of the past as well as for the unsettled, yearning present.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
A single seeing isn't enough to take in the eccentric marvels of The Triplets of Belleville, an animated feature by Sylvain Chomet that creates a visual language all its own.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Adam Sandler's 50 First Dates isn't just slovenly and smarmy but creepy.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
While the film itself isn't perfect, who cares about perfection in the face of abundant life, authentic screwiness and lovely surprises by the busload?- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Wild Hogs, which includes a cameo by a live revenant from "Easy Rider," gives a bad name to carpe diem, but could have been worse; the trip might have started from Bangor.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The worst would-be-big-and-Capraesque-but-actually-bloated-and-bloviating-beyond-belief movie of the year.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
A movie of minimalist moments (Molly's tiniest gestures speak volumes) and lovely, almost holy tableaux.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Mr. Franklin has always been easy with quicksilver moods -- and Mr. Washington is terrifically appealing as a fool for love who loses his cool as he learns about fear.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
A work of huge, if unobtrusive, ambition -- a vision of modern life, appropriate for sophisticated adults as well as for kids, that is both satirical and, of all things, inspirational. It's a great film about the possibility of greatness.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The celebrated percussionist Evelyn Glennie is the subject of a wonderful documentary called Touch the Sound, although calling her a percussionist is like calling Brancusi a demolitionist.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
How bad must a movie be to be good fun? How dumb to be smart? (Or, in the case of "Dumb and Dumber," how pretend-dumb to be surpassingly smart?) Whatever the case, Hot Tub Time Machine doesn't make the cut.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
As Crowhurst's situation grows desperate, the scope of the film expands -- from a good yarn to a haunting, complex tale of self-promotion, media madness, self-delusion and, finally, self-destruction.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Difficult too, and certainly problematic, but it's sometimes quite wonderful. Do see it if you're curious about one-of-a-kind films, and if you care about the ever-evolving career of one of our most gifted filmmakers.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Breaks through the conventions of its biopic form with a pair of brilliant performances and a whole lot more.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
I found this film deeply affecting as well. It has a gravity that's independent of technique, and an engaging spirit that's enhanced by flashes of comedy.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Eloquent acting -- in fits and starts -- can't make up for the movie's glib, off-putting calculations.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Less than the sum of its parts, which were problematic to begin with.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
No one comes out of Mooseport unscathed -- not Rip Torn, as the president's campaign manager, not Christine Baranski as his avaricious ex-wife. It's a democracy of mediocrity, or worse.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
This tale of an English schoolgirl's hard-won wisdom is thrilling --for the radiance of Carey Mulligan's Jenny, who's wonderfully smart and perilously tender; for the grace of Lone Scherfig's direction, and the brilliance of Nick Hornby's screenplay.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Robert De Niro collects another stupendous paycheck for starring in another piece of exploitable junk.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Five months after Sept. 11, the movie inevitably echoes those events, but in a loud and extremely cheesy way.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The kind of inspirational movie that Hollywood made about the Army, Navy and Marines during World War II. Now, with inspiration in short supply, it's the Coast Guard's turn.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Mark Andrus's script is built on soggy sandstone, and Irwin Winkler's bulldozer direction keeps unearthing toxic epiphanies. That's not to say the movie isn't occasionally moving, as well as exasperating.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
This children's entertainment-grownups beware!-is preoccupied by squishy stuff that includes mud and poop, as well as by syrup that oozes from cabinet drawers.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
As you watch Doc Paskowitz perform for Mr. Pray's camera, it's hard not to judge him harshly. His narcissism seems boundless, even when he cloaks it in self-deprecation.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Angels & Demons is a serious slog. Still, it's an odd kind of a slog that manages to keep you partially engaged, even at its most esoteric or absurd.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Nothing's alive in this trash-heap travesty of warm-weather entertainment, despite the frenetic pace.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Mr. Tykwer's hands the movie changes almost magically from drama to chase to romance. As it does so its moral weight lessens; by the end there is less than what first engaged the mind. What meets the eye, though, is unforgettable.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The film celebrates artistic freedom without preaching a sermon, and often flies when Mr. Chi is on screen. When he is on stage, spinning and leaping to the strains of magnificent music, the film soars.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
When movie lovers are looking back on the best of 2001, they will still be marveling at the beauty, intelligence and seemingly effortless mastery of Ms. Blanchett's performance.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Mr. Jarecki undercuts his own case -- not just undercuts but carpet-bombs it -- by using the same propaganda techniques he professes to abhor.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
A thoroughly serious film, full of vivid details, but also a relentlessly serious one that requires Mr. Wilson to spend a great deal of time looking disconsolate.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Whatever thematic clarity the added footage may confer is prosaic or didactic and intrusive; this stuff hit the cutting-room floor the first time around for good reason.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The show is redeemed by its co-stars, up to a point. They struggle womanfully, and sometimes successfully, to find truth in the script's silly symphony of false notes.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The Happening makes you wonder whether Mr. Shyamalan's own switch may have been flipped. How else to explain his film's befuddling infelicities, insistent banalities, shambling pace and pervasive ineptitude?- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
A misshapen semi-spectacle that seems to be simulating an epic, and getting away with it only occasionally.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The last thing I want to do is represent The Stoning of Soraya M. as entertainment, summer or otherwise. This is classic tragedy in semimodern dress that means to horrify, and does so more successfully than any film in recent memory.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Edge of Darkness was one of the most enthralling, intricate and genuinely thrilling productions in the history of the small screen. The big-screen version--directed by Martin Campbell, who did the original--offers an example of why the studios' numbers often add up, and why, at the same time, so many of today's Hollywood movies leave us cool if not downright cold.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Vincent is played masterfully by Aurelien Recoing, who gives him a sort of as-if anomie; this haunted hero is so detached that he may not realize he has no real life to be detached from.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
I wish I'd brought a pair of peas to the screening. Then I could have taken in the glorious scenery without the dumb dialogue, which is delivered in a jangle of accents that makes a mockery of ethnicity.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Since Mr. Stone is a prisoner of his penchant for pop-psychologizing on a cosmic scale, his movie has the astounding effect of absolving President Nixon of personal guilt for his crimes and misdeeds without bothering to explain what he did wrong. [21 Dec 1995, p.A12]- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
This movie needs a star performance at its center, and the director, Joe Johnston, doesn't seem to know it. His closeups dote on Mr. Mortensen's striking face, and on the actor's interesting inwardness, but he doesn't ask for, or find, the sort of zest that could turn laconic into romantic.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Adam Green's Frozen explores a tiny idea exhaustively, and I mean exhaustively.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Movies often turn on slender notions worked up to look like full-fledged ideas. Once in a while, though, a notion will be fertile to begin with, a self-renewing source of delight. That's the case with Luc Besson's Angel-A.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The drama is repetitive rather than resonant, an over-calculated, under-ventilated studio production -- even paranoid thrillers need to breathe -- whose plot machinery grinds grim and coarse.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Mr. Smith's latest film is about nothing less than life and death, sin and atonement, and it takes the soggy cake for multiple layers of sentimentality topped by indigestible grandiosity.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Seldom has grandeur struggled so mightily, and fruitlessly, with rampant goofiness.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The Clearing has been directed by a successful producer. In this case it's Pieter Jan Brugge, who brings seriousness and intelligence to his newly chosen craft, but little verve.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The director and co-writer, Niels Mueller, has also done his work well, but the film feels insubstantial at 95 minutes, even though -- or maybe because -- it bristles with borrowed ideas and unavoidable associations.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Duma is not a masterpiece, but its deficits recede into insignificance once you open yourself to the movie's mystery and visual splendor.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The comedian has had his ups and downs recently, but the film is pure up, a wonderfully genial and inclusive record -- not that the music is devoid of anger or social protest -- of a day-long, freestyle show.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The explosively combative young hero, Liam (a brilliant performance by Martin Compston), has only the illusion of a fighting chance. Yet Sweet Sixteen is powerful because of the searing honesty with which it strips Liam of his illusions.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
It's classic animation wedded to modern technology -- painted pictures that move in magical splendor.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The brute force of Terminator 3 is relieved, I'm happy to say, by Claire Danes's winning performance as John Connor's reluctant accomplice (whom the production notes describe, not inaccurately, as an "unsuspecting veterinarian"); by many of the special effects, which don't seem obsolete at all, and, yes, by the sinister trix of the Terminatrix.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
You can't take your eyes off Ms. Kidman; she has never played a role with more focused energy.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
I took it as a pretty piece of ephemera, and I must confess that I laughed a lot.- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
The daunting logistics of Superman Returns have obviously affected the director's work -- thus the hit-or-miss continuity of the narrative -- but Bryan Singer hasn't been defeated by them. While his movie can be cumbersome, it's consistently alive, and that is saying a lot when many such productions are dead in the water, on land or in the air. Also, how can you resist the charm of a fantasy in which everyone gets his news from newspapers?- Wall Street Journal
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- Joe Morgenstern
Can't lift the double curse of too little genuine action, as opposed to quixotic events, and too many fancy words.- Wall Street Journal