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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- By Critic Score
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
An entertaining comedy-thriller directed with bounce (if not much nuance) by Barry Sonnenfeld.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Jarmusch has said that the film's odd, generally slow rhythm -- hypnotic if you're captivated by it, as I am, and probably unendurable if you're not--was influenced by classical Japanese period movies by Kenji Mizoguchi and Akira Kurosawa.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The best documentary to date about the military occupation of Iraq.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Director Billy Kent seems to have instructed most of his actors to behave like robotic sitcom characters; the principal exception is Danny DeVito, who simply behaves like Danny DeVito.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
While no Hawks movie can be considered a total loss, this reductive replay of Rio Bravo and El Dorado is too peevish to qualify as tragic, and only occasionally funny.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Both actors are so good that one might easily overlook the Pollyannaish subplot.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Roman Polanski's second British film is a mean little absurdist comedy set on a remote Northumberland island; it's also one of the best and purest of all his works.- 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
This goofball comedy is easy to take and just as easy to leave alone--unless you develop an affection for the hapless characters, which isn't too hard to do.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Takes a while to arrive at what it has to say, but some of the performances kept me occupied in the meantime.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
A sensationalist grunge festival spiked with dollops of poetry on the sound track.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This is a fairly accomplished first feature -perky, visually inventive, and unusually nast- 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
The martial arts choreography is neither graceful nor exciting--it's worthy of a video game. Only after cars, trucks, and a motorcycle join the action--easily outclassing all the actors--does the movie take on a modicum of vitality.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Doesn't succeed in everything it sets out to do, which is a lot. But as a statement about the death rattle of 60s counterculture it's both thoughtful and affecting, and Daniel Day-Lewis is mesmerizing.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
"Sweetie" and "An Angel at My Table" have taught us to expect startling as well as beautiful things from Jane Campion, and this assured and provocative third feature offers yet another lush parable--albeit a bit more calculated and commercially minded--about the perils and paradoxes of female self-expression.- 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
For the most part, this is a very close adaptation of Booth Tarkington's underrated novel about the relentless decline of a wealthy midwestern family through the rise of industrialization, though Welles makes the story even more powerful through his extraordinary mise en scene and some of the finest acting to be found in American movies.- 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
If old-fashioned jolts are what you're after, this nasty piece of merchandise delivers. But so does electroshock.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Not even the crude ethnic humor--Billy Crystal's Mel Brooks-ish Miracle Max--pricks the dream bubble, and the spirited cast has a field day.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
A witty, canny meditation on the power of pop culture in general and the rationalizations of cinephilia and film criticism in particular.- 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
This taut thriller adds so many twists of its own it might be more appropriately cross-referenced with The Manchurian Candidate, even though it isn't nearly as daffy or as mercurial.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Striking to look at, though often offensively opportunistic, this mainly comes across as a throwaway shocker with energy to spare. There's not much thought in evidence though.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Watchable if far-fetched movie is seriously marred by its three leads; only Garrel manages to suggest a person rather than a fashion model dutifully following instructions.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Seems intentionally slapdash and stupid, but when one of them referred to Europe as a "country," I wasn't sure if it was meant as a joke or not. Even so, I laughed once or twice.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Still about as good as Allen gets, a persuasive, nuanced, and relatively graceful portrait of an egotistical yet talented jazz guitarist of the swing era, astutely played by Sean Penn.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Banned in France for 18 years, this masterpiece still packs a wallop, though nothing in it is as simple as it may first appear; audiences are still arguing about the final sequence, which has been characterized as everything from a sentimental cop-out to the ultimate cynical twist.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The French title is Comme une image ("like an image"), but Tennessee Williams's phrase "the catastrophe of success" seems more appropriate.- 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
Though the premise seems obvious and facile, the execution and the delineation of the various characters (all recognizable Hollywood types) are likable and funny, and the cast is great.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Director Robert Benton allows the cast... to shine, but I was left wondering why such a very literary construction as this needed to be made into a movie.- 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
Apart from the script, it's the actors who make this a film worth seeing; all of them look and sometimes even act like real people rather than types or icons, and behind their interactions can be felt the depths of lived experience.- 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
The footage is often fascinating, but when it comes to anthropomorphism I prefer the Disney live-action adventures.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Grandstanding 1961 courtroom drama about the Nazi war trials, courtesy of producer-director Stanley Kramer, breast-beating screenwriter Abby Mann, and an all-star cast—watchable enough on its own terms, but insufferably glib next to something like Shoah.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
It's neither sexy enough to qualify as good trash nor serious enough to pass for history.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
An intermittently enjoyable bad movie that never knows when to stop.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
I had a pretty good time with this until the end, when I felt so soiled by the filmmakers' cynicism and the characters' gratuitous viciousness that I wanted to take a bath.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Good campy fun from the combined talents of Paddy Chayefsky and Sidney Lumet; Chayefsky was apparently serious about much of this shrill, self-important 1976 satire about television, interlaced with bile about radicals and pushy career women,- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Romero's fourth entry, turns out to be his most conventional as an action thriller--though it's every bit as gory as the others and more clearly class-conscious.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
An adroit piece of storytelling from Irish writer-director Neil Jordan that's ultimately less challenging to conventional notions about race and sexuality than it may at first seem... The three leads are first-rate.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Gamely running through parodies of TV commercials and shows, not to mention Spielberg, Schwarzenegger, Stallone, Selznick, and Gandhi, the movie proves to be awful by any standards--feeble, corny, and labored in script as well as direction--although the Capracorn of the basic premise occasionally manages to convey a certain sweetness.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Caine has already been cited as a likely Oscar nominee for his performance, which is clearly one of the most nuanced to date from this first-rate actor, and Fraser is funny and effective as a foil to the old pro.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
McDormand has never been better, but all the performances are interestingly nuanced, including Natascha McElhone's as one of Bale's fellow psychiatric interns.- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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
David Lynch's first digital video, almost three hours long, resists synopsizing more than anything else he's done. Some viewers have complained, understandably, that it's incomprehensible, but it's never boring, and the emotions Lynch is expressing are never in doubt.- 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
In short, I never quite believed the story, but this movie is more about feeling than thinking.- 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
One of the better Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn comedies—not so much for the screenplay by Garson Kanin and Ruth Gordon, which lacks the bite and sophistication of Adam's Rib, as for the relaxed and graceful interplay of the stars.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
While its slender plot (stripper Karina wants a baby and turns to Belmondo when her boyfriend Brialy won't oblige her) can irritate in spots, the film's high spirits may still win you over.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The recut American version is truly awful, but a good 75 percent of the awfulness is attributable to Miramax, the film's distributor.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This remarkable British silent (1929) is special in many ways.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Moving in fits and starts, mawkish in its sincerity, and at times disjointed in its lumpy structure.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Thomas is a couch potato as well as a recluse, and a terminal bore to boot. The women, real and simulated, are only slightly more interesting, and then only when they talk back.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Not wishing to spoil the fun -- pretty hard to come by anyway in this 1998 blockbuster's 150 minutes -- I won't tell you the outcome, but I'll wager you can guess.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Sam Raimi tries to do a Sergio Leone, and though this 1995 feature is highly enjoyable in spots, it doesn't come across as very convincing, perhaps because nothing can turn Sharon Stone into Charles Bronson.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This is fun if you're looking mainly for light entertainment.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The special effects are beautifully handled and the reflections on death attractively peaceful.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
I was worn down by the excess: Depp's fruity impersonation of Keith Richards (or William F. Buckley) as pirate Jack Sparrow; too many bottomless chasms on an island with too many jungle savages (after the fashion of Peter Jackson's King Kong); Bill Nighy playing too squishy a villain with a beard of too many crawling octopus tentacles; too much violence, pop nihilism, and sick humor.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Nearly all the SF premises are accorded the status of Andrew Dice Clay one-liners - which means that they, along with the characters, keep changing from one scene to the next.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The cast - including Derek Jacobi as the modern-dress chorus, Paul Scofield, Judi Dench, Ian Holm, Emma Thompson, and Robbie Coltrane in an effective cameo as Falstaff - is uniformly fine without any grandstanding.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
One emerges from this film not only with a new vocabulary and a fresh way of viewing the straight world but with a bracing object lesson in understanding what society “role models” are all about.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
I'm not sure what it all means, but, as in Ed Wood, Burton's visual flair and affection for the characters make it fun.- 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
This semianimated adventure is enjoyable and imaginative despite its formulaic qualities.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Inspired by a true story, this slight but charming and nicely balanced comedy tells the tale of a group of middle-aged women in a Yorkshire village who decide to pose nude for the dozen photographs in a fund-raising calendar.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
While largely effective, Greenwald's documentary is not a complete success.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
At its best it's a free-form fantasy with glitzy, well-executed effects and assorted metaphysical conceits but little feeling for any of the characters apart from derision (with a few touches of racism here and there).- 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
The movie starts off as a narrative but gradually grows into something much more abstract—it's unsettling but also beautiful.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Streisand sings a fabulous version of “You’re the Top” behind the credits, and the busy script by Buck Henry, Robert Benton, and David Newman keeps things moving, but the spirit of pastiche keeps this romp from truly rivaling its sources.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Never gets around to explaining how he (Michael Morra) picked up the moniker Rockets Redglare. In fact, the intimacy of this portrait may be a disadvantage.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This is mainly the girl's story, though the numerous southern archetypes out of Tennessee Williams and Carson McCullers (who's explicitly referenced) keep threatening to overwhelm her.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The story has its hokey moments ("There's something very fishy about that girl"), but the sincerity and focus of the storytelling compensate.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The casting of Michael Douglas against type as an over-the-hill novelist and writing professor is the sort of clever move that wins undeserved Oscars.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Maybe because director Scott Marshall is Garry's son, he allows his affable father to steal the movie from everyone else, and his performance proves to be a small gift worth having.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
I seem to be in a distinct minority in finding the satire toothless, obvious, and insufferably glib -- Still, I found genuine pleasure in watching Catherine Zeta-Jones, Renee Zellweger, Richard Gere, and John C. Reilly try their hands at singing and dancing.- 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
So lightweight that you're likely to start forgetting it before it's even over.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Rossellini left this project before it was finished, and it was edited and released a few years later without his approval—but it still comes across as a remarkably suggestive fable.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
A superior soap opera, evocative at times of Warren Beatty's "Reds."- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
A lot of uninteresting and unpleasant people torture, abuse, and fire guns at a lot of other uninteresting and unpleasant people, in a repulsive, interminable would-be crime thriller.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
It's more than a simple improvement, inverting some of the original's qualities so that the impersonal, well-crafted filmmaking remains lucid throughout.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Greengrass takes pains to keep events believable and relatively unrhetorical, rejecting entertainment for the sake of sober reflection, though one has to ask how edifying this is apart from its reduction of the standard myths.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Moore's best film to date is this comic and grimly entertaining reflection on America's gun craziness and why we kill one another.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This isn't always adept as storytelling, and Block's coming to terms with his own denseness occasionally tries one's patience, but he manages to make the overall process of his reeducation fascinating and compelling.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Like so many post-Val Lewton horror films, this 1992 feature starts out promisingly while the plot is mainly a matter of suggestion, but gradually turns gross and obvious as the meanings become literal and unambiguous.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
There are even more characters of interest here than in "Nashville."- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Nothing that suggests an independent vision, unless you count seeing more limbs blown off than usual.- 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
Oscillates bewilderingly between contrived and insightful, mechanical and sincere, clumsy and graceful.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The virtue of this play and the film of this play is that many readings and meanings are possible. The same can’t be said for the propositions of its detractors, who merely want to sweep an enduring and potent form of liberal protest under the carpet.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Not so much a sequel to "The Fugitive" as a lazy spin-off that imitates only what was boring and artificially frenetic about that earlier thriller; the little that kept it interesting.- 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
A compellingly watchable, suspenseful, and often funny treatment of a grim subject--the hatred that can build up in a long-term marriage--that also becomes an indirect commentary on yuppie materialism.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Brooks' film is especially welcome now because it frankly admits that most Americans are ignorant about Muslims and have a lot to learn, in contrast with the few other Hollywood movies dealing with Muslims -- "Syriana," "Munich" -- which seem to suggest that non-Muslim viewers can emerge knowing the score.- 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
This is probably Alan Parker's best film, in part because it's one of his most modest.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Since the virtues of heroism and decency it celebrates are universal, I hope it doesn't get absorbed into the dubious agitprop of American exceptionalism.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The film mechanically uses the crosscutting technique made famous by Kubrick's "Dr. Strangelove" without any of its wit or focused energy.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This one's slightly better than average these days, which means slightly diverting.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Puzzling, intriguing, and often compelling, apparently set in the present but magical and futuristic in tone.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Prince himself, passing through a spectrum of costumes and sexual roles, is never less than commanding, as performer, composer, and director.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Not only Waters's best movie, but a crossover gesture that expands his appeal without compromising his vision one iota; Ricki Lake as the hefty young heroine is especially delightful.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
If you can accept the flouting of logic and credibility that usually goes with this kind of horror picture, this scary and suspenseful genre exercise, chock-full of false alarms and brutal shocks, really delivers.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Bullock, Rowlands, Whitman, and others in the cast -- most notably Harry Connick Jr. -- acquit themselves as admirably as the pedestrian script allows.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The animation seeks to dazzle, but with a self-consciousness that's relatively new to the Disney studio. The results are fun and fast moving, but far from sublime.- 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
I don't know the novel, but judging from the script by Crichton and John Patrick Shanley, this must be scraping the bottom of the Crichton barrel.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
It's no masterpiece, but I found it consistently good-hearted and sometimes hilarious, and the sparse crowd I saw it with was laughing as much as I was, especially at the outrageous rap numbers.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Once the gore and suspense take over, this becomes mechanical and unpleasant.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- 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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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
What emerges is a very poor man's North by Northwest without much moral nuance and a decreasing number of thrills.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Writer-director Walter Hill, known earlier in his career for his American versions of French thrillers by Jean-Pierre Melville (indebted in turn to Hollywood noir), specializes in tweaking much-used material.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Ordinarily I don't care for this kind of thing at all, but something must be said for Jackson's endless reserves of giddy energy; perhaps because this is so clearly meant to be silly, he generally avoids the calculated mean-spiritedness of more prestigious directors like Spielberg and Renny Harlin.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Their calm assurance -- Hallyday as a grizzled icon, Rochefort as a melancholy mensch -- is a pleasure to behold.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Ridley Scott directed this 1989 feature, and while there's a lot of his characteristic atmospherics—smoke, fog, neon, yellow light, rain, and squalor—to fill all the dead spaces, he's still a long way from the splendors of Blade Runner. The script by Craig Bolotin and Warren Lewis doesn't give him or Douglas very much to chew on, apart from a lot of unpleasant xenophobia about Japanese gangsters, and the plot never gets far beyond the formulaic and the forgettable, hammered into place by Hans Zimmer's pounding and numbing score.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
To my taste, the only serious drawback to this absorbing film is Harris's unimaginative adherence to documentary convention, which obliges him to "illustrate" the voice-overs even when the material matches the narratives only in fictional terms.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
[It] may not be your cup of tea, but you have to admire the style, sincerity, and overall sense of craft even if you don't fancy the comic-book gore.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Technically speaking, this feeble effort is the ninth Pink Panther or Inspector Clouseau comedy, but only the third without Peter Sellers. Roberto Benigni (Life Is Beautiful) does what he can as Inspector Clouseau Jr. (which isn't much, given the degree of prominence accorded to a hackneyed kidnapping plot).- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Stylistically, it's a remarkable effort -- with a continuous sense of gliding motion -- and the film is entertaining and gripping throughout.- 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
This is familiar but atmospheric, with good performances by Peter Falk, Blythe Danner, Joey Bilow, Michael Santoro, Merle Kennedy, and former football pro Don Meredith.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The passionate and carnivalesque sense of politics reminded me at times of "Dog Day Afternoon," but despite the absence of cynicism this is a 90s story in every sense of the word- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
A potent feminist protest--all the more so because some of the laws depicted are still in force today.- 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
The animation is fairly unexciting though serviceable, and the overall mystification of class difference would probably have made Dickens shudder, but kids should find this tolerable enough.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Ambling along like a wry, laid-back “Heart of Darkness” this likable and touching film makes full use of Frank’s remarkable photographic eye and Wurlitzer’s witty, acerbic, and quasi-mystical handling of myth that has already served him well in his novels. The results are a resonant reflection on the music business and a memorable ode to wanderlust–with lots of good music (by Dr. John, Joe Strummer, and others) on the sound track.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Sweet tempered but occasionally simplistic youth picture about three young, progressive Israelis who share a flat in a chic section of Tel Aviv.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This 2006 drama may seem to be worlds apart from the surreal theme-park setting of Jia's previous film, "The World," but there are similarities of theme, style, scale, and tone: social and romantic alienation in a monumental setting, a daring poetic mix of realism and lyrical fantasy, and an uncanny sense of where our planet is drifting.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Shot in and around the town of Bradford in long, loping takes, this sprightly comedy, adapted by Andrea Dunbar from her own play, has some of the energy that one associates with the better exploitation films that used to be produced by Roger Corman.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
As a truthful account of the life of Tina Turner or as a faithful adaptation of her as-told-to autobiography, I, Tina, this 1993 film can't be taken too seriously. But as a powerhouse showcase for the acting talents of Angela Bassett (who plays Turner) and Laurence Fishburne (who plays her abusive husband, Ike) and as a potent portrayal of wife beating and the emotions that surround it (in this case, Ike's professional envy and Tina's stoic acceptance of abuse), it's quite a show.- 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
The period details and performances are uniformly superb (Bob Hoskins is especially good as MGM executive Eddie Mannix), and the major characters are even more complex than those in "Chinatown."- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Holly Hunter and Sigourney Weaver, a cop and a shrink, are the main trackers, but so little is done in Ann Biderman and David Madsen's script to give them or their colleagues or even their prey interesting human dimensions that the overall ambience is chiefly pornographic.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This movie is a clone itself, a far cry from "Total Recall" but vastly superior to "End of Days."- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Based on this outing, writer-director Joe Carnahan (Narc) can't tell a story worth a damn--especially not a complicated mishmash like this one.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This offbeat and unpredictable comedy-thriller throws so many curveballs, one right after another, that I doubt I've had more fun at an American movie this year.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
A melancholy character study of romantic delirium and Napoleonic ambition with a nice sense of nuance, this is much more coherent than the general run of blockbusters.- 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
Adapted from a story by Joe R. Lansdale, this might have squeaked by as a half-hour "Twilight Zone" episode, albeit with jokes about toilets and erections in old age.- 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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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This interminable contest between two narcissists, stretched out over many miles and years, is supposed to have something to do with romance.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
An inept cheapo by any standard, only marginally more sophisticated than an Edward Wood Jr. production—yet it carries a certain demented charm, and there’s reason to suspect that Tobe Hooper checked it out before making The Texas Chainsaw Massacre.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Originally a two-part film running about three hours, this treacle has been reduced by almost a third, though it still seems to run on forever -- a bit like life but much less interesting.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
At once upsetting and highly involving, it packs an undeniable punch.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
There's some striking camerawork by Christopher Doyle (in 35-millimeter) and Rain Kathy Li (in Super-8), though this doesn't alter the overall feeling of random, nihilistic drift.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
You may find it pleasantly diverting, especially if you like the leads, but mostly it made me want to see "Adam's Rib" again.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
If you don't care about the first version, or what director Jonathan Demme's name once meant, the cast does an OK job with Daniel Pyne and Dean Georgaris's routine thriller script.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Falk throws himself into the part and almost single-handedly enables this comedy drama to transcend some of its sitcom limitations.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Those who miss the wildness of his premainstream work will probably be only partially appeased.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Schrader is no Faulkner and no Gillespie, but in his third silly attempt to appropriate Bresson's form of story telling and his second misguided effort to remake Pickpocket, he has arrived at a pretty good offscreen narration.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Much more deserving of plaudits is the secondary cast--Hope Davis as Schmidt's resentful daughter, Dermot Mulroney as the waterbed salesman she's engaged to, and, above all, Kathy Bates in a hilarious turn as the latter's New Age mother.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
While the actors show some sensitivity and Scott works up a modicum of suspense and involvement, the real interest of this picture is the radiance of the images—a mastery of lighting and decor second only to Scott's Blade Runner, with atmospheric textures so dense you can almost taste them. Unfortunately, this mastery bears only the most glancing relationship to the story at hand, and Scott becomes guilty of the sort of formalism that used to be charged (less justly) against Josef von Sternberg. But even though the movie doesn't leave much of a residue, it looks terrific while you're watching it: Manhattan has seldom appeared as glitzy or as glamorous.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The performances are perfectly distilled, but the traits I dislike in Bergman are all here -- self-pity, brutality, spiritual constipation, and an unwillingness to try to overcome these difficulties.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The film adopts, somewhat insidiously, the myth that life was simpler back in 1953 and '54, and it offers Murrow as a lesson for today.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Malick still has an eye for landscapes, but since "Badlands" (1973) his storytelling skill has atrophied, and he's now given to transcendental reveries, discontinuous editing, offscreen monologues, and a pie-eyed sense of awe. All these things can be defended, even celebrated, but I couldn't find my bearings.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
If you want to waste a couple of hours, you can surely do much better looking elsewhere.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This funny, nervy, and pointedly unrated geriatric sex comedy is both enhanced and occasionally limited by being targeted at baby boomers.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Sadly, the technical logistics seem to have impeded the dreamlike flow a movie like this requires.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Far from avoiding the tackier implications of this concept, the film revels in them like a puppy in clover; Martin's delivery of the line, "Into the mud, slime queen!" is alone nearly worth the price of admission.- 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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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The film is made up chiefly of found footage and therefore lacks the mise en scene of its predecessors, but it has the added benefit of Davies's voice-over narration, which, thanks to his training and experience as an actor, is enormously powerful.- 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
Tries to be an audacious, irreverent satire about youth culture like "Lord Love a Duck," but most of the laughs get strangled at birth by the uncertainty of Siega's tone.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The mad campy moments—which chiefly involve snake woman Amanda Donohoe slinking around in various stages of undress or in dominatrix outfits—are worth waiting for.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
If Sayles's bite were as lethal as his bark, he might have given this a harder edge and a stronger conclusion. But the performances are uniformly fine.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Playwright Adam Rapp, making his feature debut as writer-director, details the family dysfunction to the point of hyperbole, but over the long haul he rewards one's observation and intelligence and a more interesting story emerges.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
It's pretty perverse for William Wheeler, who scripted this feature, to get most of the facts wrong, inflating details that don't need any spin. (As Irving himself remarked, "You could call it a hoax about a hoax.")- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The movie is quite enjoyable as long as it explores the fantasy of a neglected little boy having an entire house of his own to explore and play in, but the physical cruelty that dominates the last act leaves a sour taste, and the multiple continuity errors strain one's suspension of disbelief to near the breaking point.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
A postnoir melodrama with metaphysical trimmings, it does remarkable things with mood and pacing, and the two matches with Gleason as Minnesota Fats are indelible.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Frankenheimer handles it tersely and professionally, and coaxes an exceptionally good performance out of Harry Dean Stanton as an American general.- 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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- 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
Like "The Hustler," this absorbing Las Vegas story about a professional poker player (Eric Bana) uses gambling to tell a tale of moral regeneration. But Bana can't carry a picture like Paul Newman, and poker proves less photogenic than pool.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Another takeout—untidily slapped into a Styrofoam container—is more like it. Aimed at less discriminating viewers, this sequel to the 1987 Stakeout, again directed by John Badham, isn't too bad if you're looking for nothing more than good-natured silliness, low comedy, gratuitous tilted angles, and protracted dog jokes.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
One of Jean Harlow's best pictures, this 1933 feature is a merciless satire of Hollywood, with Harlow as a movie star and Lee Tracy as her publicity agent.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Thanks to Anthony Mann's splendid eye for landscape, composition, and spectacle—in particular his striking use of the edges of the 'Scope frame, a facet (among others) that is totally lost on TV and video—this is a rousing and often stirring show.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This 1964 entry is the most enjoyable of the James Bond thrillers starring Sean Connery—perhaps because it's the most comic and cartoony in look as well as conception. Still, it's every bit as imperialist and misogynistic as the other screen adventures based on Ian Fleming's books.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The film has little to do with art, intelligence, or values (except for the kind found in department stores).- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The period ambience (call it funk) is irresistible, but the main points of interest here are sociological rather than musical.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Unlike many colleagues, I'm not a fan of "Amores Perros" or "21 Grams," scripted by Guillermo Arriaga and directed by Alejandro Gonzalez Iñarritu. This conclusion to their trilogy is easier to follow as a narrative, but it's even more pretentious, generalizing about the state of the modern world.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
For me it felt like a good many weeks at a politically correct summer camp, though the talented actors--including Cecilia Roth, Eloy Azorin, Marisa Paredes, Toni Canto, Antonia San Juan, and Penelope Cruz--certainly seem to enjoy the taste of the characters they're playing.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The story is so black-and-white that one feels like hissing the villain (Kenneth Branagh) and cheering the heroines at every stage, but it's so amazing that the simplicity of the telling seems warranted.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Like some of Joan Crawford's and Bette Davis's studio vehicles, this soapy romance exists only for what Gong Li can bring to it: a certain amount of soul and nuance.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Despite a hokey prologue and ending (the latter imposed by producer Charles Evans), this is one of George Romero's most effective and interesting horror thrillers—not as profound as his remarkable Living Dead trilogy, but unusually gripping and provocative.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This is possibly the funniest lesbian romp since "Go Fish."- 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
For all its pretensions and avant-garde narrative dislocations, the star-studded cast...keeps this buzzing.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This arty and moody account of her formation as an artist, as its subtitle declares, is basically invented. Its nerviness only pays off in a few details and in Nicole Kidman's resourcefulness.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewski's script may in spots be as much of a skim job as their one for "Ed Wood," but it's almost as sweet and as likable, and if the movie can't ever practice what it and its hillbilly hero preach--the only "beaver" shot in the movie involves a corpse--its heart is certainly in the right place.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The ethnic humor that gave May's movie its charge is replaced by crass mean-spiritedness. If I were in movie hell, I'd rather see "Good Luck Chuck" again than return to this atrocity.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Thematically, this has a lot to do with the sexiness of class difference and the hypocrisy of marriage and double standards, although, as often happens in porn, the “dream sequences” by the end make it hard to know what's actually happening in terms of plot. But customers looking for photogenic flesh and passion, with a passing plug for safe sex thrown in, won't have much cause for complaint.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Juggling onstage and offstage action, Cassavetes makes this a fascinating look at some of the internal mechanisms and conflicts that create theatrical fiction, and his wonderful cast never lets him down.- 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
It's an utter waste of Watts; there's not a trace here of the talent on display in Mulholland Drive, perhaps because the script doesn't bother to give her a character.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This is so ravishing to look at (the colors all seem newly minted) and pleasurable to follow (the enigmas are usually more teasing than worrying) that you're likely to excuse the metaphysical pretensions—which become prevalent only at the very end—and go with the 60s flow, just as the original audiences did.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
This is a highly personal and even religious expression of Hitchcock concerning the vicissitudes of fate, predicated on his lifelong fear that anyone can be wrongly accused of a crime and placed behind bars.- Chicago Reader
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- 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
After a while it becomes apparent that this movie is too eager to please, too willing to sacrifice its point of view toward its targets to sustain itself for the length of a feature.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Worst of all, the movie's conventional showbiz finale, brimming with false uplift, implies that the traumas of other mutilated and disillusioned Vietnam veterans can easily be overcome if they write books and turn themselves into celebrities.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
In many respects this is a black counterpart to The Naked Gun, and very nearly as funny; the bounty of antimacho gags is both unexpected and refreshing.- 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
Leave it to coproducer Jerry Bruckheimer to revive the Indiana Jones cycle without the period setting, the camp elements, or Spielberg's efficiency; director Jon Turteltaub just plods along, and the script by Marianne and Cormac Wibberley is equally poker-faced.- 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
For one of the first times in his career Jean-Luc Godard has elected not to hector and harass his audience, and it seems to have paid off.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Payne is just as guilty of using her (Ruth) as a figurehead for his ideas--most of them about the stupidity and futility of politics--as are the targets of his satirical abuse.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
It's a piece of disposable fluff -- though that's exactly what's so appealing about it.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The gratuitous use of the city (New Orleans) during Mardi Gras is the least of this movie's unoriginal sins.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Though it's not unlikable, John Singleton's second feature ("Boyz N the Hood" was his first) is an unholy mess in almost every respect.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Oscillating back and forth between insulting its two central characters (Muriel and her dad) and showing they have hidden depths, this movie only shows true tact and understanding when it comes to flattering the audience; everyone on screen is strictly up for grabs.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
A pretty watchable and always interesting period film, well photographed by English cinematographer Freddie Francis.- 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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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
It's hard to think of many more galvanizing definitions of what it means to be an American than Cho's volcanic self-assessments.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The cast as a whole is astonishing--especially Gillian Anderson as Lily and Dan Aykroyd in his finest role to date.- Chicago Reader
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- 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
This anachronistic tale goes beyond Capracorn to evoke Depression-era fare like "One Hundred Men and a Girl" in which the charm is overtaken by mush. One wants to protect this, but it's hard not to gag on the cuteness.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
If you think 85 minutes devoted to a "difficult" French philosopher is bound to be either abstruse or watered-down middlebrow stuff, think again.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Has its awkward and square moments directorially, but it's also uncommonly honest and serious.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The results are easy to watch, though awfully familiar and simpleminded.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Evelyn Glennie has worked with everyone from Bjork to Brazilian samba groups and also gives solo concerts, and the best segments simply show her at work in her mid-30s, explaining what she does.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Somewhere in writer-director Giuseppe Tornatore's overstyled movie, about a 12-year-old boy (Sulfaro) during the Italian fascist period who has the hots for a mistreated war widow (Belluci), is a pretty good short story about the fickleness of community and the cruelty of gossip struggling to get out.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
An offensive premise and a pathetic, almost pleading desire to outrage our sensibilities with it.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
As an interweave of crosscut miniplots, this isn't nearly as interesting or as pleasurable as Jeremy Podeswa's recent "The Five Senses."- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
It has its moments, but not many, and generally speaking it runs neck and neck with Dune as the least successful and least interesting Lynch feature.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
A masterful 168-minute piece of storytelling that never ceases to be gripping in spite of its measured pace.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
More memorable for its title than for anything else.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Indescribably awful—a serving up of Beatles tunes by Peter Frampton and the Bee Gees with the ugliest visuals imaginable, directed with more glitz than good sense by Michael Schultz.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
One could have plenty of quarrels with this as an adaptation of the Herman Melville novel, but it’s still one of the better John Huston films of the 50s.- 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
Tierney and Hackman contribute most to keeping this life-size and funny.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
The old-fashioned theme of disaster as an existential test of character still works.- 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
Gordon is so visually and stylistically inventive and the actors are so skillful that you aren't likely to lose interest.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
I never thought that a thoughtful director like Gillian Armstrong would get trapped in such Euro-nonsense, but I guess there's a first time for everything.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
An absorbing and compelling account of a historical episode that should be better known.- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Offers the same crudely effective variation on the hatred and fear of hillbillies in "Deliverance."- Chicago Reader
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- Jonathan Rosenbaum
Director Cedric Kahn, Laurence Ferreira Barbosa, and Gilles Marchand collaborated on the well-honed script, derived from a Georges Simenon novel. The film works well with quiet tensions, but becomes less convincing and interesting once it moves beyond them.- Chicago Reader
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