Jonathan Rosenbaum
Select another critic »For 1,935 reviews, this critic has graded:
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42% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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56% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 4.1 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Jonathan Rosenbaum's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 62 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Breathless | |
| Lowest review score: | Bad Boys | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 961 out of 1935
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Mixed: 744 out of 1935
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Negative: 230 out of 1935
1935
movie
reviews
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
One of the earliest of the Disney true-life adventures (1953), this won an Academy Award for best documentary, in spite (or because) of its celebrated use of square-dance music with footage of scorpions.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The film persuades us to think long and hard about what prison means, and Lee has shaped it like a poem that builds into an epic lament, especially in a beautiful and tragic closing that risks absurdity to achieve the sublime.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
It has been called both detached and loaded, unfairly slanted as well as balanced by some of its critics--I can only testify that I found the film both troubling and absorbing over two separate viewings.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Quentin Tarantino's lively and show-offy tribute to Asian martial-arts flicks, bloody anime, and spaghetti westerns he soaked up as a teenager is even more gory and adolescent than its models, which explains both the fun and the unpleasantness of this globe-trotting romp.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Gordon Hessler directed this 1974 British feature, whose main raison d'etre is some first-rate “Dynamation” special effects from Ray Harryhausen, including a ship's figurehead that springs to life and Sinbad crossing swords with a six-armed statue.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The main novelty of this conventional, slight, but charming youth picture is that it's English and therefore more class-conscious than most American equivalents.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Clint Eastwood resurrects the star system, the Hollywood love story, and middle-aged romance, but despite all his craft and sincerity, he and screenwriter Richard LaGravenese can't quite turn Robert James Waller's cardboard best-seller into flesh and bone.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The movie overextends a patch of folk mysticism toward the end and then adds a silly whimsical coda, but as a comedy of errors it's often hilarious.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
As disposable fun, this is every bit as enjoyable and as forgettable as most Hollywood equivalents.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
First-rate agitprop about the ruthlessness of South African apartheid, directed by Euzhan Palcy (Sugar Cane Alley) and adapted from Andre Brink's novel by Palcy and Colin Welland. The relentless plot is effectively set up and expertly pursued, and Hugh Masekela makes some striking contributions to Dave Grusin's musical score.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Infamous has dramaturgical strengths, whether or not it gets the facts right. Jones's performance as Capote tends to be delivered in a monotone, yet thanks to Craig all of their scenes together are potently realized.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Despite the usual amounts of gore, this is a surprisingly tender, ambiguous, and sexy film in which Romero's penchant for social satire is for once restricted to local and modest proportions.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Fairly predictable, but the two leads' impressively nuanced performances make it less so, and Berri makes skillful use of both actors.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
More good-natured than Michael Moore, these guys score by raising the issue of just how much their amateur antics exaggerate the neocon principles of the WTO.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Wears its art, as well as its heart, on its sleeve -- so much so that I feel guilty for not liking it more.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
An odd, atmospheric 1947 thriller with a San Francisco setting, adapted by writer-director Delmer Daves from a David Goodis novel and starring Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
A pleasant, inoffensive, and (quite properly) mindless diversion.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Writer-director Alan Rudolph has been remaking his own romantic comedy-dramas for so long now that even when he gives us two couples instead of one or substitutes Montreal for Seattle--both of which he does here--the film still comes out feeling the same.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Grade-school violence freaks may find a few kicks here, but even they may have trouble coping with this ugly movie’s ending about eight separate times.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Set on the French Riviera, the movie has the kind of plot that cries out for the stylish treatment that a Billy Wilder could bring to it; without it, the various twists seem needlessly spun out and implausible, although Martin is allowed to show off his brand of very physical comedy to some advantage, and Miles Goodman contributes a pleasant score.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The sheer neurotic intensity of Techine's characters--characteristically stretching both backward and forward in time, as in a Faulkner novel--holds one throughout, as does Techine's masterful direction and many of the other performances.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
What eventually emerges isn't nearly as achieved or convincing as the neighborhood portrait, but even when it ultimately overwhelms the characters, it's full of juice, humor, and nuance.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
After all the free advertising Ray Bradbury had given Walt Disney over the years, the Disney studio finally returned the compliment in 1983 by letting him write his own adaptation of his fantasy novel and giving his script a polished, respectful treatment, including tasteful direction by Jack Clayton.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The three neighborhood kids who venture inside this toothy trap are wittily conceived (as are other characters, like a goth babysitter), but though the overall conception suggests Hayao Miyazaki's "Howl's Moving Castle," the frenetic pacing seems as American as an apple pie in your face.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Even when his work is at its most contrived, which it certainly is here, writer-director Ron Shelton is the best purveyor of jock humor around.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Karen McCullah Lutz and Kirsten Smith's script has its witty moments, and some of the secondary characters--such as Larry Miller as the father and Daryl "Chill" Mitchell as an irritable teacher--are every bit as quirky as the leads.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
None of the characters ever rises beyond the level of his or her generic functions, and by the end the overall emptiness of the conception becomes fully apparent.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Despite the sudsy, overlit look of William A. Fraker's cinematography and Downey's varying success with sight gags, this is still a lot of fun. An additional kicker is provided by the picture's crazed doublethink morality, which implies that incest is OK as long as you've got amnesia.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This has its moments, but don't expect many fresh insights.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
I can't yet decide whether the film works or not, but it certainly held me for its full two hours.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
It's Tykwer's most assured picture to date, and like much of Kieslowski's best work it qualifies simultaneously as engrossing narrative and philosophical parable.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
What comes across is a fascinating fetishist delirium, where memories of remote war movies get recycled into something that's alternately creepy and beautiful.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Reasonably lifelike and nicely acted (Keener is especially good), but otherwise nothing special, this is an OK light comedy.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Especially interesting are the complex relations among the residents of the ghetto.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The engineering of the special effects is fairly impressive, and the sight of so many objects and creatures being buffeted about carries a certain apocalyptic splendor.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The ideological reasons for the heroine's project aren't divulged, so I guess we're supposed to be fascinated simply by the fanaticism of her will, doubts and all. I wasn't.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
I didn't feel I was wasting my time but I started looking at my watch long before it was over.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Classic genre movies may be a scarce commodity, but this gutsy crime thriller and female buddy movie qualifies in spades.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
In her third feature Nicole Holofcener leapfrogs between characters with wit and grace, gathering them in various clusters and adroitly showing how money or the lack thereof really does inflect their lives and interactions.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
While it's easy to imagine an infinite number of bad courtroom comedies based on this scenario, this 1992 movie turns out to be wonderful—broad and low character comedy that's solidly imagined and beautifully played.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This scary black-and-white SF effort from 1953 was shot in 3-D, and on occasion it’s shown that way.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Purports to give us the lowdown on Manhattan celebrity life, yet it depends so consistently on plot contrivances and other movies (The King of Comedy, Midnight Cowboy, even All About Eve) that it often comes across as wannabe muckraking.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
What ties all this material together is the force and humor of Moretti’s eclectic personality.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Danny Glover, as hard-rock reliable as Spencer Tracy in his prime, plays onetime pianist Tyrone "Pine Top" Purvis.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
It's beautifully cast and filmed (cinematography by the matchless Robby Muller) and often quite moving, despite the fact that most of the characters are never developed much beyond mythic or parodic prototypes.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The main interest here is the juxtaposing of Gosling's Method acting with Hopkins's more classical style, a spectacle even more mesmerizing than the settings.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Satisfying in a purely infantile way, and the familiarity of everything is oddly comforting. In terms of action, moreover, this makes "The Matrix Reloaded" look like a clodhopper's jamboree.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
There's more soul to be found in any Kong close-up than in this film's overplayed reactions, which are used to instruct us what we should be feeling at any given moment. This is never boring, but I can't recall another Spielberg film that left me with a more hollow feeling.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This is the least well-known of the madcap satirical comedies of Jim Abrahams and David and Jerry Zucker (Airplane!, The Naked Gun), and by all counts the weirdest. But the richness of its ideas makes it my favorite. The plot combines the rock musical with the spy thriller (not to mention assorted other genres), and the comic invention is fairly constant.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Too much of the story is unfelt and mechanical—the grimly humorless Tracy (Beatty) is never very convincing as an object of desire or admiration.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The script by producer David Franzoni, John Logan, and William Nicholson is serviceable but not exactly inspired.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
My Sex Life, for all its virtues, was a bit conventional and bland, but The Sentinel is genuinely crazy and a lot more interesting, mainly because it has a meatier subject: the end of the cold war and what this means to French yuppies.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Fresh, character driven, often funny, and unfashionably upbeat (as well as offbeat).- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Like most of Lee’s work, this movie bites off a lot more than it can possibly chew, and it bristles with the worst kind of New York provincialism.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This David Cronenberg masterpiece (1991) breaks every rule in adapting a literary classic - maybe On Naked Lunch would be a more accurate title - but justifies every transgression with its artistry and audacity.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Professionally made, quite entertaining, and disappointingly hollow.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This thriller is a lot better than you might expect--especially for a Kevin Costner vehicle.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Gross-out horror comedy is my least favorite genre, but this movie's so skillful I have to take my hat off to it.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
A rather tedious kidnapping movie by writer-director Lisa Krueger, despite the novelty of the kidnappers (Scarlett Johansson and Aleksa Palladino) being sisters, one of whom is pregnant, and the kidnapped person being a nurse (Mary Kay Place) needed to assist with the childbirth.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The weaknesses of the film are twofold: an inability to convey any convincing grasp of the present beyond the family's present (and ongoing) situation, and a belt-and-suspenders heavyhandedness that has always been Lumet's biggest stumbling block in driving home a dramatic climax.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Klapisch self-consciously throws fistfuls of quirky film style at us, as if he were Francois Truffaut, but his characters are still interesting and his party sequences are especially good.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
By the end the story is more satisfying than you might expect.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
While billed as a romance and a thriller, the film strictly qualifies as neither, appealing to our prurience, guilt, hatred, and dread.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This cagey and compelling 2004 documentary looks at the world of wine, but it's actually a nuanced, provocative piece of journalism about globalization and its discontents.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The film asks us to embrace not only the death of beauty but the beauty of death.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
If you treasure Gilliam at his best and take his ideas seriously, you'll probably be infuriated as well as delighted.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The only problem I was faced with was trying to understand what exactly it was that I enjoyed, and how this movie differed from the play I'd read.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
There are plenty of laughs whenever Moore wants to twist the knife, but the bottom line is that he respects and trusts his fellow Americans a lot more than Bush does.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
If your idea of a good time is watching a lot of stupid, unpleasant people insult and brutalize one another, this is right up your alley.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
It seems more like an illustration of his (Kaufman) script than a full-fledged movie, proving how much he needs a Spike Jonze or a Michel Gondry to realize his surrealistic conceits.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Apart from McVay and Lea DeLaria (as a lesbian who befriends and advises the hero), the actors mainly come across as movie types rather than characters, and despite the obvious sincerity of the project, deja vu seems written into the conception.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Carl Reiner comedy whose technical execution (Michael Chapman's cinematography is masterful) is better than its script.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Recklessly biting off more than they can possibly chew, the filmmakers still give us a memorable apocalyptic view of 1987 England.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Either you like this movie a lot or you run screaming for the exit; I find it rough going.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Among the many offhand virtues of Julie Delpy's first feature as solo writer-director is the fact that she's as attentive to French foibles as American ones.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
A film about a junkie rock musician, played by Michael Pitt at his most narcissistic, doing nothing in particular for the better part of 97 minutes isn't my idea of either a good time or a serious endeavor.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Powerfully illustrates what globalization has been doing to underdeveloped countries around the world.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The performances are strong without calling attention to themselves--which is more than I can say for the occasionally hackneyed use of rock on the sound track.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The film raises many interesting questions about our own responses, but it may finally be too open-ended for its own good.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Despite the flashback structure, this is a film in which mood matters more than plot, while the hero's heroic stature steadily shrinks.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Some of Roth's cars become characters, their voices furnished by Ann-Margret, Jay Leno, Brian Wilson, Matt Groening, Tom Wolfe, and others. The pace never flags, and the enthusiasm is infectious.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The mirthlessly sadistic gags tend to target people in wheelchairs or hospital beds and betray a mild if all-encompassing disgust for the source material and the audience.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This movie really belongs to Baye and Lopez, both so skillful that they almost make you forget that what you're watching is close to a stunt--one oddly evocative of Graham Greene in its doomed romanticism but at times also minimalist to a fault.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
If you can figure out all the intricate and incestuous family backstory of this domestic melodrama by Claude Chabrol, there's a certain amount to appreciate, though most of this is more cerebral than emotional.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Storper is pretty good at playing with and against certain western cliches in his treatment of the good guys (including Annette Bening's character), but resorts to pure cliche when it comes to the villians (e.g., Gambon and James Russo).- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The result is grimly "effective," but it made me long for Hollywood junk.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Writer-director Richard Brooks had a flair for sensationalism, and his adaptation of Evan Hunter's novel is loads of fun as a consequence, but don't expect much analysis or insight.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Given all the filmed memory pieces about screaming, violent Italian-American families in New York boroughs, I'm not especially thrilled by even a well-made example.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Directors Keith Fulton and Louis Pepe (Lost in La Mancha) are too preoccupied with hip cleverness to have much else on their minds, and the music is so-so.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
If your taste runs in this direction, you're bound to be amused.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The plot of this 1995 romantic comedy, directed by Jon Turteltaub ("Cool Runnings") from a script by Daniel G. Sullivan and Fredric Lebow, is pretty stupid throughout, and the filmmakers show no compunction in shaking its silliness in your face, but the film's casual warmth may make you tolerate some of the shortcomings.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
What emerges is a powerhouse thriller full of surprises, original touches, and rare political lucidity, including an impressive performance by Jeff Goldblum as a Jewish yuppie gangster.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
If you care whom she winds up with or why, you probably caught more of the TV references than I did.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
It's soon apparent that a closer model for this charming romantic comedy is "Bell, Book and Candle." The direction by Marc Forster (Monster's Ball) is so fluffy it's easy to drift along and ignore the logical lapses.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
I enjoyed quite a bit of it, in large part because of the energy and charisma of Jennifer Lopez in the title role.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
What this movie has going for itself in spite of its cloying pleas for indulgence is a playful and interesting narrative structure that precludes much development and comes to the fore only toward the end. The whole thing may drive you batty, but as with "Rushmore," the melancholy aftertaste lingers.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The filmmakers aren't exactly cruel, but they focus on compulsion rather than passion, which by implication tends to tarnish the more intellectual and scholarly members of the breed.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Apart from a certain implausibility in the film's initial premise, this is a first-rate entertainment that captures Le Carre's jaundiced if morally sensitive vision with a great deal of care and feeling.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Missing is most of Tarkovsky's contemplative and mystical poetry (which is why it's 90 minutes shorter), and added are some unfortunate Hollywood-style designer flashbacks -- The story is still strong and haunting, but I'd recommend seeing this, if at all, only after the Tarkovsky.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
What Brooks manages to do with them as they struggle mightily to connect with one another is funny, painful, beautiful, and basically truthful--a triumph for everyone involved.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This exercise in mainstream masochism, macho posturing, and designer-grunge fascism is borderline ridiculous. But it also happens to be David Fincher's richest movie.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Dumont is much more confident when he sticks to the title town and the young woman the men left behind; his habit of alternating close shots with extreme long shots and his singularly unsentimental way of showing sex are as distinctive as ever.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The unvarnished quality of some of the acting limits this effort in spots, but the quirky originality of the story, characters, and filmmaking keeps one alert and curious.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This interminable, poorly constructed drug thriller by writer-director Frank E. Flowers sat on the shelf for two years before winning a release.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
John Zorn wrote the percussive score, which is compelling throughout.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Despite the title, this is less a soccer documentary than a corporate hagiography along the lines of "The Last Mogul" or "The Kid Stays in the Picture"; its real hero isn't Cosmos star Pele (who wisely declined to be interviewed), but Steve Ross, CEO of Warner Communications, which owned the team.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This erotically charged drama may not be quite as great as the original, but it's an amazing and beautiful work just the same.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
It's gripping and provocative, making effective use of Charles Berling and the music of Sonic Youth, though I wish it were a little less indebted to David Cronenberg's "Videodrome."- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
2005 French feature by the highly uneven Francois Ozon (Swimming Pool, Under the Sand), who doesn't have much to say about his subject that's fresh.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
On a mindless exploitation level this is pretty good, but on other levels it seems to make promises that it fails to deliver on; none of the deaths carries any moral weight, and the climactic special-effects free-for-all tends to drown out all other interests.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The results are pretty obnoxious and only intermittently funny, but certainly characteristic.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
I don't question the legitimacy of celebrating the courage of these individuals and their families, and I can even tolerate the hokey nostalgia for World War II epics. But I'm troubled that the filmmakers have elided so much else of what happened on that day, as if it were some kind of neutral backdrop.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Anticapitalist propaganda that persuades and uplifts is in short supply these days.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
It's a devastating portrait of self-deceiving obsession, and a notable improvement on Viertel's book in terms of economy and focus.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The inventive performances -- keep this story interesting in spite of its puritanical framework.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The double crosses are so intricate and the cynicism so enveloping that it becomes increasingly difficult to care about the characters- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
George Roy Hill's very professional, very entertaining 1972 adaptation of Kurt Vonnegut's time-traveling novel, with the pseudoprofundities nicely tucked into place as peppy one-liners and narrative tricks.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
While competent, it's too routine to generate much interest. Leigh is effective as always, but has little to chew on; Patric has even less.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
There are still plenty of laughs and some inventiveness along the way...although some of the gags and contrived plot moves stumble over their own cuteness.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
It opens promisingly, with a fine sense of the disorientation of a monolingual tourist abroad and in trouble. But instead of things building from there, the energy gradually dissipates, and by the time the mystery is solved, it's difficult to care very much.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Despite a certain originality, the movie isn't really a success, not only because the plot bites off more than it can chew (the film doesn't conclude; it simply stops), but also because, like its hero, it has some trouble distinguishing between petty irritations and cataclysmic traumas.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Apart from some softening of the extreme violence (through manipulations on the sound track) and some fancy intercutting, this is every bit as unpleasant as Olmos can make it, but occasionally edifying as well.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The film runs for 134 minutes, but Lumet keeps things moving with his sharp eye (and ear) for New York detail and his escalating sense of liberal outrage.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Ken Marino, who plays the silliest of the diggers, wrote the script, and when it isn't straining after elegiac moments, it's fresh and unpredictable.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Pivots on the characters' racism and xenophobia, playing tricks with our own biases and ultimately justifying an extravagant array of coincidences and surprises.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Neither character is especially well defined, particularly if one discounts the strident overdefinition of their respective milieus, but as an old-fashioned Hollywood romance in which anything can happen, this is reasonably watchable, and at times mildly funny.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Narrative continuity and momentum have never been among Hopper's strong points, and this time the choppiness of the storytelling diffuses the dramatic impact without offering a shapely mosaic effect (as in [his] previous films) to compensate for it.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The script by Nicholas St. John (who would become a Ferrara regular) not only anticipates American Psycho but offers a fascinating look at New York's bohemian art scene circa 1979.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
If you like Ryan and Robbins as much as I do, you'll probably feel indulgent and even charmed in spots; if you don't, you'll probably run screaming out of the theater.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The movie overall may be routine, but Donner gives it some spark and polish.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The script runs out of ideas long before he does, and the film doesn't build dramatically as much as it could. But it's an impressive debut, full of bizarre imagination and visual flair—a must for fans of offbeat horror films.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
I'm a sucker for fantasies, but this one is so undistinguished and arbitrary that it left few traces in my consciousness, apart from the impression that the filmmakers resort to cruelty whenever they run out of ideas, which is often.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Unfortunately, after the well-honed psychological melodrama of its first half, this wanders off into the metaphysical territory of Ingmar Bergman's "Persona" (a much better film).- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
DuBowski focuses on religious faith as much as sexual preference, which may be the most interesting aspect of the film.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
So lackluster both as an homage and as a story in its own right that I was already forgetting it before it was over.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Four writers worked on the script, and they all should hang their heads in shame.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
I wasn't bored at all by this, and Angela Bassett's action-hero charisma often blew me away, but fans of Bigelow at her best (e.g., Near Dark) may be put off by the movie's calculation, which doesn't always fit with its intellectual pretensions.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Hysterically hyperbolic and unpleasant if still witty dissection of family traumas.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Behind all the macho bluster stand (or, it would appear, sit) director Tony Scott, writers Michael Schiffer and Richard P. Henrick, and producers Don Simpson and Jerry Bruckheimer, trying (and failing) to get all the characters to behave like grown-ups.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Its paper-thin characters turned into caricatures by egregious hamming, this 1996 Japanese comedy-drama about shy ballroom dancers is sentimental goo and downright interminable.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The three parts add up to a rather lumpy narrative, and the characters are perceived through a kind of affectionate recollection that tends to idealize them, but they're so beautifully realized that they linger like cherished friends.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Diverting, energetic, and even reasonably satisfying, so long as you aren't looking for a real musical to take its place.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Even a good performance by Tom Hanks and noble intentions can't save this mainstream look at AIDS from the worst effects of nervous committeethink.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Lane’s conceit is handled with such unassuming sweetness and charm that it never comes across as presumptuous or pretentious, and the simple authority of his conclusion–which uses dialogue in order to point out what most of us refuse to hear when we’re walking down the street–is unimpeachable.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Apart from a few sleek shots involving boats or helicopters, the action eventually devolves into a standard war-movie shootout.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Most features composed of sketches by different filmmakers are wildly uneven. This one is consistently mediocre or slightly better, albeit pleasant and watchable. It helps that none of the episodes runs longer than five or six minutes.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Marion Cotillard tears up all the available scenery in this overblown, achronological biopic of French pop singer Edith Piaf.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This runs 192 minutes and has very few jokes, but there are many references to Citizen Kane to put us in the right frame of mind.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
More entertaining than "The Spanish Prisoner" -- it also turns out to be more conventional and predictable.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
I could have done without all the pushy tactics of this romantic comedy.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This 1970 film is John Cassavetes's most irritating, full of the male braggadocio and bluster that mar even some of his best work. But it's impossible to dismiss or shake off entirely, and the performances—as is usually the case in his work—are potent.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Unfortunately, the relationship between Cobb and Stump as depicted here isn't very substantial or interesting, and the fictionalized Stump's offscreen narration feels rather concocted; what the movie has to say about Cobb mainly leaks through around the edges of this cumbersome apparatus.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
May have more heart than head, but it's also just as interesting for what it leaves out of its romantic story as for what it retains.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This delightful 1989 pop-fantasy musical about Valley girls and extraterrestrials gives the talented English director Julien Temple an opportunity to show his stuff in an all-American context. The results are less ambitious and dazzling than his Absolute Beginners, but loads of fun nevertheless: his satirical yet affectionate view of southern California glitz is full of grace and energy.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The plot turns on the complicated lives of the daughters, who are played by Sabine Azema, Emmanuelle Beart, and Charlotte Gainsbourg; they, Fabian, and Rich are the main reasons for seeing this picture.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Documentary filmmaker Chuck Workman has a slick and entertaining way of stitching together old footage and practically no analytical or historical insight at all.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
There are no characters to care about or remember afterward - just a lot of flashy technique involving decor, some glib allegorical flourishes, and the obligatory studied film-school weirdness.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Alan Rudolph's 1994 feature about writer Dorothy Parker and the famous Algonquin wits she hung out with in the 20s certainly has its pleasures, but someone should tell Rudolph that, for all his skill and charm, period movies aren't really his forte.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Frightening, funny, profound, and mysterious.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Like "Mystery Train" and "Night on Earth," this feature by Jim Jarmusch is a short story collection, but it's funnier and more formally adventurous than either--also ultimately greater than the sum of its parts.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The pacing never flags and the story—let’s face it—is well-nigh unbeatable.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
It's also quite energetic -- there isn't a boring shot anywhere, and writer-director Schnabel is clearly enjoying himself as he plays with expressionist sound, neo-Eisensteinian edits, and all sorts of other filmic ideas.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This picture is packed with fun, but it doesn't really go anywhere, and elements that summon up memories of The Hustler don't work in its favor.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
For my money, this version doesn't match the Siegel film, though it's a lot scarier and more memorable than Kaufman's low-key, New Agey version.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The English cast is fun; but this is more spectacle than story, and the Steve Kloves script deserves better handling than director Chris Columbus -- plus any number of studio deliberators -- gave it.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
What's most conspicuously missing is the kind of background information needed to assess many of Eichmann's statements.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This video profile by Deb Ellis and Denis Mueller allows his significance to register and his charisma to shine despite a pedestrian approach that's especially awkward in its use of archival footage.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Fortunately, the script by Ronald Bass and Barry Morrow isn't half bad, and both Barry Levinson's direction and the performances are agreeably restrained.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Slapdash plot, paper-thin characters, misogynist undertones, and mechanical crosscutting are all soft-core standbys.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The actors are brilliant, the dialogue extremely clever, and the direction assured. But by the end I couldn't have cared less about any of the characters.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Peter Bogdanovich used Gazzara in a similar part in Saint Jack (1979), but as good as that film is, it doesn't catch the exquisite warmth and delicacy of feeling of Cassavetes's doom-ridden comedy-drama.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Leftist propaganda of a very high order, powerful and intelligent even when the film registers in spots as naive or dated.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Searing drama that uses the police procedural to explore the moral and psychological devastation of the Iraq war for U.S. soldiers (and, incidentally, for Iraqi citizens).- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
They've hit a fatal snag. The feature they selected happens to be a pretty good one -- certainly much better than Mystery Science Theater 3000: The Movie by just about any criterion one could think of.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Howard Hawks’s only attempt at a wide-screen blockbuster (1955), much disparaged afterward by Hawks and many others, is actually fairly awesome if you can get beyond the clunky dialogue (some of it written by William Faulkner, as well as Harry Kurnitz) and the campy evilness of the Joan Collins character.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Conceived like a sports movie, this delivers passion, nuance, and historical insight along with unnecessary hokum.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Writer-director Marcos Bernstein is more interested in how a melodramatic imagination can distort reality, a concept he explores with charm and tact.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
If you're looking to be romantically captivated, this movie just might do the job.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The talentless but irrepressibly trendy Luc Besson ("Subway," "The Big Blue") dreamed up this idiotic story that seems vaguely inspired by Kubrick's (not Anthony Burgess's) "A Clockwork Orange."- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The transition from stage to screen may be bumpy in spots, but this movie is much funnier than Bogdanovich's What's Up, Doc?, and the long-take shooting style is executed with fluidity and precision.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Conceptual to a fault, writer-director Todd Haynes (Poison, Safe) realizes one of his oldest and most cherished projects -- a celebration of the glam-rock era and the bisexuality it turned into an opulent circus -- with wit, glitter, and energy, but with such a scant sense of character or period that it leaves one feeling relatively empty as soon as it's over.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Confounds expectations -- about slasher stories and about film narrative in general, in part by being closer to a collection of interconnected short stories than to a novel.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
A film that might make you cry watching it is just as likely to give you the creeps thinking about it afterward, which is as it should be.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Awkward storytelling and spotty exposition reduce it to a string of rude shocks--not even the eventual denouement provides a lucid enough account of where this is all coming from.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
A feeble sequel to The Naked Gun that's about one and a half rungs down from its predecessor and a good four or five down from Airplane!- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
With Hurd Hatfield memorably playing the title part, the 1945 film also includes juicy performances by George Sanders, Angela Lansbury, and Donna Reed. Deeper and creepier (that is to say, better) than anything turned out by Merchant-Ivory, this is both very Hollywood and very serious in a manner calculated to confound the “Hey, it’s only a movie!” crowd.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The character and plot contrivances are dumber than ever, but this is basically vaudeville, not narrative, and the thrills keep coming.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Waters builds to a didactic message that he underlines with Disney-esque dream dust (in various colors), as if to protect his sincerity with the disclaimer of self-mockery.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Before the movie collapses into the utopian nonsense that seems obligatory to this subgenre, a surprising amount of sensitivity and satirical insight emerges from Eleanor Bergstein's script and Emile Ardolino's direction.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The results may seem overripe and dated in spots, but she coaxes a fine performance out of Nolte, and the other actors (herself included) acquit themselves honorably.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
One reason why it disappoints is that it comes across as more the work of screenwriter Laura Jones ("An Angel at My Table," "The Portrait of a Lady," "A Thousand Acres"), who's lately been specializing in high-minded literary adaptations, than of Armstrong, who tends to do better and more nuanced work with more intimate and domestic material (e.g., "The Last Days of Chez Nous," "Little Women").- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
A bewildering mixture of fairly accomplished storytelling (I enjoyed it more than Dead Poets Society, which isn't saying a lot), awkward contrivances in the script, and lies in the overall conception so egregious they undercut any pretensions the film might have to social seriousness.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Almost no plot here and even less character--just a lot of pretexts for S-M imagery, Catholic decor, gobs of gore, and the usual designer schizophrenia.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
There are times when this leisurely movie seems so much in love with its own virtue and nobility that there's not much room left for the spectator.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Carax has a wonderful cinematic eye and a personal feeling for editing rhythms, and his sense of overripeness and excess virtually defines him.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Fortunately almost everyone acquits himself coolly and admirably; only costars Greg Kinnear and Marcia Gay Harden ham it up.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Assisted by Gordon Willis's cinematography and John Houseman's performance as the demanding Professor Kingsfield, director James Bridges manages to do a fair job with the semihokey material.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
An irrefutable triumph of engineering, and it entertained and intrigued me through two separate viewings...though as a view of the human condition it's astonishingly and depressingly meager.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The setup of this comedy by director-cowriter Peter Hedges (Pieces of April) and some subsequent twists may be contrived, and the laughs aren't very plentiful, but much of the behavior seems real, and the able cast makes the most of it.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
What's lacking here is a sustained thematic focus -- at least five people worked on the script, including Mann, which may account for the absence of a clear through line -- though the spectacle and characters keep one absorbed.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Cuesta directs the lead actors with such feeling that their misery seems authentic.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Despite very good performances, this is anemic and uninspired filmmaking: shapeless as narrative, awkward and drifting as drama.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
More enjoyable for its unending string of outrages than for its capacity to make coherent sense.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This may be the most Brechtian thing Lumet has ever done -- a movie that repeatedly challenges us to think and then to reconsider.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Under the thoughtful direction of Guy Ferland - what emerges is solid and affecting.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
One can already tell that this film is on to something special during the opening credits.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Tim Burton's new movie is gorgeous -- shot by shot it may be the most impressive thing he's done.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Polanski honors the craft of classical storytelling and never flinches from the book's melodramatic extremes in portraying the horrors of poverty.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Harris’s refusal to treat her heroine strictly as role model or bad example makes her portrait a lot livelier and less predictable—as well as more confusing—than the standard genre exercises most reviewers seem to prefer. What’s exciting about this movie is a lot of loose details: frank girl talk about AIDS and birth control, glancing observations about welfare lines and the advantages of a boy with a car over one with subway tokens.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
There's something a mite pathetic about our culture still clinging to 007, but it's hard to deny that this is one of the most entertaining entries in the Bond cycle, which started with "Dr. No" (1962).- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Both actors work hard to give this disturbing crime story some flavor and substance, but the narrative is overextended and poorly organized.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The glorification of the FBI, the obfuscation about Jim Crow laws, and the absurd melodramatics may all have been well-intentioned, but the understanding about the past and the present of racism that emerges is depressingly thin.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Prior to its hyperbolic final act, this is one of Robert Altman's most skillful and least bombastic features in some time.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Yes, the picture is flawed, but it is still something unusual in contemporary movies, a work that deserves to be called honorable, and not only in its intentions.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The good direction and performances seem wasted on limited material; despite a few interesting twists and ambiguities, the main revelation--that the reporter is an insufferable snob--doesn't seem worth the 84 minutes devoted to spelling it out.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This isn't as snappily directed or as caustically conceived as the subsequent Risky Business, which has a similar theme, but it's arguably just as sexy and almost as funny.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Aside from one slow-motion sequence, the film treats its subject with few commercial concessions, so one hopes that the horrible and decidedly unmemorable title won’t keep people away; this may be the best movie about disaffected youth since River’s Edge and Pump Up the Volume.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
As usual, Lee tries many kinds of stylistic effects and uses wall-to-wall music (by Aaron Copland and Public Enemy); what’s different this time is how personally driven the story feels.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
I value the flawed Tic Code over a good many relatively flawless features because it has more heart, more life, and more spunk.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Unfortunately, without even the most cursory effort to establish some notion of normality, the movie progressively gets duller and duller as its mechanical horror fancies spin themselves out.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
I loved this at the age of nine and suspect that some of it’s still pretty funny when it isn’t being self-congratulatory; the Technicolor and guest-star appearances undoubtedly help.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Not to be confused with the 1959 Mamie Van Doren-Mel Torme exploitation item, this is an uneven first feature (1996) by independent filmmaker Jim McKay about the friendship of three rebellious high school seniors.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The notion that Page, like Marilyn Monroe, was too ditzy to know what she was doing is more a mythological construct than an observation.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This impressive first feature by Jill Sprecher, coscripting with her sister Karen, shows that she has an eye and ear all her own.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
It's a story worth telling, though once the participants and the filmmakers start basking in their virtue, the material begins to feel overextended.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Though the basic brains-versus-beauty tension suggests a female variation on "The Nutty Professor", this is a softer version of the dilemma than Jerry Lewis offers -- easier to take and easier to forget.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Despite some signs of muddle and uncertainty, this is a surprisingly strong picture about a convict (Hoffman) on parole in LA learning what the supposedly “normal” world is all about.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Smith is resourceful in the role, though the story stretches one's credulity about his character's resourcefulness.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This is a twilight film, full of sorrow yet lyrical, beautiful, and dark.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This kind of filmmaking is riddled with so-called errors, but these mistakes are indistinguishable from the uncommon rewards.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Like Fellini's "I vitelloni," this Spanish-French-Italian coproduction is a bittersweet epic about frustration and relative inertia, though with a somewhat older and wiser group of layabouts.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
What makes the strongest impact is the superb documentary photography and the "found" audio segments--telemarketing ads left as voice messages.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The plot points verge on the familiar and obvious, but Adams's work with the actors (especially Judd and among the others Jeffrey Donovan, Diane Ladd, Tim Blake Nelson, and Scott Wilson) is so resourceful and focused that she makes them shine.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This sounds like a slender premise on which to hang a feature, but director Ning Hao is more interested in ethnography and landscapes than narrative and often holds our interest by concentrating on how folklore, technology--motorbikes, cars, trucks, films, TV--and imagination affect a nomadic way of life.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
A pretty good chronicle of a certain phase of French working-class life.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Ridiculously ambitious, though often likable and touching in its sincerity.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Even if you can't accept all the movie's left curves, you might still be amused.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This gets very suspenseful (as well as fairly gruesome) in spots, and if it never adds up to anything profound, it's still a welcome change to have a lesbian couple as the chief identification figures.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
If one discounts the facile and unconvincing ending, this first feature by Guka Omarova, offers a convincingly bleak view of how a 15-year-old boy could get ahead in rural Kazakhstan in the early 90s.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
A quirky, lyrical independent feature by writer-director Michael Almereyda. It's shot in luscious, shimmering black and white.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Eastwood himself, pushing 70 but cruising women in their early 20s, counts on more goodwill than I can muster. I wasn't bored, but my suspension of disbelief collapsed well before the end.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The film is compelling to the extent that the subject is, but also unimaginative and unsurprising.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The charm, humor, and healthy eroticism of Australian writer-director John Duigan (The Year My Voice Broke, Flirting) are back in force in this pleasantly recounted tale, set in the 30s, about a newlywed Anglican clergyman and his wife, freshly played by Hugh Grant and Tara Fitzgerald, who stop off at the remote home of a controversial (i.e., erotic) painter (Sam Neill).- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Insofar as they're implicitly the spoils of war, this movie seems to be meditating on the whys and hows of the spoiling process -- raising more questions than can possibly be answered, and in this sense, at least, far from dogmatic.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
It's as entertaining and informative as anything Mann's ever done, and as good an example of grass humor as you're likely to find anywhere.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Costner has an uncanny aptitude for gravitating toward the dopiest projects in sight, but this time he's outdone himself.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Less pretentious than Platoon and more attentive to the Vietnamese than The Deer Hunter, this picture proposes with a great deal of skill and sincerity that we honor and respect the men who suffered on our behalf without even beginning to consider why they did so, or to what effect.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
A knockout thriller that succeeds brilliantly at just about everything Scorsese's Cape Fear didn't.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
There's something stirring and gutsy about this evocation of collective ferment -- not to mention timely, in the wake of the Seattle uprising against the World Trade Organization.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This isn't a visionary western like "The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada" (2005), but in its own quiet way it delivers the goods.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Action-adventure pictures have a lamentable tendency toward mindlessness, but Edward Zwick's epic story has numerous virtues apart from suspense and spectacle.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Volatile and sometimes daring performances by Catherine Deneuve, Gerard Depardieu, Gilbert Melki, Malik Zidi, and Lubna Azabal (as twins) contribute to the highly charged and novelistic experience.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Genuinely frightening...it's nice for a change to see some of the virtues of old-fashioned horror films—moody dream sequences, unsettling poetic images, and passages that suggest more than they show—rather than the usual splatter shocks and special effects (far from absent, but employed with relative economy).- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Russ Meyer's most deliriously mannerist and frenetically edited feature (1978); it's helped along by an extremely arch script written by Meyer and, pseudonymously, Roger Ebert.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
An elaboration of the concept of Annie Get Your Gun—not to mention Doris Day’s tomboy image in On Moonlight Bay—this 1953 western musical is perhaps best remembered for its Oscar-winning tune “Secret Love”; otherwise there’s Howard Keel as Wild Bill Hickok, direction by David Butler, and all that kinky cross-dressing.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The source material has undergone some sentimental softening, though Hope Davis, as the heroine's sister, does a swell job of making sanity seem obnoxious.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
There's some excellent comedy early on involving the mutual incomprehension of Africans and Americans, though this eventually gives way to solemn, ethnocentric mush about one African's reading of the story of Jesus, demonstrating as usual that sustained subtlety is hardly Spielberg's forte.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Christopher Guest's hilariously canny 1989 satire about contemporary filmmaking in Hollywood- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This is the dullest and least successful adaptation of the Christmas chestnut I've ever seen, possibly because the mixture of Muppets and humans creates anomalies of scale and degrees of stylized behavior that the film tries to ignore rather than work with.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
A geek festival that mainly invites us to hoot at a bunch of alleged crazies.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Without ever posing a serious challenge to the original, the new Nutty Professor is much more respectful of its source and funnier than I'd anticipated.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The sheer oddness of the New York world constructed for this film--where cops and crooks are literally interchangeable, and Oldman and Danny Aiello are stranded in roles that pick over the leavings of earlier parts--ultimately seems at once too deranged and too mechanical.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Many reviews have suggested that this is as politically mild as a John Sayles movie, but Linklater clearly agrees with the frustrated kid who says, "Right now, I can't think of anything more patriotic than violating the Patriot Act."- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
A few of the bad-taste gags are funny, and Carrey's grimaces have a certain inspired delirium, but this is a long way from the social comedy of Jerry Lewis.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
A step down from the first Naked Gun cop-thriller spoof, which was a step down from Airplane! and Top Secret!; but if you care about such fine distinctions, this may be marginally better than Naked Gun 2 1/2: The Smell of Fear. Or at least it is when the movie finally arrives at the climactic Academy Awards ceremony; prior to that, it's mainly just one little-boy gag after another.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
My only reason to recommend this movie is that there's nothing quite like it.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Doesn't reflect anyone's love or hatred for anything, just a lot of anxiety about test marketing, which means it takes a nosedive when it goes shopping for an ending.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Arguably Woody Allen's funniest movie. A riotous object lesson in how much dialogue can transform visuals, and Allen works wonders with it.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
If you haven't lived until you've heard Geena Davis say "Suck my dick," New Line probably deserves your money.- Chicago Reader
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