Ken Fox
Select another critic »For 1,722 reviews, this critic has graded:
-
54% higher than the average critic
-
3% same as the average critic
-
43% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 0.6 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Ken Fox's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 65 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Berlin | |
| Lowest review score: | Strange Wilderness | |
Score distribution:
-
Positive: 991 out of 1722
-
Mixed: 646 out of 1722
-
Negative: 85 out of 1722
1722
movie
reviews
-
- Ken Fox
The real stars of the film are Francois Emmanuelli's vibrant production design, Klapisch's flair with inventive optical effects and above all Barcelona itself, captured here in all its baroque brilliance.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Who these brave men were and why they fought disappears under the usual clichés, while the astounding acts of courage that occurred at Ia Drang are lost to the dust and din.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Peddle captures a vital and increasingly visible community that's easily misunderstood, and his film will undoubtedly help novices further understand the complex differences separating gays, transsexuals and the transgendered.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Rossier's film leaves the dispiriting impression that democracy simply will not be tolerated in the Southern Hemisphere.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Driven by Edward Norton's and Evan Rachel Wood's riveting performances, writer-director David Jacobson's tense drama samples bits of cinematic Americana from sources as diverse as "Shane," "Badlands" and "Taxi Driver."- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Even when the script takes a turn for the chatty, there's always something pretty to look at.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Its brightly colored surfaces and chirpy, picaresque tone notwithstanding, filmmaker Ra'anan Alexandrowciz's first feature is a scathing condemnation of the rampant venality he perceives as having gripped his country.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
It presents an image of today's Israeli army, composed of teenagers who are by now several generations removed from the founders' original vision and have begun to question whether tactics designed to keep the country safe will only lead to increased levels of fear, humiliation and deadly violence.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Both Hesses and a surprisingly large number of their very talented cast and crew are graduates of Brigham Young University's film program: Could BYU one day join the esteemed ranks of USC and NYU?- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Though it clearly explicates the problem, the film is by no means a straightforward documentary.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
What this spectacular-looking sci-fi thriller lacks in originality it makes up for in pure beauty: It just might be the most visually audacious and startlingly beautiful space opera since the original "Solaris."- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Features a first-rate voice cast and state-of-the-art animation that's nothing short of miraculous.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Versatile, highly skilled Norwegian director Hans Petter Moland's poignant drama examines the lingering effects of U.S. intervention in Southeast Asia.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Dreams With Sharp Teeth Or, Why is Harlan Ellison so gosh darned angry?- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The underlying political motivation may be unclear, but the violence and desperation of lives lived in something close to hell on earth is terrifyingly clear.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Among those who are on hand to offer their own feelings about the man known as Peter Berlin and his art are fellow porn legend Jack Wrangler, groundbreaking gay writer Armistead Maupin, pornographer Wakefield Poole and director John Waters, who remembers Peter from his days in San Francisco, and still doesn't quite get what he's all about.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Too bad that Romanek feels compelled to tie it all up with a banal pop psych explanation that offers an all-too simplistic solution to an otherwise uncommonly complex thriller.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Offers substantial food for thought on the subject of prison reform, and Ariel and Menahami close by noting that Bedi's example has been followed in Thai and -- surprisingly -- U.S. prisons with encouraging results.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Film works best as a soberly witty commentary on the workplace and makes an interesting companion piece to "Mondays in the Sun."- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
A flawed but nevertheless endearing father-son road trip with a distinctive twist.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Far from proving the reality of the Horatio Alger myth it peddles, Chris Gardner's story is worth celebrating precisely because he managed to beat the odds stacked so high against him. Steve Conrad's screenplay is also curiously but insistently silent on the subject of race.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Brimming with ideas, aphorisms, diatribes, film clips and even bits of a story, the film's a gorgeous muddle that somehow manages to leave one both baffled and deeply satisfied.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Eight magnificent sled dogs must fend for themselves amid Antarctica's frozen wastes in this top-notch survival adventure that will reduce the coldest heart to a puddle of warm slush.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
With its artfully artless hand-held cinematography, haphazard focus, non-diegetic dialogue and what sounds like a largely improvised script, Thraves's film is all about style, but contains a surprising amount of substance.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Despite Schnack's half-hearted attempt to divide the film into chapters, his film is too unstructured to hold the interest of non-fans who might have appreciated a somewhat less hagiographic approach.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Imagine "The Full Monty" without any of the feel-good uplift, and you'd be pretty close to capturing what this bitter -- and often bitterly funny -- film from Spain is all about.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
A fascinating allegory of life in Iranian Kurdistan, a remote borderland still deeply scarred by years of war with Iraq.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The morbid theme notwithstanding, this is by no means a downbeat film, and it ends with the rather hopeful thought that for every disaster there's also a chance for survival.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The humor is too adult for children and the plot far too childish for most adults; in fact, everything about the film is really too silly to warrant much consideration.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
It's not a great film, but let's face it: Considering the source, this is as good as it was ever going to get.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
French director Helene Angel's dark but deftly handled fable about familial violence has a terrifying, fairy-tale atmosphere that's in perfect keeping with its unique point of view.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
It shifts the focus from Charles and Sebastian's youthful idyll to the stronger, more provocative relationship between Charles and Julia, wherein lies Waugh's concerns with materialism and velvet-gloved dual grip of family and religion.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
It's a gripping, understated thriller with a solid emotional undercurrent that builds to an unexpectedly moving denouement.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Title notwithstanding, there's nothing particularly funny about this political drama from the tireless Claude Chabrol.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
(Tykwer's) unpredictability has become predictable, and the only thing genuinely uncanny here is the unsettling — and unintentional — sense of déjà vu.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Winner of the John Cassavetes Award for Best Feature Under $500K at the 2006 Independent Spirit Awards, Henry's film is beautifully shot and extraordinarily well acted by Williams.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Questions the efficacy and, above all, the humanity of what even steadfast Bush supporters like Tony Blair have condemned.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Ending the film with a perfunctory run-through of Lennon's murder on the doorstep of his Manhattan apartment building, however, foregrounds an unfortunate irony: Had the INS succeeded in forcing Lennon out of the U.S., he might be alive today.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Mock's film leaves us with a sense of gratitude and relief that so thoughtful an artist as Kushner continues to work among us, capturing and reacting to the world as he buzzes through it.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Israeli director Keren Yedaya's remarkable debut feature, which won the 2004 Cannes Film Festival Camera d'Or, is a powerful study of a teenager's willingness to do anything to save her mother, a Tel Aviv prostitute who may be well beyond salvation.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
He's (Mann) a solid historian and this film is full of fascinating facts, but he's a cultural critic at heart, and a good one at that.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Running just a little over two hours and wordily narrated by talk-radio host Amy Goodman, Stephen Vittoria's hagiography spends more time bemoaning the past 30 years of U.S. political history and setting the dismal tone for McGovern's arrival on the political scene than it does on his 1972 campaign.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Though the film springs an okay twist at the very end, there's a good chance you won't be awake to see it.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Like the film's giddily intoxicating cannabis hybrid, Rogen and Goldberg's script cross-pollinates Cheech-and-Chong style stoner comedy with Tarantino-esque ultra-violence.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
It highlights a still shadowy moment in the creation of Pakistan that saw the abduction of nearly 100,000 Sikh and Muslim women in both India and Pakistan.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
For all the impending doom, the film remains suitable for kids of all ages (the filmmakers even end on a happily reassuring note that is at odds with the film's overall message).- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Andreas' cast and crew, however, have done an admirable job of backing up that hilarious title with an intelligent little film that knows its limitations and makes the most of a shoestring budget.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
While incontrovertibly light compared to contemporary master of melodrama Andre Techine's best work, this 2005 romance is best enjoyed as the welcome reunion of two of French cinema's most beloved stars.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The reality of the situation and the nightmarish consequences they suggest, however, are frighteningly real.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
First-time feature director Sanaa Hamri's virtually perfect romantic comedy is a marvelous mix of brains and heart that confronts serious questions about race and dating with sensitivity, humor and enormous sex appeal.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
More high - but strangely touching - weirdness from acclaimed Japanese auteur Kiyoshi Kurosawa.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Hopkins plays "Hopkins," and the buff, terribly miscast Gyllenhaal will be convincing only to viewers who've never set foot on a university campus. What makes it worth seeing, however, is the extraordinary chemistry between the atypically raw and unguarded Paltrow and Davis, a fabulously talented actress once again testing her range with a performance unlike any she's given in the past.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Presenting facts in a wrapper of fiction only muddies the waters, and many of the film's subtler points are likely to slip by viewers who haven't first read Schlosser's book. Other salient points are shoehorned into the dialogue, rendering key scenes preachy, heavy-handed and dramatically inert.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The audacious finale, which plays out in a wholly symbolic realm, will leave even the most adventurous moviegoers scratching their heads. See it with a friend; you'll appreciate the second opinion.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Aside from Bjork's astonishing performance, it's a grim tragedy that's deliberately drab and exceedingly painful to watch.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Despite outward appearances, Paolo Virzi's utterly charming fable is actually a razor-sharp political satire.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Fascinating, if slightly unfocused, film.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
While the film captures all the beauty of these extraordinary pieces, the details of Saint Laurent's legendarily turbulent personal life are glossed over with frustrating tact.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Breillat also offers sharp insights into the love-hate relationship between directors and actors.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Concise and well-researched documentary does a fine job of presenting a complicated issue clearly while maintaining a fairly objective middle ground.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Fessenden uses an unsettling mix of montage, time-lapse photography and animation to create an atmosphere of great, unknowable menace that closely approximates the haunted spirit of Algeron Blackwood's unforgettable tale "The Wendigo." These hills are indeed alive.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Before it takes a sudden turn and devolves into a bizarre sort of romantic comedy, Steven Shainberg's adaptation of Mary Gaitskill's harrowing short story about dominance, submission and the twisted sexual dynamics of the work place is a brilliantly played, deeply unsettling experience.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
With his sure handling of this thriller's switchback plot and hairpin turns, Hideo Nakata confirms his mastery of genre material in the wake of his phenomenally successful "Ring."- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
In the end it appears that the problem is less divorce per se than immature and deeply selfish parents who should never have had children in the first place.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Touched with eerie dream sequences, the film casts a strange spell that's enhanced by the rhythmic, almost sensual depiction of the painstaking art of embroidery.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
How can such awful things come out of the mouth of such a pretty girl?- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
First-time director Mark Milgard displays enormous promise and a surprisingly sensitive touch with this beautifully rendered tragedy.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Longley has constructed a remarkably coherent, horrifically vivid snapshot of those turbulent days.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
It's a complex new approach toward putting memory to tape, and the result can be at times too theoretical, too personal and too opaque, but it's a consistently challenging work that's often sharply poignant.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Masharawi's use of actual footage of clogged roadblocks and scary police actions bring a topical immediacy to his film, but it also asks an important question about the relevance of art during a time of crisis.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Beautifully played by Valette and Zylberstein, and directed with amazing grace by Albou, this touching film offers a respectful, fascinating look at a community that's ignored as often as it's misunderstood.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Most mystifying, however, is the bizarre hero-worship surrounding the fingure of Kim Jong Il, a nationwide personality cult that makes Joe Stalin and Chairman Mao look like D-list celebrities.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Bearded, burly and even balding, these "bears" are a refreshing change from the depilated, youth-obsessed men of "Queer as Folk."- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Interestingly, the real horror lies in the film's depiction of the era: The sight of guillotined bodies -- naked, headless and dumped under the shady trees of Picpus -- is truly shocking. Rarely has the horror of the Terror been so graphically and effectively evoked.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Animal lovers and museum-goers alike are sure to enjoy this curiously delightful hour-long documentary.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Attempts at balance through interviews with unidentified U.S. soldiers is halfhearted at best. In the end, Berends sacrifices coherence for the sake of a story he's determined to tell, rather than focusing on the one that's practically telling itself.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
"Survivor" meets "Cinema Paradiso"in this wonderfully entertaining documentary about a film fanatic's quest to bring Hollywood movies to a remote South Sea island.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The film doesn't dwell on bad feelings, and anyone looking for lurid details won't find them. But fans will love the live footage of this still-powerful band ripping through a virtual greatest-hits set.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
By alternating between Jackson's and Kim's point of view, McCann shows both sides of the story: the panicky fear of the paranoid schizophrenic -- the arrhythmic editing and Marshall Grupp's masterful sound design convey a sense of dislocation and shifting reality -- and the bewilderment and frustration of the people who try to help him.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
It's both funny and harrowing in the way that only a childhood nightmare come to life can be.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Bold and unforgettable meditation on a truly bizarre incident that pokes at the very heart of one of our culture's biggest taboos.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Director Gore Verbiniski delivers the best one can hope for: a cleverly nostalgic, high-tech copy of the real deal.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The film's rather shallow treatment of his art only reinforces the long-held opinion that Hockney is more a brilliant visual stylist than an artist of any great depth.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Through what sounds like a project of unpromisingly limited scope, Lee manages to touch on a surprisingly wide range of subjects, from cultural identity, familial expectations, community responsibility and, above all, self-definition.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Wood is excellent, but this is a career highlight for Douglas. His depiction of the manic Charlie stays surprisingly grounded and prevents the story from being a naive celebration of mental illness as a kind of freedom that it so easily could have become.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Looks and sounds great, and is at its best when it isn't trying too hard to have fun.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Begun over seven years ago and described by the filmmaker as a work-in-progress, the documentary still feels a bit incomplete.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
In the end it all comes down to Mitchell. She turns in a truly harrowing performance that will leave you shaking.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
An extremely funny, ultimately heartbreaking look at life in contemporary China.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Allen Loeb's first produced screenplay is an unvarnished treatment of death and its aftermath that's unusual for a Hollywood film.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
It's lighter, funnier and violent, and it's not entirely without hope, making this tale of survival under horrendous conditions far more suitable for younger, more impressionable audiences.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Set in Paris in 1975, this sensitive, low-key film is another exquisitely crafted volume in French director Benoit Jacquot's collection of films about young Frenchwomen at pivotal points in their lives.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Sectioned neatly into chapters with titles like "Mon petit frere" and "Ma mere," the film is perhaps a little too rigid, even by the conventions of road movies.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
This warm, ultimately poignant film hoes its own row, and proves once again the diversity and vitality of contemporary Argentine film.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The overall effect of Demme's film is a little like experiencing Nazi prison camps through reruns of Hogan's Heroes, right down to the few bona fide laughs.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
It's fun, fast-paced, educational entertainment that's fit for the whole family -- American boys included.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The best parts of the film come when he (Doillon) just lets the camera roll and lets the kids be kids.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
It's a documentary, but the filmmakers couldn't have scripted a more revealing microcosm of profiteering and exploitation.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
A wonderful premise that delivers solid laughs and has a heart as big as the state in which this farce unfolds.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
This strange and beautifully expressive film set in a remote Mexican canyon has nothing whatsoever to do with Japan, but its themes are as universal as they come.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The title refers to the giant promotional sign for the Hollywoodland real-estate development that once loomed on the side of Mt. Cahuenga. Shorn of its last four letters 10 years before Reeves' death, it survives as the iconic Hollywood sign.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Moreau gives a beautifully sensitive performance as a woman who finds herself at a literal and figurative crossroads, a performance for which she was quite justly rewarded the Cesar Award in 2005.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Offers exactly what you've come to expect from the series: Bland but wholly innocuous family entertainment featuring a cute kid and an even cuter dog.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
This raw and raunchy drama from director Henrique Goldman offers what few feature films have ever bothered to attempt: a realistic, wholly sympathetic look at the lives of transgendered prostitutes.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The theme song, a wonderful Portuguese version of Bread's soft-rock classic "Everything I Own," is by Dinah, a long-forgotten Brazilian singing sensation of the 1970s who deserves to be better remembered.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The fact that Pastor Fischer would probably consider the film an accurate portrayal of her mission may be the most terrifying thing of all.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Under the candy coating and girl group soundtrack, the film acknowledges some hard truths about women and education that haven't changed much since the '60s. But it never loses sight of having a good time, and the girls are great.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Exchanging Buddhist mantras like diet tips, they thoughtlessly destroy themselves after destroying each other.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Luke gives a powerful performance -- with his looks and talent, he should be a much bigger star -- but Robbins is the one you'll remember. Fixed with the faraway look of a doomed man who knows the center cannot hold, he gazes fearfully toward a future he knows is coming and can do nothing to stop.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
A mystery that's filled with genuine sorrow and capped off with a denouement that may take even seasoned mystery buffs by surprise.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The film is virtually wall-to-wall music with very little commentary -- it's obvious that, given the chance, these musicians would much rather play than talk.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Part documentary, part one-woman quick-change show and part sociological investigation, this is enthralling theater with a purpose.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Though impressively ambitious and making the most of a small budget and talented cast, director Ari Taub's feature concentrates so intently on the day-to-day minutiae of infantry life on World War II's European front that the bigger picture gets lost.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Raunchy without ever devolving into flat-out prurience, Berger's oddly sweet comedy perfectly captures the naivete of the era and the unexpected wholesomeness of some of its adult entertainment.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Songwriter Jack Johnson's collection of laid-back, sunshine pop tunes unobtrusively support the sweet and surprisingly touching story line, rather than the other way around.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
A sweet and surprisingly unconventional look at the changing definition of family in contemporary Japan.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
It's Norton who makes the film such an enlightening experience, and he's mesmerizing.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The fine acting and sexy chemistry between Bonham Carter and Eckhart make it work.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Works best as an illustration of the way conspiracy theories serve to weave threads of order, however fantastic, during moments of incomprehensible upheaval.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Writer-director James Ponsoldt's first feature is a small, modest movie structured around a fairly simple situation that leaves plenty of room for some fine performances.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The only surprise here is how a film with so much promise could ultimately settle for so little.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Fortunately, no amount of optical wizardry and quick-change trickery can disguise the fundamental power of Harper's performance, a revelatory turn that's truly transformative in every sense of the term.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
A truly fresh take on the romantic comedy: It's as sad as it is funny, and the boy-girl match so misbegotten you can't help but pray it won't work out in the end. Call it an anti-rom-com, and see it if you can.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
What is grating is the filmmakers' perennial tendency to underestimate their audiences; their lack of faith leads them to drive home each nuance with a hammer.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The first 45 minutes of this wickedly clever comedy features the smartest, tartest high-school satire since Alexander Payne's "Election."- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
It's actually a clever commentary on documentary filmmaking, an pretty good monster movie to boot.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Veteran conspiracy buffs probably won’t find much of Stone's material particularly new, but Stone’s film does serve as a neat summary for the rest of us while offering a number of intriguing insights into how conspiracy theories work and what they say about specific cultural and political climates.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
What will really shock Western viewers are the luxurious trappings of Handong's world: The tailored suits, Mercedes Benz and expensive Japanese sushi bars have little to do with age-old perceptions of the PRC.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Funny without out ever making fun, Vardalos mixes elements of ethnic stand-up, Cinderella romance and Bridget Loves Bernie-style situation comedy, all grounded in something very real.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
We only experience the horror of the genocide through several layers of artifice -- first Saroyan's, then Egoyan's own -- a sad acknowledgement that with each story told, we're drawn that much further from the truth.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
It's a richly textured, psychologically acute film that takes an unblinking look at the tattered life of the returning soldier, and it's boosted by two powerful performances from Phillippe and the increasingly impressive Tatum, a former underwear model who has somehow turned into a fine actor.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Much of it will probably go right over the heads of kids who aren't familiar with classic movies or the naughtiness of Eddie Izzard.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
It's a surprisingly uplifting experience, and in the end, unmistakably a Kiarostami film.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
It's a clever legal thriller, one that thankfully doesn't twist itself into a knots trying to keep audiences off guard.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The filmmakers' attempts come to terms with a recent catastrophe of indeterminate meaning but global consequences are often fascinating.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
A drum-tight, extremely grisly thriller. And odd as it may sound given the subject matter, it's also surprisingly funny.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
No amount of style or good acting can disguise the fact that this downbeat Israeli comedy is little more than a sudsy soap-opera with a distinctly unsavory aftertaste.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
As lightheartedly as the film plays, Morrison manages to say quite a few serious things about immigration and otherness.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
If the idea of playing Scrabble conjures up dreary images of dull evenings with aged family relatives, you haven't met the subjects of Eric Chaikin and Julian Petrillo's irresistible documentary.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
A deeply personal coming-of-age story steeped in heady nostalgia and all the creative myopia that too often comes with it.- TV Guide Magazine
-
- Ken Fox
A gorgeous feature that's both passing strange and undeniably beautiful.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The film nevertheless exerts a strange sort of power that makes for compelling viewing, even as its images force one to repeatedly look away.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Flawed, but fascinating, this somber adaptation of David Guterson's award-winning novel is sometimes sluggish and difficult to follow, but it's also unexpectedly poetic.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
There's a telling disjunction between the dismal lives of Jia's characters and the optimism of China's officially sunny advance into the 21st century, and their helplessness often becomes a pathetic pantomime.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
While the film may drop a few of the novel's more disturbing moments, it still travels some emotionally rocky territory, and each of those actresses -- particularly Alison Lohman, who carries most of the movie on her young shoulders -- turns in a first-rate performance.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
For many, the soundtrack to this beautifully shot film will probably mark their first encounter with Traore and the intoxicating sounds of his unique brand of Malian blues. Chances are it won't be their last.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The swooping helicopter shots, the POV camerawork from the front seat of a 800 hp trophy-truck and the propulsive soundtrack will have your heart racing towards the finishing line along with the drivers.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
You just know that any film that opens with Nietzsche's aphorism about hope being an evil that only prolongs the torments of man isn't going to a comedy.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
There's a fine line between subversively transgressive and just plain gross, and this coming-of-age-movies parody from Todd Stephens, who wrote and directed the charming and underrated "Gypsy 83," crashes right over it.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The entire cast is extraordinarily good -- many of them are, after all, actors by trade -- but throughout, Zhang is keen to remind his audience that this is only a dramatization.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
This film's splendid visuals suit the subject, Spain's greatest painter, but its stilted dramatics are wholly at odds with Francisco de Goya's tumultuous life and times.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Be sure to stay for the coda, a damning piece of newsreel that casts much of what went before in a whole new light.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Chances are you'll watch most of this documentary with both hands over your eyes, but as a window into a particular kind of insanity seizing kids in heartland America it's enthralling.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Wang's film offers an interesting look at the rapidly changing face of Beijing.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
In the end, despite Williams' extraordinary, nearly wordless performance, it's impossible to fathom what this young woman is experiencing at her moment of crisis, because we never knew what could have brought her to such a desperate pass in the first place.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Its opponents, Arab and Israeli alike, the "wall" is a dispiriting symbol of apartheid and defeat.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The film is filled with a languid air of decadence and decay, and a touching sympathy for people whose lives are crushed in the shadows of progress.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
It's actually quite interesting, albeit in a supremely self-conscious and artsy-fartsy way.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
In real life the opportunity to make amends is rare, though the attempt may produce great art. In The Kite Runner, we get neither.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The dialogue is minimal but sharp, the pace swift and the action sequences suitably loud and brutal.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
For all the blood spilt -- and there are gallons of it -- this is a surprisingly understated thriller.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
A wildly entertaining detective thriller that succeeds entirely on its own terms.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
A cerebral thriller that dares to ask a fundamental question: What, exactly, is love?- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Lee has perfectly captured the details, textures, sights and sounds of a China caught between East and West, occupied by an ancient enemy and quaking on the eve of an earth-shaking revolution.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
A riveting account of one of the most extraordinary events in U.S. immigration history.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Dryly funny, deceptively simple road movie that quietly reveals the state of contemporary Romanian life.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Only the heavy stylization mitigates some highly artificial plot contrivances, and the final photo montage of America's poor, while no doubt exciting to Von Trier the provocateur, is maddeningly oblique.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Of all the feature films and documentaries to emerge since 9/11, few have been as bold, perceptive or as downright chilling as this thriller.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Lacking the thematic depth of "On The Run," this brisk, bubbly jape never really transcends the genre it's emulating, and your enjoyment of the film really depends on your tolerance for bumbling misunderstandings and improbable coincidences.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Natali's film has a fabulous look, a nerve-wracking, claustrophobic mood, a number of genuinely suspenseful set-pieces and some sublimely stomach-churning special effects.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
A fun and fanciful comic adventure, based on the novel "The Death of Napoleon" by Simon Leys, that takes a great premise and runs with it.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
As a visual counterpart to some of the most sublime verse ever written, it's often thrilling.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Grisly, yes, but it's all done in fun; having tried his hardest to shock audiences with his previous films, it now appears Miike simply wants to entertain, and he pulls out all the stops.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Yuen would have been better off exposing more of that reality and celebrating less of the joyful silliness of the model works, let alone staging pointless hip-hop-inflected dance numbers set to Yang Ban Xi musical themes.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
None of it really adds up to much but it's smart, low-key fun -- terrible title and dangling preposition notwithstanding.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Andrew Neel's fascinating but troubling documentary about his famous grandmother is more than a mere biography of an important 20th-century artist: It's also an intimate portrait of a family member that questions whether or not "great artist" and "good parent" can ever be combined in the same person.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
These three films form a remarkably cohesive whole, both visually and thematically, through their consistently sensitive and often exciting treatment of an ignored people.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Gordon makes the mistake of preserving Bradfield's highly idiosyncratic dialogue -- dazzling on the page, deadly in any actor's mouths -- and the otherwise talented Lloyd is miscast.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Ironically, as the former U.S. ambassador to Saudi Arabia Chas Freeman, puts it, Iraq has become what the Bush White House insisted it was at the very beginning, albeit for altogether different reasons: a battlefield in the war against terrorism.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Simply and eloquently articulates the tangled feelings of particular New Yorkers deeply touched by an unprecedented tragedy.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Runge's coolly photographed, intricately plotted feature is always interesting in its execution, but disappointingly pat in its resolution.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Everett remains a perfect Wildean actor, and a relaxed Firth displays impeccable comic skill.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
History has since overtaken Ponfilly's film, which now more than ever seems like but one chapter in a much larger story -- the ongoing tragedy of Afghanistan -- and a tragic tribute to all that might have been.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Ivory's last minute decision to render his hero sightless may make certain symbolic sense, but creates an even greater distance between Jackson and the woman he must inevitably come to love; their dull self-restraint makes "The Remains of the Day" look like soft-core porn.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Twenty years ago, Li's film might have served as a warning; today, it rues a dehumanizing economic system run rampant that leaves one sad slave wife to muse, "It's easy to die. It's living that's hard."- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
This is a film for hardcore film fans and Francophiles. Everyone else may find little to sustain them beyond the pastiche and shots of Paris.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Simultaneously shocking and deeply religious, Carlos Reygadas' follow-up to his acclaimed 2002 debut, "Japon," tells the story of one man's battle for spiritual redemption through a series of explicit images rarely seen by even the most jaded art-house audiences.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Phil Donahue and Ellen Spiro's powerful documentary takes a microcosmic look at the war and its devastation by focusing on a single casualty.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The result is so overloaded with extra characters, tangled story lines, dance numbers, fantasies and flashbacks that the once-simple plot feels puffed-up and irritatingly self-important.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
A touching coming-of-age story from Sweden, made interesting by the fact that the protagonist is a lonely, middle-aged farmer rather than an adolescent.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
A sloppy, self-indulgent valentine to the theater, delivered with all the grace of a letter-bomb.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Goldbacher's film is lovely to look at, but the blurry heart of the film only suffers by the comparison.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Three Belgian clowns wrote and directed this sly, winsome tale of one woman's quest for her destiny in the polar seas after an absurd but life-altering accident reveals the emptiness of her mundane, middle-class life.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
More shaggy dog story than a contribution to the ever-growing mountain of fact and fiction dealing with the Kennedy assassination, Neil Burger's feature film debut is a cleverly crafted but ultimately hollow mockumentary.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The film unfolds like a thriller: The plot moves so inexorably toward its tragic conclusion you can almost hear the clock ticking.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Not even Drew Barrymore's million-dollar smile can save this humiliating comedy.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The film doesn't really go anywhere, other than outside for endless games of basketball, and the group-therapy environment allows for far too many young-actor monologues.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The soundtrack includes great songs by Andre Williams and Shirley Ellis, and music by local R'n'B legend Ernie K-Doe and electronic organ freakazoid Quintron, who both appear in the film.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Thanks largely to Tabatabai's superb performance, it's on this level that Maccarone's film is most affecting.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
It's an unexpectedly powerful little film that manages to say a lot of what, despite all the talk on the subject, isn't being said in the national debate on immigration.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Unfortunately, this earnest but short-sighted documentary by New York-based painter-turned-filmmaker Stefan Roloff touches only the tip of a very large iceberg.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
An intelligent, imaginative children's adventure refreshingly free of rapping cartoon animals, fart jokes and mind-numbing special effects.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Jordan and McCabe's real triumph here, however, is the tenderness with which they imbues "Kitten," and the astonishing grace with which the extraordinary Murphy pulls it off.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The superego gets bested by the id in Spanish director Joaquin Oristrell's curious period sex comedy, which mixes intellectual musings on psychoanalysis with vulgar guffaws of the basest sort.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
That the film seems willing to erect a simple religious parable on such a moral morass is bewildering. That it should do so without accurately depicting the nightmare of Hitler's Europe is unconscionable.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Any similarities to "Northern Exposure" are undoubtedly coincidental, but the comparison is entirely apt.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
(Bassett's) finally been given another part worthy of her talents, and she makes the most of it.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
A tale of conscience lost and found becomes little more than a smart but tepid ghost story for idealists and '60s survivors, and not a terribly spooky one at that.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
A perfect example of how a top-flight cast can compensate for unimaginative filmmaking.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Cruz's willingness to allow her appearance to be so degraded for cinema's sake doesn't really help.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Lacks the real emotional wallop these two fine actresses...seem ready to provide.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
By the film's end we feel neither sympathy nor, oddly, total disgust for this most loathsome of killers. We simply begin to understand, and perhaps that's achievement enough.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The surprise is that you won't hate it nearly as much as you expect -- thanks to a solid supporting cast, a cute cat and an even cuter Ricci -- and the manic pace will have the kids purring with delight.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
South African director Mark Bamford's sweet-natured ensemble film doesn't shy away from addressing issues of racism -- both black and white.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Delightful Bolivian comedy, which also works as a sly critique of mass media.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
This smart political thriller gets pulses pounding with no pyrotechnics and only one car crash. And it's a doozy.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Anyone unfamiliar with Chomsky's work may be unsettled by his unblinking critique of the U.S. policy at a time when patriotism is the order of the day, and while he fails to offer any real solutions, his conscientious perspectives on the questions remain invaluable.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The film, like its subject, is a hoot, both shamelessly entertaining and bursting with personality.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
It's all about as white and bourgeois as you can get, but the film does take a few risks, and some actually pay off.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Though many of the risks she takes don't pay off, Elster's film contains a number of stylishly staged set pieces.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Not surprisingly, the film is strongest when its characters are simply hanging out, shooting the breeze and venting their feelings, while moments of high drama occasionally fall flat.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Chernick may not answer every question about this beguiling and enigmatic film, but you wouldn't want it to: Mystery is an essential part of the Barney experience.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Phoenix gives a nice performance as a man caught between loyalties but blind to the realities all around him, but Gray's screenplay is filled with clunky, Dr. Phil-sounding aphorisms that stop the movie cold.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
While none of this is meant to be taken seriously, the premise demeans Moliere's great achievement.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Manages to create a great deal of ambiance and a few thrills on a shoestring.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
There's nothing unique about Zarhin's plot -- it's a standard coming-of-age tale with traces of "Good Will Hunting" -- but she portrays the intra-family dynamics with unusual honesty and accuracy.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Grateful fans so enamored of traditional Irish folk music that they don't care how they come by it may enjoy John Irvin's folk-filled feature, but while there's lots of great Ceili music on tap, it's wrapped in a story so traditional that it's not especially interesting.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Film does show why so many young people raised in such communities find it so difficult to ever leave.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Neither a prequel nor a sequel. Nor is it really much of a horror movie: It's a bizarre, bloody family drama that puts its predecessor into a larger social context.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
However intriguing from a theoretical perspective, this gorgeously shot film is first and foremost and purely sensual experience. Filled with the sights and sounds of Rio of a bygone era, the whole thing virtually pulses with excitement.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
A lot fresher and bit more sophisticated than the ordinary run of maudlin chick flicks and crude gross-out sex farces that now pass for romantic comedies.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
It's easy to see why this violent, thrilling tale broke all box-office records in Thailand: Not only does it stir a sense of deep national pride, but Thanit delivers the goods when it comes to action.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The film is, in fact, an adaptation of Anton Chekov's "The Seagull." This provenance also explains why there's something slightly old-fashioned about the whole business.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
While not every artist Aaron Rose profiles in his documentary about one colorful corner of the 1990s New York Art scene is "beautiful," they're all "losers" and proud of it.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Neither Parker nor Donovan is a typical romantic lead, but they bring a fresh, quirky charm to the formula. Nor are their characters typical meet-cute types: David and Toni are imperfect people who are some how perfect for each other.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The face may be vaguely familiar, and if the name "Mimi Weddell" doesn't ring a bell it will after you've seen Jyll Johnstone's affectionate documentary portrait of this unstoppable nonagenarian model and actress.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Viewers hoping for a brutal, pitch-black war comedy along the lines of M*A*S*H are in for a major disappointment.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
White's take on southern life is no more "real" than the stereotypes he's trying to disrupt, just cooler.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The film avoids theorizing about why the bridge should exert such a hold over the imaginations of suicides all over the world, but Steel's dramatic cinematography, particularly the distorted telephoto shots that make the bridge loom even larger than it already does in life, provide one answer.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The truly heartbreaking sacrifice of a few extraordinarily heroic men is lost under the ponderous score and a series of even heavier speeches.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Virgil's naïveté isn't entirely believable, but his essential goodness is, thanks to a solid performance by Jordan, and that's really what makes this modern urban tragedy unusually affecting.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
John Curran's pretty melodrama rubs off a few of the barbed edges from W. Somerset Maugham's 1925 novel about love and infidelity in a time of cholera, but no matter: the centerpiece is Naomi Watts' outstanding portrayal of an adulteress redeemed.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Troche has bitten off quite a bit here, and it's too much for her to chew properly.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The homoerotic twists and gender-shifting turns are fun, but they can't hide the fact that the film is little more than a tedious shaggy-dog story with oblique mythological references.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Slight, genial documentary portrait of a man and his dream.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Edward Klosinski's staid cinematography lends the film a feeling of late summer languor, a deceptive calm before a terrible storm. The spare, evocative piano soundtrack is by John Cale.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
For all its crime-story elements, this richly colored, beautifully shot film is really a story of the friendship between Singer and the kid he calls ZigZag, a relationship made all the more poignant by the fact that Singer is very sick.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
Occasionally overrated as a writer but consistently underrated as a director, Towne does a marvelous job resurrecting all the seedy jumble of the long-gone Bunker Hill neighborhood.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review
-
- Ken Fox
The real surprise here is Lewis, who seems to have finally hit on a role that balances her usual flakiness with smarts and an offbeat poignancy, and she delivers the strongest work of her adult career.- TV Guide Magazine
- Read full review