Liam Lacey
Select another critic »For 1,802 reviews, this critic has graded:
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48% higher than the average critic
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4% same as the average critic
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48% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 2.7 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Liam Lacey's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 63 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Citizenfour | |
| Lowest review score: | Vacation | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,089 out of 1802
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Mixed: 514 out of 1802
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Negative: 199 out of 1802
1802
movie
reviews
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
At best, the film makes a more convincing case for the adventure of artificiality: Take Billy Crudup, add a little rouge to his cheeks and suddenly: Voilà, the guy can act.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Frankly, if I were Mrs. Claus, I might be looking for Santa Clause 3, outlining the grounds for annulment.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Apparently intended as a blend of "Bridesmaids" and "The First Wives Club," it’s often oddly engrossing, almost despite itself, largely thanks to the performances and the free rein the director gives his stars.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Apr 24, 2014
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- Liam Lacey
Where it stumbles is in the script by Matt Healy, which is often clever, but never quite takes hold.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Looking like some gorgeous fan painting come to life, Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter . . . and Spring is pictorially spellbinding.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Every hero needs to be revitalized by a little humiliation, and for at least the first 40 minutes of Die Another Day, Bond's dressing-down seems to do him and the movie franchise a world of good.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Among the lessons that Monsieur Ibrahim conveys to Moses, and the most appealing aspect of the film, is to delight in sensual pleasure.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Although overplotted and underexplained, the movie is rich in memorable lairs.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Sep 18, 2014
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- Liam Lacey
The best fake trailer, and Grindhouse's high point, is Edgar ( Shaun of the Dead) Wright's tone-perfect parody of inviting taboos, entitled "Don't."- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Fortunately, he has an ace up his sleeve with 9-year-old actress Drew Barrymore: the movie might easily be retitled The Scene Stealer. Barrymore's performance as Charlie McGee has something of the pint-sized coquetry of a Shirley Temple, and something of the shoulders-back, chin- in-the-air hauteur of a Bette Davis, but she seems incapable of hitting a false, precocious or calculating note. She virtually acts her co-stars off the screen. [14 May 1984]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Truth be told, the full 99-minute movie does not entirely hold water; it feels like three or four good episodes connected with plot padding. Aesop probably wasn't too hot at long-form fiction, either.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
This colour-drunk, sumptuous late Tang Dynasty (928 AD) drama is huge on spectacle but as devoid of delight as a Cecil B. DeMille biblical epic.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Firth gives the performance his all as a man trapped in a vortex of grief, shame and hate, but as in Scott Hicks’s "Shine," which the film occasionally resembles, there’s an overtidy relationship between trauma and catharsis.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Apr 24, 2014
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
As rock-and-roll flicks go, director Joan Freeman's Satisfaction , is a real bar band of a movie; it's derivative, unambitious and uneven, but it's also not half bad. If you bend your mind around its most awkward moments, it also offers at least some of what the title promises. [19 Feb 1988]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
As a psychological thriller, it's not so much either thrilling or psychological as it is wonderfully absurd. [25 Mar 1982]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
This time out, writer and director Mark Steven Johnson has bounced back with a movie so full of camp spirit it should come with tents and a marshmallow roast.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
The ironic, cheery-bland tone, the two-dimensional characters and episodic structure, say "comedy," while the events in the script say "bipolar depression."- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
At best, it shows how intense sexual attraction can be a form of temporary insanity.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Jun 28, 2012
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- Liam Lacey
Character development and plotting are rudimentary, though the tongue-in-cheek never gets dislodged while the body count rises.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Aug 22, 2013
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- Liam Lacey
Parents will get the historical jokes but are unlikely to be amused; kids won’t get them, but might laugh anyway.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Mar 6, 2014
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- Liam Lacey
There are sequences in Hong Kong director Wong Kar-wai’s new film, The Grandmaster, that are as gorgeous as anything you’ll see on a screen this year, or perhaps this decade.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Aug 22, 2013
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- Liam Lacey
Standing back a step from A Walk on the Moon's dippy charms, the movie delivers less than it initially promises.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
A well-cast drama that switches between sweetness and menace, the film goes down easily, thanks to a talented cast.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Too long by about 20 minutes, and arguably too obsessed with the lineage of names only of interest to other surfers, this is a vicarious kick.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Though The Cave really, really tries to be scary from as many directions as possible, it fails to hold much in reserve and never manages to build suspense.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
It's a workmanlike, passably engrossing horror flick that copies well from the Japanese original. When it's good, it's not original, and when it's original, it's not so good.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
The movie rolls on, with more clever but increasingly repetitive action sequences that entertain, but drain the film of any credible sense of jeopardy.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Dec 15, 2011
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- Liam Lacey
Like that camel-hair coat Abel wears, A Most Violent Year is classy and commands respect, but a stronger pulse under the lapels would make us care much more.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Jan 29, 2015
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- Liam Lacey
The crimes and Gervais and Fey’s performances get stale quickly, though the song-and-dance numbers are fairly clever.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Mar 20, 2014
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- Liam Lacey
Almost everyone is scum. The venality spreads from the slums or favelas, up the ranks of local militias, crooked police and pandering politicians.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Nov 30, 2011
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- Liam Lacey
Warm Bodies is for audiences who prefer stories about mending hearts to munching brains, and ideally, for girls who aren't quite sure yet if they want a slightly scary boyfriend, or a living doll they can dress up.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Jan 31, 2013
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- Liam Lacey
There's a surprising sweetness in the bond between the two cops. The gay subtext of the partnership is used for humour but it's never sniggering or mean.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Volume 2 picks up the story with an older Joe, now played by Gainsbourg, with her watchful sad face showing the character’s unsatisfied hunger. It seems more von Trier’s script than any great social taboos that cause Joe to go into free fall in a world that becomes more kinky and sinister.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Mar 20, 2014
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Narrative-driven and determinedly unpredictable, The Disappearance of Finbar is true to its mandate as a mystery story to a fault. [18 Jul 1987]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
For all its incident, A Royal Affair is slow and picturesquely framed – more of a languorously animated coffee-table book than a gripping drama.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Jan 31, 2013
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- Liam Lacey
The movie is dramatically limp, running out of narrative steam long before the set decorator runs out of colours.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Who really wants to go to an escape movie and have to work this hard to figure it out?- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Broad, loud and crammed full of costumed characters and stage asides about the poverty of the script, it's typical pantomime, with a thin plot on which to hang the over-the-top performances and light-hearted musical numbers (by Barry Mann and Cynthia Weil). [16 Feb 1996]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Certainly spectacular -- an elaborately designed combination of animation and computer-generated imagery -- but at times it's a spectacular bore.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Though superior to the original Blade, the superiority is mostly in the myriad ways the "suck-head" enemies can be blown up, melted and dismembered.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
By the time Inland Empire, David Lynch's three-hour digital epic shot on a home video camera, takes you through its tour of the contents of the director's febrile imagination, it's probably the bunnies you'll most remember.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
While it’s technically eye-popping and intricately structured, Interstellar is at its most fascinating when it struggles hard to communicate those things we human beings call “emotions”. Instead, we get something like a freeze-dried approximation of Steven Spielberg at his most sentimental.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Nov 4, 2014
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- Liam Lacey
In the end, the commercial necessity of wrapping up a family comedy in less than 100 minutes seems to have trumped anything real about Dan's life.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Not until the final shot does Noyce rise up to the potential of the history: There's a sudden shiver of recognition, that, my God, these people really lived this.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Again, as with "Star Wars," the interest lies at least as much in the set design and costumes as the narrative.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Creaky in its plotting, occasionally electrifying in its direction, We Own the Night is even more of a throwback to old-fashioned crime dramas than Martin Scorsese's "The Departed."- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
The movie delivers, if you're looking for a big-screen, big-stunt, action blockbuster that happens to have the Bond brand name on it. If you're looking for a movie with narrative coherence that recreates, or develops, the Bond mythology that first came to screen in the early sixties, go back to your video store: The current Bond franchise is a Van Damme movie with a bigger budget and British accents. [19 Dec 1997, p.C6]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Gospel music not only saves Darrin's plastic yuppie soul -- Praise the Lord -- it also gives an otherwise wasted hour and a half some warmth and buoyancy.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Overall, it pushes its "love is good" message with such insistence, so many cheery pop tunes, airport hugs, coincidences and teary smiles, that it feels like one long commercial. Surely love is a desirable enough commodity that it doesn't require such a hard sell.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
At least as perplexing as it is creepy, with a time-jumping narrative, a chain of barely connected characters and an enraged shape-shifting ghost.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
The fact that these atrocities are not well known in the West is a good reason for this film to exist.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Rent, for all its good intentions and sensitivity, is easy to forget but easy to forgive. The music and direction feel generic but the cast deserves credit for squeezing every possible drop of emotion out of the material.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Brooks is always a dry vintage, so the lack of outright laughs is to be expected. But Looking for Comedy is more depressing than funny.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Inasmuch as Cholodenko has an agenda in her two movies so far -- what appears to be a lesbian-positive theme of openness to experimentation and its accompanying emotional costs -- she's found a model in McDormand's portrayal of Jane.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Aug 23, 2012
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
The film is small-scale, cleverly crafted and feels like a more expensive version of the sort of "dramedy" they produce by the truckload at the BBC.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
It borders on deification. Yet Tupac: Resurrection is still a strong film, with some genuinely revealing insights into the life of its charismatic and paradoxical subject.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
The story of the colony’s exile and return feels like a dull sermon, but the animals themselves, with their expressive faces and Moe Howard hairdos, can switch from slapstick to pathos faster than Charlie Chaplin.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Apr 16, 2015
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Though Little Miss Sunshine is consistently contrived in its characters' too-cute misery, the conclusion, which is genuinely outrageous and uplifting, is almost worth the hype.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
In this fitfully engaging, but often patience-straining preamble to Hobbit adventures to come, there is one transporting 10 minutes of screen time. It happens when Bilbo meets the freakish, ring-obsessed creature Gollum.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Dec 14, 2012
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- Liam Lacey
Ezra Miller's sneering, absurdly precocious evil-child performance makes him just another bad-seed horror villain.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Nov 29, 2011
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Taken for what it is – a fluffy, intergenerational farce as a frame for some seventies musical nostalgia – Mamma Mia! just gets away with it, in spite of director Lloyd's lack of cinematic inexperience.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
This summer has given us two Supermen to choose from in our own distemperate times: "Superman Returns" was for the starry-eyed idealists, Hollywoodland is for the bleary-eyed cynics.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
A first film from director Mark Palansky, written by sitcom veteran Leslie Caveny (Everybody Loves Raymond, Mad About You), and the two are obviously indebted to the fanciful imagination of Tim Burton.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
This remake is distinctly a Farrelly brothers' flick -- sentimental, rambling and raunchy.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Allen's best effort since 1999's "Sweet and Lowdown," but that's not saying a lot.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Though it's a good-looking flick with some smart acting and a few flashy runs, it barely breaks even dramatically, and feels, overall, like a good chance wasted.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
The background designs are beautiful and there are plenty of lively sight gags, but magic isn’t in the cards.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Jun 21, 2013
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- Liam Lacey
The plot's larcenous resolution is something of a cheat, tying things up dramatically if unethically.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Occasionally feels like a Neil Simon rewrite of "In the Bedroom," as it see-saws between hard truths and quirky humour.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
A sprawling prison drama that seeks, by turns, to endear itself and then traumatize its audience.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Whedon can’t quite work the same miracle twice. Age of Ultron also bears the familiar stretch marks characteristic of middle movies in franchise series.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Apr 29, 2015
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- Liam Lacey
Though Radcliffe occasionally seems too stiffly callow to be completely convincing in this grown-up role, the movie is a proficient thriller with a potential appeal beyond the star's fan-girl audience.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Feb 2, 2012
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- Liam Lacey
Eventually, Typhoon succumbs to the usual special-effects bombast and plot overkill.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
When you pay good money to see an action movie, it's understood that you want it to be action-packed. You do not want it to be action-enhanced or action-flavoured or featuring accents of action.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Blend sound with sight, though, and the package becomes more difficult to take.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Apr 19, 2012
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Duke rarely operates at more than a TV movie-of-the-week level of originality, but Hoodlum is still an easy movie to enjoy.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Smartly cast, in the sense that Reeves, gloomy and pained, and Harrelson, confused and explosive, both seem befuddled while Downey, as the devious, intellectual Barris, is befuddling.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Actor Liev Schreiber’s voice-over narration is filled with sonorous urgency, but as the film’s commentators acknowledge, some ideas are a hard sell: How do politicians and regulators convince the public on the benefits of a financial diet when a spending spree sounds much more fun?- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Feb 20, 2014
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- Liam Lacey
In a film that offers itself as a Gump-esque moral fable, Phenomenon could serve as a case study of When Smart Films Fail.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
This is a movie fantasy, folks -- like James Bond, without the smarm and martinis.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Like his characters, Lin may be an overachiever and the strain of trying to do too much shows. He merges genres the way Ben juggles extracurricular activities.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
The problem is that the movie plays down almost everything that made Cash great: the train rumble of a voice, the direct, poetic truth of his best lyrics, the invention of his outlaw image and his constant creativity.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
As a portrait of a deliciously eccentric individual, Gods and Monsters features a vivid performance from Ian McKellen that makes you think not of James Whale but of Ian McKellen.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Jun 27, 2013
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
With her high forehead, pale eyebrows and solemn face, Stiles could have understudied Cate Blanchett as Elizabeth -- another dignified smart girl surrounded by conniving idiots.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
The characters in Wonderland show an intelligent complexity and sharpness of contemporary observation that transcends romantic-comedy clichés.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Has a subtle magnetism, and a real human pulse, especially as it concentrates on its two main characters.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
This is the kind of film where the audience has to sort through the sequences, like visiting the green grocer's: liked that bit, can do without those.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Kasparov is a compelling film subject: suave, sardonic and as emotionally high-pitched as he is intellectually gifted.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Sometimes, you'd swear he's (Penn) reprising his performance as a mentally handicapped man in "I Am Sam."- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Lohan, in her third lead role in a year, is a good reactive young actress, and London, Ont., native Rachel McAdams is excellently evil, a dose of poison in a pretty lacquered container.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
While Bettany and Dunst are both appealing, their chemistry lacks much fizz. As it is, the pair seem less like lovers than bouncy transatlantic cousins.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
The verdict? King Kong may be a great movie event in a "Jaws/Titanic" sense of blockbuster impact and cultural talking point, but it is not a great movie.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
For those who enjoyed J.J. Abrams’s frisky relaunch of Star Trek back in 2009, the good news is that the new Star Trek Into Darkness is more of the same. The bad news is that Star Trek Into Darkness is, well, a bit too familiar.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted May 14, 2013
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- Liam Lacey
This movie is exceptionally brutal, cruel, savage and without conscience -- and that's just the comic parts. In contrast, the violent action sequences are quite entertaining.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
In a movie world where every new release promises to be something you've never seen before, Twilight of the Ice Nymphs succeeds in being genuinely different -- even if you can't quite figure out exactly what it's supposed to be. [26 Sep 1997, p.E3]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Here are a few adjectives that do not apply to the new Superman movie: Beguiling. Frisky. Nuanced. Quiet. Even the title, Man of Steel, sounds too flighty for this film. Man of Lead, or Man of Plutonium, maybe.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Jun 13, 2013
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- Liam Lacey
Rogen’s always a dominating presence, but the doll-like Australian actress, who showed her comic chops in "Bridesmaids," comes close to stealing the movie here, in an uncorked performance full of volatile, liberating mischief.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted May 9, 2014
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- Liam Lacey
The movie is a series of ever more elaborate fight sequences and increasingly more and larger opponents.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Rather than build on the new momentum, this one's a bit more of a cruise-control effort.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Live Flesh is an often surprising assemblage of attractive parts that never seems to earn a full emotional response. [06 feb 1998]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Shiver-making moments aside, in a important way 127 Hours suffers from the filmmaker's lack of nerve, a reluctance to let the audience taste Ralston's dread and the expectation of a slow, absurd death.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Nov 11, 2010
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- Liam Lacey
Director Steve Oedekerk, who also wrote the script, simply provides a frame for the string of Carrey sight gags, which come fast and constantly. Some work, some fall flat, but the overall momentum is never allowed to flag seriously.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
All this is initially fascinating, and then progressively less so. The problem is the usual serial-killer issue – things, no matter how weird and kinky, get repetitive.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted May 9, 2014
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- Liam Lacey
Jeunet’s major achievement is to capture the book’s complicated museum clutter and hothouse-flower sensitivity.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Jul 27, 2015
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Although veteran choreographer Yuen Woo-Ping ( Kill Bill, The Matrix) handles the wire action, the camera work is merely okay and the sequences are on the familiar side. Still, it's fun to see Chan resurrect his loopy, staggering "drunken master" fighting style.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Serving as his own director of photography under the pseudonym Peter Andrews, Soderbergh picks his angles artfully and allows Carano to demonstrate her arsenal of acrobatic fighting tricks in extended, no-cheating single takes.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Jan 19, 2012
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- Liam Lacey
Mulan is another competent effort, but it's a disappointment for anyone hoping the studio would raise the standard of the animated feature to a new level.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
As a thriller, it's only fitfully suspenseful, and despite the ticking bomb premise, meanders a good deal in its plot convolutions. As a portrait of the absurdity and humiliation of life under occupation, the story is heartfelt but predictable.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Jul 5, 2012
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- Liam Lacey
Land Ho! is both loose (shot over 18 days, with an improv quality to the acting) and overcalculated in its series of encounters, small revelations and life-affirming beats. The movie is pleasant and mostly forgettable, except for the character of Mitch.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Aug 8, 2014
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- Liam Lacey
All of the story is so absurdly humourless that it is dramatically inert, as if Nolan had decided the only way to make the Batman character more substantial was to put weights on his wings.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Strictly a middle-aged comedy, which consists of more easy lobs than sharp smacks, but manages to get the job done.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Even at three hours, the film feels truncated, which raises the question of whether the entire adaptation exercise might have chosen the wrong form. Stretched out to 10 or 12 hours on cable television, Cloud Atlas, the series, would be the talk of the fall television season, and the stories, rather than the thematic scaffolding, would be the right focus of attention.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 25, 2012
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- Liam Lacey
The film sustains some suspense and brooding atmosphere for its first half, but eventually the clichés of character and dialogue drag it struggling to ground.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Jan 26, 2012
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- Liam Lacey
As the careening cars go splat, splat, splat, the director's vision of the future looks like a cheerfully mindless combination of two extremes of carnival entertainment: demolition derby and whack-a-mole.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
This is Austen as chick-lit, not too deep, but with some integrity and the worthy goal of reaching a younger audience by offering a starch-free version of the story.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
The problem with Signs is not that the movie is pretentious -- or ambitious -- enough to try to combine "The Book of Job" and "Invasion of the Body Snatchers." The problem is that Signs manages to be both so terribly serious and so unimportant at the same time.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
If Pee-Wee wasn't the most engaging physical comedian since Dick Van Dyke, it would be disastrous. As it is, the opening works well enough to have viewers completely hooked by the time he sets out on the road, like Huck Finn, with his clothes wrapped up in a handerchief on a stick. [10 Aug 1985, p.E9]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
The problem is that Chicken Little settles for what's expedient and safe and, over all, lives down to its title.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Essentially an affectionate and personal project to honour Thompson's memory, The Rum Diary occasionally strains to evoke the journalist's surreal black humour.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 28, 2011
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- Liam Lacey
Filmmaker Evan Jackson Leong, who began following Lin when he played for Harvard, also emphasizes the importance of Lin’s tight bonds with his family and the importance of his evangelical Christianity (“I only play for God,” Lin says).- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Jan 24, 2014
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- Liam Lacey
Jurassic World never breaks out of its own confines of homage and imitation. The movie ends up as an awkward, ungainly hybrid: large, but inconsequential.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Jun 11, 2015
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- Liam Lacey
Bring on the sequel please, because, as fine as Denzel is, director Antoine Fuqua’s The Equalizer is not so good – a self-consciously stylized, stop-and-start hodgepodge of Death Wish street vengeance, Bond-style Russian villainy, and moodily shot Boston locale.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Sep 25, 2014
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- Liam Lacey
Fitfully daring, Pumpkin isn't quite sure what it's about -- the tone bounces between thudding satire and toothless camp parody -- but it's definitely a bad-mannered child of our times.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
If the external threat in the plot were a little more credible, this would be an annoying distraction. But in the context of the rest of Gloria, it's a safe strategy: When not watching Sharon Stone act, audiences can fall back on just watching Sharon Stone.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
The important things first: It's always a relief to come out of an Adam Sandler movie without a case of hives, and you can comfortably attend Anger Management without prophylactic antihistamines.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Jan 24, 2014
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- Liam Lacey
Short on wrenching passion, but never less than competent, Les Misérables is merely passable. It might have been titled Les Compétents. [01 May 1998, p.C4]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
The problem with Flash of Genius is that a windshield wiper is an awfully thin mechanism on which to hang a feature movie.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Apart from Mychael Danna’s portentous orchestral and electronic score, Transcendence simply lacks oomph: Shots don’t overwhelm, scenes don’t pop and nothing on the screen gets under your skin.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Apr 18, 2014
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- Liam Lacey
As a story about a war that is unresolved, it seems better suited to a provisional “To be continued” than the certainty of “The end.”- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Apr 3, 2014
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- Liam Lacey
Some of the most striking moments in Bears are during the film’s closing credits, when we see how alarmingly close the camera crew was to the animals. We’re reminded us that while the movie Bears is both sweet and humane, the real bears are neither.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Apr 18, 2014
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- Liam Lacey
At its most interesting when it shows the lives of women and children prisoners, the film has the feel of a movie-of-the-week cliché when it returns to Julia's improbable crime.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Since there's no evidence in the film that Green teaches his students how to compose, improvise or experiment with the music, presumably the next wave will come from somewhere else.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Sumptuous and schmaltzy, Steven Spielberg's First World War drama, War Horse, is a strange beast of a film.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Dec 26, 2011
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- Liam Lacey
By the head-scratching dénouement, the "perfect" in the title seems particularly misplaced. How about Dial M for Muddle.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Does not disappoint expectations: This is not a case of dumbing down literature; it's mediocrity aimed for and successfully achieved.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Almost a comedy, though not an entirely successful one: It's too acerbic to be funny and too detached to be really moving.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Some of the later scenes capture the spirit of majestic sweetness of "Close Encouners of the Third Kind" and "E.T: The Extra-Terrestrial" period, but the elevated moments don't last. They're relentlessly undermined by the f-bombs, groin kicks, and anal-probing jokes.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Mar 17, 2011
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- Liam Lacey
Like a lot of well-staged parties, though, the affair peaks shortly after the introductions, and then devolves into intrigues, fights and mayhem.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Mar 17, 2011
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- Liam Lacey
The director veers off course and heads straight for mediocrity. It's a disappointing ride.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Musically, it's a mixed bag -- The concert remains more of an historical curiosity than a must-see rock film.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
The problem is, the last section of the movie doesn't follow the career path of Greene: It traces the blander character of Hughes. Cheadle, who galvanizes the first half of the film, fades from view, and the best part of the conversation in Talk to Me goes with him.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Not super, but not bad, the teen comedy, Superbad, is another comic dance across the hormonal minefield of late high school.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
The combination of DiCaprio's soulful, self-effacing work in Scorsese's "The Departed," and this unexpectedly complex portrait in a simple-minded movie, make it the best year of his career since the big boat crash of 1997.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
The problems with Damon's character are the problem with the movie: It's about plot mechanics, not heart and soul.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
No political tract, but it can be surprisingly bold.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
A beautifully shot, well-acted, and worthy-to-a-fault Second World War survivor story that only intermittently achieves the kind of emotional impact for which it aims.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Dec 23, 2014
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- Liam Lacey
Whatever the narrative shortcomings, these characters have the warmth of antique painted storybooks, unlike the eerie plastic simulation of Pixar characters.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
The Corruptor is visually lively and filled with gratuitous destruction. [12 Mar 1999]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
With more superheroes, more action and more stuff blowing up than ever before, X-Men: The Last Stand has the climactic oomph that suggests a finale, though not the gravitas to suggest a resolution.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
A beautifully shot, modest little fable about the misunderstandings between people.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Roughly-made but illuminating, the Iraq documentary In My Mother's Arms is a brief immersion into life in a Baghdad boys' orphanage.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 2, 2012
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- Liam Lacey
After its promising opening, I Am Legend devolves into a generic zombie slaughterfest.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
So blatantly contrived it could be called The Fast and the Spurious, Crank has the small saving grace of being intentionally ridiculous. The action sequences are more notable for their outrageousness than their visceral power.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
For all its treacly excesses of the post- "Full Monty" era, British comedy hasn't entirely lost its teeth yet.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Parents of young children should be warned: Here's a family-values film that won't be much fun for the whole family.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Excellent in flashes, unintentionally absurd and lead-footed at other moments, the movie stumbles under the weight of its own grandiose intentions.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
There are too many moments in Ice Age when you find yourself thinking: less bonding and fewer anti-Darwinian life-lessons please; more of that anarchist Scrat.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Edge of Seventeen is a gentle American coming-out and coming-of-age story set in 1984 in Sadusky, Ohio, and suffers slightly from a sugary after-school-special approach to its subject matter. [02 Jul 1999, p.C5]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
The movie manages a couple of popcorn-spitting-funny jokes for each biographical decade the film covers, though typically it's no better than moderately clever.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Never comes together as a persuasive whole. Instead of moral complexity, we get an overfamiliar pursuit tale and investigation story. Worse, the movie fails the first test of a thriller: It lacks any significant suspense.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Sep 27, 2013
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- Liam Lacey
What becomes increasingly apparent is that Gordon-Levitt hasn’t exactly decided what Jon’s problem is, in a character that seems partly an expression of male wish fulfilment.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Sep 27, 2013
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- Liam Lacey
The best one can say is that it's a smart cartoon, and a fairly exhausting viewing experience.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Slam is a film about rap poetry, romance and gangster culture that blends melodrama, visceral excitement -- and a lot of preaching. [23 Oct 1998, p.D3]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
When the larger question cannot be answered, the lesser one -- "What would you have done?" -- seems beside the point.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
So long as you grit your teeth and keep your eyes on the screen, it’s an enjoyable, if almost academic, exercise in bad taste.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Apr 4, 2013
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- Liam Lacey
One distraction is that everything feels smothered in an extra helping of déjà vu sauce: another movie featuring a middle-aged misanthrope with a dewy younger woman; another film with stage magic as a theme.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Jul 31, 2014
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- Liam Lacey
Mixes broad slapstick and off-hand one-liners in a sometimes surprisingly funny mixture.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Not exactly a movie in the usual sense, not exactly a ride, Journey is more of a virtual theme-park simulation and possibly a milestone of immersive entertainment.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
The movie's last two minutes, in which they all do goofy dances and have no dialogue or script to get in their way, is easily the highlight. It's the previous 113 minutes of plot that cause problems.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
While both the scenery and star Diane Lane are highly watchable, the movie is pure froth, a plate-sized helping of zabaglione.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
The mainstream prominence of pornography gets a shove forward with the teen comedy, The Girl Next Door, an improbably-not-terrible teen sex comedy.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Lucy, you may have twigged, is named after our 3.2-million-year-old hominid ancestor.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Jul 24, 2014
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- Liam Lacey
The other thing that sets this movie apart from the current crop of tongue-in-cheek screamers (I Know What You Did Last Summer, Scream) is that it's actually perversely intriguing, rather than just clever. [03 Nov 1997, p.C2]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
There are flashes of excitement in this film, mostly from the verbal play and sulphurous humour of Welsh's perspective, but there's a lot that makes you wonder why you're sitting through it.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Like any good religious sermon, it follows its scary vision of hell with a possibility of last-minute redemption.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
If the movie is essentially a study of a loving family, A Soldier's Daughter Never Cries is hampered by extraneous scenes that are simply self-indulgent on the director's part.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 13, 2011
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- Liam Lacey
Human Nature's zigzag ingenuity wears out some time before the farce bounces slowly to an uneven conclusion. For all its highfalutin title and corkscrew narrative, the movie turns out to be not much more than a shaggy human tale.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
An overqualified cast (including Vincent D’Onofrio and an uncredited Nick Nolte) brings more gravity than required to repeated “this is me staring you down” confrontations.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Mar 12, 2015
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- Liam Lacey
Jacobs is a competent director but he doesn't bring anything extra to this shell game of a narrative.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Invincible lacks Herzog's usual visual and intellectual panache, and is afflicted by weak English-language acting, which makes it more of a career curio than a major work.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
The real question for audiences isn’t whether Tony Stark/Iron Man defeats the latest supervillain (of course he does), but whether the movie itself rises above the dreaded third-in-a-sequel torpor of "Spider-Man" and "The Dark Knight." Spoiler alert: Yes, mostly, it does.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted May 2, 2013
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- Liam Lacey
With all due respect to Japanese animation fans and pop-culture enthusiasts, life may be just too short to plunge into the busy world of Cowboy Bebop.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
The film is visually bland, with only a couple of bookending outdoor sequences around a handful of interior sets.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Mar 12, 2015
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- Liam Lacey
If Ocean's Thirteen were compared to a gem, it would have to be considered something of a flashy fraud: Initially impressive for cut and colour, it lacks either clarity or weight.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Estela Bravo's film Fidel, The Untold Story has the kitsch appeal of a farm implement on a restaurant wall, or an Andy Warhol Mao poster: Interesting, but not for its original purpose.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Here's a vote of gratitude for Samuel L. Jackson, who has become a specialist in making mediocre movies far more entertaining than they should be.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Focus, which was co-written and directed by "Crazy Stupid Love" creators, Glen Ficarra and John Requa, is drunk on its perfume-ad cinematography and doesn’t know when to quit with its double-double cross plotting.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Feb 26, 2015
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- Liam Lacey
A resonant journalistic cautionary tale gets packaged as a hokey thriller in Kill the Messenger, a movie with a message that isn’t nearly as urgent as it needs to be.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 9, 2014
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- Liam Lacey
Shot mostly at night, in high-contrast images, punctuated by rock-video collages, Intacto is nothing if not hip, but its questions are more coffee-shop hypothetical than genuinely profound.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Critic-proof, devoid of plot or acting, and quick to mock anyone who might make something of it.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Once again, perhaps the most impressive effect is Patrick Stewart as Captain Picard, using his Shakespearean training to make long mouthfuls of nonsense sound almost persuasive.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Too silly to be taken seriously, it's not silly enough to overcome skepticism.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Sciamma (Water Lilies, Tomboy) gets unaffected performances from her non-professional cast.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Feb 26, 2015
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- Liam Lacey
By the time the last jerk on the comic premise has been tugged, you might find yourself muttering an age-ist dismissal: this Grumpy Old Man thing (or, in this case, Soggy Old Men thing) is getting kind of old. [03 July 1997, p.C3]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
The Wackness is one of those Sundance coming-of-age films, with all that implies: a surfeit of forced edginess, kooky characters, cynicism-coated sentimentality and self-absorbed angst.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
A trite but sturdy offering, a showcase for popular young Czech actress Anna Geislerova, as well as the beautiful Moravian countryside, shot in glowing earthy tones.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
He [Salles] has managed to create a movie that's pretty bleak for a Hollywood -- especially Disney -- thriller. His theme, as a director, is the indignities of poverty and, in his way, he pays more attention to that agenda than he does in generating any real thrills.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Hercules is a lot of fun -- not a masterpiece, but engaging, clever and bright. [27 June 1997, p.C1]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Full of falling rain, fluttering silk, John Williams's music and whispery voiceover, Memoirs of a Geisha is one long oxymoronic exercise in attempting to show delicacy through overkill.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
The trouble is that the plot is so elliptical to be almost unfollowable (though it helps to have seen the trailer).- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Still Alice is being called a career performance for Moore, and although it may be one of her most poignant roles (it has earned her a fifth Oscar nomination), the part barely scratches the surface of her ability.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Jan 22, 2015
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- Liam Lacey
There’s a flicker of déjà vu seeing Max Irons step into the role of a posh Oxford University student in The Riot Club. Irons has inherited the cheekbones and silky voice of his father, Jeremy Irons.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Mar 27, 2015
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- Liam Lacey
Give Quarantine credit: Without resorting to computer-generated monsters or supernatural explanations, it uses consistent logic and confinement to find new ways of being scary.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Fortunately, director-writer Marc Lawrence (he also created the Hugh Grant-Sandra Bullock comedy "Two Weeks Notice") manages saccharine saturation by tempering his stars' familiar appeal with enough dry wit to make this low-key romantic comedy a not-too-sticky Valentine's Day offering.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Think of it as "Cheers" without the beer, or "Friends'" Central Perk with razors and sharper dialogue.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Though it leaves no sex and danger cliche unturned, Lassiter is a lightweight, but briskly entertaining and stylish genre film. [20 Feb 1984]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Once again, a first-rate cast helps slightly elevate this sentimental Britcom.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Mar 5, 2015
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- Liam Lacey
Director Roger Donaldson ("Smash Palace," "No Way Out," "Species"), working from a script by Leslie Bohem ("Daylight"),does a serviceable job, wrapping his narrative around the big kabooms, but the real interest comes from the extraordinary barrage of sound and spectacle.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
A stylish, brutal affair that delivers grim atmosphere and punishing violence but loses impact in telegraphing its political punches.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Nov 29, 2012
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Though rich in visual style, the movie is unbalanced in performances and script, ranging, from scene to scene, from go-for-baroque grandeur to strident excess.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
The most disturbing aspect of the movie is not the sex scenes (shot from the waist up) but her face, especially in her porn-star persona: a frozen little smiling mask that suggests a paradoxically intense vacancy.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Give it an A for concept -- a bizarre marionette version of a Jerry Bruckheimer-style action movie; B for its occasional moments of convulsively funny comedy; and D for the politics, for pandering to exactly the kind of reactionary sentiments it purports to satirize.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
A movie that feels a bit like digging a hole in the ground -- an exercise that may build character but doesn't seem to accomplish much else.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Apart from the mobile camera and a moderately challenging time-jumping script, this is weepy women's cable-television fare of the tears-and-cuddles variety.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Hoary, rather than whore-y, Irina Palm is shameless only in its mawkish sincerity.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
The Human Scale uses plenty of globe-hopping examples to make up for what it sometimes lacks in depth.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Nov 7, 2013
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- Liam Lacey
A passable romantic dish, a good-looking, old-fashioned date movie set in an idealized Greenwich Village, evocative of the better Woody Allen films.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Like the Irish film "Once," it’s a drama about the lives of musical performers who sing songs within the film to illustrate the emotional journey of a relationship. Broken Circle, though, is painted in much darker hues.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Nov 7, 2013
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- Liam Lacey
Given Waller's experience and budget, one might expect he could upgrade the B-movie acting and stock situations. He doesn't. The pay-off comes not in the story or acting, but the camera play and movement.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
All this is more amusing in theory than practice, partly because Leonard’s world of wiseguys and slapstick violence has become so familiar – the caper-movie default mode.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Aug 29, 2014
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- Liam Lacey
If the downbeat plot is depressingly familiar, it’s partly salvaged by the quality of the performances.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Dec 5, 2013
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- Liam Lacey
Touchy Feely seems poised to explore the same issues of embarrassing intimacy Shelton mined in her two last films, Humpday and Your Sister’s Sister. But here there’s a new fantastical element, the kind of magical device that might pop up in a minor Woody Allen film.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 11, 2013
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Jul 14, 2011
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- Liam Lacey
As it dips in and out of the boys' lives, and occasionally wanders back to the contemporary Dito surveying the old neighbourhood, Saints never really integrates its two time periods.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Compared to many of last year's documentaries (Pina, Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory, Cave of Forgotten Dreams or The Interrupters), this film is distinctly minor league. But it does provide the thumbs-up emotional lift of a bumper-sticker message on game day.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Mar 1, 2012
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- Liam Lacey
Tarantino's approach is so enamoured of the exploitation cinema he emulates, there is a serious risk that noble intentions get smothered in juvenile comedy and cinematic grandstanding.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Dec 20, 2012
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- Liam Lacey
Low on nuance and high on body count, the movie is primarily of interest to fans of Asian action spectacles and followers of the charismatic Chow Yun-fat (Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon), here cast as both a dandyish villain and his idiotic double.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Mar 1, 2012
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- Liam Lacey
Though far from a disaster of Biblical proportions, Evan Almighty is a mild, sporadically funny comedy in an oversized sentimental frame.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Liam Lacey
Feels like a missed opportunity to do a country romantic melodrama in grand style.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Apr 30, 2015
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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