J.R. Jones
Select another critic »For 1,513 reviews, this critic has graded:
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43% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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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:
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Positive: 697 out of 1513
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Mixed: 598 out of 1513
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Negative: 218 out of 1513
1513
movie
reviews
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- J.R. Jones
Reasonably entertaining if utterly familiar entry in the long-running SF franchise.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
This big-budget adventure is based on a recent Michael Crichton thriller, though its premise is too stale to instill the sense of wonder critical to great sci-fi.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Only in the last third, when he gets down to the business of telling a story, does The Brown Bunny become a porn movie -- though not in the sense you'd expect.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
Ferrell and Reilly get more mileage out of juvenile pouting and bickering than any other performers I can imagine, but that's about as far as this goes.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Actually I quite enjoyed the film -- but how do I get rid of this awful discharge?- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Larry Doyle and John Hamburg's script is full of holes, but this is still pretty damn funny--thanks mostly to Barrymore, who seems to be retracing Lucille Ball's trajectory from sex kitten to comedienne.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Quicker on the uptake than any of Eddie Murphy's fat ladies, quicker even than Flip Wilson's Geraldine Jones.- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The hero's psychological transference is so blatant that even the characters begin commenting on it after a while, yet this modest three-hander is capably acted and genuinely touching.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Dec 7, 2010
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- J.R. Jones
Jeff Lipsky invests this indie drama with admirable intelligence and insight, though these fine qualities are undermined by a sense of writerly artifice.- Chicago Reader
- Posted May 12, 2011
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- 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
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- 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
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- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The film's opening and closing moments are weirdly reminiscent of "Black Hawk Down," another tale of Western soldiers in over their heads on the dark continent -- clearly no one these days understands manifest destiny.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
As the aching spouse, Moore delivers what is for her an unusually sympathetic performance.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The gags are as idiotic as you'd expect, but they consistently hit the bull's-eye.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Subtlety is not his strong suit--all the characters here are either adorable or loathsome--yet Perry has toned down the pandering materialism, evangelism, and black empowerment of "Madea's Family Reunion" and "Diary of a Mad Black Woman," letting his heart-tugging story tell itself.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
It provides a more detailed and perhaps more reliable picture of the early movement's motives and practices than anything I've seen in the mainstream media.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Set in postwar Berlin, the story involves prostitution, black marketeering, and the death camps, and the tension between the visual style and the adult story makes the movie pretty engrossing -- it's an R-rated "Casablanca."- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Highly recommended if you want to watch an assortment of rich movie stars feel your pain.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Nov 3, 2011
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
This Spanish comedy showcases a gallery of popular actresses, but writer-director Manuel Gomez Pereira gives them nothing to work with aside from tiresome romantic complications.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The special effects are incredible, blah blah blah, but oddly, the most effective element here is the original movie's striking visual design-everything pitch black except for the luminescent piping on the costumes and foreground objects-which was inspired by the primitive arcade games of the early 80s.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Dec 16, 2010
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- J.R. Jones
Never lives up to the hilarity of the opening, partly because the large-scale production smothers the gags but mostly because those gags are so easy to smother.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The master principle of film noir -- that everyone is corruptible -- turns a pinwheel of plot complications in this fleet, stylish little crime drama from Mexico.- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
The movie develops into a painful story of one generation inflicting its selfish compromises on the next. The three leads are uniformly excellent, and the strong supporting cast includes Mark Duplass and Philip Baker Hall.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Jun 28, 2012
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- 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
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
The movie's only unmitigated pleasure is a too-brief fight scene between Connor and a naked combatant made up to look precisely like Arnold Schwarzenegger.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
As popcorn movies go, this is fleet, funny, and even thoughtful: its central question, nicely underplayed by director Peter Berg, is why power and altruism never seem to intersect.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
I can’t deny this is filled with powerfully primal images, but at least one of them--an eviscerated fox that bellows at Dafoe, “Chaos reigns!”--made me burst out laughing.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
A career low for Mark Wahlberg and director John Singleton (Boyz N the Hood), this ridiculous mean-streets adventure starts out like a Hell's Kitchen melodrama from the 30s and eventually spins off into a series of gunfights, beat downs, and trite Motown numbers.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Director Kenneth Branagh has mercifully pared the action down to 88 minutes (the first movie dragged on for 138), but the final act, with its obscure homosexual flirtation, still seems to go on forever.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Adapted from a novel by Gabriel Loidolt, this is most interesting for its textured family history and pained religiosity.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
This may not be as ill considered as it sounds--some of the sharpest material in Rock's last concert special, "Never Scared," dealt with the eternal conflict between men and women--but his crowd-pleasing gags tend to clash with Rohmer's sly moral comedy.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Jules Verne's novel has been flattened into a standardized Jackie Chan vehicle.- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
With its stagy dance numbers, this reminded me more of Bob Fosse's confessional musical "All That Jazz" than "8 1/2," though it suffers from comparison to either, given that Marshall is several steps removed from Fellini's feverish self-investigation.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Mac was a magnetic performer with a long history of redeeming mediocre movies; unfortunately this is another one.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
First-time director Chen Shi-Zheng shows great sensitivity to the pressure and isolation felt by Chinese brains at American universities, and the relationship between Liu and Quinn provides a rare look at the intellectual serfdom of graduate study.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
It's so played out at this point that not even the enjoyably no-nonsense Statham can pump any life into it.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Jan 27, 2011
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
Dylan Moran has a few funny moments as Pegg's shiftless pal, and Mike Leigh regular Ruth Sheen puts in an all-too-brief appearance.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The conflict between Hawn, who prizes her freedom, and Sarandon, who values her family, is pretty rich; it reminded me of the friendship between Shirley MacLaine and Anne Bancroft in "The Turning Point."- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The main reason I enjoyed this high-powered action flick and its 2001 predecessor is their willingness to poke fun at the premise of crime-fighting dolls, even though it now has more currency than ever.- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
Blaise and Walker cleverly widen the aspect ratio as the hero's consciousness changes and make some lovely pictures of the northern lights, but the atrocious Phil Collins score (with a vocal by Tina Turner) filled me with evil spirits.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Distributors are clearly scraping the bottom of the barrel with this flimsy exposé of presidential adviser Karl Rove.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
As Adam Sandler vehicles go, this isn't quite as dire as "Eight Crazy Nights," but any movie that has to fall back on Rob Schneider rubbing his nipples has some serious script issues.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
I was haunted afterward by its seething rage at the malicious paternalism and sexual hypocrisy of fundamentalist Christians.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
By turns morally compelling and racially paternalistic, this provocative drama may be the first halfway truthful war movie to hit multiplexes since "Three Kings."- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Schizoid romantic comedy -- The first half of the movie is full of broad but capable comedy, but the original film's sexual and class politics are clumsily handled, and the mood turns serious with all the subtlety of a falling guillotine blade.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Superior 2002 farce by Walsh, Roberts, and Katie Roberts, all veterans of Chicago's ImprovOlympic who went on to form the Upright Citizens Brigade.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- 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
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- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
- Posted Apr 14, 2012
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- J.R. Jones
Writer-director Pupi Avati has a such a fine sense of narrative proportion that this Italian feature unspools like silk.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The new jokes all seem like discards from a Rob Schneider comedy, but for the most part director Peter Segal (Anger Management) and screenwriter Sheldon Turner play a good defensive game, sticking close to the original film's story.- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The two characters' pasts are so sketchy here that the drama lacks any serious emotional underpinning.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
This dazzling CGI feature by DreamWorks Animation appropriates the vivid undersea psychedelia of "Finding Nemo," though in contrast to that movie, the father-son parable here is just an excuse to burlesque "The Godfather" for the 100th time.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
There's nothing remotely new here, but the movie has the taut, queasy feel of an early 70s drive-in shocker: old-fashioned suspense without any guarantee of old-fashioned mercy.- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Producer Ismail Merchant died in 2005, but Merchant Ivory's stuffy tradition of quality lives on.- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
There's a lot of self-conscious talk about the importance of timing, but the tony sense of entitlement tends to dampen any laughs. The movie functions best as a middle-class Euro-postcard along the lines of "Chocolat" or "Under the Tuscan Sun."- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
For his third feature, Richard Kelly delivers neither a triumph (like his first, Donnie Darko) nor a travesty (like his second, Southland Tales) but a sure-handed genre piece that manages to wrap up before its plot mushrooms completely out of control.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The movie's notion of humor is exemplified by Bradshaw's extended nude scene, which might be termed "roughing the viewer."- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The romantic denouement is so predictable it must have driven the animators mad as they worked, but their modest art is eerily effective.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Like Robert Altman's "M*A*S*H" this has a banquet scene posed like The Last Supper, but the basic idea--toothless satire trimming a dull star party--reminded me more of "Ready to Wear."- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
Diaz, costars Jason Segel and Justin Timberlake, and a sharp supporting cast manage to deliver a crappy good time, mercifully devoid of any heart-tugging teacher-student subplots.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Jun 26, 2011
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- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Like the first movie, this has some cute gags but collapses like a soggy paper plate because it can't decide whether to mock or celebrate the heroine's shallow materialism.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
This drama about Baltimore firefighters makes a serious effort to honor the sacrifices of professional rescue workers, but blasts of hokum keep threatening to collapse the building.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The young sweethearts amuse themselves by donning steampunk outfits and crashing the funerals of dead children, which may seem quirky and sweet if you can disregard the awful grief of such gatherings; the problem is that, once you manage this, the main characters' grief doesn't register either.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Sep 22, 2011
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- J.R. Jones
The aerial dogfights are thrilling, but the script seems to have been written by Snoopy.- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
These ideas may well have cohered in Chuck Palahniuk's best-selling satirical novel, which I haven't read, but in this screen adaptation by writer-director Clark Gregg they seem more like an assortment of gimmicks.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Solid performances by Fiennes, Jonathan Firth, and a frail but funny Peter Ustinov keep this watchable.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Manages to transplant the action to Chicago without completely ruining it, though the emotional impact is largely deflated by the change in cultures.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
This is mostly a listless hodgepodge of half-improvised whatever, the seven lead characters so flatly conceived they're like the Keystone Kops (without the chops).- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
I missed the first half hour of this Zorro adventure, and it's a tribute to the idiot-proof screenplay that I had no trouble following the rest.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Screenwriter Bruce Joel Rubin won an Oscar for "Ghost" (1990), a pleasant, moderately thoughtful weepie that this movie closely resembles.- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
The thing runs more than two hours, but this is the sort of project that's indemnified against charges of excess.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Jun 13, 2012
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- J.R. Jones
The problem is that only a fan would be inclined to tolerate this dunderheaded mystery.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Any movie that name-checks Ford Maddox Ford's novel "The Good Soldier" is OK by me, and clearly writer-director Julio DePietro has made a careful study of Ford's crafty, illusory narrative.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
There's no real reason it should be set in the 70s, except that the freaky wigs, loud clothes, and wall-to-wall soul classics are needed to bolster the nothing script.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Lakeview Terrace isn't literally about the riots, but it's still one of the toughest racial dramas to come out of Hollywood since the fires died down--much tougher, for instance, than Paul Haggis’s hand-wringing Oscar winner "Crash."- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
This is sentimental but dramatically solid, its placid themes fortified by De Niro.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
This parallel-reality shtick would be OK if the gun violence weren't so awful--but staging a murder again and again for the sake of some undergraduate head game is no more defensible than using it to pump up an action flick.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
As a movie genre, the ghostly romantic comedy dates back at least as far as "Topper" (1937), and the stale premise, combined with the leads' typecasting, makes for an eminently forgettable date movie.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Even 82 minutes seems an eternity...The net effect is weirdly reminiscent of taking part in any online community, where a "relationship" is more like a juxtaposing of egos.- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
The ugly emotional mess is so respectfully handled that the story resonates far beyond its comic designs.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Jan 13, 2011
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- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
Bale admirably shoulders the burden of Western identification figure, but the heart of the story is the ongoing tension between the schoolgirls and the hookers, who see in each other aspects of womanhood that are out of their respective reach.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Jan 19, 2012
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- J.R. Jones
So stale and complacent that it could be a rerun of "Love American Style."- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
This never rises above the level of a plodding sword-and-sandal adventure, peopled with chiseled young beauties and bored industry hacks. Singh is a talented and eccentric visual artist with no creative future in the movie business.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Nov 11, 2011
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- J.R. Jones
Singh is much more skilled as a visual artist than a storyteller, and his artistic fortunes seem to rise and fall with the inspiration of his screenwriters. In this case he's lucked out with Mellissa Wallack and Jason Keller, whose witty script retells the story of Snow White from the perspective of the wicked queen.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Mar 31, 2012
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- J.R. Jones
This isn't all gold--there are lame riffs on a booze-swilling dog and a flabby old man with a boner--but it's well above average.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
A flimsy setup dooms this from the start, though its sheer awfulness is something to see.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Lars von Trier is back, so to speak--he's never visited the States, which makes his snide anti-American allegories even more infuriating to some….But the story holds up well enough to deliver a pointed critique of establishing self-rule at gunpoint.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The result is highly entertaining but hardly ranks with the director's best work; a dramatic subplot involving the money guy and his corrupt father (a disengaged Jack Nicholson) never gains traction.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Dec 16, 2010
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- 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
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- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The orgy of violence, as ghastly as in any video game, should go a long way toward erasing whatever goodwill Stallone earned with his sentimental "Rocky Balboa."- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
This gets off to a pretty good start, with most of the laughs coming from beefy Kevin Heffernan and nerdy Steve Lemme. But at 111 minutes, the movie is too slackly paced to build up enough momentum; like the characters they play, these guys don't know when to call it a night.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Cruise and Diaz have worked together before (in Vanilla Sky), but this is their first summer-movie pairing, and their star qualities are so similar--dazzling looks, good comedic chops, complete emotional vacuity--that together, instead of romantic chemistry they generate a sort of giddy, blinding falseness.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The script is a lifeless succession of attorney-client debates and stormy horror flashbacks, though I had a good time watching Jennifer Carpenter, a comic Buffy type in "White Chicks" and "D.E.B.S.," hurl herself around as the title character.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The story lurches from heavy-handed satire to heavy-handed drama. Heigl gives a winning performance, though Slattery-Moschkau seldom misses an opportunity to show her prancing around in her underwear.- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- 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
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- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
Whether you want to trace this romance back to "La Strada" or Allen's marriage to Soon-Yi Previn is your business, but on-screen it never registers as more than a writer's conceit.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The narrative emphasizes how much danger Spurlock is in and how noble he is to embark on all this while his wife is back in the U.S. expecting their first child; it's a little insulting to all the real reporters who've died in the field looking for hard information, not weak indie comedy.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
How long do you have to be gone to make a triumphant return to the screen, and how triumphant can your return be when all three movies are duds?- Chicago Reader
- Posted Jun 7, 2012
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- J.R. Jones
This sequel to "Fantastic Four" (2005) drags in the Silver Surfer, who looks like a gigantic hood ornament and, given voice by Laurence Fishburne, has about as much personality.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Sheridan gives this a pacing and depth one doesn't often find in "urban" product, though Jackson, reliving his own life traumas, is handily upstaged at every turn by Terrence Howard (Crash) as his oddball manager.- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
It's a powerful psychological conceit, but Samuell subverts it at every turn with his carnivalesque style and canned Gallic wistfulness.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The director of "American Pie" has set out to make a merciless satire of American media culture along the lines of "Network," but his ideas are so commonplace that nothing registers except the bile.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
This story of a girl growing up in the occupied territories never finds its footing.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Apr 14, 2011
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- J.R. Jones
This comic fantasy is the best vehicle he's (Sandler) ever had, a high-concept goof that gradually darkens into an emotional nightmare reminiscent of Capra.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
This ends on an uplifting and philosophical note, equating moral blindness with the literal sort, which you'll probably appreciate if you haven't already slit your wrists.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Cate Blanchett returns to the role that made her a star, and though this sequel to "Elizabeth" (1998) is less defensible as history, as florid costume drama it's just as entertaining.- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- 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
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- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The premise for this sci-fi actioner makes sense for about four seconds, after which you begin to wonder why everyone on the planet would willingly become a shut-in.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Hawke’s script is admirably light-handed in showing how the hero’s unreasoning passion is fueled by his parents’ painful divorce, and despite the story’s date-movie aspects, its most penetrating observations come not from the kids but from the young man’s estranged father and mother (Hawke and Laura Linney, both superb).- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
This isn't very good--the puritanical impulses of the slasher genre collide head-on with the sweet-butt requirements of gay exploitation flicks--but a gender studies major could have a field day with it.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
This didn't make me laugh much, but I liked the music, a patchwork of samples culled from the various atomic-monster epics.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Caviezel (The Passion of the Christ) gives a quietly focused performance in the title role, ably assisted by Brett Rice as Jones's father, Jeremy Northam as golf rival Walter Hagen, and Malcolm McDowell as sportswriter O.D. Keeler.- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
Perry's soap opera story lines are awful, with their nobly suffering sistas, gorgeous do-right men, and shamelessly materialistic dream endings. But the movie's message of gospel joy and racial pride couldn't be more sincere, and Perry gives an impeccable comic performance as the title character.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
As summer shoot-'em-ups go, this is pretty well executed, with plenty of macho posing and gunfire.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The plot contrivances that bring them together to torture each other are so deftly handled that I almost bought them, and the two leads are charming and funny enough to offset the characters' obnoxious motives.- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
Director Todd Phillips has become Hollywood's go-to guy for collegiate humor, and though this isn't as funny as his "Road Trip," "Old School," or "Starsky & Hutch," there are some choice sequences of the devious Thornton schooling his milquetoast students.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Writer-director Toni Kallem generates some touching moments (most of them involving Tom Bower as Taylor's wisp of a father), but this never surmounts the woeful miscasting of its two leads.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Holding all this together would be enough of a chore even without the hollow black-pride message.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
By accident or design, the resolution here is morally ambiguous and vaguely distasteful, which may be the reason I liked it.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Sep 1, 2011
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- J.R. Jones
This indie drama spends a lot of time mooning over classical Hollywood cinema, but its own visual style tends toward the pointless flash of music videos.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
The gags come fast and furious, and though some are a little stale, Rock and cowriter Ali LeRoi strive for wit over crudity.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
This may conjure up unpleasant memories of Guy Ritchie's "Sherlock Holmes" movies, but Ritchie could learn a lot from director James McTeigue (V for Vendetta); this is multiplex fare to be sure, but McTeigue manages to popularize 19th-century literature without completely vulgarizing it.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Apr 26, 2012
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- J.R. Jones
The video has a funky, loose-limbed feel, but Van Peebles has been celebrated so much already you have to wonder how many victory laps a man needs.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
- Posted May 25, 2011
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- J.R. Jones
Kruger's elaborations on the original mystery are superfluous, but Watts gives this everything she's got.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Carefully re-creates the first movie's lightweight romance and mildly cheeky gender comedy.- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- 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
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- Chicago Reader
- Posted Sep 22, 2011
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
A dearth of game footage and a wealth of inspirational platitudes contribute to the sense of a powerful tale having already faded into yellowed newspaper clippings.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Caruso and Spielberg probably thought they were reviving the paranoid style of 70s political thrillers, but their story is so implausible it barely provokes a tremor.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The racial satire is about as subtle as a sledgehammer, but there's something exhilarating about so blunt a weapon being swung with such wild abandon.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
At long last, the Dead series may be ready for that final bullet between the eyes.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Tends toward the generic, and Jim Caviezel is hopelessly bland in the lead. Among the bright spots are Mary McCormack as the hero's wife and Bruce Dern as the wise old motorboat guru.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
For a filmmaker like Julie Taymor, Shakespeare's language isn't nearly as enticing as Prospero's violent manipulation of the elements, and this screen adaptation of the play-like her egregious Beatles movie "Across the Universe" (2007)-is primarily an exercise in eccentric (and, I would argue, empty) spectacle.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Dec 16, 2010
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- 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
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- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
This is fairly satisfying, particularly a ghoulish episode in a Victorian insane asylum.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
This terminally sappy romance delivers heartache, sacrifice, a make-out scene in the pouring rain, and not one but two autistic characters.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
If you've seen any of these, you know that the hero is always killed for her trouble, a final stroke of mordant wit.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
This takes place in the same sort of pathologically sports-obsessed hamlet as "Friday Night Lights," though in contrast to that movie's grim honesty there's enough heartland schmaltz here to embarrass John Mellencamp. Remarkably, the movie rights itself once the actual season begins, focusing on game strategy more than the usual heart-stopping pep talks.- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
He's a fascinating character (even in the person of Gerard Butler), but his conversion from drug-crazed bruiser to psalm-singing family man is so swift and unconvincing that the movie is hobbled from the start. It becomes more engrossing once Childers finds his mission in Africa.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Sep 29, 2011
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- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
It's gooey fun for the first reel or two despite an abundance of close-ups that render the frantic action nearly unreadable.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
This Indiana Jones knockoff goes down smoothly enough, and Jolie isn't bad at all, though every time she opened her mouth I expected Mick Jagger to come dancing down her tongue.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Andrews is still a treasure, but the series's currency is plummeting.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
This forced spoof seems to be targeted at lesbian couples and hetero men with severe schoolgirl fetishes; that may be a legitimate market, but I'd hate to be sitting between them.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Armitage adds a slick veneer of one-liners and slapstick to Leonard's novel, but the story has been so spun around that it barely knows how to end.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Their relationship is so subtly inflected with fear, envy, and self-loathing on both sides of the class divide that I was drawn in nonetheless. Brody is a compelling presence throughout.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
This dull actioner, written and directed by Mark Steven Johnson, uses voice-over to hurry along Daredevil's genesis tale, and Affleck's rigid performance is a perpetual drag on the story.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Kline gives an interesting performance playing against type, but with its action plotting and sensationalistic scenes of women being brutalized, the movie often seems to be exploiting as much as illuminating the problem.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Bland comedy romance. Grant and Bullock fail to put across the tired dialogue, and many scenes seem ad-libbed--in desperation.- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
By the time the high-octane ending arrived I didn't even care what happened to the kid.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The remake is plenty scary, though any moral inquiry into the cost of revenge seemed to fly over the heads of the screaming, laughing crowd I saw it with.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
When the story finally collapses in a heap at the end, you'll probably want your money back, but that's where the title comes in: "Next!"- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
As on their TV collaboration, "That '70s Show," the time period never extends much farther than hairdos, costume design, and soundtrack hits.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Mar 3, 2011
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- J.R. Jones
The CGI is excellent, with characters whose depth and solidity suggest Nick Park's clay animations.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
This has wit and energy to burn, but I can't call it escapism, because tackiness and snarkiness are among the things I most need to escape.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
This historical drama is lovely to look at, with elegant Victorian fashions and verdant tropical scenery, but its story plays like a Hawaiian heritage lesson filtered through the melodramatic artifice of an old Hollywood costume drama.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
There's some cute stuff involving Hanks and some teenagers who tool around campus on scooters, but an utter lack of chemistry between him and Roberts dooms the movie.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Jun 30, 2011
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- J.R. Jones
This lame comedy was adapted from a recent British TV movie, though its (quite literal) money shots of the women squealing and hurling cash in the air reminded me of 80s greed capers like "Trading Places" and "A Fish Called Wanda."- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Pleasant bubblegum romp, which was inspired by the old Sandra Dee picture "The Reluctant Debutante."- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Delivers state-of-the-art freeway thrills tenuously held together by an absurd plot, cheap but pretty leads (Martin Henderson, Monet Mazur), diner and gas station locations that look like they've been preserved in amber since the 1950s, and plenty of engine porn.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The "Big Fat Wedding" formula dictates a certain amount of ugly-duckling fantasy along with the ethnic scenery chewing.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The gender-bending comedy of Billy Wilder and Blake Edwards gets a teenpic makeover in this 2005 debut feature by Martin Curland.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Everything wrong with today's hipster comedy seems to coalesce in this toothless satire.- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
The movie gets off to a weak start, but the jokes get progressively more bent.- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
This UK drama by Stephen Woolley, a longtime producer for Neil Jordan making his directing debut, presents a fairly convincing version of what might have happened.- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
I'm still trying to wrap my head around the historical premise for this Indiana Jones knockoff.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Jarmusch makes some effort to deliver on the promise of suspense near the end, with de Bankole stalking despicable businessman Bill Murray at his fortresslike compound in the hills.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
Initially this struck me as something you'd take your grandmother to see, but by the end it seemed more like something your grandmother would take her grandmother to see.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Apr 26, 2012
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- 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
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- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Cox has some wonderfully funny moments, but both actors are playing heavily to type.- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- 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
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- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
The fourth installment in the horror-parody franchise combines plot elements from "The Grudge," "The Village," and "War of the Worlds," with abbreviated spoofs of "Saw," "Brokeback Mountain," and "Million Dollar Baby." The amount of screen time allotted to each movie is roughly proportional to its box office take, suggesting that the first draft of the screenplay was written on a calculator.- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
The result is an insufferable academic cocktail party of declamatory speeches coaxed to life in its middle stretch by the incredible Maria Bello, who wades in like a paramedic at a disaster scene.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
On paper the story may seem hopelessly contrived -- another nostalgia piece for art-house liberals -- but on-screen it's presented in purely emotional terms, which allows Duigan and his excellent leads to inhabit and ultimately transcend the period.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Funny, suspenseful, and well paced, this is definitely the summer's best time waster.- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Inevitably, however, this oh-so-cosmopolitan setup gradually devolves into resentment, messy romance, and marital strife.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Apr 5, 2012
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
With its sappy musical vignettes and encounter-session dialogue, the movie consistently overplays its insights, though all three leads contribute thoughtful and genuine performances.- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
No one breaks into song, but this fact-based legal drama about a battered Anglo-Indian wife on trial for murdering her husband is infected with a fatal strain of heaving Bollywood melodrama.- Chicago Reader
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- 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
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- J.R. Jones
As with many R-rated studio comedies, the transgressive humor isn't nearly as offensive as the phony sentiment that's supposed to redeem it, supplied here in stale scenes of the sitter bonding with his little charges.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Dec 8, 2011
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- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
With the "Lord of the Rings" trilogy completed and the next "Chronicles of Narnia" movie two years away, fantasy aficionados needing a Yuletide fix may have to settle for this dull sword-and-sorcery epic.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Watching John Leguizamo labor to keep this leaky vessel afloat, I was reminded of all those Hell's Kitchen melodramas James Cagney rescued in the early 30s.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Watching this quick-buck sequel was about as pleasant as having my wisdom teeth pulled.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
This putrid action flick crawls along for two and a half hours before expiring in a septic field of bad one-liners, halfhearted catchphrases, obliterated cars, vicious slow-motion bullet penetration, graphic corpse mutilations played for laughs, and shamefully hollow bonding scenes between its two dyspeptic megastars.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
I'm guessing Donald Sutherland agreed to do this tedious horror flick because he heard Sissy Spacek was on board, and Spacek agreed to do it because she heard Sutherland was on board.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
This is pretty thin soup, but the players are spirited and the jokes generally offbeat.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Perelman never overcomes the disjuncture of having two familiar actresses play the same grown character, and despite the endless crosscutting, the two halves settle respectively into ghoulish foreboding and murky psychological drama.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
This is loads of fun in the early stretch, as the characters are being introduced, but the story never really goes anywhere.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
In essence this is a celebrity revenge fantasy, something few of us can relate to, but director Paul Abascal has the sense to keep the homilies short and the pacing fast.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Without Diesel's brooding lunkhead presence it's more like "1/2 Fast 1/2 Furious."- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
This is a complete mess, making up its story logic as it goes along, though in contrast to the sluggish "Shanghai Knights" its chief problem is having too many ideas instead of too few.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
This wretched remake was helmed by Raja Gosnell, perpetrator of the live-action "Scooby-Doo" movies. I'm partial to Quaid and Russo, but there are limits.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
A busy, Crash-like complex of LA stories, each hammering home the injustice of our immigration law.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The plot is just a delivery system for a series of gruesome, convoluted, and--depending on your tolerance for sadism--hilarious freak accidents.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Patrick Dempsey and Michelle Monaghan make an agreeable pair in this above-average comedy.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
With any luck this biopic of Amelia Earhart will also vanish without a trace. Hilary Swank is sorely miscast as the legendary aviator.- Chicago Reader
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- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Unfortunately, this is one of those movies with a twist ending that turns a character inside out, revealing earlier scenes to be essentially fraudulent and more or less invalidating one's emotional investment in the story. No one ever walked out of a Hitchcock movie feeling as cheated as this made me feel.- Chicago Reader
- Posted Dec 10, 2010
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- J.R. Jones
It's good sleazy fun for a while, jacked up with an assortment of edgy visuals, but the greenish yellow tint favored by action director Tony Scott is a good metaphor for the movie's jaundiced sensibility.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The scenes in which Charlie plays catch with the ghost of his Red Sox-happy brother are only the most mawkish in a movie whose every element is calculated to set a 12-year-old girl's heart thumping.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Overblown and unconvincing, the director's bright, poppy style clashing with the grim subject matter.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Kids who are still subject to the slings and arrows of high school will find this a lot funnier than I did, though I did get a bang out of Kal Penn, Kevin Christy, and Kenan Thompson as Cannon's car-crazy pals.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
More than anything Chuck and Larry shows just how flaccid American movie comedy has become now that "Saturday Night Live" has replaced vaudeville as our comedy college.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
The characters' undiluted self-interest will seem one-dimensional to all but the worst cynics.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Like so many satires in the Strangelove mold, this never comes close to working as a story, but its lampoon of U.S. imperialism and military privatization is so bracingly obnoxious I didn't really care.- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
This tepid sequel to Harold Ramis's mobster-on-the-couch comedy "Analyze This" (1999) is partially redeemed by Robert De Niro's handful of scenes with Cathy Moriarty-Gentile, who made her screen debut as the teenage wife in "Raging Bull."- Chicago Reader
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- J.R. Jones
Director Taylor Hackford ("Ray") seems to be aiming for a big "Boogie Nights" social canvas, though the movie's risible prize-fight sequence is more reminiscent of the later "Rocky" sequels.- Chicago Reader
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