Joshua Rothkopf
Select another critic »For 1,122 reviews, this critic has graded:
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48% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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50% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 0.1 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Joshua Rothkopf's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 66 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Vertigo | |
| Lowest review score: | The Back-up Plan | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 487 out of 1122
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Mixed: 576 out of 1122
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Negative: 59 out of 1122
1122
movie
reviews
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- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Director Samantha Grant scores an interview with Blair himself, whose too-little-too-late admissions (along with his reemergence as a postguilt life coach) might drive your crowd to hisses.- Time Out
- Posted Apr 8, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Concussion could have used the political backbone of Smith’s Ali director Michael Mann; instead, it has Peter Landesman, who steers both lead actor and screenplay away from the sharper edges.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 22, 2015
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The whole movie feels like a case of the sweats, putting you in desperate need of the chicken soup of recognizable human behavior.- Time Out
- Posted Apr 9, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The better actors — Kevin Costner, chiefly, as the adoptive Earth father — strain to supply warmth, but mostly, the minutes stretch into great expanses of blahness, much of them filled with Transformers-grade skyscraper snapping and bloodless catastrophe.- Time Out
- Posted Jun 11, 2013
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- Time Out
- Posted Nov 15, 2016
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Schepisi is deft with the social-strata stuff, introducing a large Gosford Park–like ensemble to tease out the central trio's dysfunction. So it's a shame that both book and film tilt away from the tart-tongued exchanges, giving increasing weight to a buried trauma that feels a little soggy.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 4, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
A proper profile of Hefner would start and end with sex, and not merely glance on casualties like Dorothy Stratten (and even the loveless Hef himself). The movie can't seem to get it up.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
A Twilight Zone–worthy premise, subtly sold by ace make-up effects, makes for a decent-enough thriller, intriguing in the moment but ultimately too timid to say anything meaningful about ageing.- Empire
- Posted Jul 22, 2021
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Burton, as usual, is great on atmosphere and comic timing (these are his weirdest moments since Ed Wood), but less so at reining in an overcomplicated plot and dimly lit action scenes.- Time Out
- Posted May 8, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Once you let go of the understandable dream of Coppola returning with another masterpiece, there is much to enjoy in “Megalopolis,” especially its cast members, leaning into their moments with an abandon that was probably a job requirement.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted May 16, 2024
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Jason Momoa's surf-bro superhero is a welcome addition to a ponderously serious genre, but his movie as a whole feels waterlogged.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 11, 2018
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- Joshua Rothkopf
A team of screenwriters more creative than Pat Casey and Josh Miller (best known for two manic Sonic the Hedgehog movies) might have done more with the backstory, and director Tommy Wirkola's beatdowns never transcend the merely serviceable. But there's no denying the joy in a child's eyes when she sees Santa's weapon of choice, a sledgehammer hefted with brutal artistry, and squeals its name: "Skullcrusher!"- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Dec 2, 2022
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- Joshua Rothkopf
This version’s shadowy Las Vegas underworld and convenient adoring female coed (Brie Larson, who deserves better) play like clichés.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 23, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Heroically, Double Tap’s new actors, rare though they are, save it from being completely brain-dead.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 16, 2019
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Filmed with the somber pretentiousness of a "Babel," the movie never quite converts its premise into something grander (never mind believable). Meanwhile, the world starts to riot, yet their bed is warm. Will love save the day? Unfortunately for us, our sense of smell remains intact.- Time Out
- Posted Jan 31, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The film definitely gets it up, but has some commitment issues.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 13, 2010
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- Joshua Rothkopf
There's no Deep Throat this time, but Tom Wilkinson does his best Ben Bradlee as a hawkish legal mentor, while Kevin Kline coos menacingly as Lincoln's Nixonian war secretary, Edwin Stanton, a man seeking to hang prisoners out of political expediency. It all seems a little forced.- Time Out
- Posted Apr 12, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Let your mind wander during this painfully generic teen-sex dramedy (trust us, it will), and there might be emotions worse than frustration in store.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 16, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Always effortful and desperate to impress, The Lion King may serve as a virtual substitute for going to the zoo (don’t slide down the Black Mirror cynicism of that idea), but let’s hope it never replaces such outings, nor its 1994 forebear, a passport to something far more sublime.- Time Out
- Posted Jul 11, 2019
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Both overindulgent and the writer-director's most fascinatingly strange movie to date.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 19, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Their movie is a tedious slog filled with pinging bullets, show-offy long takes ripped out of the Children of Men playbook and zero humor.- Time Out
- Posted Aug 23, 2017
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- Joshua Rothkopf
There's too much going on here - of a winning, thoughtful nature - to dismiss Josh Radnor's back-to-college romance as the nostalgia bath it mainly is.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 11, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
A swirly-girly sameness has taken over Malick’s flow; his movies aren’t supposed to feel like fashion spreads but they do, even as hushed narrators speak about their aching souls and lost loves.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 11, 2017
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The 33 makes shameless lunges at religious imagery via ghostly auras and this-is-my-flesh apportioning of daily rations. It feels tacky, and only late in the game does Riggen find the script’s most interesting idea, about unwanted celebrity. Miner story, major fail.- Time Out
- Posted Nov 13, 2015
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The ambition of Under the Silver Lake is worth cherishing. It will either evaporate into nothingness or cohere into something you’ll want to hug for being so wonderfully weird.- Time Out
- Posted May 16, 2018
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- Joshua Rothkopf
An unfocused comedy about weird Army pseudoscience, ends up blinking before we laugh.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
It's almost cruel to criticize something so essentially lighthearted and disposable, but it must be said that a lot of these jokes feel distinctly recycled, mainly from "Broadway Danny Rose."- Time Out
- Posted Jun 19, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
It's too bad V/H/S starts off on such a high note. Mainly, the omnibus film feels undercooked, even on the grounds of its forced technological setup.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 2, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
You’re going to find it all either enormously empowering or deeply calculated: an Arcade Fire–scored TV commercial for instant spirituality.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 25, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
There's savvy in Schwarzenegger's understanding of his appeal. Always foreign yet weirdly Americanized in our dreams, the big guy is a craggy monument in need of a countryside. He's back in the place that deserves him.- Time Out
- Posted Jan 18, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Let's not make 4:44 Last Day on Earth sound cooler than it is. Compared with Lars von Trier's histrionically doomed "Melancholia," the film lacks any serious attempt to grapple with mortality.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 20, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Even if the music leaves you cold, there’s plenty of captivating awkwardness here, like Paul McCartney listlessly watching the monitors in his dressing room, or producer Harvey Weinstein solving a tech issue by calling Google exec Eric Schmidt in the audience.- Time Out
- Posted Nov 12, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
A movie that gives Streep her most emotionally blocked character in years, without caricature.- Time Out
- Posted Aug 5, 2015
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- Joshua Rothkopf
A boxing movie in desperate need of Martin Scorsese (aren’t they all?).- Time Out
- Posted Aug 25, 2016
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- Time Out
- Posted Jan 18, 2018
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The film has a traditional appeal that's wholly separate from its surface.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 13, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Just as you're reeling from the tackiness of this premise, set within such an explosive context, the plot doubles down on it.- Time Out
- Posted Jan 26, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
An unabashed piece of political activism arriving three weeks before the election.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 21, 2016
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- Joshua Rothkopf
If Fuqua and his screenwriters (including True Detective’s Nic Pizzolatto) slightly botch the underlying theme of redemption—Ethan Hawke’s haunted ex-Confederate sharpshooter could have been more developed—it still makes good on its ideas of community pride.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 10, 2016
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Illegal has caused a stir in Belgium, and the sincerity of the movie can't be denied. But there's little emotion to hold on to, apart from a mother's impotent concern about her wayward teenage son (Gontcharov), still on the outside.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 22, 2011
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- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 11, 2023
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Sinister has so much going for it - adult psychology, a great bitchfest of a marital meltdown - that you wince when it finally makes some rather dull choices involving the supernatural.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 16, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
No Hollywood film can ever solve the central problem of adapting this book, in that it inevitably does too much of the imagining for you. DuVernay makes a big-hearted go of it, even if she seems slightly dazzled by her own magical mystery tour.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 9, 2018
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Superb limb-erasing effects and lush cinematography are bonuses, though not so much the cloying presence of American Idol's Carrie Underwood.- Time Out
- Posted Apr 6, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Where the book had a kernel of intellectual irony to it — words betray a nation — this drama goes shamelessly for the heart.- Time Out
- Posted Nov 6, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
It feels like a massive retrenchment—privately, a rebellion seems to have been fought and lost—and only the most loyal fans will be happy about it.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 18, 2019
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- Joshua Rothkopf
When the doll has more vitality than the movie around it, there's a problem.- Time Out
- Posted Jun 25, 2019
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Can they really be setting up a sequel at the end, with Robin as an outlaw? Let’s hope so--that’s the movie you actually wanted.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Dreams like Garriott's shouldn't be available only to the highest bidder. If you end up taking the kid in your life to go see it, urge them to start saving their allowance.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 10, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Roger Corman could only dream of producing a movie this stupefyingly gory and loaded with exposed flesh, making the updated Piranha that most unlikely of remakes-an improvement.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
When Ma breaks bad, it breaks bad hard, with some real wince-inducing moments of bodily harm.- Time Out
- Posted May 29, 2019
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- Joshua Rothkopf
There's nothing strictly wrong with any of this, except for the fact that even a buttoned-down period piece like "Topsy-Turvy" feels sexier.- Time Out
- Posted May 15, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The main flaw — twirling farm girls and grunting oxen aside — is an utter lack of insight into the future leader’s character.- Time Out
- Posted Nov 5, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The film lacks any kind of human interest, relying instead on our inferred love of lengthy strategy sessions and displays of ruffled pride. When it comes to yakuza cinema, you can do better.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 31, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Writer-director Gary Ross (Pleasantville, Seabiscuit) knows how to please crowds, so there's fascination in his consistently wrongheaded impulse to add more historical details: lengthy scenes of exposition, even a leap decades into the future for a courtroom drama involving Knight's persecuted offspring. He's lost sight of the powerful drama at this story's heart, about the ennobling swirl of momentous events.- Time Out
- Posted Jun 29, 2016
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- Joshua Rothkopf
You don’t often see style this gorgeous (however empty), and that must count for something. Groovy soundtrack cues by Ennio Morricone and others do the heavy lifting.- Time Out
- Posted Aug 26, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Affleck and Clooney make sense as collaborators; both of them became directors to get out of the way of their public images. Hopefully, the next time they decide to work together, they'll lean even further into the intimacies of a setting like the Dickens, a universe unto itself.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Dec 21, 2021
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Bitchy histrionics curdle faster than a spoiled soy latte in this distinctly unlikable comedy about a trio of coked-up gal pals who barely muster the strength to celebrate their happier friend's wedding.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 4, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
LaMarque foregrounds her scenario’s awkwardness—it never quite feels like a comedy—and the pair of male suitors she brings in (Jake Johnson and Ron Livingston) are, refreshingly, as unfixed as her main character. But you still wish Kazan had more to work with.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 4, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Irony can’t survive in Lee’s airless vacuum; he’s not an experimenter at heart, and as a result, his movie feels heartless.- Time Out
- Posted Nov 8, 2016
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Only Julianne Moore, as the Bible-thumping mom, has an instinct to go softer — how couldn’t she, after Piper Laurie? — and paradoxically, it’s a move that feels wrong, the role requiring its cantatory bigness.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 18, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The dueling dirty tricks zing half the time.... But subplots involving naive volunteers getting their hearts broken feel like strands from a less ambitious movie.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 30, 2015
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- Joshua Rothkopf
This isn’t a straight documentary — part of what makes the film so suggestive is the idea that we’re seeing a double performance pitted against our own prurient interests. As for the movie’s final scene, you won't witness something as confrontational all year: a yowl from beyond the grave. It’s a small piece of revenge for a lost soul.- Time Out
- Posted Aug 25, 2016
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- Joshua Rothkopf
More testimony to the experience of eating at Nobu would have helped this feel less like a commercial.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jul 3, 2025
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- Joshua Rothkopf
What makes this latest installment such a riot — apart from having more money than usual, thereby allowing the practical special effects to achieve a splattery early–Peter Jackson glee — is its original script by "Brawl in Cell Block 99’s" S. Craig Zahler.- Time Out
- Posted Aug 17, 2018
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Love Is Strange emerges as a total triumph for Sachs and his co-leads, John Lithgow and Alfred Molina, who, despite lengthy filmographies, turn in career-topping work. a sensitive domestic tragedy about the finite nature of any union.- Time Out
- Posted Jan 27, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Dramatically inert and flatter than a buzz cut, the movie ends up diminishing their moment of heroism by turning it into a defiantly amateurish piece of junior-high-grade theatrics.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 8, 2018
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Unlike most directors, style is hardly a side dish with Michael Mann—it’s the main entrée. No one captures city lights at night or luxury cars slinking down the highway like the creator of Miami Vice, and his conversion to digital video continues to yield breathtaking results.- Time Out
- Posted Jan 14, 2015
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Marvel at the desperate spectacle of three comic leads-Aniston, Bateman and Watchmen's Patrick Wilson as the original donor-being outperformed by the wide-eyed Robinson, a quiet collector of silences. These stars will never be as young as he is; you wish they'd all stop trying.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
You keep waiting for the movie to grow a brain, for that random attractive neighbor (Wilde) to turn out to be a decoy, for Banks herself to become suspect. Nope. The Next Three Days morphs into "The Fugitive" on steroids.- Time Out
- Posted Nov 16, 2010
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Now, with this underwhelming sequel, Spain proves it can stand toe to toe with any nation in the manufacture of unnecessary follow-ups.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Never once does the film feel sharp on black identity (as did Bill Gunn’s original), and the terror is theoretical only.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 20, 2015
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- Joshua Rothkopf
For all of its #MeToo heavy lifting, though, the film still doesn’t work, mainly for the same reasons as before: Constructed as symbols (not human beings), these characters have too much spy stuff to do and yet, not quite enough.- Time Out
- Posted Nov 12, 2019
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The script shoehorns in more identity-grappling this time—half-baked and sub-Westworld though it is—and the squelchy synth score (by Black Swan’s Clint Mansell) supplies a playfulness that’s unearned by the visuals. Find a handy film geek to tell you all about how Ghost in the Shell was a massive influence on The Matrix. Better yet, just rewatch The Matrix.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 30, 2017
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The movie is one big scream, clichéd and hardly credible as an oblique call to civility.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 13, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
None of this is particularly well wrought, and only a bizarre gas mask worn by the séance leader counts as an inspired (if slightly silly) touch.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 29, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The oddest thing about the movie - and perhaps the asset that will tip it over into the plus column for you - is that it's a bona fide scuzz-Western.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 13, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Christopher Felver, while an inspired photographer, is not the director for the job; he dutifully ticks off Ferlinghetti’s major achievements — such as the founding of North Beach’s literary mecca, City Lights — yet never imbues his life with anything more than lefty zeal.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 5, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The predictability is crushing, and with movies like "Crazy Heart" and Sofia Coppola's distinctly personal "Somewhere" so close in the rearview, David M. Rosenthal's estrangement drama feels especially soft.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 25, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The film will do until "Fifty Shades of Grey" turns up. The more you think about Labor Day, the more calculating it gets.- Time Out
- Posted Jan 28, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Dedicating a movie to John Hughes doesn't equal capturing the master's ear for the universality of adolescent angst.- Time Out
- Posted May 10, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Moodysson hasn’t exactly descended to "Babel"-level pabulum with Mammoth, his first foray into English; these characters are too fascinatingly thorny, and he still has a supple way with a pulse-throbbing dance tune.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
His (Fatih Akin) new movie, an occasionally shouty comedy, is easily his most fun.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Phillips goes too far sometimes (border-jail breakout?), but his new direction is promising.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 15, 2010
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- Joshua Rothkopf
This is welcome summer fare; if we’re going to have space operas, let them sing in the strangest accents possible.- Time Out
- Posted Jul 12, 2017
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Snitch is a movie that cries out for the wiry B stars of yore: Robert Forster, a younger Tommy Lee Jones. And it would have occurred to a craftier screenwriter to make his hero’s walk on the criminal wild side a touch more tempting.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 22, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The material isn’t excited or shaped toward any insight — the Mike Leigh of "Naked" did this sort of thing brilliantly — and the arrival of a sluggish investigating journalist (Richard Jenkins), himself a bar fixture and underachiever, doesn’t offer a valid counterpoint.- Time Out
- Posted May 10, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
It’s not often that faith-based films, competing in the same marketplace that rewards action, embrace the deeper, more difficult idea of meeting hate with love, but Risen tries. It’s a drama that neither seeks to convert viewers, nor confront true believers with anything uncomfortable—only reaffirm their bedrock convictions, the ones that are worth repeating.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 19, 2016
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- Joshua Rothkopf
In the wake of the spunkier "Your Sister's Sister," writer-director Brian Savelson can't seem to mount a head of steam, and his chamber piece feels underdeveloped. Even Slattery's sourness doesn't redeem the banality of impending heart-to-hearts.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 4, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Schrader can’t seem to choose a proper outcome, and the lack of a higher morality is weird, especially from a filmmaker who managed hints of spirituality in a movie about Bob Crane. Still, if you suffered through Schrader’s Exorcist prequel Dominion, you’ll know he’s somewhat back on track.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Given its multitalented cast, Rough Night should have committed to the darkness (originally, the screenplay’s title was Move that Body). In execution, the women are asked only for flop sweat and nervous jabbering. Party on.- Time Out
- Posted Jun 17, 2017
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- Joshua Rothkopf
There are sparks here that suggest the smarter movie a more scientifically minded director--say, David Cronenberg--might have made.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The Dark Knight director has had a mortifying effect on movies. In this case, it’s almost as if Affleck’s somber plunge into the calamitous, Nolan-produced "Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice" has followed him into other projects, like a heavy cologne. Avoid this one like the stink it is.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 12, 2016
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Younger audiences will see "The Fault in Our Stars’" Shailene Woodley once again excelling in an emotionally tricky role: Kat, a 17-year-old blooming into her wild years while reckoning with an increasingly unhinged mother, Eve (Eva Green, crazy-eyed and just this side of Faye Dunaway).- Time Out
- Posted Oct 21, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The way forward, both in Caouette's real-life situation and his development as an artist, remains unclear, yet that frustration makes it to the screen, in spiky waves that signal a vital personal quest.- Time Out
- Posted Nov 27, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Mike and Dave Need Wedding Dates follows a sturdy trajectory toward incipient maturity (and ceremonial catastrophe). If you don’t think about it too hard, you won’t hate it.- Time Out
- Posted Jul 8, 2016
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Amazingly, the remake—by Danish director Michael Noer—is nearly as long and equally as depressing. But he’s made a slightly more exciting movie.- Time Out
- Posted Aug 22, 2018
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The action scenes-blissfully easy to follow-are where Whedon makes the giant leap into the big leagues.- Time Out
- Posted May 1, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
By allowing viewers to step into the shoes of a wall-climbing Jackie Chan, a parkour-sprinting Daniel Craig or a bullet-spraying Ahnold, it does something that live action has never attempted before. The carnage flies—it’s possible to miss a lot of it. But if action movies are meant to be stunning, Hardcore Henry can proudly take its place among the giants. Even better, it lets you stand with them.- Time Out
- Posted Apr 8, 2016
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- Time Out
- Posted Mar 29, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Please. If you're going to ask audiences to submit to a dim theater themselves, at least greet them with the proper monster they paid for.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 15, 2011
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- Time Out
- Posted Apr 15, 2015
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- Joshua Rothkopf
But you do take the film home with you - to all your own toys - and that's what decent horror is supposed to do.- Time Out
- Posted Aug 12, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
All of the performances are knockouts, especially The Visitor's Richard Jenkins as a damaged Texas spiritualist who steeps the movie in intimacy.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
There’s social satire for those who want it — don’t tell the rest of the neighborhood our daughter’s risen from the dead! — and a fine, simmering sense of apocalypse that turns this suburban community into a war zone. Still, it’s a lot of heavy lifting for what amounts to “he’s just not that into you,” mainly because you’re as ripe as a cadaver.- Time Out
- Posted Aug 12, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Brief yet underdeveloped, Interior. Leather Bar. has a faux-documentary vibe about it.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 4, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
That title, Cobweb, suggests only one cobweb, but why be stingy? This movie’s screenplay is strewn with them: dozens of dusty tendrils linking it back to older, better horror films, sometimes on a shot-by-shot basis.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jul 22, 2023
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- Joshua Rothkopf
After the Wedding contains enough domestic revelations for several seasons of something delicious, but Freundlish’s showdowns all seem to dissipate or get curtailed abruptly.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 19, 2019
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- Joshua Rothkopf
There's no suspense, even as Galifianakis's bone-dry earnestness sometimes kicks the movie into a realm of stealth drama.- Time Out
- Posted Aug 7, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Even on its own limited terms, the jokes are sub–"Friday" sequel, and a last-act grab for "Boyz n the Hood" pathos is seriously reaching.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Judging from Sánchez's Lovely Molly, he'd like to get lost in the trees again, but now knows the path too well.- Time Out
- Posted May 15, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
When Mark Ruffalo shows up as a crumpled detective, you expect a dose of reality, yet on his heels come twin hams Michael Caine and Morgan Freeman, whose solemn presences (as Christopher Nolan knows well) prove wonderful distractions from silliness.- Time Out
- Posted May 31, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Mainly, though, this is a humorless film that skimps on the delicious opportunity for spousal retribution.- Time Out
- Posted Jul 18, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Sophia Takal's update of the cult classic turns the real horror of campus assault into a springboard for cheap thrills.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 12, 2019
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- Joshua Rothkopf
This sex thriller is trapped in a tepid zone between quality trash and pretentious psychodrama.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Some kind of napping for sure: The line between rigor and tedium is crossed in this Madrid-set home-invasion thriller, captured in a dozen or so claustrophobic shots but impoverished as a piece of drama.- Time Out
- Posted Jun 14, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
As scripted by Bryan Sipe, Demolition buries its lead actor under a rubble of clichés.- Time Out
- Posted Apr 8, 2016
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The set pieces are grand—gloriously dumb and never realistic enough to make you wince at the fact that billions of microscopic souls are dying before your eyes. Rather, you wince at everything else.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The profusion of Dudes is - pardon the apt pun - game-changing. By turns a fierce megalomaniac and a Lebowskian monk, Bridges supplies more soul than any sci-fi sequel deserves.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 14, 2010
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- Joshua Rothkopf
These filmmakers got halfway there, but Carpenter's genius was about more than just a look.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 14, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Call it a strange and unintended benefit, then, that many of these generic characters work better as awkward adults than as teens.- Time Out
- Posted Apr 3, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Cutesy and generic, New York, I Love You is almost colossally inept at capturing five-boroughs flavor.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Adult children and friends watch nervously as Pippa reclaims a measure of spunk; too bad it all feels like one of those pharmaceutical ads for longer, healthier lifestyles.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Missing is Cameron’s signature action modification, best exploited in Aliens: the strapping female heroine. McG’s testosterone-juiced world feels a little doomed without her.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The new movie is a joke, a toxic cocktail of banal psychobabble, laughably arty slo-mo flourishes and unmotivated sexual violence that only brain-in-jar types could take as a serious statement.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Hard-core fans get the loud noises they came for, but true fear vaporizes.- Time Out
- Posted Jan 3, 2018
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Hollywood does this too; truth be told, Russia’s high-tech whitewash goes down smooth like vodka.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 25, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
There’s no denying the movie’s climactic gathering of females bent on saving the species.- Time Out
- Posted Jan 28, 2017
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- Joshua Rothkopf
A thick sheen of luscious lens flares and Terrence Malick–like poetic lulls feel like icing on an undercooked mud pie—Bedford’s script deserves a stronger engagement with its characters’ desperation. Instead they collide in a clichéd ending that feels padded.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 8, 2015
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Weaknesses from the original remain, including a mustache-twirling villain straight out of a Bond film (Sharlto Copley) and a Freudian master plan that unravels the more you think about it. Give credit to Lee for staying fresh, even if this feels like slumming.- Time Out
- Posted Nov 26, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Cake chokes you on its self-seriousness, even as it trots out potentially interesting supporting players.- Time Out
- Posted Jan 20, 2015
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The final word on this incident will require a more thoughtful filmmaker. But hopefully, that artist will possess at least half of Bay’s punishing, peerless craft.- Time Out
- Posted Jan 20, 2016
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Were it not for the hard-R violence and a generous amount of computerized splatter, The Predator would play like a slightly naughtier Independence Day or Armageddon, sci-fi movies that had their squareness dirtied up by pop-culture-riffing jokesters hired to polish up a draft or two.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 7, 2018
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- Joshua Rothkopf
One would be better off experiencing Woodley via her heartbreaking turn in last year's "The Spectacular Now," a drama that actually has more to say about nightmarish cliques and individuality than any lackadaisical slide into future schlock.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 21, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
To the movie's small credit, there's very little grasping for larger significance: It's a dumb horror film, complete with a sexy female lust object (Kaboom's Mesquida) undraping for a shower scene.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 29, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The new drama, best viewed as a church movie, is a return to the kind of corner-chat indie cinema Lee revolutionized, with an emphasis on a towering performance by The Wire's Clarke Peters as a local bishop inflamed with the Word.- Time Out
- Posted Aug 7, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
In our chatty "Game of Thrones" moment, you'll thirst for a sidekick: a sly dwarf, a wisecracking female warrior, a huggable wolf, anything. Solomon Kane has none of these, and even heavyweight speechifiers like Max von Sydow and the late Pete Postlethwaite (that's how old the film is) have little to gnaw on.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 25, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Director Peter Webber, who once mined social unease from the painterly "Girl with a Pearl Earring," is out of his depth; this is a movie in desperate need of a no-nonsense Howard Hawks.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 5, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Alicia Vikander makes for a scrappy, spunky Lara Croft, even if the overall concept remains less a movie and more of an exercise routine.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 18, 2018
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Not helping matters is dead-eyed snark source Aubrey Plaza, somehow less expressive than the doll itself (creepily voiced by Mark Hamill).- Time Out
- Posted Jun 20, 2019
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- Time Out
- Posted Apr 10, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Is Joaquin Phoenix putting us on? After watching the terrifying, near-brilliant exposé I'm Still Here, in which the Oscar nominee's public and private unraveling becomes a sick joke, the question doesn't matter.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Admission’s comedy has walls built around it; director Paul Weitz (About a Boy), normally a softener of harsh edges, might have been stymied by Fey’s snappy persona.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 19, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Green was meant for quick-witted comedy. Unfortunately, she's becoming a mainstay of painfully sincere slogs.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 27, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Bland, artless and unoriginal, it's a horror sequel as faceless as its mask-wearing killers.- Time Out
- Posted Apr 25, 2018
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Connoisseurs will thrill to hints of composer Akira Ifukube’s original orchestra motifs or the passing mention of an “oxygen destroyer,” but mourn the lack of political stakes. It’s big dumb fun (a sequel with King Kong is on the horizon), and maybe that’s what these sequels always were.- Time Out
- Posted May 28, 2019
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The film is tangled in its mess of references: a possession thriller that also wants to dish out some grainy video footage à la “The Ring” or “Bring Her Back” along with the expected mouth-to-mouth vomiting.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 17, 2026
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- Joshua Rothkopf
"Southland Tales" was a soporific mess, and while The Box (based on material by novelist Richard Matheson) is superior by a certain margin, Kelly derails his newfound discipline with the usual shimmering portals and hazy notions of apocalyptic sacrifice.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The movie has a centerfold sheen to it--and some lesbianic soft-core flirtation to match--as its plot dives deeply into "Twilight"-esque heavy-melo meltdown in the last act. Cody throws one too many losses at Needy; the screenwriter loses her satiric way about halfway through. But for a while, this has real fangs.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The movie works-to the extent that it does-because of its sharply un-PC script (credited to Lee Eisenberg and Gene Stupnitsky) that sometimes feels like a Hollywood rewrite of "Election."- Time Out
- Posted Jun 21, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Visually ripe and located just around the corner from melodrama, A Cure for Wellness is a cousin to Guillermo del Toro’s recent "Crimson Peak," another thriller nostalgic for the deep-pocketed lushness of ’30s-era horror-branded studios like Universal, the makers of "Dracula" and "Frankenstein."- Time Out
- Posted Feb 9, 2017
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Gus Van Sant directs his players just shy of mush; he's a filmmaker capable of brilliant dares (Milk, Paranoid Park) and shocking whiffs (Finding Forrester, the pointless remake of Psycho). This one's kind of in the middle.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 13, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Before it lumbers to its big showdown — halfheartedly, with all the excitement of a third installment of a third reboot cycle — Halloween Ends is an unusually Michael Myers-free affair. Where's the big guy?- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Oct 14, 2022
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The opinions assembled are impressive: everyone from "Rounders'" Matt Damon to former senator Al D'Amato, a poker defender. But where's the voice of reason? It's card playing, not a dependable income.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 20, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Steel battleships and raining fire are Midway’s primary colors; the movie flaunts its hugeness at every turn. You’ll never mistake it for the real thing, but Emmerich’s eye for historical detail is scary.- Time Out
- Posted Nov 6, 2019
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The movie lacks the visual snap that would push the humor into next-level American satire. Still, you can’t help but laugh at scenes that could be mini-cartoons in themselves.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 30, 2016
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The new film sometimes feels too snazzy in its jittery cinematography, but the stunts make it through the budget upgrade intact.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Less a master class in inappropriate high-school relationships than the CliffsNotes version, A Teacher isn’t going to tell you anything Nabokov or "Election" didn’t.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 3, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Diced into hash, the action sequences are unusually painful: poundingly loud and punctuated by Liam Neeson's bark, Bradley Cooper's manic heehawing and a total lack of clarity.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Jessica Lange, as rare as a unicorn these days, seizes on the role of a grieving mother with two taloned hands. If there are any tremors of shame to be felt here, they emanate from her.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 18, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
A soundtrack of churning rock songs by the Kills is as close as this misfire gets to authentic grrrl power, borrowed as it is.- Time Out
- Posted May 14, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
How does one remain an unapologetic fan of Vaughn, abrasive though he is, even as his material fails him?- Time Out
- Posted Jan 14, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Like that giant metaphorical carousel looming over them, it’s a movie that’s spinning its wheels.- Time Out
- Posted Nov 20, 2017
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The Broken Tower feels unique as a young man’s tribute to an adventuresome, doomed soul.- Time Out
- Posted Apr 12, 2018
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Unfortunately, a new problem rears its head: It seems no young audience member can be trusted to enjoy a thoughtful story without a heroic, borderline-obnoxious surrogate (here, he's voiced by Zac Efron) zooming around on a scooter, bonking villainous heads and saving the day.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 29, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
We might have all felt like lost children for a while, but ten years later, the innocence is shameless.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 20, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
you sense that "The Hangover" loomed large over this production. Still, Eve has a true flair for zingers, and the movie’s heart survives intact.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
[Eva] Green is the only one able to excite this silly material into the spiky shape it’s supposed to take. You wish the rest of the cast was as clued in.- Time Out
- Posted Aug 22, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Unlike a truly daring movie like Lars von Trier's "The Idiots" - about a gang of clever jerks who pretend to be mentally retarded - The Comedy never musters an articulate indictment, nor does it have much to say on the subject of free-floating fatigue.- Time Out
- Posted Nov 13, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Listen to the rhythms of "Broadcast News" - from Holly Hunter's daily crying jags to William Hurt's cock-of-the walk patter - and you'll hear how romantic comedy can approach an art form, a roundelay that requires the ear of a conductor. How Do You Know, James L. Brooks's latest, has such tone-deaf passages that it feels made by a totally different man.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 14, 2010
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The Meg proves only that, at least cinematically speaking, great-white movies may have finally jumped the shark.- Time Out
- Posted Aug 8, 2018
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Deeply irresponsible, this a film that will give parents seizures-and Roger Corman a big old smile.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 2, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The movie sags after Mary’s weak-willed acquiescence to crime, instantly turning her into a dull-eyed monster. You know her procedures are bound to stray from elective, but it’s hard to care.- Time Out
- Posted May 28, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
"Amadeus" it's not, but as light transitional music, the film-which has Pete Postlethwaite's final performance, as a swishy landlord-is tuneful enough.- Time Out
- Posted Nov 1, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Unlike The Father, which expanded Zeller's stage source material with maze-like complexity, The Son pins us in for an endgame that you wish had more of a takeaway than a gut punch.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Nov 23, 2022
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Still Life constantly threatens to become a better movie: John’s scrutiny of photos feels vaguely serial-killer–esque, and there’s a late-inning love interest (Downton Abbey’s Joanne Froggatt) that you privately cheer for.- Time Out
- Posted Jan 14, 2015
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- Joshua Rothkopf
More shakily, Payne’s obvious pathology isn’t probed as deeply as it should be. A jaunty musical score smooths over what might have been a tougher profile about an expert liar, to self included.- Time Out
- Posted May 27, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Justice League gets the band together but remembers to bring the banter along with the boom.- Time Out
- Posted Nov 15, 2017
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- Joshua Rothkopf
"Rosemary's Baby" it's not, but color us stoked that a Twilight movie even strays into evil-fetus territory.- Time Out
- Posted Nov 18, 2011
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- Time Out
- Posted Mar 22, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The new movie is simpler plotwise (a race to the Fountain of Youth), while at the same time being somehow more deadening.- Time Out
- Posted May 17, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
By the Sea is a so-so film, but its meandering stretches of decaying glamour make it about 10 times more interesting than most Oscar bait.- Time Out
- Posted Nov 13, 2015
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- Joshua Rothkopf
A coda shifts to video footage of Cleese's irreverent eulogy; you wish the whole film could have been as slyly somber. It's what the colonel would have insisted upon.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 31, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Fresnadillo, working with screenwriters Nicolás Casariego and Jaime Marques, might be angling for the same YA fantasy as "Pan's Labyrinth," but they've forgotten about that film's violent underpinnings, a mistake that leaches their movie of suspense.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 27, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
From the auteur of "Torque" (2004) comes this instant headache: a panicky snark-schlock horror-comedy that reduces everything to a hyperactive squall of white noise.- Time Out
- Posted Apr 10, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
A largely sexless sex romp, has such a winning sense of middle-aged exhaustion to it that you might want to add a star or two, especially if you're familiar with the banalities of matrimonial bliss.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 22, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Like the vampires that cavort throughout it, this horror-comedy doesn’t have much chance of surviving the harsh light of scrutiny--but as a loopy, antiserious lark, it should prove plenty alive on the midnight-movie circuit.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The film wants to be inspiring, when it might have been cosmic-a far greater ambition. Tossing boats and dreamers, the huge waves perform beautifully.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 27, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Perfect Sisters, which takes a dark, matricidal turn (inspired by an actual Toronto case), was never going to be a new "Heavenly Creatures." But give credit to director Stan Brooks for allowing his two former child stars some real meat to sink their teenage chops into.- Time Out
- Posted Apr 8, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Who will survive the night in order to deflower her? Mysteriously, the film has a hard time functioning on even this level, introducing complications for Mandy that the actor can’t pull off, adorable though she is.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 8, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
We've seen Nicolas Cage when he's angry-and we like him when he's angry. So why does this painfully loud revenge movie skimp on the Cage rage?- Time Out
- Posted Feb 25, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
All of this is way smarter than it needs to be - and it's only the prologue to the main event, which explodes the film into awkwardness but a weird kind of triumph, too.- Time Out
- Posted Aug 30, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The unexpectedly wonderful thing about this sequel is that it actually improves on the jokes.- Time Out
- Posted May 24, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
If there’s any justice, dawning or otherwise, at the multiplex, audiences will reject Zack Snyder’s lumbering, dead-on-arrival superhero mélange, a $250 million tombstone for a genre in dire need of a break.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 22, 2016
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The navel-gazing artist class that gave Williamsburg its character (now more of a marketable “brand”) has in Friedrich both a vigorous defender and, it must be said, something close to an angry parody of itself.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 5, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
For a movie with a critique of mediocrity well within its grasp, this one settles for an embrace of it, barely breaking a sweat.- Time Out
- Posted Jan 25, 2015
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The Losers is the ultimate example, scraped from the bottom of the comic-book barrel, where writer Andy Diggle’s figurine-like characters first had their exploits in an exciting War on Terror.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The ambition here is invigorating and, during its most exhilarating stretches, Night Swim seems to be actually pulling it off — until suddenly it’s not, a victim of overplotting, pushing the water thing a little too hard.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 8, 2024
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Even this kind of WWIII escapism—it’s based on a 2012 novel by Don Keith and George Wallace called Firing Point—requires a sturdier hero than Gerard Butler, who finds himself in a time machine that delivers actors to rejected Tom Cruise projects.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 26, 2018
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Roth’s material should have been brewed into a larger indictment of authority in freefall—a few incidental Nixon mentions don’t count—and we’re left to suck on actorly handwringing in lieu of larger ideas.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 17, 2016
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- Joshua Rothkopf
A tiresome mess that's completely bereft of a quiet moment in speech or manner, The Tempest aches for the wisdom of discipline.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 7, 2010
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Equals could be her least persuasive performance to date — and remember, Stewart has played a soldier at Guantanamo and a girl who dates a vampire.- Time Out
- Posted Jul 14, 2016
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Once intriguingly strange, Lisbeth Salander returns as a boring action hero, her rough edges sanded down.- Time Out
- Posted Nov 2, 2018
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- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
My Best Enemy bleeds suspense like a pin-pricked tire. It wants to be clever, but survivor tales bring with them too much muck.- Time Out
- Posted Jan 9, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Some will find the director’s toothless brand of epiphany comforting (and download his mixtape), but the vast majority will find it tired.- Time Out
- Posted Jul 15, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Only Hélène Cattet and Bruno Forzani, directors of 2009’s stylish Amer, emerge intact with “O Is for Orgasm,” a surging montage of fluid colors and moans.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 5, 2013
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- Time Out
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- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
As the film advances its more adventurous ideas about privacy, it suddenly feels like a lecture written by a twelve-year-old. Worse, The Circle ends precisely when it’s getting interesting; you’ll wonder if the production simply ran out of money. Movies about the dangers of rampant interconnectivity are welcome in this day and age, but let’s please make them a little more courageous.- Time Out
- Posted Apr 28, 2017
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- Joshua Rothkopf
It’s both stupefying and a little sad to realize that this is the movie Shyamalan wanted to make.- Time Out
- Posted Jan 9, 2019
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- Joshua Rothkopf
It’s a movie that tips toward overkill--even Ronan’s voice is amplified into a weird whisper. More quiet would have helped.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
While Transcendence has tons of money to spend on unpersuasive digital effects and dronelike music, it shows little interest in exploring the potentially tricky benefits of a computer-enhanced intellect; it’s not even in the enjoyable realm of starkly ridiculous Cold War thrillers like "Colossus: The Forbin" Project.- Time Out
- Posted Apr 16, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The smidgen of dramatic color offered by Jennifer Lopez, as a divorced real-estate broker drawn into Parker's payback scheme, is offset by her character's shocking naïveté, shedding her clothes on command (as if she still couldn't hide a wire somewhere) and falling unconvincingly for Statham's featureless cipher.- Time Out
- Posted Jan 25, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The film’s cutesy vibe is closer to "Glee" than "Election" or "Waiting for Guffman," with Nathan Lane’s exuberant drama teacher pitching several yards of camp tent.- Time Out
- Posted May 21, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Uncourageously, the plot gets a case of cold feet, looping back to half-written family members left in the dust. But when it’s being wild, the drama has nearly enough character to pass for distinct.- Time Out
- Posted Apr 23, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Director George Clooney raids a leftover script by the Coen brothers that lacks the snap of their more vicious crime comedies.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 10, 2017
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Black Adam is what happens when artists say they want to go dark but don't really have the stomach for it. Cue scenes of humorless mid-air wrestling, shake vigorously, wait for the sequel.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Oct 21, 2022
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- Joshua Rothkopf
You’re really going for Rodriguez’s retrohappy splatter: Intestines tangle in helicopter rotors, heads pop in spring-loaded decapitations, and there’s even a new fake trailer up top. Little is believable, and that’s exactly as it should be.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 8, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
What's the word on the film debut of Rihanna, playing a sass-mouthed petty officer? Dreadful (ella, ella).- Time Out
- Posted May 15, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The filmmakers are too much in love with their made-up holiday to observe it to the fullest.- Time Out
- Posted Jun 4, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
You can go to one of those sweaty, immersive outdoor music fests and get splattered with the mud and euphoria that always engulfs fans. Or you can cheap out and see this predictable rom-com-shot at the 2010 edition of Scotland's then-in-progress T in the Park-and boggle at finding strangers in the audience more appealing than our main characters.- Time Out
- Posted May 8, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Mostly, though, as TV newscasters inform us, civilization has taken a serious nosedive — definitely the case when a well-financed Emmerich disaster flick can't even get its dumb-fun groove on.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Feb 6, 2022
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- Joshua Rothkopf
A deep supporting cast brings its A-game to the ridiculous dialogue.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 23, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
It’s the opposite of frightening: a sludgy collection of tired jump scares, inexpertly mounted period décor—this time we’re in a too-shiny 1973 Los Angeles—and a continued slump into generic blahness.- Time Out
- Posted Apr 19, 2019
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- Joshua Rothkopf
In theory, there's nothing wrong when a movie reminds you of TV. (That's where the fun is, anyway.) But when a movie resembles a long-lost, corduroy-clad episode of "The Rockford Files," that's a problem.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 15, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
There’s not enough villainy—nor lip-smacking comeuppance—to justify a smiting by ash or falling column. The movie in your head melts ten times better.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 21, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
It gets bogged down in slo-mo indie quirk when it should be faster, more in our face.- Time Out
- Posted Jul 12, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Almost half a century after "Night of the Living Dead," filmmakers are still misunderstanding how George Romero made his besieged shut-ins compelling.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 4, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Doomed love will never go out of style, but would it have killed director Carlo Carlei to inject the proceedings with some modern-day aloofness? Today’s version will likely become a cheat sheet for slacking students, but it won’t inspire them to open their hearts to the text.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 8, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The movie hinges on a lengthy lesbian sex scene between in-on-the-joke leads Asta Paredes and Catherine Corcoran; "Blue Is the Warmest Color" this ain’t.- Time Out
- Posted Jan 8, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Like all advertisements, this scripted movie is a perfect fantasy: expertly coordinated, simplistic (the bad guys like yachts and bikini girls while our heroes have loving families) and more than a little scary.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 24, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
First you laugh at McCarthy’s harshness in front of the kids, who aren’t used to her screw-the-competition ethos, then you sigh realizing this is no School of Rock.- Time Out
- Posted Apr 10, 2016
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- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Knuckleheaded though this faculty-member-turned-MMA-fighter comedy is, there's no denying the plot's lefty credentials, snuck in like Raisinets among the popcorn.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 16, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
On its way to an uncathartic climax that somehow involves a black-market-fenced oil painting and an Amsterdam shootout, The Goldfinch throws in so much diversionary character work that you wonder if anyone thought the stew was going to be edible.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 11, 2019
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The film is set in a celeb-owned Miami restaurant and many of the gags--exploding entrees, the swallowing of a diamond ring, on-the-job drunkenness--feel like leftovers.- Time Out
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- Time Out
- Posted Feb 18, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
When De Palma started taking himself too seriously—circa Casualties of War—is when he lost the thread. His genius was always in voluptuous nonsense. He needs to drop the politics and get back to baby carriages.- Time Out
- Posted Jun 3, 2019
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Ex-Glee geeks and those who sing in the shower: Your passable time-waster has arrived.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 21, 2017
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Why introduce two female characters — played by Kate Bosworth and Winona Ryder, both excelling at trashy desperation — if the script’s ultimately going to forget them? The worst sin is visited upon Statham: Sure, those fists fly, but his poetry has become a chopped-up hash.- Time Out
- Posted Nov 26, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Depending on what you need from this movie, there's slight redemption in its full-on commitment to raunch, both in baby-shit–to-mouth scatology and some choice zingers.- Time Out
- Posted Aug 2, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Close to a parody of a French sex drama - complete with bored, bourgie bed-swappers and a dull sense of amoral sophistication - this autopiloted import does no favors to the legacies of Truffaut and Godard.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 27, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Alas, it all comes off as hit and myth, mainly due to our leaden, buzz-cut hero, Perseus (Avatar’s Worthington, no Harry Hamlin), and zero sparks of heavenly-body chemistry or humor.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Forgive the film its "Napoleon Dynamite" overquirk; a loving god is watching all, genuflected to on bedroom-wall posters and seen in the film's final five minutes--and if you're not a Rush fan, this is not your movie- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
It’s a movie about memory that actually improves the more you go over its folds.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Fans hoping to watch Schwarzenegger growl his catchphrases with a slight edge of shtick are underestimating the patience involved in sitting through a two-hour slog. As for those who want a little apocalyptic tension or (dare to dream) romance, this new model is not for you. It’s the Skynet cut.- Time Out
- Posted Jun 30, 2015
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- Joshua Rothkopf
A narcotizing movie filled with endless anti-banter (come on, Kumail Nanjiani, you’re better than alien comic relief), it works only as a safe space away from the rain.- Time Out
- Posted Jun 12, 2019
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- Joshua Rothkopf
No Escape takes pains to pause for some unconvincing speechifying about Western meddling abroad, but its showbiz racism gets an infuriating pass.- Time Out
- Posted Aug 24, 2015
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Hollywood's hocus-pocus machine has turned out swill like this before, but even ultra-observant Catholics will find their interest waning. Hammy acting should make nonbelievers of the rest.- Time Out
- Posted Jan 25, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Mainly it lacks director Terry Zwigoff who, as he did with "Ghost World" and "Crumb," suggested a vital, original voice.- Time Out
- Posted Nov 23, 2016
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Lacking a single serious scare or sly idea, the movie dies in ways that merely mediocre horror films can't even dream of.- Time Out
- Posted Jul 5, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
It’s crushing, then, that the movie’s big reveal is the kind of narrative do-over that could only spring from the mind of an almighty writer in love with playing God — or with himself.- Time Out
- Posted Jun 17, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The first Reitman film to make the 36-year-old director seem about 400 years old.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 15, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Taking the worst of it on the chin is star Jack Huston, whose Jewish prince turned galley slave, Judah Ben-Hur, suffers from a distinct lack of personality—he’s like a boulder that someone forgot to chisel into a statue.- Time Out
- Posted Aug 19, 2016
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Even with the original cast on board, there's surprisingly little chemistry or humor, and the movie makes repeated pit stops to stress family values.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 8, 2022
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The documentary is strongest during these conference-room brainstorms, similar to those of a political campaign. (It could have used more of Boies’s witness-demolishing courtroom eloquence.) The draw here is watching a careful process unfold, regardless of the outcome.- Time Out
- Posted Jun 3, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The actors are what save it. Not only does Johnson build on his subversive persona of hulking, dim-witted likability, but he’s joined by Neighbors’ Zac Efron, today’s reigning king of the hazy one-liner.- Time Out
- Posted May 23, 2017
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Waiting for Inescapable to finally reach its unearned, sentimental conclusion is a tiresome experience, but seeing Tomei submit to its badness is several measures worse.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 19, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
There’s a way to make this kind of trashy noir work beautifully—was Wild Things director John McNaughton somehow not available?—but Serenity is too blandly generic to stick its snout in the muck and luxuriate, barring the occasional jail-baity line of dialogue from Hathaway (“You said I was finally old enough,” Karen whispers, reminiscing).- Time Out
- Posted Jan 24, 2019
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The movie dies onscreen; it might be the best advertisement for avoiding the glories of Italy ever released by a Hollywood distributor.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 10, 2010
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- Joshua Rothkopf
All of them slog through countless boring sword-and-sandal skirmishes, none of which feel remotely suspenseful, until the hugeness of it all becomes a mildly passable joke.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 29, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Centrally, the title character remains an impressive piece of propwork, and Leonetti's restraint in never animating it (à la Chucky) is the only thing worth appreciating here.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 3, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
But mostly, knock it for reducing Ice Cube to the tired sneer he’s been successfully avoiding in recent films, especially in last year’s Barbershop: The Next Cut.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 24, 2017
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- Joshua Rothkopf
A marvelous thought, credited to Orson Welles: You can handle shit with velvet gloves, but the gloves only get shittier; the shit doesn't get glovier. As wondrous as the regal Helen Mirren can be, it's a sad day when her queenly demeanor gets dunked in doo-doo.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Ceaselessly upbeat and just short of zany, Let My People Go! will bring smiles of recognition to anyone who hasn't seen early Woody Allen in a while.- Time Out
- Posted Jan 9, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Crushingly, the dependably perverse art-action director Nicolas Winding Refn has finally made a boring movie.- Time Out
- Posted Jul 16, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The original film, for all its zaniness, existed in a recognizable Koch-era metropolis, one that paradoxically added to our hero's likable haze of denial. This time, the town is far shinier (what recession?).- Time Out
- Posted Apr 6, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
She (Lohan) isn’t the best thing about this awful, lounged-out drama — it has no best thing — but in her defense, Lohan has been atrociously directed, allowed to get away with the worst aspects of her vocal-fry laziness, and trotted out like a symbolic objet d’art.- Time Out
- Posted Jul 30, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Ultimately, for all its running around in the middle of the night, Sex Tape plays it remarkably coy, reaffirming love, not lust. It’s the cinematic equivalent of sleeping in the wet spot.- Time Out
- Posted Jul 24, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Never do you sense an overriding intelligence; Cortés once found laughs and shocks within the coffin-confined Buried, but here's he's got too much room to wander into realms of the ridiculous.- Time Out
- Posted Jul 10, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The performances, especially from the bed partners, are complex; even if you weren’t wanting for an exposé of adult-entertainment violence, here it is.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 11, 2014
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- Time Out
- Posted Apr 20, 2018
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- Joshua Rothkopf
All the solemnity is deadly: Not one of these superhuman gang members registers in memory, and you feel stiffed on gory giggles. Talk about having your chain yanked.- Time Out
- Posted Jun 11, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Entertainingly, Hardy lets himself get jerked around, Evil Dead–style, but he’s never enough of a jerk—so much for that journo-snoop backstory—and Venom isn’t vicious enough to justify its own existence.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 3, 2018
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Seriously missing the memo in a cringe-inducing way, The Hustle takes a perfectly fine premise from Dirty Rotten Scoundrels—two predatory men get played by a savvier woman—and obliterates it by swapping genders and ultimately selling out its feminist credibility.- Time Out
- Posted May 9, 2019
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- Joshua Rothkopf
When featherweight Domhnall Gleeson, as an intense angel of death, is your feminist Irish mob movie’s most interesting asset, you need to find Hollywood’s witness-protection program immediately.- Time Out
- Posted Aug 7, 2019
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- Joshua Rothkopf
If mean-spirited snarksters had set out to trash the reputation of "Juno" screenwriter Diablo Cody, they couldn’t have done a more vicious job than the Oscar winner herself does with her directorial debut.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 15, 2013
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- Time Out
- Posted Dec 14, 2010
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Watts’s work is extraordinary, sometimes keying off the same illicit register as "Mulholland Drive"; she risks being goofy, awkward and bratty.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 29, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The only aspects marking The Back-Up Plan as modern (not fresh) are its skanky wallowings in hormonal urges and an equally sour penchant for potshots at the target audience: women who want to be mothers.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Mottola has made some brilliantly idiosyncratic pictures: Superbad, Adventureland, The Daytrippers. But as Joneses’s director for hire, he’s allowed zero personality.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 22, 2016
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Miraculously, the movie doesn’t feel mean-spirited so much as profoundly awkward. Scripted by smart guys like Etan Cohen (Idiocracy, Tropic Thunder) and two behind-the-scenes writers on TV’s consistently excellent Key & Peele, the film feels both daring and foolhardy.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 26, 2015
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Unfortunately, none of the subsequent noise is all that scary, and the striving for "Paranormal Activity’s" buzz is shameless.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
A remake could have been fun if it had been made with vision, or at least an appreciation of the original. If that's grade-A beef, call this one a rancid veggie burger.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Feb 19, 2022
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The surprising thing here is how smoothly this over-iced cake goes down.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Neither as subversively fun as last year’s megadestructive "Project X," nor as creative as "The Hangover" (on which these codirectors broke through as screenwriters), this further installment in the millennials-acting-badly genre serves as a distinctly average placeholder.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 2, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Controversially, Escrivá started the Opus Dei, and There Be Dragons is best appreciated by those seeking more realism than the albino self-whipper of "The Da Vinci Code."- Time Out
- Posted May 3, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Sandler's puppy-dog persona is just about ready to be put down. From its title on, this is entertainment for extremely lazy audiences.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 11, 2011
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- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The doc’s most intriguing moment has Summers dropping into a Japanese karaoke bar and singing along to an in-progress Police hit, an affable man wandering through his own legacy.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 17, 2015
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- Joshua Rothkopf
You’re either awestruck, dumbstruck or just plain struck in the face.- Time Out
- Posted Jun 30, 2014
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Shoddy and exhausted from the start, this painfully unfunny buddy-cop comedy lands with a plop in the January sewer of failed Hollywood castoffs.- Time Out
- Posted Jan 14, 2016
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Cats may flop but it will be found by a likeminded audience, maybe the same one that rescued The Greatest Showman. Don’t be the sourpuss to tell these people they’re wrong.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 18, 2019
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- Time Out
- Posted Nov 21, 2018
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