J.R. Jones
Select another critic »For 1,513 reviews, this critic has graded:
-
43% higher than the average critic
-
3% same as the average critic
-
54% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 6.5 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
J.R. Jones' Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 59 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | The Baader Meinhof Complex | |
| Lowest review score: | Bad Boys II | |
Score distribution:
-
Positive: 697 out of 1513
-
Mixed: 598 out of 1513
-
Negative: 218 out of 1513
1513
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Often seems like a Mike Leigh movie viewed in a fun-house mirror.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Shepard is the whole show here, as weathered and elemental as the harsh Bolivian locations; the movie's best scenes are those that pit him against Stephen Rea as a former Pinkerton man who tracked the outlaws for years and can't believe Cassidy is still drawing breath.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Oct 13, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
There aren't any big laughs, but there's a steady supply of small ones, and with his overgrown-kid persona Ferrell seems more comfortable in a family comedy than, say, Eddie Murphy.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Shot at the same time as "The Matrix Reloaded," this last installment is the shortest of the bunch at 129 minutes, but I still succumbed to special-effects hypnosis in the last hour.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Director Anne Sewitsky aims for quirky humanism along the lines of Finland's Aki Kaurismaki; she's helped along considerably by Kittelsen's sunny performance, though the film crosses over into Scandinavian kitsch with a series of country-swing interludes sung a capella by a male quartet.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Oct 13, 2011
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Winterbottom and screenwriter Tony Grisoni were clearly motivated by conscience, but I can't help thinking that Stephen Frears's "Dirty Pretty Things," a much more conventional and contrived movie about third-world refugees, will have a greater social impact than this murky art-house item.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This sequel ups the ante, asking whether urban renewal means anything now other than turning neighborhoods into giant malls.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The project was produced in association with National Geographic World Films, a relationship borne out by the movie's cultural detail, rich earth-toned cinematography (by Falorni), and almost complete lack of dramatic tension.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Though the film lacks the frantic imagination of its inspiration, Robert Rodriguez's "Spy Kids" franchise, grade-schoolers should still enjoy its fresh-scrubbed humor and fantasies of youthful omnipotence.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
With a mug like hers Cervera must have realized this was her big chance to star in a musical, and she gives a dazzling performance.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The tone seesaws between comic wackiness and romantic sincerity, with Paltrow better suited to the latter.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This French variation on the backwoods horror movie proves that even a little thematic complexity in the early scenes can yield a substantial payoff when things get going.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Producer-star Tom Cruise handed this one to alumni from the TV spy drama "Alias," and the result is nearly as good as the series' best, Woo's Mission: Impossible 2.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This Argentinean comedy is short on plot and leisurely in its character development, though by the end it's become a modest and genial portrait of a dysfunctional family.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This downbeat indie drama gives the leads a few excellent scenes together, and they acquit themselves credibly. But there's also a fair amount of wilted comedy from the stock supporting characters.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Aside from the Pirandellian games and some interplay of different film stocks there isn't much going on here, though von Trier rewards the patient with a strange and horrifying climax.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The movie gets off to a weak start, but the jokes get progressively more bent.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This pleasant romantic comedy is essentially "Far From Heaven" with the races reversed.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This French biopic of Nicolas Sarkozy plays like a competent TV miniseries, moving briskly and focusing on the hustle and bustle of electoral politics as the protagonist climbs toward the presidency.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Jan 5, 2012
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Gets a little soapy, but the dismal working-class milieu and the measured performances by Mezzogiorno and Girotti (a venerable Italian actor who died last year ) bolster the sense of solidity.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Though it easily surpasses most American action flicks, it suffers from the old commercial imperative of making the protagonist a nice guy, something Refn has seldom bothered with in Europe.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Sep 15, 2011
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
There are plenty of funny moments, as well as a sweet subplot involving the unkempt drummer and the guitarist's no-nonsense mom (Christina Applegate).- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This doomsday scenario takes up the first third of the movie, after which the tension dissipates badly and the husband and wife, now separated by plastic sheeting, wait for help to arrive.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Broomfield, whose celebrity exposés are known for their intrusiveness and innuendo, lost me with his gentle shower scene between an Iraqi woman and her husband; even if it wasn't invented, is it really any of our business?- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Fortunately for the company, Largo turns out to be a formidable knife fighter in the corporate sense; fortunately for this sleek, empty thriller, he turns out to be a formidable knife fighter in the street sense too.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Nov 23, 2011
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Whether or not she's alive is the question that's supposed to animate this ostensibly metaphysical horror movie, but thematic rigor mortis sets in long before the final reel.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Whether the character is supposed to be a stand-in for Cody, who grew up in the western 'burbs of Chicago and has since won an Oscar, is more than I can say, but the movie suffers from the sort of self-pitying fog that can envelop a writer when he dives into his own malaise.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Dec 8, 2011
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Glodell seems to be reaching for the nihilistic buddy romance of a movie like "Mean Streets" (1973), but without the serious intent; despite all the roiling emotions, this begins to feel like a pile-up of macho fetish items and stylistic affectations.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Sep 15, 2011
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The argument is so tilted against windmills (sorry) that this comes perilously close to an advocacy video. But Israel deserves credit for delivering the bad news that wind power, like natural gas and nuclear, comes with its own array of social and environmental headaches.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Feb 6, 2012
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Unfortunately, as in many such big-screen comic books, the backstory beats the hell out of the present-tense plot.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The famously passive-aggressive musicians manage to keep any real drama offscreen; the overriding impression is of four people enduring each other long enough to get their retirement portfolios in order.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
It's most entertaining for its stunt casting of movie stars as the president's family and advisers.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
First-time director James Gartner observes all the rituals--the coach busting chops, the team sneaking out to party--but the players are indifferently characterized and the civil rights story has a fake Black History Month feel.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Director Paul Greengrass has applied his jumpy, tumbling visual style to action blockbusters with Matt Damon and serious dramatizations of political events. This Iraq war drama makes a game attempt to meld the two, though manufacturing thrills takes precedence over any kind of journalistic insight.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
All I got was this lousy movie. OK, it's not that bad, though in contrast to "Ocean's Eleven," which gave its megastars a neat little heist story, this sequel is both contrived and convoluted.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Samberg can't carry this, though director Akiva Schaffer supplies some hilarious, "Jackass"-style wipeouts and there are nice supporting turns from Isla Fisher (Wedding Crashers) as Rod's love interest and Bill Hader as one of his goofball friends.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
His story demands to be heard, though Tucker and Epperlein lack the material for a full feature and pad this out to 73 minutes with some incongruously playful elements (spy music, comic-book illustrations, scenes of Abbas frolicking at a beach).- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Pine, who expertly approximated William Shatner in the Star Trek reboot, seems to have picked up some of the actor's air of self-serious buffoonery, and it suits him well; as Witherspoon's best pal, late-night TV comedian Chelsea Handler holds down what might be called the Nora Ephron part, dispensing an endless stream of bawdy man jokes.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Feb 16, 2012
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The scenes between husband and wife are spectacularly awkward and arresting, though the movie grows more dubious the nearer the guys get to their shooting session in a local hotel room.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The problem is that only a fan would be inclined to tolerate this dunderheaded mystery.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This is a killer idea for a political satire, and screenwriters Jason Richman and Joshua Michael Stern come close to realizing its farcical potential.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Adults won't find much to enjoy here, though the dog's high-octane action series serves as a perverse parody of Jerry Bruckheimer-style summer blockbusters.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Former FBI agent Robert Hanssen is now serving a life sentence for his long career as a Russian and Soviet spy, but this rote thriller implies he should have done prison time just for being Catholic. As played by Chris Cooper, Hanssen is a humorless asshole who commits treason because the bureau won't give him an office with a window, and the screenplay scores countless easy points off his religiosity, which masks a weakness for sex tapes and sleazy chat rooms.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Tykwer manages to negotiate this incredible coincidence without much trouble, though the movie slows to a crawl in its second half.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Nov 17, 2011
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The gilt-and-grime setting is eerily atmospheric, and screenwriter Dan Madigan has a nicely sick sense of humor.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
It runs like a Swiss watch, though the plot continuously turns on Cage's liberal interpretation of ridiculously cryptic clues.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Most of the humor is of the kick-daddy-in-the-shins variety, though Anjelica Huston has a few choice moments as "Ms. Harridan."- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This screen adaptation never quite jells, veering from family drama to stale 50s consumer kitsch, but it's anchored by strong performances from Julianne Moore.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The first positive portrayal of homosexuality in Russian cinema, a distinction that carries it only so far.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The true story of Kimani N'gan'ga Maruge, an 84-year-old Kenyan who entered primary school in hope of learning to read, inspired this pleasant but routine exercise in third-world uplift.- Chicago Reader
- Posted May 19, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Like so many secular, big-studio Christmas comedies, this isn't naughty enough to be funny or nice enough to be uplifting; it's just an ugly sweater from a distant relative, thoughtlessly sent and destined to be thrown away.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Alexander Payne has won an Oscar for best adapted screenplay (Sideways), but you'd never guess that from this clumsily written drama: characters keep explaining things that their listeners would already know, and the first couple reels are so thick with expository voice-over that you may think you're listening to a museum tour on a set of headphones.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Nov 16, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
For the grown-ups there are sweet, sincere performances by Ginnifer Goodwin, Sandra Oh, and, as Ramona's endlessly game father, the likable John Corbett, relieved for once of his drippy rom-com duties.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This is mildly entertaining for its cheery sacrilege (crucifixes that turn into throwing stars, etc), but once the premise has been rolled out, the movie is about as surprising to watch as the Stations of the Cross.- Chicago Reader
- Posted May 14, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
"The Illusionist" also centers on a 19th-century magician, and the elegant contours of its story are even more impressive compared with Nolan's clutter of double and triple crosses.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The vile sadism of the Saw movies has been replaced by decorative references to Saint Augustine and Immanuel Kant, and there's a beautiful but brainy police profiler (Waddell) on hand to dispense a thick layer of psychobabble.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
By the time Herzog tried to pass off jellyfish as Dourif's old pals, my indulgence was nearing its end--but then so was the movie.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This manages to make the real seem generic, rather than the other way around.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The movie seems unusually honest in portraying the no-option existence of the working poor, but the story slips into melodrama in the last reel.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
It preserves the peculiar machismo of Ayer's earlier projects: the alpha male dominates not only because he's the most powerful, but because he's the most jaded.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This singing-along-to-the-radio effect has a dingy charm that honors the blue-collar Italian setting, yet Turturro spoils it by turning the movie into a hip star party, with a cast of indie-acting royalty.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
I love Franken and wish there were more funny liberals in the chattering class, but his crushing sarcasm wouldn't exactly elevate the national debate.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Surrounding and ultimately subsuming this ethical struggle is a fair amount of pediatric-cancer horror and mush, though Cassavetes is frequently bailed out by his cast (Diaz is admirably unpleasant as the controlling mother, and Joan Cusack is unusually tough and restrained as the presiding judge).- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This story of a girl growing up in the occupied territories never finds its footing.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Apr 14, 2011
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This is pretty thin soup, but the players are spirited and the jokes generally offbeat.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
No movie with access to the Cole Porter songbook could be a complete waste of time, but this biopic of the great tunesmith by producer-director Irwin Winkler is all upholstery and no chair.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This revisionist western by writer-director Andrew Dominik makes a wan attempt to present the Jesse James legend as the dawn of celebrity culture in America.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
I hate to rap this serious-minded filmmaker, but I'm beginning to wonder whether her scripts aren't better realized when they're held in check.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Apr 14, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Weird anachronisms (cars, telephones, home computers) contribute to the craziness, but despite the copious imagination on display, this is a fairly long haul.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Canned racial uplift and tear-streaked faces abound, though they're offset somewhat by a nicely funky blaxploitation vibe.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This is the usual cartoon of hound dogs, roadhouses, antebellum mansions, and Civil War reenactments. Aside from that, it's not a bad date movie.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Only loosely connected to the story, the visuals quickly grow monotonous, and as the chronicle arrives at Cobain's late years of curdled fame and fortune, his bitterness and cynicism make even the narration hard to take.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Pederson has no smoking gun that connects Nashi to dirty tricks or violence, but there are plenty of both swirling around Moscow.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Mar 8, 2012
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
You don't have to get too far into Kazuo Ishiguro's brilliant 2005 novel Never Let Me Go to realize it's hopelessly unfilmable.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The setup for this Oliver Stone drama keeps its iconic villain so far removed from the financial action that he seems like a dog tied up outside a restaurant.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The behind-the-scenes tragedy gives Gilliam an easy excuse for the dull chaos that engulfs the story, but he might have generated it all on his own.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Posted Apr 14, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Zemeckis captures all the story’s terror, but its pathos has always been the real challenge, and it mostly eludes him.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Bong's opening and climactic scenes, in which the old woman bops around to a dance tune amid a vast field of yellow grass, are typical of the movie's cockeyed poetry.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
In these dusty American settings, the wistful melancholy of Wong's earlier movies seems fairly contrived.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Poor distribution doomed the original movie, though Romero has stuck around long enough to serve as executive producer of this respectable update by Breck Eisner.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The movie's studied tranquillity will appeal to some, though its embrace of traditional village life struck me as self-satisfied to the point of smugness.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Cox and three others have produced a swift and economical script, but it's just porn with a different money shot--not graphic violence per se but the sort of blood-soaked crime scene that sells true-crime paperbacks.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
As a romantic comedy this is a cut above the norm, satirical in its treatment of both spiritually bereft New Yorkers and materialistic Indian immigrants.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Tasteful, unremarkable art-house fare, rescued from complete irrelevance by Stephen Dillane's bottled-up performance as a writer scarred by the Holocaust.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
McAdams is typically effervescent here, but she can't rescue this weak comedy from a wooden Ford, whose stick-up-the-ass character is unimaginatively goosed by screenwriter Aline Brosh McKenna.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Nov 11, 2010
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Washes onto the big screen with a tide of weak one-liners, exaggerated reactions, and vaguely nauseating gags.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The gentle Wood isn't very convincing as a bare-knuckle brawler (which bodes ill for his forthcoming role as Iggy Pop), and the movie settles into a payback soap opera reminiscent of "West Side Story."- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Watchable but not very gripping. Patricia Clarkson does her best with an underwritten part as the young man's terminally ill mother, and British actor Ken Stott is excellent as the grieving husband she leaves behind.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Aug 18, 2011
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Director Brian De Palma will probably take the rap for this tepid noir, but the real culprits are Josh Hartnett and Scarlett Johansson, red-hot lovers in life but (as ever) gorgeous stiffs on-screen.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Michael Mann was one of the producers, and his daughter Ami Canaan Mann directed; a couple more Manns fill out the credits, which makes you wonder why they couldn't just have a nice picnic and softball game at a state park somewhere.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Oct 20, 2011
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The real problem, however, is the male protagonist and his foul inner life: Almodovar's impressive recent work has focused on the rich emotionality of women, and though the film provides an interesting take on gender and submission, this sort of nastiness just isn't his thing.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Oct 20, 2011
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Eastwood is still a primal force on-screen, but his unusual practice of shooting scripts as written, which served him well on "Unforgiven" and "Million Dollar Baby," here leaves him exposed to Nick Schenk's familiar situations and awkward dialogue.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Not having read the Richler novel, I can't comment on the movie's fidelity to it, but this has the overstuffed feel of a sprawling, life-spanning story that's been wrestled down to feature length.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Jan 20, 2011
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The genre shows serious signs of wear in this needlessly fictionalized feature about Vince Papale.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Despite the two-hours-plus running time, major plot developments like the actual escape and the eventual departure of Colin Farrell's hardened Stalinist flit by so quickly that they barely register.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Jan 20, 2011
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Mike White contributed to the script, and though he shares with the Hesses an innocence that can be both sweet and slightly grotesque (e.g., Chuck and Buck), his influence is most evident here in the conventional plotting.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This passable live-action feature from Christian mogul Philip Anschutz (The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe) also relies heavily on the voices, though the actors are sometimes miscast (Julia Roberts as the spider) or chosen more for their on-screen personas than their pipes (Steve Buscemi as the rat).- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Kruger's elaborations on the original mystery are superfluous, but Watts gives this everything she's got.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Being male, I can't relate to this at all; on the other hand, I don't need Midol either, but I'm glad it's on the market.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This was shot at the legendary Ealing Studios, but I hesitate to call it a British comedy: its two stars are American, it currently has no UK release date, and its innocuous naughtiness seems pitched at grandmothers who watch BBC America.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Cox has some wonderfully funny moments, but both actors are playing heavily to type.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Wyatt Cenac, the latest addition to "The Daily Show" With Jon Stewart, is the best reason to see this easygoing romantic comedy.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
If the project was intended to enlarge the comedian's audience, it may be a wash: for every prospective Ferrell fan who can't understand English, there must be an existing one who can't understand subtitles.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Mar 15, 2012
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The stock characters and leaden stretches of expository dialogue are welcome evidence that there's still no computer program capable of telling a decent story.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Watching this is like watching kids play with Hot Wheels--not a bad time at all, but I wouldn't pay ten bucks for it.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Perry hasn't lost his touch for stroking his loyal audience of Oprah women; his enforced happy endings are the car keys taped under your seat.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The story doesn't arc so much as unspool like a stretch of desert highway, but the Ghost Rider is such a powerful amalgam of hot-rod iconography that this is still fairly watchable.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Schmidt works the slasher formula for all it's worth, but the repulsive stereotype at the center of the movie dampens the fun.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The drag-racing saga "The Fast and the Furious" (2001) made stars of Vin Diesel, who promptly ditched the series, and Paul Walker, who bailed after "2 Fast 2 Furious" (2003). Both actors return for this fourth installment.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
There are some funny scenes in which the two brothers spy on the wife, who may be having an affair, but the movie's climax is a badly contrived attempt to ratify Jeff's notion of personal destiny.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Mar 15, 2012
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
As usual with Burton, the visuals are much better than the story, and Carroll’s characters are richly realized--especially Tweedledum and Tweedledee, poster children for juvenile obesity, and the raving Red Queen, played with razor-sharp timing by Helena Bonham Carter.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The movie lopes along from one half-baked scene to the next, interrupted on occasion by car-porn sequences.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Jan 13, 2011
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
In one slack exchange, Del Toro intimates that the government wants to shut him up because he knows too much, but apparently someone decided that this thing was silly enough already and the matter was dropped.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
No movie with Kevin Spacey as a heartless prick can be all bad, but this gambling thriller, based on Ben Mezrich's nonfiction book "Bringing Down the House," hasn't got much else going for it.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The plot is ridiculous and the characters are cardboard, but none of that really matters once the snakes get into the cabin and start zapping people, the very definition of entertainment.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
With her tetchy screen persona, Sandra Bullock is well served by brainteasers like "The Lake House" and this passable thriller about a woman who seems to be bouncing between two alternate realities.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The aerial dogfights are thrilling, but the script seems to have been written by Snoopy.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Director Nicolas Klotz paces his mystery plot so luxuriously that it feels like a ride in a company limo, though his ultimate thesis, that corporate culture is inherently fascist, hardly seems worth the trip. The saving grace is Amalric, who looks so sharp in a tailored suit that he can't sense himself rotting from within.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This precious story line, adapted from a novel by Jonathan Safran Foer, keeps shriveling up against the backdrop of a traumatized city; only gaunt Max von Sydow, as a mute old man who accompanies the young hero on his rounds, supplies the grave authority the premise demands.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Jan 21, 2012
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Produced by MTV Films, this step-dancing drama is mired in cliche, but with its dingy ghetto settings and hardened, despondent young characters, it's marginally more interesting than "Stomp the Yard," the 2007 movie that inaugurated the subgenre.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The movie's mix of erotic Latin dance and vaguely liberal politics should have young girls swooning in the aisles.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Its numerous ancillary characters are so closely observed that even those without speaking parts register as people, in a manner than blurs the line between strangeness and intimacy.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The stoy makes no sense, and the two lead characters are repulsive, but I must confess I laughed immoderately at this clever piece of junk.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
His (John Cusack) quickness and intelligence make him a poor choice to play the flat-footed main character, a rigidly conservative family man who can't work up the nerve to tell his two daughters their soldier mother has been killed in action.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The details of Saint-Laurent's creative process are fairly scant compared to the endless display of material possessions; when the movie is over, it seems more like a catalog than a life story.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Jun 2, 2011
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
All singing! All dancing! All squealing! The money-minting Broadway musical has been adapted into the year's most aggressive chick flick, with a score of irresistibly catchy ABBA tunes sweetening the dumb story like peaches in cottage cheese.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The story takes place in 1988 in the Brighton Beach neighborhood of Coney Island, but I could never figure out why; with its pitiless gangsters and virtuous boys in blue, it could have been set anywhere.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This Belgian comedy suffers from the fact that its mismatched lovers are so consistently unpleasant; it catches fire only in the scenes between the mother and the daughter.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Screenwriter Adam Herz is calling this third installment the last, and not a moment too soon: his characters have grown up, but his gags are still trying to graduate from high school.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Clooney and Bridges model an assortment of wigs and facial hair as they labor to put across their outsize characters; at its best the movie recalls a subpar episode of M*A*S*H.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Most of the chills have been faithfully re-created, though first-time screenwriter Stephen Susco hasn't done much to straighten out the muddled narrative.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This typically bloated production from Jerry Bruckheimer is good swashbuckling fun for the first few reels but eventually slows to a halt under the weight of too many doubloons.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
At its best this 2005 feature wickedly satirizes the politics of pity--how healthy people buy off the dying with gifts and imminent death becomes a kind of stardom. But the sap begins to flow.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Matthew McConaughey injects some much needed life as the oddball coach who sets out to rebuild the football squad, and David Strathairn, Ian McShane, and Robert Patrick do their best with sketchy characters and artless dialogue.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
No movie star appears to have more fun in a crap movie than John Travolta, and his inimitable my-check-has-cleared! glee is the best thing about this lame espionage thriller.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The genuine sense of loss and nicely observed family details don't stand a chance against the generic buildup to the big game.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Despite some scattered moments of bad craziness involving the hero and his drinking buddies (Michael Rispoli, Giovanni Ribisi), the spine of the story is no strange and terrible saga but a conventional morality tale.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Oct 27, 2011
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Solondz has grown so possessive of his characters, in fact, that he's begun to guard them jealously from any one actor.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Gainsbourg has some cute scenes with Johnny Depp, a debonair stranger she meets in a Virgin Megastore, but otherwise this is a fairly banal installment in the battle of the sexes.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Argento is admired for his voluptuous use of color and his operatic bloodletting; this is lovely to look at, if you can stand to.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Most of the movie, about the search for a magical guitar pick, farts along at the level of a "Wayne's World" sketch.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
With Mallick as one of the producers, this Boogie Nights wannabe benefits from an insider's knowledge of how online commerce was born but suffers from a seemingly endless voice-over by the Wilson/Mallick character steering our sympathies in his direction (it's the sort of middle man the movie could have done without).- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
As the bad guy, Jason Patric gets the funniest lines, but there are plenty to go around; though rigidly formulaic the movie is undeniably good-humored, if you don't count all those minor characters getting shot in the face.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
As "Kick-Ass" proved, there's a ready audience for the spectacle of a school-age girl who's a relentless killing (as opposed to texting) machine.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Apr 7, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
I'm still trying to wrap my head around the historical premise for this Indiana Jones knockoff.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Chicago native Steve Conrad, who scripted "The Weather Man" and "The Pursuit of Happyness," makes his feature directing debut with this low-budget comedy, which isn't as broad as its premise might suggest.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Fickman mostly soft-pedals the play's homosexual panic, generating a comedy that lacks both the verbal sophistication of its source and the sexual sophistication of its target audience.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This French kidnapping drama drags on for so long I'd have paid the ransom out of my own pocket just to wrap things up.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Sep 1, 2011
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Isn't really a satire of Hollywood so much as a chance for Short's wealthy showbiz buddies (Steve Martin, Kurt Russell, Kevin Kline, Whoopi Goldberg) to poke very gentle fun at themselves and stick it to the press.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
As in Christopher Nolan's Inception, the premise is so mind-boggling and fraught with implications that it tends to obviate the action mechanics of the last couple reels.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Mar 3, 2011
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Another go-round for the premise of an overaged kid insinuating himself into a stranger's family.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This is eminently missable, though the mosaic design of Asgard, Thor's mythical realm, is pretty cool.- Chicago Reader
- Posted May 11, 2011
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The script favors routine "Odd Couple" gags over the sort of comic contemplation of motherhood a writer like Fey might have brought to the subject.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
A tolerably warm bath of postcollegiate self-pity, salted with irony and self-mockery.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Dec 9, 2010
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The end is swollen with macho brooding before the hero finds the inner strength to accept the advances of another incredible dish.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
You may feel fussy asking for a coherent narrative, though, because director Ridley Scott delivers so many of the shocking set pieces that are the real hallmark of the series.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Jun 7, 2012
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Silberling has the nerve to play it for laughs -- This is clearly an actor's movie, but only Sarandon and Holly Hunter (as the attorney prosecuting the murderer) rise to the occasion.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The stilted performances are especially unfortunate when one considers what a fine documentary Clark might have gotten out of the same material.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Shane Acker has expanded his Oscar-nominated short 9 into a full-length feature whose splendid visuals are dragged down by a tedious story.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Yu's portrait of Darger, which clocks in at 82 minutes, skims over the only aspect of his life that commands respect: his craft.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Costner has the stoic routine down pat, and there are some spectacular action sequences of helicopter rescues on the high seas, but Kutcher is in way over his head.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The bar for historical accuracy in Hollywood biopics hasn't always been this high -- paradoxically, it's been rising even as the public has become more ignorant of history.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Visually and dramatically it works well - it's Shakespeare by way of "Black Hawk Down" - but as an allegory of modern-day geopolitics it doesn't really go anywhere.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Feb 2, 2012
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
What might have been a serious drama about coming to terms with violence and loss turns into a crowd-pleasing and increasingly far-fetched remake of "Death Wish."- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Brothers Brad and John Hennegan track six thoroughbreds in the qualifying races running up to the 2006 Kentucky Derby, yet the horseflesh isn't as interesting to them as the owners and trainers, an odd assortment of moneymen and equine gurus with a culture all their own.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Jeb Stuart directed, his well-rounded portrait of the community partly undermined by the slack editing; with Rick Schroder as the minister and Michael Rooker as the defense attorney.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
More or less restages Tobe Hooper's 1974 original, including its much-loved family dinner scene.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
George Clooney produced and stars in this international spy thriller, which he probably thought of as existential but which registers onscreen as a giant bore.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Luhrmann's squirrelly, five-exclamation-point stylings mercifully subside after the first 20 minutes or so, leaving behind a palatable big-screen confection.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Based on a story by Steve Martin of all people, the script seldom rises above formula (Guy Pearce and Neal McDonough are especially ill served as a pair of starchy FBI agents), but its respectful treatment of Islam is both unusual and welcome.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
It's the angriest comedy I've encountered all year, though it's pretty well spoiled by Carrey, who insists on turning it into a star vehicle with his slapstick and spazz attacks.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
By the time director Patrice Leconte arrives at his predictable climax and conventional moral, this lethargic French comedy may not have any friends either.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The main pleasure of this high-stakes-poker drama is watching a septuagenarian Burt Reynolds effortlessly revive his 70s screen persona as a strutting paragon of male shrewdness and sexuality.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Director Nigel Cole is best known for "Calendar Girls" (2003), another condescending exercise in you-go-girl uplift.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Nov 24, 2010
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Watching Best Worst Movie, you can't help but notice that the Troll 2 crowd consists almost exclusively of people in their 20s, which makes perfect sense: manufacturing an obsession with a terrible movie probably seems more worthwhile if you think you've got all the time in the world.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
As the WWF-style villain, Stiller misfires again and again, but Vaughn is reliably funny and Rip Torn has a great part as the underdogs' crotchety old coach.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Notorious on the festival circuit for its excruciating scenes of self-mutilation.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
After 9/11 and Katrina, this megabudget remake by Wolfgang Petersen benefits from a similar cultural oomph, though it's just as enjoyably silly as the original.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This sitcom setup is as bad as it sounds, and Cox never really surmounts it, though the characters deepen significantly after the missionary is caught caressing the waiter and sent home to be excommunicated and shamed by his family.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Despite a three-hour running time Stone is too occupied with psychodrama to explore Alexander's innovations in battle, and Farrell, clearly out of his depth, seems less a leader of men than a Hellenistic James Dean.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Like her previous feature, "Look at Me" (2004), this relationship drama is mature and intelligent, but the character conflicts are so decorously handled that after a while the whole enterprise begins to seem more like a good waiter than a good story.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This new version is an almost scene-for-scene remake, which is good news in the first half and bad news in the torpid second.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Unfortunately Jia --a rather limited actor, judging from the movies excerpted here -- has trouble either articulating or projecting the existential crisis that ultimately landed him in a mental institution, which leaves the emotional center of the film inert.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Warmly and gently handled, though the central story, detailing the personal politics between him and the six childlike monsters, steadily loses steam.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Scenes of harvested frogs provide an apt metaphor for Brazil's miserable have-nots, so apt that Kohn can't resist beating it to death.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Naturally, age and infirmity are a major subtext of Shine a Light (and, really, any movie featuring Keith Richards). No matter how cadaverous the Stones appear, they keep climbing onstage, and I’ll miss them when they’re finally gone.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This originated as a late-night play, and the humor is correspondingly sophomoric, but I loved Dennis McCarthy's melodramatic score.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The Israeli academy showered awards--best picture, director, screenplay, editing, cinematography, sound, costumes, actress, supporting actress, supporting actor--on this coming-of-age story, which makes its modest whimsy even harder to get excited about.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
As in "Breaking Upwards," the best joke here is that the wives (Jenna Fischer, Christina Applegate) wind up getting more action during the marital recess than their hapless hubbies.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Feb 24, 2011
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This has some currency as ethnography, showing how tribal and interpersonal matters mesh with sports mania, but it remains a formidably dull account of an inherently exciting pastime.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Feb 9, 2012
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The connection between the two narratives is supposed to be a big, heartbreaking surprise, though I figured it out well in advance and spent the interim unfavorably comparing this greatest-generation hanky wringer to the British drama "Iris."- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
It’s one thing to make a movie filled with mayhem and then implicate the audience for watching it; it’s another thing entirely to come back ten years later with the same movie, hype it with a marketing campaign, and try to implicate the viewer again. One nice thing about America is that you can’t be tried twice for the same crime.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Joffe, a British screenwriter (The American, 28 Weeks Later) debuting as director, hits some of these notes in his adaptation of Brighton Rock, but the movie's religious flourishes seem more rhetorical than heartfelt.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Aug 25, 2011
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Unfortunately I can't give this a thumbs-up or thumbs-down; I haven't yet developed an aesthetic that will accommodate a guy firing a bottle rocket from his ass.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
As the aching spouse, Moore delivers what is for her an unusually sympathetic performance.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The main characters are a couple of revered high school table-tennis champs (one short and aggressive, the other tall and moody), and their efforts to win a big national tournament accommodate plenty of Zen aphorisms, glaring showdowns, and slow-motion paddle swinging.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
It's a subject that guarantees a certain amount of liberal tongue clucking, though director Jeff Renfroe wisely concentrates on suspense instead of sermons.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Posted Feb 23, 2012
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
As in Korine's other movies, characterization is often just amplified weirdness.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This begins to get interesting in the home stretch, as the woman's chronic deception begins to catch up with her, but for the most part it's an extended Geritol commercial.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Alison Eastwood, whose good looks and last name have served her well as a Hollywood actress, makes her directing debut with this mediocre cancer drama.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Writer-directors Jon Hurwitz and Hayden Schlossberg are content to trot out the familiar gags and characters, and the murmurs of recognition I heard in the preview audience indicate that the series has become some kind of sad generational touchstone.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Apr 9, 2012
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The scenes of his incarceration and escape from the place are gripping, thanks mainly to Michael Bowen as the hard-ass staffer who wants to break him. But the movie slides toward melodrama with some stale business about the hero spreading his late father's ashes.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Joel and Ethan Coen wrote the story, using the ancient gag of the toxic Santa as a vehicle for their patented brand of misanthropy; Zwigoff and company wring some laughs out of it, though the tone is uniformly mean and vulgar.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The opening stretch, when the visitor arrives on earth and blithely dresses down mankind, is great fun. But screenwriter David Scarpi has drained away much of the sentiment.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Main drawback is a relative dearth of clips showing Hicks in his ferocious prime, so if you come away from this wondering what all the fuss is about.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Apr 28, 2011
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The early scenes of Greene misbehaving on the air are pretty funny, thanks mainly to Martin Sheen as the apoplectic station manager. But I was bummed out by the movie's trite VH1 cartoon of the black power era--especially coming from Kasi Lemmons, who made her directing debut with the hauntingly ambiguous "Eve's Bayou."- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
It often seems precious and overconceived, its accumulating crosses and double-crosses as devoid of consequence as a child's backyard game.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
It wasn't so bad, aside from the god-awful ending; at the very least Freundlich manages to come up with funnier jokes than the ossified one-liners decorating Allen's recent movies.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This is dumb, raunchy, and obvious, but it's also pretty funny, and delivered with the gusto of a Redd Foxx monologue.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
A relatively mindless thrill ride that would have made the old NBC execs grin from ear to ear.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The surprise ending is neatly done, but the characters are so thin that waiting around for it is no fun whatsoever.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The cluttered narrative leaves little room for character development, though director Niels Arden Oplev does manage to accommodate plenty of gratuitous torture and rape.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Despite all the grand gestures of climax and resolution, there's a pronounced sense of autopilot; the only person who seems to be having a good time is Ian McKellen as the scheming Magneto.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
McGee has taken Hitchcock's idea of the MacGuffin to such an extreme that the plot becomes a set of nesting dolls with nothing at the center, but the players conjure up a smoky mood of existential sadness.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
At their best, the Jackasses combine low-brow humor with delectable absurdity (one of my favorite gags from Jackass: The Movie had a guy creeping up on a cougar while dressed as a giant mouse), but here it's almost pure punishment.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Eventually the action leads to an uncharted island, where the film devolves into an explicit but unoriginal gorefest. [28 May 2009, p.30]- Chicago Reader
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The romantic plot, involving his unrequited loved for Garner, is soured by her character's unconcealed shallowness: she won't have him because his genes aren't up to snuff.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
There are strong turns by Michael Caine as Alfred the butler and Tom Wilkinson as a ruthless crime boss.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
What has changed, however, is the audience consuming it: back in 1971, the Peckinpah film horrified moviegoers with its bloody climax, whereas today people are so vengeful and sadistic that the remake is just another multiplex crowd pleaser.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Sep 17, 2011
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The movie begins to seem a little overloaded and gimmicky once characters from children's classics begin turning up (including Toto from The Wizard of Oz), but it's handsomely mounted.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Writer-director Len Wiseman, now the star's husband, wisely moves this sequel to the countryside and wastes less time dispensing the same grog of grisly CGI combat and mythical mumbo jumbo.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
There's a good deal of honest emotion onscreen, particularly from the parents left behind to worry, yet the documentary sometimes feels like the work of a filmmaker who began with a preconceived story and wasn't quite sure what to do with the one she actually got.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Sep 17, 2011
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The strain to pull all this together becomes more evident as the movie progresses, and the three-way musical finale, a rickety acoustic run-through of “The Weight,” hardly lives up to the stars’ reputations.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This is marginally better than most, with a few offbeat comic ideas, a reliably droll performance from Vaughn, and, as the parents, four watchable old troupers in search of a fat paycheck.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Inception delivers dazzling special effects and a boatload of stars, but it sags and eventually buckles under the weight of its complicated premise.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The true schism here, however, is between the brainless fun of the action plot and Stone's cheap exploitation of the cartels' real-life sadism.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Jul 5, 2012
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Michael Curtiz may be the most hotly disputed director of Hollywood's golden age; his filmography includes such classics as Casablanca, Mildred Pierce, Yankee Doodle Dandy, and The Adventures of Robin Hood, but also a numbing succession of undistinguished contract pictures.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
I found this sequel more tolerable than Sherlock Holmes (2009), though I'm not sure whether it's actually better or I've just accepted the putrid idea of turning Arthur Conan Doyle's brainy detective into just another quipping action hero.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Dec 15, 2011
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Despite the lowbrow story, this is supposed to be tasteful; expect modest nudity, swelling strings, and plenty of water imagery.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Offers a steady supply of clever lines but suffers from the patina of self-loathing common to industry lifers and the unfortunate miscasting of straight-arrow Broderick as a depressed, cynical hack.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This adaptation of the best-selling novel by Stephenie Meyer never rises above the level of a teen soaper on the CW, and its pale, sulky boy toys (Kellan Lutz, Peter Facinelli, Jackson Rathbone) are more silly than scary.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The torture is strictly for kicks, which spoiled this for me, but less skittish viewers may enjoy this as a stylish and tightly wound genre piece.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Never really delivers on that promise, mainly because its scenes of two brilliant men discussing the nature of the subconscious can't compare with Cronenberg's visual rendering of that subconscious in earlier movies.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Dec 15, 2011
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The famously oblique French director Alain Resnais (Last Year at Marienbad) won a special award at the Cannes film festival for this existential comedy (2009), whose masterful technique fails to compensate for its glassy characters and mercilessly self-amused tone.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
The beloved 1938 children's book about a house painter who becomes guardian to a dozen penguins has been turned into a standard-issue children's comedy with Jim Carrey.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Jun 16, 2011
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
At one point screenwriter James C. Strouse name-checks the brilliant Richard Yates, whose fiction similiarly perches between grim humor and utter despair, but the movie's hip detachment is a far cry from the unruly passions of Yates's chronic losers.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
Assorted movie in-jokes should keep parents tolerably entertained, and Alan Menken's songs mercifully favor western swing over the expected twang pop.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This wacky Australian comedy about a struggling rock band is tolerable fun, neither as inventive as Bob Rafelson's 60s sitcom "The Monkees" nor as hilariously bad as Ron Howard's made-for-TV cult movie "Cotton Candy" (1978).- Chicago Reader
- Read full review
-
- J.R. Jones
This being senior year, Burstein can't help but capture some genuine drama, but there's a stage-managed quality to the movie that reminded me of MTV reality shows.- Chicago Reader
- Read full review