Keith Uhlich
Select another critic »For 754 reviews, this critic has graded:
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35% higher than the average critic
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1% same as the average critic
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64% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 7.7 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Keith Uhlich's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 58 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Level Five | |
| Lowest review score: | The Do-Over | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 218 out of 754
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Mixed: 467 out of 754
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Negative: 69 out of 754
754
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Keith Uhlich
This was Italy's official submission for Best Foreign Film to the 2011 Academy Awards (a red flag more often than not), and, sure enough there's little here that rises above middlebrow.- Time Out
- Posted Apr 12, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
The film suddenly gains in power, until it fulfills the promise of its title with hard-hitting compassion and a crystal-clear sense of grace.- Time Out
- Posted Apr 6, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
Ceremony passes by quickly and painlessly, its annoyances easily forgotten. On the plus side, Thurman and Angarano do work up a sweet odd-pair chemistry.- Time Out
- Posted Apr 6, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
Subtlety is not this movie's strong suit; even the terrific Chemical Brothers score pounds your nerves a bit more than it should.- Time Out
- Posted Apr 6, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
The belly laughs do come, many of them courtesy of the mechanical bird companion.- Time Out
- Posted Apr 6, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
The various plot threads-E.B. is pursued by a trio of ass-kickingly cute long-eared operatives; a disgruntled worker chick (voiced in emphatic Telemundo tones by Hank Azaria) orchestrates a coup d'état-mostly get lost amid all the allusions. Even Hugh Hefner pops up because, you know, Playboy Bunnies.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 29, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
What begins as a tense, inventive suspense film becomes, to paraphrase Doctor Who, a wibbly-wobbly, timey-wimey, mushy-wushy mess. That's decidedly NOT fantastic.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 29, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
The director races far too quickly to get to his ashes-to-ashes, dust-to-dust punch line. This is the film of a pretender, not a believer.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 29, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
Begins in the land of lunacy and ends up somewhere on the far side of deranged.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 25, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
The laughs are purely surface; the film's women's-lib pretensions seem grafted on as if to lend significance to a story that would benefit from a lighter, less cerebral touch. Still, it's hard to resist La Deneuve's charms.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 22, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
Only Wilson acquits himself, finding a few insightful layers in his black-sheep stereotype and working up a sweet chemistry with Taraji P. Henson as his sassily devoted lady-friend.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 22, 2011
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- Time Out
- Posted Mar 22, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
The title character himself is also an unimpressive digital creation-Rogen might as well be performing his stoner-from-another-world shtick during a wee-hours movieoke session.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 15, 2011
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- Time Out
- Posted Mar 15, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
As we work our way back to that cliff-hanger of an opening, it becomes clear that the movie is no acid critique, but a hollow endorsement of high living. Guess every generation gets its "Boiler Room."- Time Out
- Posted Mar 15, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
The highlight, though, is Julie Christie as Grandma, whose GILFy gorgeousness (especially in the "better to eat you with" scene) is the only thing in this overblown campfest with real teeth.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 10, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
The film builds to a shattering climax that works precisely because all involved fully embrace the melodrama. Be sure to bring Kleenex.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 8, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
Dull and perfunctory, the film's saving grace is MVP Neil Patrick Harris as Kyle's blind tutor, who has a witty aside for every woodenly expressed sentiment. You go, Doog!- Time Out
- Posted Mar 8, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
New Yorkers and those who've been following the neighborhood's plight know exactly how this ends; at the very least, Paravel and Sniadecki have preserved the memory of what was. Sometimes, that's the most you can do.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 8, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
Several quick-witted touches-such as a hilarious nod to Depp's role in "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas"-can't make up for Gore Verbinski's leaden direction of this digitally animated feature.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 2, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
What you see and hear always seems perfectly natural, even if you can't exactly say why. Who needs words when you have cinema?- Time Out
- Posted Feb 28, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
Godly as the monks are, they are still human-which makes their ultimate sacrifice all the more devastating.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 22, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
Writer-director Tariq Tapa-who shot much of this vérité-style film by himself-does a beautiful job attuning us to Dilawar's drifting routine, but what's especially striking is how he gives equal weight to the supporting characters.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 15, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
You can practically taste the grime in Jorge Michel Grau's art-house horror show-the film looks like it's been slathered with gooey discards from a backyard barbecue.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 15, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
Yun is quite simply spectacular as a woman who holds steadfastly on to her dignity and empathy, even in the face of unspeakable tragedy.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 9, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
Chu does his best to humanize his subject, showing him surrounded by devoted friends and family, and wringing much drama from an on-the-road vocal-cord strain.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 9, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
Do you like movies about gladiators? Well, lend me your ears: The Eagle will more than gratify your sword-and-sandal cravings.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 9, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
This 3-D cave-diving adventure plays on a lot of fears, so avoid it if you have an aversion to claustrophobia, drowning or really bad acting.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 4, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
The film's sure-to-be-brief theatrical release is a mere stopover on the way to basic-cable eternity.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 4, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
We certainly need all the ecological jeremiads we can get. But must they be so numbingly pedantic?- Time Out
- Posted Feb 1, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
The film has the look of unflinching truth, yet it too often feels like a calculated ploy to stoke viewers' liberal-guilty consciences.- Time Out
- Posted Jan 25, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
It's a pleasure to watch the granite-faced action star do his own stunts, particularly a death-defying leap from a bridge. Yet everything feels hurried.- Time Out
- Posted Jan 25, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
An hour and half of comparable barbarity follows-all of it monotonous, none of it enlightening.- Time Out
- Posted Jan 18, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
The major change is that the domestic, Eun-yi (the great Jeon, star of "Secret Sunshine"), is now more of a victim than an aggressor.- Time Out
- Posted Jan 18, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
Injecting a devil-may-care attitude into a franchise-focused blockbuster only gets you so far. When all is said and done, this wasp's got no sting.- Time Out
- Posted Jan 11, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
It's "Centurion Deux" without the second-coming-of-Carpenter pretense, though you still wish the trashiness were more distinctive.- Time Out
- Posted Jan 7, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
Despite the faux-realist aesthetic (gritty handheld camerawork; all-natural sound), we never feel like much is at stake, though Pistereanu and Condeescu have an easygoing rapport that makes the quieter moments between them affecting.- Time Out
- Posted Jan 4, 2011
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- Keith Uhlich
Its stunningly composed images showing how Isaac is himself something of a ghost-given to staring off into the distance, being condescended to by those around him, a man perpetually outside the times. What he needs is to take that one extra step toward his spectral siren; the scene in which he does so might be one of the most exhilarating visions of death's sweet embrace ever filmed.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 23, 2010
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- Keith Uhlich
These characters are more than what we see on the surface, and it's thanks to Leigh's rigorous yet generous eye that we never just gawk at the drama.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 22, 2010
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- Keith Uhlich
Chomet builds this beguiling symphony of sadness to a poignant finale that does ample justice to the many layers of Tati's tale, both in text and out.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 22, 2010
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- Time Out
- Posted Dec 15, 2010
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- Time Out
- Posted Dec 14, 2010
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- Time Out
- Posted Dec 14, 2010
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- Time Out
- Posted Dec 13, 2010
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- Keith Uhlich
That the duo will work their way back to each other is never in doubt, although Chazelle doesn't succumb to easy sentiment. If anything, he moves too far in the other direction, aiming for a wizened ambiguity that doesn't entirely come off.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 12, 2010
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- Keith Uhlich
You still leave hoping he ultimately found peace and enlightenment, two things he graciously gave to those of us who hung on his every word.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 10, 2010
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- Keith Uhlich
Disney knows how to bewitch a crowd, but the sense that Tangled was made more by corporate mandate than artistic spark remains constant throughout.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 9, 2010
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- Time Out
- Posted Dec 9, 2010
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- Keith Uhlich
The first part of Deathly Hallows has plenty of invigorating imagery alongside the pro forma narrative elements.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 8, 2010
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- Keith Uhlich
Someone surely thought to call this knowingly ridiculous genre mash-up "Cowboys vs. Ninjas," though even that title wouldn't hint at all the you-gotta-be-kidding-me craziness on display.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 7, 2010
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- Keith Uhlich
For an especially egregious bit of miscasting, look no further than Mena Suvari, star of this tony adaptation of Ernest Hemingway's posthumously published novel about a disintegrating marriage.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 7, 2010
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- Keith Uhlich
One's heart sinks the moment the trio is picked up by Prince Caspian (Barnes) and deposited on his ship, the Dawn Treader. Suddenly we're in green-screen land, where everything looks cheap, heavily digital and unfortunately postconverted to 3-D-hardly a fantastical otherworld.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 7, 2010
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- Keith Uhlich
People who like their comedies pitch black (we're talking midnight, no stars or moon) should get a kick out of the tale of Steven Russell (Carrey).- Time Out
- Posted Dec 6, 2010
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- Keith Uhlich
Clearly there's a lot of myth-dispelling to do; indeed, the film often seems like a public-service announcement wrapped around a sketchy narrative skeleton.- Time Out
- Posted Nov 17, 2010
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- Keith Uhlich
The fancifulness wears out its welcome, though, and you often wish the film would treat its subject with a bit more seriousness.- Time Out
- Posted Nov 10, 2010
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- Keith Uhlich
For everything admirable, like the way female Prime Minister Agathe Uwilingiyimana (the wonderful Gakire) resigns herself to a violent death, there's a heavy-handed metaphor-a cute gaggle of orphaned goats-ready to smack away the intelligence.- Time Out
- Posted Nov 10, 2010
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- Keith Uhlich
By the end, you feel curiously closer to the performer and her process without having any clue how you got there. It's exhilarating.- Time Out
- Posted Nov 4, 2010
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- Keith Uhlich
Depardieu and Cornillac's sibling rivalry, which segues between mostly verbal smackdowns and liquored-up bursts of merriment, is beautifully observed, as is the relationship between the detective and his devoted wife (the wonderful Marie Bunel). The thriller stuff, by comparison, is just a lot of perfunctory deadweight.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 26, 2010
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- Keith Uhlich
There's so much right with Gareth Edwards's low-budget alien invasion tale that you almost want to brush aside everything that's not up to snuff.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 26, 2010
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- Keith Uhlich
Indeed, you leave the film feeling like Wiseman has given you a glimpse of one of those ephemeral ports in a storm to which all of us retreat at times.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 21, 2010
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- Keith Uhlich
For those of us with a love of actorly indulgence, though, the film is a treasure trove, filled with enough molten-gold performances to gild a thousand Oscars.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 21, 2010
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- Keith Uhlich
Strikingly picturesque locations and a terrific ensemble cast help this tonally inconsistent adaptation of Posy Simmonds's comic series pass by with relative ease, though it leaves a very peculiar aftertaste.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 20, 2010
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- Keith Uhlich
The question lingers as the movie comes to its triumphant body-swapping close: Is this a pro-environment parable or a prophecy of virtual realities yet to come? Cameron's new world may very well be a verdant Matrix.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Never quite shakes its sitcom-ish setup. The director alternates incident-laden storytelling with penetrating character moments that her terrific cast acts to the fullest.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
West is far more adept at and interested in sustaining an unrelentingly ominous mood than in executing the genre-required spook shocks.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Only "Slumdog Millionaire's" Dev Patel, as the bastard prince of the villainous Fire nation, truly gets jiggy with the fantasy. Everyone else stares off into green-screen space and waits for lunch to be called.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Hopper keeps things light and off-the-cuff, allowing his performers free rein - sometimes too much, as in the case of the screechy and shrill Farrell - to explore grim territory without falling into heavy-handedness.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
What spark there is in the movie comes in the scenes when Vivian and Nana are getting to know each other. Both actresses have a sweet chemistry and strong screen presences that you wish were better utilized.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Keith Uhlich
Visual Acoustics goes out of its way to remain as kindly and pleasing as Shulman himself.- Time Out
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- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
A believably unbalanced Bening scores the movie’s true coup: Karen’s revitalizing relationship with a sweetly persistent coworker (Jimmy Smits) is a rare example of Hollywood doing right by midlife romance.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
There’s a marked sense of retreat in this tale that’s never explored--everyone goes out of the way to remember the past through rose-colored specs.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
There’s an edge to The Circus that suggests a man gazing deep into the void, laughing at the darkness and urging us to do the same.- Time Out
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- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
The real drama in Parnassus comes from the troupe of sideshow performers, led by a terrifically morbid Christopher Plummer.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
The setup is pure Looney Tunes, and indeed, Despicable Me is at its best when trading in the anything-for-a-laugh prankery that was a specialty of the Termite Terrace crowd.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
The film blows up a minor aspect of the New Wave to foolishly apocalyptic proportions, substituting gossip for gospel.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Bong is so concerned with whodunit that his creaky genre mechanics diminish Kim's determined performance.- Time Out
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- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Maybe Douglas Sirk could have made something profound out of the pseudo-ennobling horsepucky. As is, The Last Song is what the crinkle-nosed Southern belle in all of us would resoundingly deem “Trash! Trash! Trash!”- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
There are plenty of formulaic boo! moments, yet Craven intelligently treats Bug's otherworldly issues like hormonal growing pains that must be tamed.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
About as deep as a kiddie pool, which isn't to say it's an unpleasant frolic.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Unlike Carroll’s perversely idealized protagonist, Burton’s Alice is just another anachronistic feminist tearing down Victorian patriarchal norms. Even her—[shudder]—Avril Lavigne–blared theme song is a skin-deep grrrl-power accessory.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
When The Father of My Children shifts focus to Grégoire’s wife (Caselli) and children (the eldest is beautifully played by De Lencquesaing’s actual daughter, Alice), Hansen-Løve’s hand steadies, and she reveals a true talent for intimate, behavioral observation.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
There’s a once-in-a-lifetime feeling to the trio’s every interaction—not only as characters but as performers—that makes the film’s casually tragic climax that much more devastating.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
There’s little of the Church’s perspective in this doc, but you can’t really fault the filmmakers--Mormon leaders refused several overtures to participate. Read more: http://newyork.timeout.com/articles/film/86550/the-mormon-proposition-film-review#ixzz0r2j38wUF- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Give Me Future only comes alive when it focuses on the underlying forces that allow the trio's radical sense of fun to take hold.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Keith Uhlich
The unspoken theme underlying Dickens’s prose--that the money-grubbing Ebenezer is conversing with semblances of his own self--finds near-perfect cinematic expression through Carrey’s efforts.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Director Christian Carion (Merry Christmas) establishes a low-key yet threatening atmosphere right from the start, and gets terrific performances from Kusturica and Canet.- Time Out
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- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Zombie is still committed to showing how violence perverts all touched by it, yet his carnivalesque approach undercuts his empathy. He panders to the cheap seats whenever he’s not being scary.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Unlike Romero’s film, what’s missing is a trenchant sense of connection to our historical moment.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Christopher Isherwood’s seminal queer novel deserves a film adaptation that captures both its sense of place and its activist spirit. Cowriter-director Tom Ford settles for the glossy ephemera of a Vanity Fair cover spread.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
A challenge inherent to a parable of this sort is that evil, being so seductive, can make good seem dull or prissy by comparison.- Slant Magazine
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- Keith Uhlich
Like so many Doors chroniclers, DiCillo can’t help but fall under the singer’s spell; it’s understandable, but frustrating.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Reitman, who also cowrote the screenplay, feels the constant need to "deepen" his characters, granting them wants and motivations--especially during the moralistic third act--that are totally alien to how they're initially portrayed.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Cage is not quite Aguirre or Fitzcarraldo in the Big Easy. But his performance hits all the right mythopoetic beats, rising above the thin script and late-night-cable aesthetic.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Given the months-long hype, what’s most bewildering about Sundance sensation Precious is its overall shrug-worthiness.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
What emerges is an illuminating, though terribly dismaying, portrait of the War on Terror’s lasting effects. Whether one retreats or steps out defiantly, there is no sanctuary.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
It isn't the first time death has figured in an Allen movie, but the way he grapples with it here (leaving each character at a moment of irresolution comparable to staring down the man with the scythe) is much more potent and direct.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
The doc’s breakout star is Vogue creative director Grace Coddington, a former model whose plain appearance (the end result of a horrible car accident) and frumpy clothing belie her genius for fashion. She counters her boss every chance she can get and provides the film with a much-needed emotional center.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
The intention outweighs the execution, though there are still pleasures to be had.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
The running time may make you blanch, but Connie Field’s seven-part documentary about the history and eventual dissolution of South African apartheid is well worth the commitment.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman's mostly whiffed docudrama makes the influential poem by Allen Ginsberg (Franco) seem dull, ordinary, pedestrian instead of pioneering.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Zack Snyder's films have some of the best opening-credits sequences in cinema; the unfortunate thing is that there's always a movie after them.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
John Travolta breaks the braggadocio meter in the latest tightly wound actioner from "Taken’s" Pierre Morel.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
The most impressive aspect of Breillat’s feature is that it agitates like the best fairy tales, seducing us with otherworldliness before sticking the knife in and permanently inscribing the moral.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
No simplistic status parable. It’s more a psychological snapshot of a person forever doomed to remain a voyeur to her own life- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
The Horse Boy comes off as both an edifying work of advocacy and an invasive home movie.- Time Out
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- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
This is like a subpar "Naked Gun" feature cooked up by Eisenstein and Godard during a drug-addled lost weekend. Where's Leslie Nielsen when you need him?- Time Out
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- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
This highly fictionalized look at the Wild West early days of Internet porn is off-putting in almost every way, with sledgehammer stylistic flourishes (incessant shaky-cam; a Rolling Stones musical cue as ironic comment) and dialogue that sounds like it was written in a testosterone-fueled haze.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
From the moment Joel Schumacher's dour teens-in-crisis melodrama establishes its group of spoiled (and so, so unloved) Manhattan silver-spooners, you long for anything to leaven the tsk-tsk prurience.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
By the end of Pray’s skin-deep love letter, only one sweeping reaction seems appropriate: “A pox on all your houses.”- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
It’s likely that only Herzog would dare to, and succeed at, resolving this singular cinematic object by contemplating the fate of an abandoned basketball.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
There’s no room for such soul-searching uncertainty with Gibson. After a few rapidly ticked-off minutes of gloom, the mission is clear: Get the sons of bitches, and make ’em pay.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
The thought behind this body-splattering nostalgia trip is unformed and stagnant.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
It's supremely annoying to see the ups and downs of romance reduced to archer-than-arch line readings and bloodless mortal kombat. What's more frustrating is that the film, adapted from Bryan Lee O'Malley's popular comic, is an endless visual delight.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Ferrara’s unconventional methods only manage to serve Chelsea on the Rocks, his loving portrait of Manhattan’s boho landmark, the Chelsea Hotel.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Lone Scherfig directs it all as if it were a breezy lark, so a third-act tonal shift makes for an incongruous, excessively moralistic fit with everything that’s preceded. Most insulting, though, is the way in which the climactic passages miraculously tidy up every frayed edge of Jenny’s life.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
If there’s humor to be found in some of the particulars, it’s never to judge or to poke fun, but to revel in the very real delights of consensual sexual roleplay.- Slant Magazine
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- Keith Uhlich
For Powell and Pressburger, the personal and the political—much like their distinctive mix of high and low artistry—weren’t separate bedfellows: Even a marvelously entertaining tale of repressed abbesses on the edge could explore, with enduring resonance and profundity, an empire losing its grip.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
The sights and sounds are splendid--a lovingly hand-detailed portside city, a touching musical interlude in a windswept field--though they're largely disconnected from the narrative proper.- Time Out
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- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Lee and Schamus make history blandly palatable; in the process, they rob the times and the people they’re portraying of their complications.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Sobering stuff for an animated movie that pitches itself somewhere between cutesy children’s entertainment and hectoring Grimm’s fairy tale. The problem with 9, though, is that it lacks a consistent tone.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Spelling may not be Quentin Tarantino’s forte, but his grasp of language (both verbal and visual) is peerless.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
What follows is pulp made near-profound through director Jonathan Mostow’s sure-handed guidance.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Thompson's imagination-she's also the screenwriter-knows no bounds, and she does a brilliant job of connecting the fantastical elements to the sobering realities of life during wartime.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Adela’s troubles feel slight and underdeveloped in the face of the world around her; it’s all too appropriate, in the end, that nature swallows her whole.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Sokurov, who also acted as director of photography, films the character and his surroundings with the eye of a newly arrived visitor to another world.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
It will test your faith in humanity, but Hersonski's film is nonetheless a brilliant reminder of the importance of bearing witness.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
The filmmakers do a good job of laying out the whos, whys and wheres through diagrams, reenactments and testimonials from veterans on both sides of the skirmish.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
There's no sense of the oppression France felt under Nazi rule. It's all just play-acting in period-specific attire. You can almost hear the AD calling lunch.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Strangely enough, our knowledge of what’s to come makes Word Is Out that much more affecting, because it shows that there were—and are—pockets of peace amid the brutality of an ongoing civil-rights struggle.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
A dumb comedy out to prove its genre-defying smarts--the title is both an onscreen-supported reference to Walt Whitman and a wacky-tobaccy allusion--Leaves of Grass is a mostly mirthless affair; not even the sight of Edward Norton portraying twins tickles as it should.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
It’s a kick to see Cera cut loose from his patented befuddled-nerd routine, even if the film’s caricatured performances and fish-in-a-barrel scorn are sure to be monotonous for some.- Time Out
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- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Writer-director Jane Campion approaches the tale with an artiste’s respectful solemnity, but it too often comes off like "Twilight" transplanted across oceans and centuries.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Our fury is never directed toward concrete solutions, and that allows the guilty parties to slip, perhaps permanently, from our grasp.- Time Out
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- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
The film never entirely overcomes the sense that it's a calling-card vehicle.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Leaving is a tawdry potboiler slathered riotously in portent, complete with a lamebrained detour into vengeance that only Claude Chabrol would be able to pull off.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Props should be given to Rodriguez’s breathless “let’s put on a show” inventiveness. Plus, Macy and the booger--kick ass!- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Polanski has made a genre piece with a verve and vitality that’s in sadly short supply.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
There’s nothing more boring than a life embalmed with halfhearted Hollywood bombast, which only makes the film’s fleeting pleasures stand out all the more.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
For a few brief moments, the film becomes something close to Greek mythology, as opposed to graphic-novel imitator. What a feeling!- Time Out
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- Time Out
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- Slant Magazine
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- Keith Uhlich
Gould is as much of a mystery at the end as at the beginning. You get the feeling that's the way he'd have wanted it.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
The film lurches through narrative incidents: Battle scenes, political intrigue and a ticking-time-bomb love triangle are all pitched at the level of mundane competence and rarely get the blood racing.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
If there's a misstep here, it would be in the character of camp medic Maj. Clipton (James Donald). His overwrought dialogue---especially some Heston-like cries of "Madness!" during the finale---is too much of an on-the-nose contrast to the story's necessarily clinical existentialism. It slightly dilutes the film's piercing grandeur, but the nit is easily enough picked.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Terrific performances and superb cinematography (by Claire Denis’s right hand, Agnès Godard) lift cowriter-director Ursula Meier’s feature debut above its thuddingly metaphorical premise.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
The aural and visual overload that marks most of the director's work is here in spades--few documentaries look and sound so distinctive.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
The stylistic conceit of keeping us entirely with the clones (so that we are as ill-informed as they are and never get to meet their powerful oppressors) only reveals what an empty-headed abstraction this tale was from both page and frame one- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
There's more than a few things off in this tale of a disillusioned professional thief (Affleck, dull), his unlikely inamorata (Hall, wasted) and the determined FBI agent (Hamm, solid) out to apprehend him.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
All three of you clamoring for a sequel to "Wild Wild West" have got your wish: Jonah Hex--an adaptation of the DC Comics series about a Western antihero with otherworldly abilities--gives that Fresh Prince–starring disaster from 1999 a run for its wasted money.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
It’s a neurotic treatise that simply adds to our cultural dementia instead of illuminating it.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
I'll respect the studio's wishes to abbreviate all plot description. God knows, they're marketing it like the second coming of "The Crying Game," though the revelations that await Nev are only shocking if you believe P.T. Barnum was really in possession of a genuine Fiji mermaid.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
It would be risible if Ozon’s hand didn’t remain so steady and confident throughout, all the way up to a complicatedly upbeat conclusion that recreates the Christian Annunciation with the straightest of faces.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
The comic jabs — Tati makes brilliant use of a gaudy, gurgling fish fountain — never overwhelm the humanity of these disparate characters. [09 Sep 2010, Issue#780]- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Director-cinematographer Steven Soderbergh’s indifference to the material is palpable and of a piece with his deathly dull output of late.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
If you’ve seen "Species," you know where this don’t-mess-with-Mother-Nature horror show is going, though director-cowriter Vincenzo Natali has a few interesting twists up his sleeve.- Time Out
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- Time Out
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- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Often resembles a prime John Carpenter thriller--call it "Assault on Manger 13"--until an overcaffeinated angel-fu climax significantly lowers the intelligence quotient.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Notwithstanding Brown's occasional half-baked critical comment about the sport's corporatization, the film ends up as a cliquish circle jerk that flatters those in the know and leaves neophytes little to mull over.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Less deadpan spoof than loving act of possession, Black Dynamite near-fully channels the look and feel of its blaxploitation ancestors, warts and all.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
There’s little that can be done with material wrung of its complications to accommodate an ultimately life-affirming, it-all-works-out agenda.- Time Out
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- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Credit Broderick and the cast for putting across the fey Indiewood bullcrap with committed, nearly convincing effort.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
All the retroactively enlightened symbolism gets monotonous, and reaches an absurd apex with the introduction of a party-line newspaperman played by that scowling emblem of Teutonic depravity, Ulrich Tukur.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Filmmakers from Jacques Rivette to Hou Hsiao-hsien have treated the City of Light like Alice’s rabbit hole; writer-director Hong Sang-soo similarly embraces the fantasy, but goes one step further in this extraordinary character study by fully erasing the line that separates the actual from the fictional.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Even supremely talented actors like Melissa Leo (as a confidently sexy trucker) and Brendan Sexton III (as a train-station beggar) are stifled by all the pseudo-redemptive mush.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Crank’s Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor direct with their usual flashy brio, and basso profundo Keith David has a sublime cameo as a cop indignant at the thought of a pistachio peanut butter sandwich. It’s that kind of movie, folks.- Time Out
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- Time Out
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- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Gallo and Dalle are sublimely tragic figures; the scene in which Shane stalks around Notre Dame like Frankenstein unleashed is a pitch-perfect encapsulation of the way the film plays with and deepens movie-monster archetypes.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Speed can be a virtue, but there’s something extremely off-putting about the way The Wolfman, Universal’s latest horror classic redux, races through its opening scenes.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Strasberg’s doe-eyed dedication to her role and Douglas Slocombe’s brilliant black-and-white cinematography counterbalance the film’s increasingly ridiculous plot turns, which nonetheless have a crude, jaw-dropper effectiveness.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
The cast to die for is almost entirely wasted in this machismo-marinated slab of Brit-crime nastiness.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Her (Angela Ismailos) heart's in the right place, but her subjects' ruminations demand a much larger canvas.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
But when has a performer as fully and uniquely sacrificed himself to the moving-picture cause as De Niro? He leeches LaMotta of soul and conscience, making him a purely physical creature sculpted in sinew for the glory days, then padded up in lard for the declining years.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
A Jerry Bruckheimer–produced video-game adaptation--it has to be good, doesn’t it? (Ya, sarcasm.)- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Kilcher makes the slog worthwhile--her face gleams with possibility, even in the character’s darkest moments--though one prays she escapes the typecasting trap ASAP.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
The movie does have an air of cautiousness about it, trying so hard to be a respectful, definitive statement on WWII (and often succeeding) that it sometimes feels cadaverous.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
It's easy to think of comics, especially time-tested ones like Rivers, as mechanical laugh-generators. Stern and Sundberg allow her to reveal the deep-rooted humanity of those ever-present quips, and the effect is humbling.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
It’s unfortunate that the result is so unaffecting, especially in light of all the things the director does right.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
This is hackwork of the highest order, lacking in all poetry and barely comprehensible aurally or visually.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
A grimy kitchen-sink melodrama with an Ajax cleanser script: The muck is all surface, the turmoil cleanly shallow and contrived, though never less than gripping.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
It helps that Fame has been cast with performers who have the glow of possibility about them.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
A slipshod documentary about a fascinating subject: the loaded history and current complications of African-American hairstyling.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
It’s the creature’s instinctual murder spree that makes the immediate impression, but that would be nothing without the simmering tensions among the human counterparts. [30th anniversary release]- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
It’s too easy to say that Peter Billingsley shot his eye out with this inept comic trifle, but…well, he shot his eye out.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
This is the kind of movie in which it's considered the zenith of meta-wit to have a slumming Robert De Niro (as Machete's racist politico nemesis) drive a taxi.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Taken on its own fun-over-philosophy terms, this is an exercise in tone-shifting virtuosity.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
The ideologies underlying Andersson’s oft-astonishing succession of extreme wide-angle, vanishing-point tableaux are a decidedly acquired taste.- Time Out
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- Time Out
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- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Bless you, R.Patz & Co., because this gloriously steaming pile is officially in the bad-movies-we-love pantheon.- Time Out
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- Time Out
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- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
This is the kind of autumnal sentimentality that the Academy goes wild for-a (rightly) venerated performer acknowledging his own mortality by pandering to cheap-seat emotions.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
This is Young in his playroom, grabbing his toys at random while indulging his every antimelodic whim, and Demme’s off-the-cuff approach makes for the perfect aesthetic complement.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Cue those weepy violins. Indeed, you get everything you'd expect from this mostly saccharine melodrama.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Sontag’s true talent was for the printed word; behind the camera, her limitations come more harshly to light. Upon Promised Land’s release, she recounted her experiences in Vogue--an all-too-appropriate forum since her film is mostly chic posturing.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
The meanings of Close-Up shift, subtly and profoundly, with every viewing; the only certainty is that its rewards are boundless.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Only Billy Connolly, as the boys’ way-of-the-gun pa, brings a smidgen of sobering gravitas to the proceedings, though he can hardly counter the pounding hangover brought on by all the mock-virtuous butchery.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
The film slowly loses the sobering toughness of its initial inquiry, and finally comes off as bloodline-biased hagiography.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Desperation oozes from every frame of Cop Out, which front-loads its best joke -- then spends the rest of its running time endlessly spinning its wheels.- Time Out
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- Keith Uhlich
Jolie must eventually become a comic-book supergirl impervious to explosions and bullets, all the better to set up a "Bourne"-like franchise by the final fade-out.- Time Out
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- Time Out
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