Kirk Honeycutt
Select another critic »For 1,003 reviews, this critic has graded:
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55% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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43% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 4.7 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Kirk Honeycutt's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 61 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Apocalypse Now Redux | |
| Lowest review score: | Your Highness | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 477 out of 1003
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Mixed: 433 out of 1003
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Negative: 93 out of 1003
1003
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The Banishment (Izgnanie) starts off like a thriller with a car roaring into the city and a clandestine surgery by a man to remove a bullet in his brother's arm. Then, ever so slowly, the movie falls into the clutches of long, solemn stares into space, meaningful drags on cigarettes, cryptic dialogue revealing little and a tiny drama that feels old, tired and empty of real purpose.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 18, 2018
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- Kirk Honeycutt
One can reflect on what the young Coppola, with his masterful camera work and vivid imagination, might have done with such an opportunity. Unfortunately, the present-day one produces only tepid and tired imagery that would not earn high marks in any film school.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 20, 2013
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- Kirk Honeycutt
It’s a film that doesn’t always work but when it does you almost hear an audible click. Violet & Daisy has its share of these ah-ha moments.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 3, 2013
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The film falls into an interesting intersection between documentary and feature, between reality and fiction.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 3, 2013
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- Kirk Honeycutt
An arresting visual style cannot make up for lack of new information or viewpoints about the Green Revolution in 2009 Iran.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 6, 2012
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- Kirk Honeycutt
La Ronde 2011-style is simply a game and its makers expert gamesmen. The film is never less than intriguing. But the artifice shows all too clearly.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 20, 2012
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The film has a winning combination for all sorts of platforms as the story is highly intriguing and the music speaks, or rather sings, for itself.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 5, 2012
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The saving grace to the utter predictability in Christina Mengert and Joseph Muszynski's screenplay is reasonably personable characters and spirited acting by director Bruce Beresford's cast.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 4, 2012
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The film's great gift, though, is Romaner. Unbelievably, this is the first film for the Bavarian stage actress. She fully inhabits the role of this complex personality whose passion for love and art collides with her role of wife and mother.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 23, 2012
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- Kirk Honeycutt
Now Batmanglij and Marling deliver another terrific and engrossing venture into speculative fiction, Sound of My Voice.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 21, 2012
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- Kirk Honeycutt
You could point a camera just about anywhere at Comic-Con and record something weird, amazing, funny, stupid or all of the above.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 1, 2012
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The filmmaker made the film on his family's tobacco farm so perhaps his own memories may filter through those of his fictional characters. Or maybe they're not fictional at all. Jess + Moss is, to put it mildly, open to interpretation.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 14, 2012
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- Kirk Honeycutt
Joe Berlinger and Bruce Sinofsky's final film about the West Memphis Three demonstrates how the first two docs played a role in galvanizing national support to free the wrongly convicted men.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 12, 2012
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- Kirk Honeycutt
This is, in a way, a real horror film about everyday things and a disconnected family.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 29, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
A gloomy but perhaps realistic depiction of the forces of corruption and deceit that produce environmental catastrophes.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 28, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
Harrelson goes full bore from the opening scene and there are no scenes he is not in. But the effect is wearying rather than exhilarating.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 13, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The cast is fine, but the roles are superficial and too concentrated on the film's theme.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 9, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
A mildly diverting naughty comedy, lacking the pure comic nastiness of "Bad Santa" or the sheer audacity of "Up in Smoke."- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 3, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
You don't have to be an enthusiast of Bollywood to embrace RA.ONE, but it sure would help.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 26, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The movie does say a lot about female athletes and the changing role of women in American society, but in aggressively pursuing the formula, writer-director-producer Tim Chambers is prone to exaggeration and a moralizing tone.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 22, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
Comedies don't get much more unfunny than Father of Invention, a lame and somewhat preachy comic take on a father trying to get back into his daughter's good graces.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 12, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
Like many lab experiments, this melodramatic hybrid makes for an unstable fusion. Only someone as talented as Almodóvar could have mixed such elements without blowing up an entire movie.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 10, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
Dennis Lee comes up empty. Kids, parents, siblings, an aunt and an estranged wife all bicker and yell, but the noise cancels itself out. The movie is one long argument, tiresome and repetitive, that produces more heat than light.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 10, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The film grabs at historical facts, mangles them into a plot worthy of a John le Carré spy novel and takes the viewer on a breathtaking ride through ye olde London.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 5, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
Mild vulgarity and discreet nudity garner the sought-after R rating, but this effort feels forced. The real "bad" here is the sheer formulaic nature of everything. There are no surprises but for once you don't much mind.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 28, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
Everyone's comments are thoughtful and articulate but everyone stays "on message" so steadfastly that no dialogue ever ensues. It's 20 people giving the same lecture.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 27, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
Moshe, who wrote and directed, creates a boldly Expressionistic alternate reality to background this heavy-on-the-action story, but neglects narrative and character beyond the most basic strokes.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 25, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
A greater argument for music education in our secondary school curriculum can't be made than Mark Landsman's doc about a Texas high school funk band that tore up the music scene from 1968 to 1977.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 17, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The film is chock-a-block with extraordinary performances and no one will fault the filmmaking either. This is a well-made movie, make no mistake. It just suffers from a dysfunctional hero.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 17, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
One can't escape the nagging feeling that the film doesn't dig deeply enough into its real-life hero. The film doesn't explore all those "whys" and "whats."- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 17, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
Reiser has written his characters with an indelible sweetness and vulnerability, which allows the cast to deliver performances with some depth.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 14, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
An eloquently shot and closely observed documentary about a poor family in modern-day Indonesia.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 13, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The film, well made in every way, smartly focuses on an unlikely friendship between Gretel and the athlete who ultimately replaced her -- a high jumper who was later revealed to be a man!- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 13, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The movie does achieve something nearly impossible: Someone who doesn't even like the sport may care about Billy Beane and the 2002 Oakland Athletics.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 9, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
As a thriller, The Debt performs many if not all the right moves. Where the John Madden-directed film gets into trouble is in wanting to deal with the Holocaust without being entirely a period film.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 2, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
This Mexican action flick from director-writer Beto Gómez has all the makings of a great comedy only no one told the filmmakers.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 2, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
It's a long movie that feels short: It grabs you in early scenes, intense though low-key before all hell breaks loose, then keeps you riveted to its mostly male characters.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 29, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
In a sense, this is not a financial thriller so much as a financial mystery. Which gets a bit lost in the movie's stylized presentation.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 23, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The film is a deft, graceful and often poignant story of a woman's quest to find her own identity and a spiritual sanctuary that will give her life hope and meaning.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 20, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
Danish director Lone Scherfig skillfully adapts David Nicholls' best-selling romantic novel to the screen.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 17, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
There is no purpose to the film other than random blood splattering amid scenes of bondage, primitive savagery and S&M eroticism. The film is numbing and dumb with its hero indistinguishable from its villains.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 16, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The result is a scary movie that is genuinely scary in parts, although an adult can't help noticing this is set in the very worn and tattered territory of the haunted-house genre. Then when you get a glimpse of the CGI critters causing all the mayhem, the scares completely vanish.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 15, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
To borrow from TV terminology, the series hasn't jumped the shark yet, but the strain of inventing bizarre deaths is beginning to show.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 10, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
Taylor does capture the Jim Crow era and its anxieties well, but his characters tend toward the facile and his white heroine is too idealized.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 8, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
Fleischer stages one chase scene with a bit of comic flair but otherwise never locates that mix of macabre action and comedy that at least made "Zombieland" amusing.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 5, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The Change-Up bravely attempts to revive the dormant subgenre but it's a lame effort that grows increasingly frantic and foul-mouthed as the realization sets in that the gimmick isn't working.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 2, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
Green has chosen for his focus to fall on Enrique, in many ways the least interesting character in his story, rather than the son or even the mother who is surprisingly protective and understanding.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 1, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The film never quite pins the chef down about any of this but in his menu introduction to the staff or off-hand remarks to long-time colleagues you begin to understand the mindset. "The more bewilderment, the better," he declares. He is not joking.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 30, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
A high-wire act that almost slips as it edges perilously closer and closer to the edge of improbability. But it never does.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 27, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
Good Neighbors is a film of acquired taste. If one is willing to accept humor in a movie about a serial killer, if one likes a thriller than emphasizes character over thrills, if one is susceptible to a cast of characters that includes three cats, then the movie has found its very selective target audience.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 27, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
Life in a Day is an experimental project driven by the Internet at its best, where connectivity among the planet's population has become a reality.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 24, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The key to its success lies in the determination by everyone involved to play the damn thing straight. Even the slightest goofiness, the tiniest touch of camp, and the whole thing would blow sky high. But it doesn't.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 24, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The movie suffers perhaps from too many characters and subplots but all the actors appear to have fun with their characters.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 23, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
Sticking to its simplistic, patriotic origins, where a muscular red, white and blue GI slugging Adolf Hitler in the jaw is all that's required, Captain America trafficks in red-blooded heroes, dastardly villains, classy dames and war-weary military officers.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 20, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The movie gathers momentum with a steady, assured pace, accumulating incidents, characters, secrets and lies until the rush of events is absolutely transfixing. Cinema can sometimes rival the novel in compulsive intensity and Sarah's Key is one such example.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 18, 2011
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 16, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
So strong are the emotions - and, yes, the melodrama - that Snow Flower and the Secret Fan represents one of Wang's best films to date.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 13, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The lameness of the gags and dialogue and the film's frequent deep dives for the bottom at the expense of real comedy speak to desperation in Hollywood to figure out the audience for contemporary naughty comedy.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 5, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
Charlie Hunnam and Terrence Howard put enough actors' oomph into these ledge mates to make them authentic characters even though the film fails to achieve anything like the same level of authenticity.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 2, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The best science fiction tells stories about people in extraordinary environments or situations that serve to open up the vast, still largely unexplored terrain of the human heart. Mike Cahill's Another Earth is science fiction at its best.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 2, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
Every scene is on the prowl for laughs at the expense of the inherent drama in the lives of its colorful characters.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 28, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The millions of man hours put into producing this techno shock and awe must be staggering. Everyone got his job done, but somewhere along the way, the movie got lost.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 28, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The loggerhead turtle's journey is indeed incredible. But you would rather the narration, delivered intelligently by Miranda Richardson, didn't feel a need to remind you of this fact so frequently.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 24, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
By keeping things simple and understated, director Chris Weitz and screenwriter Eric Eason have crafted a little gem where humanity is observed with compassion, not condescension.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 18, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The six penguins cast in this amiable family comedy steal the movie -- along with any fish they can find -- although the film's star, Jim Carrey, does manage to hold his own. Barely.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 15, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The movie is fast, funny and light on its feet, dipping less into politics or religion than into cultural quirks and characteristics.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 11, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The film wants to put on screen the sense of random play and concentrated games that fill a child's world for a few summers. In this it succeeds, but the film does not welcome others who might still retain memories of those NOT bummer summers.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 3, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
All the movie's playfulness rubs off on the actors. Scenes crackle with life. The chemistry among all the actors is terrific.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 29, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
For anyone with a keen interest in this unique American musical form, Rejoice and Shout is a must-see and see-again.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 29, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
While Kirkpatrick does a fine job in establishing a gritty inner-city milieu and a collection of more than credible street characters caught up in an endless cycle of crime and violence, his body count reaches the proportions of the worst sort of studio schlock. Going for a shock effect, he instead strains credulity and risks unintended laughs.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 17, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
How To Live Forever is less about how to delay or defeat death than a film about what gives life meaning.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 9, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
Without Antonio Banderas, The Big Bang would be a whimper of a movie, too awful to watch.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 9, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The film just doesn't mine enough humor or drama from this situation. Meanwhile most of the developments are wholly predictable.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 9, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
British writer-director Roland Joffé dips a toe into explosive material - the Spanish Civil War, betrayal, sainthood, Opus Dei - but all these big themes and characters slip from his grasp.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 2, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
Last Night is a sex tease, but that makes it sound more exciting than it ever becomes.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 2, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
A wedding comedy that grows increasingly unfunny with each passing minute.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 2, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
Doesn't so much borrow from other movies as settle into a comfort zone of raising provocative questions regarding love, commitment and marriage only to dismiss them with a brush of a hand as so much dandruff.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 2, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The movie has a cheerful good nature and a solid cast of youngsters - including Aimee Teegarden and Thomas McDonell - but any resemblance between this and real high school is, of course, purely coincidental.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 27, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
To call this movie fascinating is akin to calling the Grand Canyon large.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 25, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
So don't tell Spurlock he can't have his cake and eat it too. In Greatest Movie, he gleefully accepts his sponsorships on camera just to show you how wrong this all is.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 19, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
Zokkomon gives Indian youngsters not only their first super hero but, even more tantalizing, he is a young boy "terrorizing" susceptible adults in a small village to the increasingly delight of the town's children.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 19, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The cinematography and editing are as superb as the film's feline stars are photogenic and heroic.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 19, 2011
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 12, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
There is little worse in the movie world than a spoof that falls flat on its over-costumed butt, but that's what you get with Your Highness.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 5, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
In the end, it isn't so much that the New Arthur isn't the Old Arthur. Rather it's the anti-Arthur.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 5, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
A documentary about autism that's nearly perfect in doing what an advocacy documentary should do: show rather than tell, entertain rather than preach.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 31, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
Hop delivers plenty of wit, verve and surreal mayhem to entice even the post-adolescent crowd into this jolly (and strangely Christmas-like) Easter egg hunt.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 31, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
A true story of courage, determination and guts that deserves a more exciting approach.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 30, 2011
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 29, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
In The 5th Quarter, the filmmakers' hearts are in the right place but the execution couldn't be more wrong-headed.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 27, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
This time, tedium sets in early and never loosens its grip. The gags are obvious, predictable and dull.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 23, 2011
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 15, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The movie boils down to one character, acting under enormous pressures of space and time, racing to solve a mystery. In this case, that may be good enough.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 14, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
Documentaries have been coming down on humanity so hard in recent years -- from "An Inconvenient Truth" to the latest Oscar winner, "Inside Job" -- that it's refreshing to bask in a bit of optimism coming from a nonfictional film.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 9, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The film is only "superior" though, not great. The themes feel shopworn and devotee of crime fiction can point to the any number of antecedents for these characters.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 9, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
Horror film buffs like to giggle as much as scream but there're no giggles here.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 9, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
The three most important things in movies are story, story, story so the movie never comes off as the considerable achievement it truly is.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 8, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
Rarely do films from Hollywood emerge in such an inane manner. Its rote characters are inevitably in predictable situations with no subtext or subtlety to any of their predicaments.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 3, 2011
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- Kirk Honeycutt
Michael Dowse's aggressively unfunny film which seeks the lowest common denominator in nearly every scene.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 2, 2011
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