Ken Fox
Select another critic »For 1,722 reviews, this critic has graded:
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54% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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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:
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Positive: 991 out of 1722
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Mixed: 646 out of 1722
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Negative: 85 out of 1722
1722
movie
reviews
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- Ken Fox
Shot through the bars of a barbed-wire topped cage and staged to a pounding soundtrack, the fight is quite a spectacle, but it's ultimately an empty one.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The constant flow of background images can be distracting, but this is nonetheless a fascinating film that offers an unexpected and valuable perspective on the on-going Arab-Israeli conflict.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Lucas rarely breaks his glower to express anything other than tough determination. It's an attitude that's clearly modeled on that of storied Nicks' coach Pat Riley, who, it so happens, played for Kentucky that now legendary final game.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Actor-turned-first-time-filmmaker Liev Schreiber tosses out most of what made Jonathan Safran Foer's too-clever-by-half debut novel so precious, rooting out the heart of Foer's story from the precocious bombast.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The film is really a timely critique of the ongoing insanity that has engulfed Israeli life.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Austrian auteur Barbara Albert uses complex mathematics, chaos theory and the music of Dutch pop sensation A-Ha to explore the connections that link a group of disparate characters.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The whole thing whizzes by in such a panicked rush that there's no time for anything so immaterial as character, but what little we do learn about Chev works against the film.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Not just an engaging melodrama that explores the class conflict and sexual mores of feudal Japan, but a work of extraordinary beauty; you could literally hang any random frame on the wall and call it art. No doubt the master would have been pleased.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
A frighteningly good horror movie with enough solid scares to freeze the blood of ardent fans and newcomers alike.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
A solid performance by the often underrated Judith Light lends considerable weight to this melodrama's controversial subject.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Both enjoyably lighthearted and proof that even the most stridently purist approach to filmmaking can produce a cliched romantic comedy.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The movie belongs to the fifth-billed Bishil, a truly gutsy young actress who captures the essence of young female desire in all its adolescent confusion.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Neil Armfield's film hits hard because it sensitively shows how life on drugs can never be about anything else, and how the real horror of addiction is not what users do to themselves, but what they do to each other out of loneliness and despair.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
There's so much less to the film than the novel: Nicholas Meyer's screenplay fails to capture the intricate subtleties of its subject and replaces Roth's moral scope with a moralizing tone.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
It's a handsome production, and a pleasure to watch. With a shadowy palette and a set design reminiscent of Edward Hopper's nocturnes, a soundtrack hearkening back to the sounds of vintage rock 'n' roll, and a cast of characters straight out of a James M. Cain novel.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Excellent performances from Sarah Polley and Deborah Harry, and a sensitive script from writer-director Isabel Coixet transform what might otherwise have been little more than a disease-of-the-week cable melodrama.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Much of it is inspired, some of it is downright awful, but it does entertain, even as it threatens to drown its generally fine cast in a flood of blood and sundry body parts.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
About as subtle as a hammer blow to the skull and marred by a heedless mixture of fact and fiction.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Perhaps the only person more enthralled by the romance of train hopping than the latter-day hobos profiled in this great looking documentary from first-time director Sarah George is George herself.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The subject can sharply divide even the most liberal-minded critics, but it's no secret on which side of the debate filmmakers Bathsheba Ratzkoff and Sut Jhally find themselves.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Based on the book by syndicated columnist and savvy media watchdog Norman Solomon, who appears throughout as the main talking head, Earp and Alper's documentary shows just how the U.S. government coerces a nation into accepting the very idea of war, and it's a job it couldn't do without the full cooperation of the media.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
When it comes right down to it, there are two kinds of people in this world: Those who despised Comedy Central's notorious series Strangers with Candy as the rudest, crudest and most offensive show ever to appear on television, and those who loved it for those very reasons.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The film doesn't provide any narration or go out of its way to identify the participants, so it's left to the viewer to make connections and draw their own conclusions.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Greenebaum manages to portray old-age as a condition with its own peculiar beauty and considerable grace.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The result is a mixed bag of lozenges, some sweet, some tart and others that just melt away into nothing.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The line separating "fan" from "fanatic" has never seemed as thin or as permeable as it does in this harrowing, and at times surprisingly humorous, case study from actress-turned-director Emmanuelle Bercot.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Gitai's film is an interesting, if not entirely successful, adaptation of an excellent book.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The atmosphere is once again black, creepy and unsettlingly elegant, lending this twisted tale of psychological dominance and submission a patina of anxiety and dread.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
If this brutal tale of crime and corruption within the upper ranks of the Los Angeles Police Department feels like an updated retelling of "L.A. Confidential," there's good reason. Both stories spring from the dark mind of American crime writer James Ellroy.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Deeply personal film that often feels more like an artfully produced home video than a documentary.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Serious stuff indeed, but the film is also rich with humor -- most of it courtesy of the always-excellent Greene -- and ends with an act of vandalism as shocking as it is exhilarating.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The film's sweetness derives primarily from the relationship between Ashmol and his unusual sister, and draws much of its richness from the unfamiliar and fascinating world of opal prospecting.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Aduaka's comprehensive account of an African nightmare covers a lot of important ground, making this flawed film worth seeing.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Peter Berg's fast-talking and unnecessarily complicated tale of Middle East terrorism is more smoke and mirrors than meat. It may come on like Syriana, but it boils down to little more than a diverting episode of "CSI: Riyadh."- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The widescreen photography is, however, quite beautiful, and the scenes of aerial combat thrillingly staged.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Rapp's theatrical past is evident throughout: His strongest scenes tend to be those purely character-driven moments when his sharp dialogue takes precedence over any cinematic action. Harris gives another strong performance and Ferrell is great in a comic but low-key role, but this is Deschanel's movie.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
With his ersatz-gangsta swagger, the once-again buff Bale gives it his all -- he's got to be the most committed actor in Hollywood -- but the real surprise here is Rodriguez, who has all the talent and charisma of a major star.- TV Guide Magazine
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- 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
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- Ken Fox
Barratier has assembled an unforgettable gallery of faces both young and old, and prolific character actor Berleand plays the perfect villain.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The skating photography is excellent and, like the documentary's soundtrack, songs from the Stooges, Blue Oyster Cult and the Weirdos set the proper mood. But this dramatization does nothing Peralta's documentary didn't do better.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
As thrilling as they can be on stage, Chekhov's plays have never been the stuff of great movies -- there's simply nothing cinematic about them.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
It's tremendous fun, thanks largely to a smarter-than-average script and some fierce casting.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Linney's character is written as a one-dimensional monster whose selfish cruelty is beyond redemption and, ultimately, belief.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
While there's plenty of Shakespeare, Lawrence and Yeats scattered throughout John Brownlow's screenplay, there's precious little Plath -- no doubt the unfortunate result of the stranglehold the Hughes estate still maintains over her work.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
This is a smart and splendidly decorated rethinking of Anna Leonowens's famous chronicle- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Negrin's film is a well-deserved tribute to a principled man who dared to act when principles no longer counted for anything.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Regardless of the artistry involved (though the street-level anxiety of post-9/11 New York is far better evoked in Jane Campion's underrated "In the Cut," The Brave One ultimately never really strays from the same moral low road as "Death Wish."- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Easily one of the most brutally realistic horror movies since the original "Texas Chain Saw Massacre" (1974).- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Aside from the overbearing soundtrack, the film is mercifully unsentimental and Ami himself can be quite droll.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The film does, however, assemble an amazing array of recorded conversations and vintage newsreel, and offers up enough press conference footage to make one nostalgic for the days when an uncowed, penetrating press really did serve the public interest, and the president was a smart, inspirational and often very funny figure who could think on his feet and fearlessly take on all comers.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
It's a good thing that Cummings and Leigh have such talented friends: They may overstay their welcome, but it's the entertaining guests who end up saving this poorly planned party.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
This charming tale of a quartet of Australian orphans who share a life-altering holiday in the 1960s should appeal to sentimental adults old enough to wax nostalgic over their own adolescences.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
This is Hunt's show, and she delivers a strong performance that captures all the seriousness and absurdity of the avalanche of circumstances that comes crashing down on April's head. To say she's only half the director she is an actress is actually paying her quite a complement.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
An intriguing, if flawed mystery set in the shadowy subterranean world of undocumented Mexican immigrants.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The wonderfully drawn characters and their soap-opera entanglements are dryly amusing and well played.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
It's hard to believe this shoddy, dishonest mess is Clark's sixth feature film, and not the unpromising debut of a rank amateur.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
But it's all done with such high style and whizzes along at such an exhausting pace that you probably won't have enough time to notice how little you care.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
What does make the film disturbing is the way in which it positions Hitler as a mere mouthpiece for what was already in the air, a role he was convinced to play after suffering one disappointment too many at the hands of Jews like Rothman.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
This handsomely mounted documentary takes the same, indulgent tone that at lot of Thompson's friends and associates seem to have had.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Despite the inaction, the film culminates in a scene some viewers will no doubt find shocking.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Energetic and ambitious, and its likeable cast marks a welcome return of non-white faces to the center of a gay-themed film.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Christensen simultaneously avoids all the cliches that might have been heaped upon her beautifully rendered characters and roots their travails in everything that makes for a good soap: tragedy, tears, sexual tension, misplaced letters and a slightly sardonic voice-over that teases the plot lines like the old-fashioned, "tune in tomorrow" narrator of yesteryear.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Like its title, the film is ultimately an affirmation in the face of catastrophic negation, a bit obvious at times but nonetheless welcome.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The camerawork is crude and the editing seems almost accidental, but it's really all about the writing, which is strong throughout; Seaton has a sharp ear for convincingly conversational dialogue.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Without offering any hard and fast solutions to the essential mystery, this is a thought provoking drama about the nature of belief and devotion that never feels exclusionary.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
With an often very funny story line that eventually touches on parental disappointment and suicide, it's clear that, his debt to Hess and Wes Anderson notwithstanding, Waititi has learned a thing or two from fellow antipodean Jane Campion as well.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The detatched, fly-on-the-wall perspective, however, offers little insight into the strange gender game that's played out in the dark safety of the porn theater.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The pressure often shows: For all its charm, the dramatic moments are awkward and the final act feels rushed and under rehearsed.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
To help break the monotony, Frost relies on relentless digital effects; there are so many shots of giant golf balls whizzing toward the screen it looks like the film was meant to be projected in 3-D.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The dialogue is minimal but sharp, the pace swift and the action sequences suitably loud and brutal.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Beautifully shot in rich colors by Franz Lustig, it's possibly Wenders' most accessible film to date, and among his most emotionally satisfying.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Some nice scenery, an unexpectedly funny performance by Jodie Foster and a unflaggingly spunky Abigail Breslin make for above average family entertainment.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Sebastien Pentecouteau's startlingly beautiful cinematography lends the film a dreamlike quality and perfectly suits Kounen's mystical subject matter.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Faithfull is marvelous: Once notorious for her own escapades, this great-great-niece of Leopold von Sacher-Masoch is no shrinking violet, but she's perfect as a plump, frumpy widow with a huge heart and a hidden talent no one would ever suspect.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
De la Iglesia's years of filmmaking experience are obvious in the film's formal touches -- his transitions between scenes and time frames are smooth and very stylish.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Huston, with a flawless Irish accent, is simply wonderful as the tough, foul-mouthed and very funny Agnes Browne.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The Armenian-American quartet have taken it upon themselves to teach their fans about what happened to their families in that now-forgotten time, a deeply personal mission that has proven effective in politicizing their audiences.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Steers clear of historical accuracy. Herzog is obviously looking for a moral to his fable, but the notion that a strong, unified showing among Germany and Eastern European Jews might have changed 20th-Century history is undermined by Ahola's inadequate performance.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
While Brosnan, an Irishman by birth, lays it on bit thick, his performance is surprisingly effective.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Blends history and mystery into an entertaining, if somewhat slight, romance.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
As Lord Peter Carrington, former mediator of the European Community, points out, a case can be made for all sides in this highly complicated civil war.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Even though Kinnear is meant to be obvious love interest, it's the relationship between Kate and Angie that becomes the film's central story, making this comedy sweeter -- and more honest in its depiction of class difference -- than one might otherwise expect.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Bean fills in some empty spaces with heady thoughts about the nature of power and beauty, but the movie's real appeal lies in the simple but by no means inconsiderable pleasure of watching Tim Robbins take a hammer to a parked car as it wails pointlessly, deep into the night.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Sadly, the only aspect of this well-intentioned film that doesn't feel completely formulaic is its refreshingly unromantic picture of an inner-city neighborhood in the early '70s: Life in Nicetown is hard and very, very poor.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Superbly acted by everyone involved (Rhames does his best work since "Pulp Fiction"), the film is really more about character than plot, though frankly, at more than two hours, it could have used a bit more of the latter.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
When it's not wasting time with character, this deliberately dumb collegiate comedy is good for a few laughs of the big butts and sex variety, but not much else.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Takashi Miike's frenetic comic yakuza thriller embodies the best and worst this notorious Japanese genre auteur has to offer: It's endlessly inventive, consistently intelligent and sickeningly savage.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
One hopes Koury will return to this interesting project to flush out the bigger story that continues to lurk just below the surface.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The entirely computer-generated Hulk is a surprisingly expressive creation — it certainly gives a better performance than Connelly — but the action is late in coming and feels like a long set-up for the inevitable sequel.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
When characters aren't quoting Alfred de Musset, they're speaking in aphorisms of their own, and the dialogue is stylized and stilted. Happily, Kaas, one of France's most popular jazz singers, has a sensuous, sonorous voice, and Lelouch uses it as often as possible; in many ways, the film is a musical.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Even if you think you know a little something about world music, Cuba's cultural riches may come as a surprise.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
At a time when the images of Arab-Americans are already largely negative, do we really need more violently temperamental, bomb throwing men in turbans and beards?- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
One isn't quite ready to forgive the miscasting of Gere, however, who is about as convincing a Kabbalistic scholar as Madonna.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The film is slow and somber during the windup but pretty scary in the follow-through.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
It's filled with great footage of what must have been a wild time behind the Iron Curtain, and the music itself speaks volumes.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
This failure is especially surprising because Zwigoff not only reunited with "Ghost World's" writer, ingenious graphic artist Dan Clowes, but he aimed to satirize a rarefied sphere both know all too well: the art world.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
It all feels like an insubstantial short that's been stretched to the breaking point.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Kids might find the sight of monkeys -- sorry, apes -- wrestling in outer-space funny, but unless they're unusually sophisticated, much will probably just confuse them.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The film is a pleasant breeze that refreshes, mostly because it's a rare, thoughtful comedy clearly intended for grown-ups.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The film is at odds with itself, trying to present transgendered characters as resourceful and tough as nails while the plot habitually reduces them to traumatized masochists and helpless victims.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Even though the screen is often divided into a Mondrian-like grid, each individual box containing its own discreet moving image, McDonald's film is surprisingly fluid and easy to follow.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
There's also precious little chemistry between the players. Only Mol has any charm of which to speak, and, frankly, she deserves much better.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The film is filled with the kind of choreographed carnage that became synonymous with Hong Kong action during the genre's heyday, but there's an elegiac self-consciousness to it all that acknowledges that while the best is behind us, there's still something to be said about its passing.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
So while the facts of Frank's actual political career tend to fall by the wayside, Everly treats us to an insightful look at a remarkable public figure who first became famous for what he does in private.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Performances are really what count in a character-driven romantic comedy like this, and each is well above the indie average.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Interestingly, the real heart of the film is in the finely drawn adult characters.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
It's basically a one-joke comedy that spins out of control once the joke's over, but the cast is likable, the women smart, and one can't argue with the important safe-sex message.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
This film exposes a more insidious kind of exploitation, one far more difficult to detect.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
With this perceptive, however bloody, film, Ishii makes it disturbingly clear that a culturally instilled sense of shame and fear of being shunned mean that women like Chihiro are doubly victimized, both by their attackers and the society that should protect them.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
This is the rare Holocaust documentary that ends on an optimistic note, and Comforty's film might even help reinforce one's faith in humankind.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
For all its talk about sex, incest, insanity and the gory details of the Kennedy assassination, Mark Waters' adaptation of Wendy MacLeod's play doesn't really amount to much more than a lurid, thoroughly enjoyable little pot-boiler.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
A fine, straightforward tribute to a sports giant who faced blatant prejudice and paved away for the likes Jackie Robinson, Hank Aaron and other minorities who dared make a place for themselves as heroes of America's greatest pastime.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Perry certainly loves his divas -- the best parts are written for Scott and the wonderful Smith.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
As a piece of cinematic art, this meandering, shambolic film isn't much to speak of, but as a time capsule, it's priceless.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Long takes do not a masterpiece make, and the suspicion that the whole thing is a lark is only bolstered by Damon and Affleck's inability to contain their giggles.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Herek does capture the rush and crush of a stadium concert, and the music (more Leppard than Priest) isn't half bad -- in a disposable, arena-rock sort of way.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Shane West does a pretty impressive impersonation of the on-stage antics of Darby Crash...Unfortunately, little else in this clunky, half-baked biopic rings very true.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
This gripping documentary contends that some shockingly sleazy efforts to undermine Clinton's character and authority were very real.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Brimming with fun and a few great ideas, it's little more than a foggy memory the minute it's over.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Cassavetes' instincts are spot-on, particularly when it comes to casting Timberlake in what turns out to be the most important role in the film. He manages to be both reprehensible and deeply charismatic, and winds up stealing the picture.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The set-up revolves around a draggy love triangle, while the climax -- slo-mo leap through the air and all -- could have come out of any direct-to-video action flick.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The rogue feminism of "Thelma and Louise," mix in some of "Rock 'N' Roll High School" punk-rock energy.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Amid the clutter, Weber -- who narrates but never appears in front of the camera -- occasionally allows a glimpse into his own mind.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Granted, the film is a technical marvel: The many chases through rooms, under floors and behind walls -- including one very scary encounter with a nail-gun -- are all done to jaw-dropping, state-of-the-art perfection.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The movie's refusal to treat young girls like silly tramps-in-training is almost radical: It's just good, clean fun and actually offers children of a certain age a role model even adults can feel good about.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
It's a mainstreamed, big-screen version of the bowdlerized, endlessly syndicated version of the show, not the raunchy original.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Despite the overplotting, there's scarcely any of the characterization that might have made some of it interesting.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Stripping away the false glamour generated by pop culture's undying fascination with the Mafia, this hour-long film tells the tragic but inspiring story of a 17-year-old Sicilian woman who risked — and ultimately lost — her life in order to reveal just what a nasty bunch they really are.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
However deep the divide currently separating the Middle East from the West appears to be, there's at least one thing we can all agree on: Albert Brooks isn't all that funny anymore.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
De Marken and Freeman preserve the group dynamic by dividing the screen into six parts, each mini-frame capturing actions and reactions from a different camera angle, and while the film drags in spots, the performances are unusually powerful.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
It comes as a huge disappointment, then, that having cast Witherspoon as Miss Sharp, director Mira Nair and Oscar-winning screenwriter Julian Fellowes (Gosford Park) were unable to resist that impulse to find 21st-century prototypes in 19th-century literary characters, fictional creations whose values lie not in the way they reflect our own narcissistic times, but the way they reveal so much about their own.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The film is rich in period detail and a keen visual sense of irony, but it's curiously static; scenes that blister the pages of Miller's novel barely move.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Eisenstadt has an unerring sense of comedic rhythm and a knack of cutting away just in time to extract the drop of humor from a potentially pathetic situation.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Achieves what Hollywood never quite gets right: a tense and timely thriller that also serves as a political and a moral allegory.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Amazingly, not all of the witty and wise barbs are Wilde's, and any confusion between the old and the new is probably the highest compliment one could possibly pay to screenwriter Howard Himelstein's tart screenplay.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The movie's is really good, clean fun that's fine for slightly older kids and a lot of fun for adults.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The folks at Jim Henson Pictures have wisely opted not to mess with the late Jim Henson's winning formula; the crowd-pleasing soundtrack features hot '70s funk classics, the Muppets are as cute as ever and there are more than a few flashes of adult humor to keep grown-ups laughing right along with the kiddies.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The film is beautifully told and superbly acted. More importantly, Paul Laverty's screenplay goes along way toward showing how the traditionalism that can turn a community inward on itself is often a response to racism, and in that sense the film's timing couldn't have been any better.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
An entertaining road movie with a topical point: The three passengers on this cross-country trip are U.S. soldiers who've just returned from Iraq.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Every character fated to die in Othello meets his or her maker by the time the curtain falls on Blake's adaptation, which means the manicured campus of Palmetto Grove is left littered with slain coeds.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Hooking up can be as random, and as rewarding, as hitting the jackpot -- and helps makes "This Car Up" the best of a pretty good bunch.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
This loud and thoroughly obnoxious comedy about a pair of squabbling working-class spouses is a deeply unpleasant experience.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
If you know there's so such place as Avenue E in the East Village, or if you've ever taken a bath in your kitchen, this one's for you.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Stony and statuesque, Michelini is an excellent casting choice: Her impassive face and dispassionate voice serve as a carefully constructed protective mask that hides her pain, and which she rarely lets slip.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
It's swiftly paced and never dull, but the heavy-handed symbolism comes fast and thick.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Once again brushing aside critical drubbings and public indifference, determined independent auteur Henry Jaglom follows up the abysmal "Let's Go Shopping" with something far better: an old-school Hollywood cautionary tale about -- what else? -- Hollywood.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Admitting that it's formulaic doesn't make it any less so, but it's enjoyable in a mushy, easily digested sort of way.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
It's beautifully shot -- the sweat-drenched jukejoint scenes are particularly evocative -- and features a terrific performance by Ricci, one that deserves to be seen by a wider audience than the one certain to be reeled in by those torrid ads.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
It's never dull: Shalhoub's direction is smart, the dialogue is tart and the Adams' family shares a palpable intimacy that translates directly onto the screen.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
fFrst-time feature filmmaker Cam Archer turns what might have been an exercise in salaciousness into a stylish visual poem about desire and adolescent alienation.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Taking its title from a key track by the NYC noise band Sonic Youth, S.A. Crary's documentary about No Wave music and its paradoxical influence is both a history of music that sought to defy history and a sharp look at the crisis of innovation in an age of commodified nostalgia.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
A fascinating, often tragic history of a program the Soviet Union held up to the rest of the world as communism's ultimate technological achievement.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
This is a rare road picture that leaves us knowing less about our traveling companions than we did when the journey started; Dahan and screenwriter Agnes Fustier-Dahan reduce their characters to pasteboard symbols, colored by unexplained quirks.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Purely literary stuff that's always the first to go whenever a book is adapted for the screen. Unfortunately, as this thin and entirely ill-conceived adaptation from director Neil LaBute demonstrates, that stuff happens to be the lifeblood of Byatt's wonderful book.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
True to form, Salles' version is an intelligent, brooding ghost story brimming with atmosphere, emotions and, above all else, water, but it's disappointingly short on scares.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The movie winds up becoming "The Annette Bening Show," and she's quite good: Bening makes the most of a string of mad scenes for which any actress would kill, and the real pain she brings to the part grounds the film in something real.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
There are a number of excruciating moments that are almost too silly to mention.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The good news is that Fishburne also stars, and has recruited a talented group of actors to flesh out the cast; the bad news is that no one seems to have been on hand to help out with the rest of film.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
It's all terribly trite, but Durst does make an effort to keep his film grounded in the reality of a lot of once thriving towns like the fictional Minden.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Old family secrets and fresh entanglements snake through the intricate plot like the tendrils of a particularly poisonous strain of ivy that flourishes only in the hot-house atmosphere of tiny towns, whatever the outside temperature.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The whole film has a rag-tag, purposefully shambolic feel -- but this communal commitment to a DIY aesthetic is also his undoing, particularly when he allows an irritatingly manic Jack Black to run wild and virtually hijack the movie.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
A privileged peek into the glitzy world of Texas's ultra-rich, minus the melodrama.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Characteristically stylish and willfully outre, and uncharacteristically watchable.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
wWhat doesn't entirely succeed as convincing psychodrama makes one hell of an acting exercise (it's great fun to see great actors purposely mangle the Bard's immortal words), and Levring's cast -- McTeer in particular -- run with it.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
While there's little to be gained from over-critiquing a child's performance, it must be said that director Alejandro Agresti badly miscalculates the appeal of his young star; the fact he not only dominates each scene but provides the film's narration means there's not getting away from young Noya.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Screenwriter Vincent Molina takes into account changing attitudes towards homosexuality and the resulting film never feels like the kind of thing we've seen time and again in the '80s and '90s.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
What Garvy's oral history of the Students for a Democratic Society lacks in clarity and opposing viewpoints it makes up for with fascinating personal reminiscences of a turbulent time.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
There are a few weak spots -- the ending could have used some fine tuning -- but otherwise its a solid sleeper: unassuming, unexpected and wholly entertaining.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
It's not only sexy, clever and well-acted by a fine cast of mostly TV actors, but it's also a grown-up comedyabout honest-to-God grown ups.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Zizek as a larger-than-life figure who manages to engage you even when you're not entirely sure what he's going on about.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The movie deals superficially with Native American pride and racism in the ranks, but it's hardly about the codetalkers at all: Neither Woo nor the screenwriting team of Joe Batteer and John Rice seem to appreciate the bitter irony in a Native American soldier protecting his land by serving the very government that took most of it from him in the first place.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
If it's all supposed to be in fun, why does it feel so much like an insult?- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Damon, an underrated comic actor, is particularly good as an ultra-rationalist who'll scream like a girl and run from anything he can't immediately explain.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
There are nice touches, particularly in Venora's performance and Timothy Kendall's editing, but the film's maudlin edge illustrates the dangers of directing your own material: There's no one on hand to tell you when what you think is "just enough" is actually way too much.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Many of the script's observations sound as though they were lifted directly from the pages of Baxter's book, and they're too platitudinous to impart much wisdom to anyone who's been in and out of love at least once in his or her life. But it's nice to see these ideas played out by a fine cast.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The film is surprisingly successful in developing a sense of mounting dread.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Like any good soap opera, the script deftly flits among story lines, offering just enough tantalizing plot development to keep you sticking around for another bite.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The film often teeters on the brink of melodrama and is saddled with a sappy original score.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The direction is slack -- it's Lloyd's first feature film and it shows -- the choreography clumsy and every ten minutes there's yet another gratuitous showstopper shouting in your face and insisting you have a good time.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Aside from an inspired bit involving a pair of sycophantic starfish, it's amazing how unimaginative a movie about a mermaid can be, and it's sad how thoroughly its girl-power stylings devolve into a muddle of mixed messages.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Walks such a fine line between what separates dreamer from stalker, that the film he made about it ellicits a variety of responses.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Whether you take the film as a deliberately vile act of filmmaking that unpacks rape-revenge scenarios while making a point about male desire, or simply as a deliberately vile piece of filmmaking, one thing is certain: It's about as close to a physical assault on viewers as movies get.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Far from the sentimental drivel you might expect given the subject matter, this amiable and heartfelt drama about an adolescent boy's attempt to rouse his comatose mother explores the meaning of faith by tapping into the original, rebellious spirit of Christianity.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
An observant and sensitively played drama about adolescent sexuality, unrequited love and heartbreak.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The end result is an entertaining tour film.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Marshall delivers what he promises and Mitri makes for a cool, kick-arse heroine in the Ellen Ripley mold.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Unfortunately, the characters feel more like symbols than people, despite strong performances, including what might be Portman's finest work to date.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
This short documentary might teach you a thing or two about the electronic instrument that revolutionized the sound of modern music.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
A terrific showcase for a troupe of fine actors who rarely find work outside the Australian film industry.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Despite its flaws, the film has the same dreamy, romantic melancholy that distinguishes Wong's best films.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
No matter how deep one's affection for man's best friend, there's something undeniably fatuous about considering the emotional impact 9/11 has had on a dog named Rain.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The famous soliloquies are heard in voice-over -- a risky idea that works -- and Wright has found clever ways of naturalizing the play's more supernatural elements.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Terrific acting and fearless direction transform what might have been a silly exercise in the slightly spooky into a somber and deeply romantic mystery.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
It's actually quite interesting, albeit in a supremely self-conscious and artsy-fartsy way.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Like its seven subjects, it can't see past the immediate demands of addiction, and the film becomes a seemingly endless string of scenes depicting shooting up, nodding out and waiting around for the next fix.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Coming at a time when the settlements on the Gaza Strip are being dismantled, Cedar's film offers a sly critique of their origins, and refreshingly different point of view.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Where the hero of Maupin's novel learns some valuable lessons about love and faith, the film strikes a darker, even angry tone that's far more understandable and, in the end, far more convincing.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Ask New York-based filmmaker Amos Poe, who badly botches this profile of the artist with a sloppy structure, careless editing and amateurish optical effects that detract from what's actually good about the film: Earle's music.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Very possibly the most ruthlessly irritating comedy since the dreaded "S.F.W." attempted to put its finger on the pulse of young America, and that's saying something.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Ghobadi has little use for sentimentality, and never flinches from the fate of these children.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The all-too-vivid simulation of terrorist attacks, including a prolonged scene of a building collapse in which people are seen plummeting to their deaths and crushed under falling concrete, may strike a very different chord with post-9/11 American audiences.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Further proof that so-so books often make better movies than good ones.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
There are a few inspired set-pieces -- Ruber's creation of a mechanical army is really quite something -- and the score by David Foster and Carol Bayer Sager is generally fine. But overall, this is a bloodless entry into an already highly formulaic genre.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
It's handsomely shot by Stuart Dryburgh and nicely acted, and if it tastes a bit bland, you'll soon forget that, along with just about everything else about it.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
This surprisingly grim comedy-drama is about as good as director Joel Schumacher gets.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The final moment of Minac's film is a powerful tribute to Winton's heroism and the magnitude of his achievement, easily eclipsing the 90 minutes that precede it.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
This winning comedy joyfully embraces every possible permutation of love; cupid, it turns out, is indeed blind, and doesn't care much about gender either.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Playing straight man isn't really Barrymore's strength, but former "Simpson's" writer Larry Doyle's script is funny and Stiller is even funnier; he turns even the more juvenile moments in something to laugh at.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The film is all a little Lit Crit 101, but it's extremely well played and often very funny. But beware: Solondz uses humor as a booby trap, so be careful what you laugh at.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
A startling about-face for Australian director Alex Proyas, and an unwelcome one as well.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
While it does take place over a weekend spent touring Northern California's wine country, writer-director Russell Brown's feature debut isn't exactly a bicurious "Sideways." The characters are less interesting and even less likable, and the only pleasure we can take is in their emotional pain.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
What begins as an entertainingly contrived lark soon feels like a poorly plotted muddle.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
It's a "Taxi Driver"-inspired odyssey into violence and insanity that runs close to two hours -- a long time to be riding shotgun with a madman.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Beautifully shot and lushly scored, this may be one of the least P.C. love stories ever filmed. But it's one of the most deeply felt.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Packed with more information than can possibly be digested in a single viewing, the film will be a bracing eye-opener to anyone who hasn't considered the full implications of recent Congressional debates advocating further media deregulation.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Chinese director Ann Hu follows-up her tepid 2000 debut "Shadow Magic" with another luscious historical drama that, thankfully, is a lot more interesting. The plot is no less melodramatic, but here melodramatics work along with the film's theme, not against it.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Cruise is downright scary. It's the creepiest -- and most entertaining -- performance since his unforgettable appearance in that Scientology video.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Though "Pulp Fiction" is the obvious point of reference, but this hugely entertaining Mexican crime comedy is actually closer in spirit to "Go," Doug Lyman's underrated 1998 lark.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The movie exists only as a showcase for the animation technology known as hyperReal, a photo-realistic simulation of space, figure and movement that hopes to one day erase the line between animation and live action once and for all.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The film's few saving graces include Dickinson's sardonic southern belle; Winger's welcome return to the screen after a five-year absence; and Howard's voice-over readings of Brown's powerful prose, which ultimately saves the film from itself.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Wahlberg, whose Bobby is the kind of guy who enters a room gun first, swinging a can of a gasoline, is the glue that holds everything together; he's perfectly cast and has never given a more persuasive performance.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Works better as a look at life among a family of Croatian immigrants in Vienna during the nightmare years of the Balkan conflicts than an exploration of the psychosexual tension between a prostitute and her son.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Director Kevin Reynolds isn't so much inspired as determined to tell it with period accuracy, without bothering to be historically accurate.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
It's wholesome fun for the whole family.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Forgetting that French New Wave directors often turned to Hollywood for inspiration, cinema snobs will doubtless be outraged that Hollywood would dare remake such a beloved Rohmer masterpiece, when in fact, tone aside, "Chloe In The Afternoon" isn't all that different from "The Seven Year Itch."- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The plot itself isn't really strong enough to stand alone. And that leaves the film an essentially conventional whodunit, if one with a rather unconventional sleuth at its center.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
The downside is that many of these characters are hastily sketched and their stories unsatisfactorily developed.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Everything about Takashi Miike's brilliant and blood-soaked crime thriller comes as a shock.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Perhaps more than any war film in recent memory, Kippur is about the actual work of combat.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Where "Brockback" leaves its lovers where gay love stories have left them for centuries - isolated, ostracized and miserable - this small comedy finds a far more liberated alternative for everyone involved. In its own modest way, it's the far more radical film.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
This formulaic adventure pays tribute to George Hogg, a true hero largely forgotten everywhere but China, where a statue of him now stands -- a rare honor for a westerner.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Thanks to some first-rate acting from its stars, it ranks among Perry's best.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Naturally there's plenty of adolescent drama both on stage and off, and if the film ultimately feels a little thin, that's also to be expected.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Features more than enough thrilling wirework, slow and agonizing deaths, and blood-spattered faces to please even the most discriminating fans of the genre.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
While the film's erotic symbolism is surprisingly obvious -- all those trains and tunnels! -- it's otherwise bafflingly vague.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
It took the combined directorial talents of Ivan Passer and Sergei Bodrov to complete this historical epic about the 18th-century attempt to unify the contentious Kazakh tribes into what would become Kazakhstan (no Borat jokes, please), but the result is really little more than an intermittently entertaining.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
It's refreshing that there's any moral at all, and that despite its warm and fuzzy trappings, the film floats actual ideas and sprinkles serious questions of ethics and morality atop the usual Hollywood syrup.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
Easily one of the oddest romantic comedies since "My New Gun." It's also one of the most visually inventive, and if its charms very nearly defy description, it's nonetheless irresistible.- TV Guide Magazine
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- 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
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Ken Fox
As a treatment of yet another unexplored corner of the Nazi nightmare, the film is revelatory; needless to say it's also heartbreaking.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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