Joe Williams
Select another critic »For 820 reviews, this critic has graded:
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60% higher than the average critic
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4% same as the average critic
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36% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 1 point higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Joe Williams' Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 67 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Samsara | |
| Lowest review score: | The Divergent Series: Insurgent | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 597 out of 820
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Mixed: 156 out of 820
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Negative: 67 out of 820
820
movie
reviews
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- Joe Williams
An eye-opening primer in cross-species similarity. We learn that apes are violent and territorial but also that they are capable of creativity and tenderness.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 20, 2012
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- Joe Williams
Fuqua is a proficient action director, and the boxing scenes deliver plenty of whomp. But the music-saturated scenes involving the media, the law and a turncoat friend played by Curtis (“50 Cent”) Jackson are trying to appeal to fans of “Empire,” not “Raging Bull.”- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 23, 2015
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- Joe Williams
It's a credit to the cast and to the worthiness of the idea that this overlong movie works at all. But those of us who already know that racism is bad could use a little more challenge and a little less help.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Aug 9, 2011
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- Joe Williams
Although it's stuffed with subplots, gadgets and bad guys, this tinny contraption is half-hearted.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
Cars 2 is like a gorgeous sports car with a toxic tailpipe, a busted navigation system and a loud stereo that plays only commercials.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 23, 2011
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- Joe Williams
Toast is lovely to look at, evoking both the gray-green milieu of Midlands life and the sensuality of good food, but it's like a whipped topping with no base.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Oct 21, 2011
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- Joe Williams
The multiple cameras that shadow Anker and his novice partner provide unprecedented images. But they also raise unintended questions about the vanishing frontier.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
So stupid and hateful, it needs to have a stake driven through its heart before it can spawn a franchise.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Sep 18, 2014
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- Joe Williams
Mainstream moviemaking at its most proficient, with a zippy script, comfort-food casting and a breakout performance by a deserving star.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Nov 9, 2010
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- Joe Williams
Spacey evokes memories of other movies in which he's played a shark, and it's inherently fascinating to hear Aniston talking dirty and to see Farrell with a combover, but nothing in the film is genuinely provocative.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 7, 2011
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- Joe Williams
Redford is an adequate director, and he keeps things moving at a moderate pace, passing up exits to more spectacular vistas or hotter issues.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 26, 2013
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- Joe Williams
It's funny but (sorry, ladies) unrealistic that Jake continuously sneaks away from his young wife to canoodle with Jane. Baldwin is a blast, but the role requires him to indulge in indignities such as a naked webcam conversation.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 24, 2014
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- Joe Williams
The crescendo of two resonant careers makes the false notes of Unfinished Song forgivable.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 5, 2013
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- Joe Williams
The Equalizer, loosely based on the TV series of the late ’80s, is a guilty-pleasure platform for Washington’s slow-cooked, kick-butt heroism.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Sep 25, 2014
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- Joe Williams
The result is only half as hip as hoped. Yes, this Holmes is leaner and meaner, and Watson (Jude Law) is nearly his equal. But there’s still something fussy about the result, as if bobbies had broken up the party at 11:59.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
In the infidelity drama Leaving, British reserve gets overtaken by French passion, and the subsequent events have the horrific momentum of a slow-motion car crash.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Dec 17, 2010
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- Joe Williams
With its broad strokes, this invitation to an important discussion is hard to ignore, but the blood and honey on the table is an unpalatable mix.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 3, 2012
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- Joe Williams
A Knight's Tale succeeds as light entertainment if not as historical record. [11 May 2001, p.F1]- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
As predictable as a 3-and-0 pitch down the middle, but when it’s baseball season, who wants dark clouds?- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 15, 2014
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
Notwithstanding the characters’ spiritual camaraderie, Salles’ emphasizes the hard physical labor and loneliness in Sal’s story, including the jittery rigors of the writing process. When he reaches a crossroads choice between down-and-out Dean and his own rising career, Sal senses that except for the words on a typewritten scroll, his life on the road is gone, real gone.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Mar 21, 2013
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- Joe Williams
The kiddie audience will laugh a few times, but it would take an electron microscope to find an original idea or joke in this entire cartoonish movie.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
After some overly talky revelations, the cornered writer/directors are forced to shatter their absurd shell game with a final act of violence that spoils the breezy, capering mood that prevailed for much of the movie.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 26, 2015
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- Joe Williams
It's a little black dress of a movie, an elegant hint of something sensual that is ultimately denied to us.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 27, 2014
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- Joe Williams
This shrill caper is more like a blind date between fingernail and chalkboard.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
Minions is product, pure and simple. Little kids will love it, but grown-ups will feel like they’re being held hostage in a Fisher-Price test laboratory.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 9, 2015
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- Joe Williams
What it lacks is the human element. Charlie is more of a rat than a rascal, and instead of working hard to build and operate his robots, he's literally going through the motions.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Oct 7, 2011
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- Joe Williams
Although Steadman’s artwork seems like sloppy pen-and-ink caricature, there’s a method to the madness.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 29, 2014
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- Joe Williams
On a minute-to-minute level, it's an engaging mystery, the kind that rewards our participation with eye candy and adrenaline shots. But when we pull back for an overview, we see that it's flat and that pieces are missing.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 18, 2011
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Oct 24, 2010
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- Joe Williams
Its mean-spiritedness, stupidity and squandering of talent is uniquely Hollywood.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
Here most of the punishment is inflicted on the audience, which gets nailed to a cross of boredom.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
The movie is best enjoyed as a minor-key operatic, not a coherent story. While Law bellows blasphemous poetry, his director orchestrates a noirish light show with a cockeyed rhythm.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 17, 2014
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- Joe Williams
It’s amusing fluff, but from an Oscar-winning dramatist, this return to comedy is a bit of a letdown.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 25, 2013
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- Joe Williams
While Walt and El Grupo is less than a penetrating analysis, it's more than a Mickey Mouse advertisement.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
Like an acquaintance couple's baby pictures, Friends With Kids induces coos but isn't as cute as they think.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Mar 8, 2012
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 13, 2013
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
Taiwanese director Ang Lee sees the '60s through a rose-colored telephoto lens, but his sympathetic spirit extends the generous message of the hippie era like a passed joint.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
It's pure speculation on the filmmakers' part that Gaelic pagans were adorned with bones, blue mud and Mohawks, but the fire-dancing spectacle is a welcome respite from the beefcake of the journey scenes.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 11, 2011
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- Joe Williams
Hitchcock is an amusing lark, but the clumsy way it dissects the director is for the birds.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Nov 30, 2012
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- Joe Williams
There's an alliance of interesting stories fighting for dominance here, but instead of a clear victory, Hyde Park on Hudson is the site of a muddled truce.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Dec 14, 2012
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- Joe Williams
The Hefner we meet here is the likable rogue we already know.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
May be too light for vampire purists or fans of the original show, but fresh blood is just what the doctor ordered.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 10, 2012
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- Joe Williams
Ondine is dipped in whimsy and might have drifted out to sea, but it's bounded on four sides by love stories -- between a father and a daughter, a man and a mermaid, an actor and his co-star, and a director and his country.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
Savvy filmgoers will know they are getting a stale product as soon as they see the wrapper: one of those vintage muscle cars that screams “stakeout.”- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Aug 1, 2013
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- Joe Williams
There’s a lot of comic and fantasy potential here, but much of it gets squandered.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Nov 7, 2013
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- Joe Williams
Three actors portray the clumsy-but-limber Li in the years of his arduous training, when he is pulled between a teacher who's inspired by Mao and another who's inspired by bootleg videos of Mikhail Baryshnikov.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
Although the outcome is as predetermined as a prix-fixe menu, the storytelling is as smooth as goose-liver pate through a pastry nozzle.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Aug 7, 2014
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- Joe Williams
Because he's the protagonist of the movie and played by the likable Matt Damon, we keep an open mind, but Promised Land is morally ambiguous to a fault.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jan 4, 2013
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- Joe Williams
Successful in small doses, but the full regimen needed more testing.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Dec 13, 2010
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- Joe Williams
Instead of entertaining us, director Robert Redford offers us a handsome history lesson that's as dry as a hardtack biscuit.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 15, 2011
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- Joe Williams
Sticks to the syllabus of a decidedly minor movie, but its humanities faculty is first-rate.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Sep 28, 2012
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- Joe Williams
While Black is painfully effective as the dork who drops slangy kudos on his new BFF, Marsden is a revelation.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 7, 2015
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- Joe Williams
The spoof of consumerism scores some predictable points, but the tidy ending is a sell-out to the ultimate marketing machine: Hollywood.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
Home delivers like a mailman on Valentine’s Day. But when we scratch beneath the sugary surface, there’s something tart inside that’s difficult to digest.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Mar 26, 2015
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 9, 2013
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- Joe Williams
This jam-packed picture is too zippily scripted and edited to get stuck in message mode, yet the stellar cast achieves a rare harmonic convergence.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
Director Philipp Stolzl worked in the same dangerous conditions as the original climbers, and we can feel the chill and peril in our bones. It's a shame, then, that the screenwriter, unlike the camera crew and the characters, was afflicted with such timidity.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
The film is constructed from four flimsy vignettes that are artlessly overlapped.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 5, 2012
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Nov 7, 2013
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- Joe Williams
While the cast includes Luis Guzman (as a buffoonish deputy) and Johnny Knoxville (as a local gun nut), there's no sense that these are real people in a real town, and Schwarzenegger's Sheriff Owens has the weakest backstory of all.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jan 17, 2013
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- Joe Williams
Although the characters are three-dimensional, the simultaneous crises and last-act resolutions are a little too neat for a movie about the messiness of life.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Sep 19, 2013
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- Joe Williams
The simmering rivalry between Di and Fiamma, inflamed by the kind of glimpsed indiscretion that makes adolescent melodramas tick, explodes in a thriller ending that turns an observant coming-of-age story into something resembling "The Lord of the Flies."- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 12, 2011
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- Joe Williams
The worst thing about this multifaceted failure is the two-time Oscar winner behind the camera. Where there ought to be a director, there’s nothing but an empty chair.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 19, 2014
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- Joe Williams
This movie may be sickly sweet, but it's harmless; and as a handcrafted antidote to a toxic toy story like "G.I.Joe," Paper Heart has healing properties.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
The questions raised by Oblivion aren’t especially deep, but the movie does answer a puzzler that has troubled humankind for generations: Can Tom Cruise build a concept so big that he himself can’t lift it?- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 18, 2013
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- Joe Williams
Draft Day isn’t quite a comedy, but it’s got a similar kind of flow that makes it as easily consumable as lite beer.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 10, 2014
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- Joe Williams
Here's a riddle: What's Alice in Wonderland without wonder? It's a beloved character landing in the rubble of wrong-headed revisionism.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
The Big Year puts the focus on people who aren't inherently interesting - or funny.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Oct 14, 2011
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- Joe Williams
Michael as a character is defined almost solely by his helplessness and gratitude. He's as lovable as a lost puppy, but a more perceptive movie than The Blind Side would have let us see him from another angle.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 8, 2011
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- Joe Williams
What the movie crucially lacks is the clockwork complications that produce a payoff.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Mar 13, 2014
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- Joe Williams
He might be guilty of showboating, but De Niro's knockout performance is a declaration that the star of "Raging Bull" isn't ready to hang up his gloves.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Mar 16, 2012
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- Joe Williams
A lot of care went into crafting the handsome production but not enough into making the handsome hero come alive.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
Some of the themes and the hallucinatory special effects are reminiscent of Cronenberg’s “Naked Lunch,” and there are cheeky allusions to “Dawn of the Dead” and even “Eyes Wide Shut,” but a viewer with an open mind might say that this midnight-style movie is more enjoyable than any of them.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 7, 2013
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 8, 2012
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- Joe Williams
An utter shipwreck, a would-be adventure with meager rations of magic and a listless crew.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Dec 10, 2010
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- Joe Williams
Easy to watch but hard to pin down, like a creature with eight legs going in different directions.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 1, 2014
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- Joe Williams
The moral lesson that this movie feeds us smells fishy - because it's not in the book. But the backbone story about a guy who inherits some penguins is enough to tickle the kids.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 16, 2011
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- Joe Williams
Like black coffee that's flung in our face, The Killer Inside Me silences the question of whether it's good or bad. But for darn sure, it's strong.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 27, 2014
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- Joe Williams
Stays too low to the ground to become an animated classic, but if there's a fairer midwinter's tale, wherefore art thou?- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 11, 2011
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- Joe Williams
It's zippy, and the movie version has both a computerized sheen and handcrafted detailing. Because the details are cribbed from classics, parents can enjoy this 'toon as much as their kids.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
A buddy comedy disguised as a political thriller. It’s full of malarkey, but as a campaign of shock and awe, it’s hard to resist.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 27, 2013
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- Joe Williams
It's deliberately difficult to untangle the crossed allegiances of the people that Kelly interviews, and it's melodramatic that he tries to smuggle Ming and a surrendered assassin onto a plane bound for the United States. But dramatizing such a complex situation is a necessary evil.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
What makes Love Is Strange so special is that the challenges the couple face are more mundane than menacing.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Sep 18, 2014
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- Joe Williams
With its seductive images and smart dialogue, The City of Your Final Destination has the setting and circumstances for a ripe family drama or a literary love story, yet it never awakens from its siesta.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
There aren't enough surprises to justify the title, but The Switch produces sufficient light for a late-summer diversion.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
For real balance, the debate needs fiercely leftist truth-tellers in tri-corner hats, calling themselves the Organic Chai Tea Party.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 19, 2014
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- Joe Williams
The Women on the 6th Floor shouldn't work, but this efficient flick whisks away our cynicism.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Nov 6, 2011
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- Joe Williams
A handsome movie with a handsome leading man. Christian Bale is widely considered the finest actor of his generation. Yet here he’s adrift in the bulrushes. This might be the most indifferent performance of Bale’s career.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Dec 11, 2014
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- Joe Williams
It's not a good film, but viewed from a cockeyed angle, it's a great guilty pleasure, and director Bill Condon is in on the joke.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Nov 15, 2012
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- Joe Williams
The most rewarding way to watch Water for Elephants is to focus on the sideshow of costumes and craftsmanship, because the romance in the center ring smells like trained animals going through the motions.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 22, 2011
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- Joe Williams
It’s admirable, but Monuments Men just poses on a porous foundation like a statue.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 6, 2014
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 23, 2013
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- Joe Williams
The action is contained within a coherent dramatic structure and the puzzle-box paranoia of spy-agency protocol.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 10, 2012
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- Joe Williams
Comedies about privileged princesses and unsuitable suitors come in all colors, but Peeples is only palatable on a double bill with pink antacid.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 9, 2013
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- Joe Williams
With Labor Day, director Jason Reitman turns a Nicholas Sparks scenario into an Alfred Hitchcock creep-show.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jan 30, 2014
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- Joe Williams
Within the bloodshot-eye perspective of their other stoner comedies, it’s bluntly funny and ever-so-slightly sweet.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Dec 27, 2014
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- Joe Williams
A faithful remake of RoboCop would be timely. Instead, the producers of this new version have retreated back to the lab, concocting a creaky hybrid of “Frankenstein” and “Call of Duty.”- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 12, 2014
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- Joe Williams
The derivative script and skimpy effects don’t convey either the power or the problems of being a young witch.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 13, 2013
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- Joe Williams
Starved of sufficient comedy or drama, The Age of Adaline is a pipsqueak.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 23, 2015
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- Joe Williams
96 Minutes is a mere introduction to Sociology 101, but it's brisk enough to rustle the reading list and keep the conversation alive.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 27, 2012
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- Joe Williams
If you can’t guess that the whole thing ends with a big dance number, you’ve been snoozing in your samosas.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Mar 5, 2015
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- Joe Williams
The documentary Live from New York is a separate thing. It doesn’t try to be wild and crazy, and it can’t be comprehensive. Like a land shark, it’s an uncomfortable hybrid that bites off more than it can chew.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 11, 2015
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- Joe Williams
The verdict on Snitch is that Johnson has attempted a career detour on a street marked Do Not Enter.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 21, 2013
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- Joe Williams
You can tell by some loose threads and hurried workmanship that God’s Pocket is a knock-off, but it’s so stuffed with value, it’s an offer you can’t refuse.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 15, 2014
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- Joe Williams
The Woman in Gold works, largely because of the odd-couple chemistry between Mirren and Reynolds. It just goes to show that broad strokes are appealing when they’re in the right frame.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 9, 2015
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- Joe Williams
It's smart, heartfelt, handsome and just mutated enough to sustain interest in a specialized subject.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Nov 2, 2013
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- Joe Williams
As a testament to traditions that are usually kept hidden from Hollywood, Holy Rollers is a mitzvah. But as a thriller, it's bubkes.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
While it's both too crude and too commercial to be mistaken for journalism, the good news is that the headliners deliver.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
The fiery finale is good enough to leave the legions smiling. But when a movie is expected to lift an entire industry, "good enough" shouldn't be good enough.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 3, 2012
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Oct 5, 2013
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- Joe Williams
The libido and bloodlust flowing from the pint-size Page is the funniest thing in the movie, but elsewhere, the mix of the goofy and ghastly is hard to digest.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 15, 2011
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 8, 2011
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- Joe Williams
While the movie sometimes seems like faux Fincher, the symbiotic acting, artful imagery and punchline ending turn True Story into credible entertainment.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 16, 2015
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- Joe Williams
The best thing you could say about Happy Feet Two is that it doesn't have any product placements or potty jokes. Other than that, this charmless Antarctic cartoon is what it looks like when hell freezes over.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Nov 17, 2011
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- Joe Williams
Crowe is effectively restrained in his acting, but in his debut as a director, he overdoes the manipulative music and the pretty images from cinematographer Andrew Lesnie.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 23, 2015
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- Joe Williams
Closed Circuit is not a tense thriller about the new era of surveillance — it's a tepid thriller about the old notion that no leader can be trusted.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Aug 27, 2013
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- Joe Williams
Hit and Run isn't a catastrophe, but it leaves loose ends and a more adventurous map by the side of the winding road.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Aug 21, 2012
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- Joe Williams
This broadside against sharia law lacks the finesse of an import, but it's effectively melodramatic.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
Letters to Juliet has about half as much Shakespearean content as "Shakes the Clown" and even less sincerity.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
Prince of Persia is woven of recycled fibers, but by the slipping standards of summertime entertainment, it's a magic carpet ride.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 27, 2012
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- Joe Williams
This true story fills a needed niche, spotlighting women's basketball in the era before Title IX promoted equal treatment.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Oct 21, 2011
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- Joe Williams
A high-concept comedy that peddles some slapstick laughs and life lessons but little insight.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 3, 2013
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- Joe Williams
Back when it was planned as an African-American "Ocean's Eleven," this project might have been edgy, but the script has been whitewashed into a generic caper comedy with pretensions of timeliness.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Nov 3, 2011
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- Joe Williams
This long, ludicrous soap opera is also a mighty spectacle, a new standard in disengaged destruction.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
Spurlock teases the baby sitter contingent with a brief scene where a scientist discusses the neuro-chemical appeal of pop music, but thereafter the film is aimed squarely at face-value fans of the Pre-Fab Five.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Aug 29, 2013
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- Joe Williams
It's a triumph of streamlined design, but TRON: Legacy never enters the fourth dimension where it's worth a plugged nickel to humans.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Dec 16, 2010
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- Joe Williams
A solid sci-fi/horror hybrid, but this iceman doesn't deliver enough to chew on.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Oct 14, 2011
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- Joe Williams
This thriller about the game-changing website Wikileaks is as smart about cyberspace as “The Social Network,” but there’s a glitch when it shifts the focus from felonious leaders to the misdemeanors of the man who exposed them.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Oct 17, 2013
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- Joe Williams
There's some laughing gas left in the cupboard, but this series may require an infusion of new blood to last until "American Funeral."- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 5, 2012
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- Joe Williams
Neither a comprehensive guide nor consistently good, but because the theme is romance, most of these small bites of the Big Apple are easy to digest.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
Pine and the always-watchable Banks make the best of a bad screenplay, but People Like Us gives us nothing that we can relate to.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 29, 2012
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- Joe Williams
Terminator Salvation is a tale told idiotically, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
With this unfunny fourth installment, the "Ice Age" franchise has skidded so far into kiddie land that adults who tread there risk extinction.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 12, 2012
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- Joe Williams
The movie looks like it was made for broadcast television, the place where words and pictures go to die.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 5, 2014
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- Joe Williams
As much Fosse as Fellini. It’s a shadow of a shadow, refracted through a fun-house mirror. For all the noise and color, it feels like an exercise and not a natural expression.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
30 Minutes or Less could have been a guilty pleasure, but the crusty caper is half baked.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Aug 11, 2011
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- Joe Williams
Even by the sloppy, soulless standards of hit man movies, The Mechanic is a mess.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jan 28, 2011
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- Joe Williams
Despite playing with a stacked deck, The Judge is guilty of exceeding expectations.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Oct 9, 2014
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- Joe Williams
As in the first "Sherlock Holmes" movie, there are plenty of pratfalls and bare-knuckle brawls but no sleuthing for us to share.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Dec 15, 2011
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- Joe Williams
One man’s mirth is another man’s poison, this critic can only consult his belly as the barometer. On a gut level, Ted 2 is a funny film.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 25, 2015
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- Joe Williams
In trying to lift this lame schtick, De Niro, Douglas, Freeman and Kline are stand-up guys, but Last Vegas is a case of erectile dysfunction.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Oct 31, 2013
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- Joe Williams
In its cross-cultural breadth, director Ridley Scott’s smart and violent film merits comparison to Steven Soderbergh’s “Traffic,” but the dialogue delivered by the stellar cast is incomparably McCarthy’s.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Oct 24, 2013
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- Joe Williams
Without the kindling of character development, Planes: Fire and Rescue is no smoldering success, but if Disney’s flight plan is to share Pixar’s airspace, it’s getting warmer.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 17, 2014
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- Joe Williams
This true-ish story adds a romantic subplot to the prosecution of Japanese war criminals by American general Douglas MacArthur, but neither the love nor the war are completely baked.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Mar 7, 2013
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jan 31, 2013
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- Joe Williams
Imagine if the "Godfather" saga had been told from the point of view of Talia Shire's character. The perspective of a don's daughter could produce a compelling movie, but The Sicilian Girl isn't it.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
Whether true or a hoax, I'm Still Here represents real risk-taking that I can only applaud.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
The CGI effects are a familiar sort and so is the heroic-quest motif. The principal virtue in this modest entertainment is that the young characters act like real teenagers.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
Red 2 is not just a bad movie, it’s bad karma. And the target audience of adult moviegoers who respect the names in its once-vital cast have a bull’s-eye on their collective cranium.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 18, 2013
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- Joe Williams
The special effects remain good, but the jokes are creaky, the sentiments are forced and the pop-historical lessons are obligatory.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Dec 18, 2014
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- Joe Williams
You ought to have a movie that's both smart and sexy. But Jennifer's Body is neither. Most damning of all, it's not scary.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 23, 2011
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- Joe Williams
It's a worn-out show-business fairy tale piggybacking on a nonexistent trend.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Dec 9, 2010
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- Joe Williams
If you haven't seen a wasting disease in real life, you might think Restless is romantic. If you have, you might diagnose it as terminally cute.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Oct 21, 2011
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- Joe Williams
In its last act, Max is reminiscent of Rin Tin Tin and Lassie serials, with a frosting of freshly minted multiculturalism.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 25, 2015
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- Joe Williams
Written, directed and acted by Hollywood pros, Heaven Is For Real is a polished little movie with a hopeful message, but when it literalizes the divine mysteries, it opens the door to a Doubting Thomas.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 15, 2014
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- Joe Williams
The only edge in the movie is represented by Russell Brand, who actually lived the lifestyle, but he's muzzled by a bad Liverpool accent and a gay subplot that's as insincere as the swaggering anthems by fatuous hacks like Foreigner, Starship and Journey.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 14, 2012
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- Joe Williams
Kids are too smart to fall for it, and any grown-up who thinks that The Odd Life of Timothy Green is funny or heartwarming has a head made out of cabbage.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Aug 14, 2012
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- Joe Williams
What's finest about Everybody's Fine is to watch a good fella groping hopefully toward old age.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
What enriches the recipe is that no one is quite as cagey as they seem. Colin is officially thuggish, but he's a blinkered romantic. Archie is a mama's boy, Meredith is gay, Mal is impotent, and Peanut wears dentures.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 20, 2014
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- Joe Williams
It's classic sitcom shtick, and The Dilemma is a painful reminder that director Ron Howard was trained in television.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jan 14, 2011
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- Joe Williams
While it claims to be exported from New Jersey, The Oranges is peddling an alien motto: When life hands you lemons, fuhgeddaboudit.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Oct 5, 2012
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- Joe Williams
Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close is supposed to promote healing, but as they say in New York: close, but no cigar.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jan 20, 2012
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- Joe Williams
For anyone expecting the second coming of Clouseau, Johnny English Reborn is a karmic catastrophe.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Oct 21, 2011
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- Joe Williams
Alba is a showstopper in a fringed cowgirl outfit. But nine years wiser, we know that pretty things aren’t always worth killing for.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Aug 21, 2014
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- Joe Williams
The settings and supporting roles suggest that If I Stay started out as someone’s passion project, but the final product only requires its star to sleepwalk through buckets of schlock.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Aug 21, 2014
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- Joe Williams
The movie version of Fifty Shades is better than the book. It's still awful, but when a filmmaker starts with stupid source material, he's handcuffed.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 12, 2015
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- Joe Williams
As phony as a poodle-skirted waitress at a mall diner, yet it's as sweet as a malt. A vanilla one.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
In telling a true story about hapless thugs who are the embodiment of Michael Bay fans, the director has made the most fiendishly enjoyable movie of his career.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 25, 2013
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- Joe Williams
A textured and unexpectedly entertaining drama about the human toll when racial assumptions crash.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jan 29, 2015
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- Joe Williams
There's nothing cinematic about this turgid tearjerker except the slumming presence of movie star Harrison Ford.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
The few Jewish characters are cartoonishly evil, but even the Palestinians are sketchily dramatized or, in the case of a terrorist, clumsily legitimized.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 15, 2011
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- Joe Williams
On Stranger Tides has the fishy smell of something washed ashore and sold as new. But this shipwreck isn't worth a wooden doubloon.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 20, 2011
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- Joe Williams
A movie with no surprises at all, a streamlined chase flick that is running on the fumes from recycled fuel.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Oct 4, 2012
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- Joe Williams
Like the middle-aged dads in this flaccid fiasco, Hall Pass is a decade behind the curve of what's happening.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 25, 2011
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- Joe Williams
Initially, the puzzle structure and a pair of Oscar-winning actresses distract us from the dark vacuum at the center of this enterprise, but when it implodes, it doesn't reverberate.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
For the rest of his life, Spencer Susser can brag to the other ditch diggers that he persuaded two of the best young actors in Hollywood to star in one of the worst movies ever made.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 12, 2011
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- Joe Williams
If your inner amphibian craves a wave, you have the right kind of brain to appreciate the elemental story and scenic backdrops. But advanced mammals might smell something fishy.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Oct 26, 2012
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- Joe Williams
It’s too cheesy and predictable to be a real miracle, but by Vegas standards, it’s a winner.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Mar 14, 2013
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- Joe Williams
The more suitably antic Robert Downey Jr. and Johnny Depp were considered for the part before Franco wandered into the picture with his stoner grin.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Mar 8, 2013
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- Joe Williams
’Round these parts, when a movie promises a million laughs but only delivers a dozen chuckles, that’s a hanging offense.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 29, 2014
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- Joe Williams
It requires a mild suspension of disbelief to accept that slacker David would suddenly intervene in so many lives, pretending to be a good Samaritan.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Nov 21, 2013
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- Joe Williams
We're the Millers is nothing but stems and seeds, with less buzz than a bag of oregano.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Aug 6, 2013
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- Joe Williams
It's clear that Phillips is betting heavily on funnymen Jeong and Galifianakis to hide his creative bankruptcy.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 25, 2011
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- Joe Williams
Although the ratio of comedy to drama becomes increasingly weighted toward tearjerking, few of the emotional moments are realistic or effective.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Sep 18, 2014
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
Mainstream audiences will note that Hudson has never been better and that the tearjerking taps into something universal. For audiences seeking shelter from superhero carnage, Wish I Was Here is a lovely place to be.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 17, 2014
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- Joe Williams
The richly constructed first hour is so superior to any feat of sci-fi speculation since "Minority Report" that the bland aftertaste of the chase finale is quickly forgotten.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Aug 2, 2012
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- Joe Williams
Reilly is very funny as the sarcastic mentor, and director Paul Weitz strikes a loopy tone in the scenes at the freak encampment.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
If you'd pay to see a film called "Hotel Rwanda: Maniac Manager," you might be receptive to this mixed-message movie, but skeptics should keep one eye on the exit.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Oct 7, 2011
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- Joe Williams
Has a welcome message of personal growth and racial tolerance. And it's ably made, with evocative Memphis locations. But in the final sermon, it proffers some plot twists that are supposed to be miraculous but may strike a doubting Thomas as lame.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 25, 2011
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- Joe Williams
Once we've quickly digested the fortune-cookie message that modern women are as bound by obligations as their grandmothers were, all we can savor is the scenery.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 28, 2011
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- Joe Williams
Yet so much about The Lovely Bones is so skillfully orchestrated, from the chillingly methodical villainy to the thrillingly paced manhunt, we can accept that we're in the hands of a higher power.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
There is such a thing as an infinitely bad movie, and this is it.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Mar 19, 2015
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- Joe Williams
While the cast is filled with award winners, writer-director Daniel Barnz is a dunce who can't construct an argument without employing flimsy logic and cardboard characters.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Sep 28, 2012
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- Joe Williams
An ambitious movie, but ultimately there’s too much “artificial” and not enough “intelligence.”- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 17, 2014
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- Joe Williams
As a critic who complains about painless and brainless action movies, I hoist a glass of mead to the men and maidens of Ironclad.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 8, 2011
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- Joe Williams
Congratulations, visitor. You have been randomly selected to beta test an entertainment-software product called “The Internship 2.0.”- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 6, 2013
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- Joe Williams
One small step for action movies, one giant leap into the abyss of mindlessness.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 28, 2011
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 21, 2012
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- Joe Williams
Hits most of the markers of a flashback film but not enough of the beats.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Mar 4, 2011
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- Joe Williams
Anyone old enough to have read Jules Verne or seen the way his work was successfully adapted in the past will suffer worse than the kids in the audience who just came to laugh.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 9, 2012
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- Joe Williams
War of the Buttons is handsomely crafted and it's touting tolerance, but as long as we open the gates to the Trojan horse of historical simplification, there's a danger that Hollywood could attack us with "The Goonies Go to the Gulag." Be vigilant!- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Nov 1, 2012
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- Joe Williams
As long as Hollywood keeps hitting us over the head with empty spectacles like G.I. Joe: Retaliation, regular Joes will be too numb to fight back.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Mar 29, 2013
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- Joe Williams
When a celebrity chef like Rodriguez is just going through the motions, we can smell that the grindhouse fad is way past its expiration date. It's time to put a fork in it.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Oct 11, 2013
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- Joe Williams
Proficient director Peter Berg ("Hancock") keeps the noise so deafening we can't think about how preposterous it all is.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 17, 2012
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- Joe Williams
He's not in Mark Wahlberg's league, and 21 Jump Street isn't quite as funny as "The Other Guys," but by lampooning himself here, Tatum has bought himself a grace period to grow in.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Mar 15, 2012
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- Joe Williams
Dare we say it? Even the acting is atrocious, with pop-eyed Pacino chewing the scenery like a geezer gumming his oatmeal.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jan 31, 2013
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- Joe Williams
Kevin Hart hits the vicinity of humor with a few of his drive-by wisecracks, but the movie itself has nothing under the hood.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jan 16, 2014
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- Joe Williams
To stand out in a crowded marketplace, a sequel can’t just kick ass — it has to blow minds.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Aug 15, 2013
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- Joe Williams
Strikes an uneasy compromise between liberty and justice. It marches at an efficient pace, but there's too much collateral damage to believability.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Mar 18, 2011
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- Joe Williams
This is an extremely gory flick, with autopsy scenes to complement Schwarzenegger’s usual shoot-first sensibilities. After 30 years, it’s pointless to complain about the collateral damage in his movies, but here Schwarzenegger is taking vigilante justice to dark new levels that can only be reached via plot holes big enough for a Hummer.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Mar 27, 2014
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 1, 2011
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- Joe Williams
Shakespeare’s play evokes the poetry of undying love, but this Romeo and Juliet is prosaic.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Oct 10, 2013
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- Joe Williams
Act of Valor is a competently directed action movie, but forcing the audience to wear such narrow goggles is a dereliction of duty.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 23, 2012
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- Joe Williams
Further proof that likable actors have to take an occasional sick day.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Nov 25, 2014
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- Joe Williams
Loud, incoherent and unfunny, Here Comes the Boom is the sound of American culture imploding.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Oct 12, 2012
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- Joe Williams
a horrific misstep in the branding of Robert Pattinson. The erstwhile teen vampire, who daringly portrayed gay surrealist Salvador Dalí in last year's "Little Ashes," lurches backward into a pile of romantic rubbish.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
This documentary reconstructing the life of the ultimate cult author is like a three-act thriller, and the character at the center of the story is a mute man of mystery. Salinger would have recognized the irony, even as he hated the film for invading his privacy.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Sep 19, 2013
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- Joe Williams
The setting and offbeat tone may remind some viewers of another recent comedy, but whereas “The Descendants” was a substantive meal, Aloha is a pu pu platter.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 28, 2015
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- Joe Williams
Channing Tatum is a lot of things, but he’s not a stoic Superman like the role he plays here, which is made more laughable by prosthetic pointy ears.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 5, 2015
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- Joe Williams
As in the mindless Man on a Ledge, the hero is never really in danger, we're the ones who are trapped.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jan 27, 2012
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- Joe Williams
The clichéd script doesn't develop the secondary characters or the critical theme of the mutants' alienation.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
The spectacular collapse of Green Lantern is bound to be blamed on Reynolds, but the villainy has its origins in an injustice league of TV-trained screenwriters and tin-hearted studio suits.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 16, 2011
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- Joe Williams
I still think it's a funny movie, but given its genes, it's a bit of a slacker.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Aug 4, 2011
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- Joe Williams
Offers about as much flava as a Dr. Pepper commercial and about as much drama as a “Sesame Street” rerun.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
In the new Clash of the Titans, the effects are computerized, the hero is questionable and, instead of an owl, we get a turkey.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
The best excuse for watching The Gunman is Penn. His first mainstream leading role in a decade is worthy of comparisons to Matt Damon in the “Bourne” movies; yet it’s also disappointingly shorn of the humor and humanity of which this great actor is capable.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Mar 19, 2015
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- Joe Williams
It's almost offensive that Danny Glover is relegated to playing the mysterious old confidante who haunts the same fishing hole as Cal. By the time Glover's character delivers the homily, Legendary is pinned to the mat.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
McCarthy and first-time director Falcone must have assumed that tossing a drunk and a dunce into a Cadillac would negate the need for a motive or even a script.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 1, 2014
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- Joe Williams
Despite the oddly literate title, Vincent Wants to Sea never deviates from the predictable bonding-through-misadventure script, and it has little to teach us about the nature and treatment of the traveler's respective maladies.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Aug 19, 2011
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- Joe Williams
This movie, which was made by an animation studio in Spain, isn't trying to make a social statement; it speaks in the international language of lightweight comedy.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
On that vicarious-pleasure level, the movie version delivers. Yet for anyone with a sense of irony or social justice, it’s also frustratingly soft around the edges, with no real sense of the drugs-and-violence underside of show business or the spiritual cost of failure.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 3, 2015
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- Joe Williams
This mash-up movie is like a greatest-hits collection for obsessive collectors. On its own terms, Terminator Genisys makes virtually no sense.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 30, 2015
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- Joe Williams
Although The November Man shows us some attractive people in motion, the cumulative effect leaves us neither shaken nor stirred.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Aug 26, 2014
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- Joe Williams
If cranking out this kind of mediocre, head-scratching blarney is the only option available to Hollywood veterans like Reiner, we have some friendly advice: Open a haberdashery.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 24, 2014
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- Joe Williams
There’s a good movie to be made about the alienating effects of modern technology. In 2013, a little-seen indie called “Disconnect,” starring Jason Bateman, came closer than this well-intentioned failure, which has virtually no heart, humor, sense of place or central point of view. In trying to be a big, important movie, Men, Women & Children is about none of the above.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Oct 16, 2014
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- Joe Williams
Although the choice of interviewees skews the movie in a New Age-y direction, there's less pseudoscience and more heart than in the kindred documentary "What the Bleep Do We Know?"- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 29, 2011
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- Joe Williams
The fatal flaw of this screenwriting term paper is that Cooper's character is a boring jerk we're supposed to regard as a nice guy who made an honest mistake.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Sep 6, 2012
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- Joe Williams
The actress and the aviatrix are a match made in heaven, but surrounding the soaring performance is a movie that's mostly earthbound.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
Although it’s superficially grungy, this true story isn’t much more substantive than something that star Vanessa Hudgens might have made for the Disney Channel and considerably less shocking than her career gambit in “Spring Breakers.”- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jan 23, 2014
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- Joe Williams
Considerably better looking than its predecessor, but it's spewing the same old gibberish.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Mar 29, 2012
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- Joe Williams
Except for the dynamite finale, The Long Ranger feels like a long, slow ride to the dump, to the dump, to the dump, dump, dump.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 2, 2013
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- Joe Williams
It's more like a shelved episode of "Touched by An Angel." The sappy script is a disservice to the naturally effervescent Efron, whose character is so mopey he makes Robert Pattinson seem like a song-and-dance man.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Dec 19, 2013
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- Joe Williams
Annabelle is so lazily coat-tailing on Roman Polanski, they should have called it “Rosemary’s Barbie.”- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Oct 2, 2014
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- Joe Williams
Compared to most teen comedies these days, Fun Size is almost touchingly tame.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Oct 25, 2012
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- Joe Williams
This dead-on-arrival ’toon is some of the worst p.r. for rodents since bubonic plague hit medieval Europe.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jan 16, 2014
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- Joe Williams
It's hard to hate a movie that escorts us to such lovely locales, but instead of marking the territory as her own, Madonna has directed a potentially provocative story like a virgin.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Mar 16, 2012
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 8, 2011
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- Joe Williams
Yet notwithstanding its derivative dolefulness and PG-13 timidity, The Art of Getting By is smart and sweet enough to become the favorite film of some Midwestern adolescent who wrongly believes he's already seen the dark side.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 16, 2011
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- Joe Williams
Based on an acclaimed novel by Ron Rash, Serena is like a towering tale that’s been fed into a woodchipper.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Mar 26, 2015
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- Joe Williams
If this movie wanders into your neighborhood, the only watch that will hold your attention is the timepiece on your wrist.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 26, 2012
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- Joe Williams
It's a pleasure to watch Ryan resurrect her trademark persona, a mix of perkiness and pique, as she flounces around the room. But it's shaded with a middle-age desperation that's half real and half chick-flick shtick.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
The cheap, indifferent, teen-alien thriller I Am Number Four delivers none of the spectacle of a competent sci-fi film, none of the emotion of an effective teen romance and none of the giggles of a kitsch fiasco.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 18, 2011
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Aug 5, 2011
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- Joe Williams
Suffering through this felonious farce could only inspire a prison riot.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 7, 2013
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Sep 29, 2011
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- Joe Williams
Ultimately it's sunk by the hole in the middle: Paul Campbell (presidential aide Billy on "Battlestar Galactica") who substitutes smarm for charm as the archetypal player who gets played.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
Here, Dan Aykroyd mimics the original voice, but the three-dimensional CGI isn't loose and lively enough to compensate for the unimaginative story.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Dec 17, 2010
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- Joe Williams
A vigilante/torture-porn potpourri, is particularly toxic because it's scented with phony importance.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
Technically proficient enough to keep us intrigued; but we shouldn't have to Google a movie to know if we were scared.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
This gravely serious drama is as insular as a tomb with Muzak. It takes a particularly heavy hand to make us numb to the abduction of two children, but that's the effect of the wall-to-wall music and earnestly dour performances.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
This amateurish action flick is so lacking in personality or punch, it ought to be titled "V for Video Store Discount Bin."- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
What might have seemed like a lively idea -- an all-star roundelay about love in Los Angeles -- is as fossilized as the wooly mammoths in the La Brea Tar Pits.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
Hallstrom (“Chocolat”) makes the mishmash palatable, and romance mainstay Duhamel provides some sweet-and-salty charm, but there’s not much they can do with Sparks’ canned dialogue and Hough’s undercooked acting.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 13, 2013
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- Joe Williams
There Be Dragons is tethered to the earth by a tangled plot, wooden acting and the heavy burden of healing old wounds.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 6, 2011
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 30, 2013
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- Joe Williams
Because the affable Wahlberg is making the sales pitch, you could kid yourself that this is just a high-tech vacuum cleaner, built to siphon loose change like popcorn. But our failure to understand the terrifying significance of the “Transformers” series is why we're in the age of extinction.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 26, 2014
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- Joe Williams
If Repo Men could have sustained its ghoulish humor, it might have been a guilty pleasure.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
Even by the standards of light entertainment, This Means War is meaningless.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 16, 2012
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- Joe Williams
In matters of personal taste, there is no right or wrong, so if erasing brain cells is your idea of a good time, That's My Boy could be your cup of turpentine.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 15, 2012
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- Joe Williams
This world is divided between the makers and the takers, and after just a few minutes of Red Dawn, you'll realize there's not much more you can take.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Nov 20, 2012
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- Joe Williams
The Road has the signposts of an important film, but it lacks the diversions of an inviting trip.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
As usual for the comedies he produces, Sandler keeps pooping in the sandbox, and he expects the audience to give him a cookie for it. It’s a shame that he forces Barrymore to get soiled too.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 22, 2014
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- Joe Williams
While the plot is as flimsy as a hooker's halter top, it's buoyed by two actors with attitude and timing.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Oct 18, 2012
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- Joe Williams
The good news is that Ed Helms doesn’t wake up in a Tijuana brothel with an amputated leg and a donkey in the room. The bad news is that you’ll wish he had.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 22, 2013
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- Joe Williams
More benevolent than Bill Maher's snarky flick "Religulous" and a heaven-sent affirmation of our common humanity.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
"Beverly Hills Chihuahua," we owe you an apology. Among talking-dog movies, Marmaduke is the runt of the litter.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
Between the carefully trained animals and their computer-animated mouths, the movie doesn't have much room for realism; but the 3-D effects are surprisingly effective, and this playful pic earns a pat on the head.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- Joe Williams
Nobody escapes unscathed, except, of course, for Sandler, who co-wrote the infantile screenplay.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 13, 2014
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- Joe Williams
Such a sorrowful attempt to resurrect the marketing magic of "Twilight" that it ought to be titled "Career Eclipse."- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Mar 11, 2011
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- Joe Williams
Sparks would be delighted if this movie were compared to his other story about reunited lovers, but compared to “The Notebook,” The Best of Me is the coffee-stained outline of a sales pitch for sleeping pills.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Oct 16, 2014
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- Joe Williams
Weaver is a natural as the imperious Ramona, but the rest of the cast is flattened by the script, particularly White, who is just window-dressing in a movie that could use the rude humor she's displayed elsewhere.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
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