Lisa Schwarzbaum
Select another critic »For 1,979 reviews, this critic has graded:
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70% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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28% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 3.4 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Lisa Schwarzbaum's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 69 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Big Night | |
| Lowest review score: | Valentine's Day | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,280 out of 1979
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Mixed: 520 out of 1979
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Negative: 179 out of 1979
1979
movie
reviews
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Lathan, charismatic and beautifully strong, holds the screen in every scene.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A gaudy, daring, operatic, and bloody funny provocation of a melodrama from Park Chan-wook.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Amreeka is strategically inviting and carefully mild even when making unsubtle points about Palestinian suffering and American insensitivity.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
There's much that's simplistically grand, worthy, and fine in Perdition. If I yearn for less measured filmmaking that cries out with more reckless despair, it's because I think hell on earth is a meaner, much more interesting, and far less tidy cinematic place than Mendes trusts his audience to handle.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Exquisitely structured, pitiless study of a middle-aged man trapped in a stagnant emotional weather pattern.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Affleck the director shows excellent instincts, not least of which is letting his younger brother, Casey, hold the center as a young guy not as smaht as he thinks he is.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
At once an unsentimental portrait of the ambitious singer who thought himself bound for glory, and an affecting elegy for a time when song was a form of revolution.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jan 20, 2011
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Asif Kapadia's blazing feature debut, a gorgeously photographed saga with a fine sense of the way place shapes personality, has won numerous awards in the filmmaker's native Britain.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The movie's biggest surprise may be that the story we think we know from modern scary cinema - that horror is a fun, cosmic game, not much else - here turns out to be pretty much the whole enchilada.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Apr 11, 2012
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Tthis isn't just any setup, is it: It's suds being sold as ethno-sensitive reality, a case of coveting thy neighbor's fiesta.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
In that rare moment, the movie relaxes its rictus of pain and actually dares to feel good. Moments like these aren't just a negotiation between all and nothing -- they're everything that allows us to care about even those characters who only slouch and shriek ''F -- - orfff!''- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Even Moore's target ticket-buyers are likely to squirm with concern, unsure of who the real weasels and idiots are in this large, unkempt, rambunctious country of ours.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Excitement trumps incompetence as one colorful loser recruits another. Pretty soon, the screen is filled with hip actors playing clueless lowlifes, pretending they're in a Bizarro World production of ''Ocean's Eleven.''- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Färberböck's sensual adaptation is a matter of fact embrace of the unconventional and dangerous during a terrible time.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
All too content to be a comedy of surfaces and stereotypes. And because, for all the novelty of the bisexual romantic angle, there's something about Jessica, her New York-singleton ticks and her Jewish-family tocks, that feels...old.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Trembles with respect for Hillenbrand's book. It's hobbled by good intentions, grand plans for telling many stories at once, and a fear of the very audience whose intelligence and sophistication it claims to court.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The filmmaker's decision to shoot the past in color and the present in murky black and white is an inspired visual translation of psychological truth.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
This super-duper deluxe nature documentary clearly aims to recruit young viewers as conservationists.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Never harmonizes into a cinematic experience any more resonant than the average, manly, why-we-fight pic, or coalesces into a stirring cry for freedom.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Clooney proves himself to be a true movie star and romantic leading man. His charm, his energy, even his ease with children (one of any adult actor’s most terrifying challenges) carry One Fine Day into irresistibility.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Lucy Walker's observant film Blindsight is about profound East-West differences in the importance of journey versus destination and comradeship versus competition.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Larrain's (literally) dark, edgy movie is a precise artistic commentary on Augusto Pinochet's miserable regime.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The many fans of the uniquely droll 2003 animation Oscar nominee "The Triplets of Belleville" will recognize the inventive hand-drawn sensibilities of French filmmaker Sylvain Chomet in his loving and lovely new feature The Illusionist.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Dec 20, 2010
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The story may be thin, but the project, a feat of stop-motion animation, is made with generous care by the same impressive LAIKA studio artists who conjured up the gorgeous "Coraline."- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Aug 8, 2012
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Jaoui neatly, gently, firmly slips political commentary into Let It Rain's articulate mayhem.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The power comes from Winterbottom's rigorous sense of storytelling, which manages to show and tell terrible tales without telegraphing emotionalism- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
If it's not up to the cups-and-balls elegance of previous Mamet movies like ''The Spanish Prisoner'' and ''House of Games,'' if it piles on more psychological fake-outs than is safe in a setup this size -- well, at least it's got that talk, that language, that thing Mamet does that is at this point as identifiable as the cadences of the Bard.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Based on a true story, this Indian variation on a theme of "The Burning Bed" emphasizes the psychological freedom the inmate finds behind bars.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Gets weirder and meaner and darker and sadder as it progresses, which is amazing since it simultaneously remains funny and horrifying right up to the end.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
As a thriller, this 21 2-hour production takes a slow route between short bursts of excitement.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The result is a duet of outstanding loveliness between Kendrick and Gordon-Levitt, also an actor of nuanced control.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Sep 28, 2011
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Loving, Playful, and spectacularly well made, Super 8 is easily the best summer movie of the year - of many years.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 8, 2011
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
This is a beautifully built, classically framed movie, shot with the unshowy natural expressiveness of a John Ford Western by Spielberg's great cinematographer, Janusz Kaminski.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Dec 16, 2011
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Director Roger Michell (''Notting Hill'') conveys some of the sharpest insights into the woman buried beneath the wife and mother in those early scenes, using ragged, vérité-style camera work that takes merciless inventory of a certain stripe of posh, hard-edged modern family life in which dowdy grannies are invisible.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Writer-director Oskar Roehler spends all his energy on cataloging ''outrageous'' behavior, and none on giving the transgressions any meaning.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Thor's Chris Hemsworth leads the pack as a high school football star-turned-Marine, while Josh Peck plays his stubborn younger brother. There's also a collection of junior guerrillas, including The Hunger Games' Josh Hutcherson and Friday Night Lights' Adrianne Palicki. Take that, screaming North Koreans with no agenda!- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Nov 20, 2012
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
This is a dark story as well as a frothy one. But the bubble of absurdist self-absorption in which Menzel places this specimen of man-child is exquisite.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Everything is vast and hugely ambitious in Martin Scorsese's magisterial, scrambled historical epic.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Like a dowser who can divine hidden sources of water, Atom Egoyan has a talent for locating the dream-state perversity that runs just under the surface of everyday life;- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Something particularly clean shines in this American fairy tale, a quality of simplicity that's almost as hard to achieve in such movies as a middle-aged man's boyhood dreams.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Audience empathy for the displaced Redlichs, coupled with the filmmaker's proffered charms of wise natives and their mysterious rituals, goes a long way toward making this lyrical travelogue a crowd pleaser.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Underneath the ravishing imagery however, hearts are in flux.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Crowe sometimes summons up one of the most powerful depictions of mental illness I have ever seen with barely an eyelid flicker separating manifestations of sickness from utterly sane displays of creative concentration.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Each an actor of distinctive delicacy, Duplass, DeWitt, and Blunt do some of their subtlest, most sweetly calibrated work ever, playing off one another with the kind of ease and trust that is, in itself, a demonstration of love.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 13, 2012
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The biggest surprise in Shame is how distanced, passionless, and merely skin-deep the director's attention is - how little he cares about the subject of his own movie.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Nov 30, 2011
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Completing his wonderful French cultural trilogy that also includes portraits of the Comédie-Fran¸aise and the Paris Opera Ballet, indefatigable documentarian Frederick Wiseman freely, unobtrusively prowls the joint to create a movie that respects the serious work involved in simulating the sensations of pleasure.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Feb 7, 2012
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Johnson also grabs hold of a fundamental truth and seduces us with it: The schoolyard can be the noirest burg of all.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Diverting enough, but it's also the kind of high-concept studio concoction Ricky Gervais might have ridiculed in his great backstage-showbiz sitcom "Extras."- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Tiny Furniture is proof, against steep odds, that there are no small stories, only small storytellers.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Dec 11, 2010
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Nettelbeck has a particularly lovely sense of behind-the-scenes restaurant choreography. And her warm, patient understanding of little girls' psyches guides young Maxime Foerste, as the turbulent niece, to a terrific performance.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Doug Pray's cool documentary about 85-year-old Dr. Dorian Paskowitz, his wife, and their eight sons and one daughter is about surfing insofar as surfing is the family's shared passion.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Another 3-D animated kid movie demonstrates that cartoon storytelling pitched to young people is the last, best refuge of sprightly filmmaking this hard, hot summer.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Nothing in this enjoyably twisty, cool/ hot, genre-grafting Italian psychological thriller by Giuseppe Capotondi is what it seems. And the more you try to solve the narrative puzzle, the more you may want to watch it again - or at least argue about what's real.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted May 11, 2011
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Any random episode of Law & Order would be more sophisticated than this heavy-handed, moralistic Southern-lawyer corn pone, directed by Francis Ford Coppola.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The flourishes don't answer the question most on Potterites' minds -- who lives, who dies? -- but they briefly stupefy.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
What's new about the unsensationalized portrait of one-day-at-a-time progress (and setbacks) is the low-key energy of this drunks' tale, by and for a generation with a high tolerance for humor and a low tolerance for soapiness.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Oct 3, 2012
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Of all the shocks in the riveting and timely political thriller Paradise Now, the most unsettling may be the dignity bestowed on a pair of prospective Palestinian suicide bombers.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A tough, authentic street drama born, bred, and shot in the no-spin zone of working-class South Boston.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
It's an intoxicating feeling when a movie excites and enlivens us like this -- and there's a particular giddiness to be had in thinking about what movies can (but don't often) do for one's soul after imbibing such a fine vintage.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
But where would these lads be without the pop-culture-happy language of Quentin Tarantino to fuel their bull sessions? Nowhere, that's where.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The filmmaking is rudimentary in The Treatment, Oren Rudavsky's adaptation of Daniel Menaker's novel, but the feeling for the patient-and-shrink dynamic is authentic.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Where ''Rushmore'' surprises and delights with its spiky depiction of sprawling American idiosyncrasy, Tadpole's more urbane, less complicated charms are specifically made in New York City.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The energy is sapped by clinging condescension in the guise of compassionate liberalism.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
It's thrillingly original, lyrical, and wise, and the filmmaker conveys the mutable intensity of young love with the authoritative originality of an important filmmaker.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
There are no zombies out of ''28 Days Later'' to alleviate the slow creep of realistic doom in this chilly, tense corker.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Honoring the literary ground beneath it, spotted yellow lizards and all, the movie Holes is easy to dig.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Only pretends to care about good people who sometimes do bad things. In fact, it hasn't got time for the pain.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
With Intolerable Cruelty, though, something scares me: I cannot detect a heartbeat of feeling, no matter how close I press a stethoscope against the star machinery of George Clooney and Catherine Zeta-Jones.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
It's raunchy, outspoken -- and also a smart and agile dissection of art, fame, and the chutzpah of big-budget productions.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Newcomer Jessica Haines is transparent and heartbreaking as the prof's unorthodox daughter, a victim of violence as the old ways crumble.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A good measure of the movie's white-knuckle fun comes from Craven's old-hand familiarity with the way thrillers tick.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
As an exception to the norm, Kitano doesn't appear this time, confining himself merely to writing, directing, and editing.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
There's also a Disney den of big, comically dumb-looking bad guys who turn sweet when Rapunzel sings to them. Because Happily Ever After never goes out of fashion- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Dec 9, 2010
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The lightness with which Buñuel was able to insert the little jokes and knife stabs of surrealism he loved so much is, in fact, divine.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Young Adult bumps along with nasty swerves, middle finger proudly in the air, toward an ending blessedly free of anything warm, fuzzy, or optimistic. Now that's adult entertainment.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Dec 7, 2011
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
At a little over two hours, this is a pared-down but no less essential Dickensian feast.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
It's refreshingly low on the kind of Cinema of Empowerment pedantry that often goes along with stories about ethnic families, sweatshop working conditions, or women confronting issues of weight and body image -- and this little crowd-pleaser embraces all three.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
This is a gentle, engaging narrative of constancy and devotion against all odds, both natural and bureaucratic, in which the past represents enduring family values and customs.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
If I ran the circus, the gang that made the sturdy, witty, inventively animated Dr. Seuss' Horton Hears a Who! would get first dibs on any future movie productions of the Theodor Seuss Geisel canon.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The serious struggle in this lilting doc is told with an inviting light touch and a big heart.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Anderson brings compassion to his amused sense of yuppie tragicomedy, as he does to his nuanced understanding of Boston, the setting of this appealing fairy tale.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Lauren Ambrose is lovely as the girlfriend he's a fool to lose but seems intent on losing anyhow.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Aug 22, 2012
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Technical elegance and fine performances mask the shallowness of a story as simpleminded as the '50s TV to which it condescends; certainly it's got none of the depth, poignance, and brilliance of "The Truman Show," the recent TV-is-stifling drama that immediately comes to mind.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Wilkinson once again astonishes with his ability to convey weakness and strength, hypocrisy and gallantry, cruelty and compassion in the same male animal.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Director Bahman Ghobadi (Turtles Can Fly) shot his faux documentary in secret, and the close-to-the-ground style compensates for the tenuous narrative structure by capturing the energy and variety of Tehran's music scene in all its bravery.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
This is one of the year's best. To paraphrase the Wild Thing named KW, I could eat it up, I love it so.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A sly catalog of deceits and a gentle commentary on slippery creativity and desire.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Even blood, spilled so freely, has a distinctive intensity of red in this beautiful and harrowing film.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A quietly dazzling microcosm that's always just this side of eerie, just that side of tragic.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Fanning is remarkably collected and even dignified. As for the rest of the gang, they ought to be returned to sender.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The dramatic conflicts are soapy and unsubtle, but Karanovic pours intense authority into Esma's scarred psyche.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Beautifully led by birdlike Sylvie Testud as an ailing young woman in a wheelchair, every character (pilgrim and helper alike) exhibits a soul. And shaped with confident talent by the Austrian filmmaker, every serenely composed shot matters.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
John Hurt is magnetic as a Catholic priest running a school where terrified Tutsi have taken refuge, while Hugh Dancy, as a naive teacher, represents white commitment to black Africa at its most impotent and unreliable.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Gorgeous as the underwater life-forms are, the excitement of Aliens of the Deep comes from that most old-school, low-tech of elements: real human beings.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Gentle Bingenheimer, who retreats from being ''figured out,'' is dubiously honored with unenlightened commentary by people hell-bent on doing so.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Gehry sketches and free-associates about how he's not nearly the menschy aw-shucks pussycat from Canada he appears to be but rather a wily, complicated L.A. lion.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The pace is quick, the violence is rough, and the visual style is documentary as Padilha hammers home his point: Someone is forever in the pocket of someone else as The System constantly adapts to protect itself.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Nov 9, 2011
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Black Book may be the looniest use of the Holocaust as a playground since Roberto Benigni served up his infernal clown act in "Life Is Beautiful."- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
With its propulsive punk-rock soundtrack and beautifully rough cinematography, Dragonslayer makes you care about this scrawny young man, skating to nowhere.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Nov 2, 2011
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The director of The Descent is savvy enough to suggest even more than he shows. And he's old-school enough to load up on glimpses of good, clean, gruesome gore.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The result is an unabashedly home-cooked homage to New York eccentricity.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Kelly, the 26-year-old writer-director of this excitingly original indie vision, shares more artistically with Wes Anderson or Paul Thomas Anderson than he does with Spielberg or John Hughes, but the point is, he's out on his own here. He swings big -- with flair.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
I mean no impertinence when I say that as a portrait of love and grief, writer-director Mike White's exceptional film Year of the Dog deserves the same admiration accorded Joan Didion's exceptional memoir "The Year of Magical Thinking."- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
It's a tiny, sunny character study about a fat guy who's an unlikely chick magnet. And as such it's a pip.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A frustratingly inert story, a bookend to last year's wooden ''Captain Corelli's Mandolin.''- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Almereyda excises big chunks of plot to shape his vision, but retains Shakespeare's language and pays such rigorous attention to meaning and subtext that what's missing isn't missed.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
By the time Worf (Michael Dorn), knocking off a slimy attacker, growls a Schwarzeneggerish ''Assimilate this!'' we've already done so, with pleasure.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The unusual intimacy and authenticity can't be faked: The cast is peppered with nonprofessionals, most notably Michal Bat Sheva Rand.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
But the very thing that drew the two actors to this ripping yarn — their enchantment with playing archetypes of male power — is the very thing that undoes their awfully big adventure.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Thornton, giving a splendid, disciplined performance, seamlessly shapes his coach into a believable man of quality rather than star-size charisma.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The narrative logic of Swimming Pool slips through our hands like cool water, shimmery and light-dappled, leaving behind the pleasures of summer heat and goose bumps.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A fast, loose, and very funny parody that pulls off the not-so-simple feat of tweaking Trekkies and honoring them.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The interviews Bitton conducts, almost all with Arabs and Jews who share her despair, are less meaningful than what she captures in silence: the sight of farmers separated from their farmland, everyday people thwarted in their dailiness, and children playing next to what looks like prison walls.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
As filmmaker Michael Mann takes pains to emphasize in his handsome, underheated gangster drama Public Enemies, the gent may have been murderous, but he had style.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
More calculated than a Starbucks sampler CD, the picture could win the up-from-hardship award.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
It's in the brightly observed vignettes from mall-society life, captured with a low-key, on-the-run visual style, that Burman shows his best stuff and deadpan wit.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A curious case indeed: an extravagantly ambitious movie that's easy to admire but a challenge to love.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The best vignette, at the very end of the film, is the story Auster originally wrote for a newspaper as a Christmas piece, the one that inspired Wang to make Smoke in the first place. It's the one you'll want to inhale.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
While Rodriguez punches through the indie clutter to announce herself as a superb new movie talent, so Kusama scores big points in her first main event.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
As a sharky, gay TV journalist investigating the story, Tom Selleck charms by playing in contrast to his own determinedly hetero persona.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
One of those thrilling confluences in pop culture that rewards audiences for thinking the worst about politicians and the best about movie stars.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Hip, funny, mostly nonmusical, decidedly non- epic family picture.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A funny, shrewd, no-bull family comedy about the relationship between mothers and teenage daughters that allows Curtis the comedian to remember her days as a slinky starlet while making use of her wisdom as the mother of an adolescent girl herself.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Actually, there's one other way to approach Matchstick Men, and that's to forget all about neuroses and con artistry and admire the movie instead for the unsettlingly beautiful directorial study in geographical mood that it is.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Feb 23, 2011
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Allusions to "Vertigo," "Rebecca," and Georges Franju's great 1960 French horror movie "Eyes Without a Face" are intentional: The Skin I Live In is, above all, the creation of a movie fanatic who loves to look.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Oct 19, 2011
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Mouret not only stars (opposite a delicate Ledoyen) as the slightly schlemiely fellow in want of a woman's affection, he also wrote and directed this enticing, weightless divertissement.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The Science of Sleep is like a weird dream that tugs at the memory throughout the day with its intriguing, misshapen pieces.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Beauty competes with vacuity in Elephant, and for a good stretch of writer-director Gus Van Sant's maddeningly passive ode to high school innocence and Columbine-age youthful evil, beauty wins.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Chiara Mastroianni charms here just as her maman, Catherine Deneuve, did in Demy's 1964 classic.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Shanley turns out to have dismayingly few original cinematic notions to back up the basic did-he-or-didn't-he hook in his study of conviction and compassion.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The vignettes don't add up to a story, but Wong's nervy brio and subterranean-fantasy style make for an arresting work about an exotic subculture.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The generosity and gorgeousness with which Aussie writer-director Stephan Elliott (and costume designers Lizzy Gardiner and Tim Chappel) turn this most unlikely road picture into something arresting - if a tad sentimental - in its naive vision of a perfectly tolerant world.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
In the tradition of such food-as-love films as "Eat Drink Man Woman" and "Big Night", kitchen work is idealized as a form of communion in this indulgently nostalgic story -- deep-fried with plot, script, and character cliches but honey glazed with goodwill...- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Gere is terrific at suggesting the kind of addictive cocktail of excitement, panic, chutzpah, creativity, and naked hunger for fame and megabucks that might inspire such big, fat lies.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Fados connects today's leading interpreters with legendary fadistas of the past. And it's the last title to be released under the banner of the venerable New Yorker Films.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Conveys the heaving passion of Puccini's famous love-jealousy-murder-suicide fandango with great cinematic innovation.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Bassett's natural dramatic fierceness, so powerful when incited to action, is at odds with the knee-weakening sexual surrender required by the story.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A weightless movie as cheerily artificial as the Old Navy pitchman's bronze skin tones.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Willful, meandering, and intriguing, this Wuthering Heights is similarly headstrong.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Oct 3, 2012
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A Lebanese variation on sweetly soapy dramas about Women Who Bond With Wet Hair.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
I do wish the movie's ending weren't so squishy. It's been changed from the finale that Sundance audiences saw earlier this year and now reeks of focus-group testing.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Aug 24, 2011
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Here's a scare-the-crap-out-of-you medical thriller about a viral pandemic that will have the immediate post-screening effect of causing a handwashing stampede.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Sep 8, 2011
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Jacquot economically conveys the small, painful sacrifices both lovers -- but particularly the woman -- must make, and the constant, ongoing negotiations of power required to maintain no-strings freedom.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
How exceptional a film actor is Russell Crowe? So exceptional that in Cinderella Man, he makes a good boxing movie feel at times like a great, big picture.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Feb 9, 2011
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The breath of cinematic life, though, the sensibility, the energy, belong to Joel and Ethan Coen, and this is their stirring success.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
André Téchiné's beautifully ambiguous, exquisitely underplayed drama Strayed has less to do with the events and moral choices of the era that continue to shape French identity than with the timeless psychological effects of finding oneself unmoored from the familiar.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Imamura's delight in the infinite oddity of men and women is goofy; it's also, at heart, reverent.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Really, I think we put up with Lars at all only because Gosling has such an affinity for the wounded boy birds he tends to play that it's easy to watch him do his thing.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Miller hit documentary gold when he met Levitch. But this marvelously structured, sensitively edited, deep and compassionate portrait (in atmospheric, made-for-Manhattan black and white) of one man hopscotching a fine line between verbal genius and psychological miswiring is Miller's own jewel, the work of a gifted filmmaker.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
In Tarantino's besotted historical reverie, real-life villains Adolf Hitler and Joseph Goebbels are played as grotesque jokes. The Basterds are played as exaggeratedly tough Jews. The women are femmes fatales.?- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Measured in anything other than biblical cubits, the sum of Babel's many parts turns out to be a picture that suggests Americans ought to stay home and treat their nannies better.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Merida may be a headstrong heroine, a feisty animated hybrid who calls to mind Katniss Everdeen, Bella Swan, and the neo-fairy-tale protagonist who faces off against her evil stepmother in "Snow White and the Huntsman." But she is also, for safety's sake, a nice girl in a pretty green dress who loves her family and believes in dynasty.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 20, 2012
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
For the love of all things sensual and mysterious, see this one on a big screen.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
In such an audience stroker, where casting is everything (on Broadway, James Gandolfini brought exciting menace to the role of Mr. Longstreet), Winslet and Waltz jell while Foster and Reilly flounder, unable to make sense of what kind of people they're supposed to be.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Dec 15, 2011
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- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Feb 16, 2011
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A lot of fun early in the evening, when the Rat Pack ambiance is novel, but gets bleary by 4 a.m. in the story.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
This is no real-life comedy à la "Election" -- more like a valuable, teen-scaled version of the presidential election that currently obsesses us.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Children bumps into a few dead spots along its irreverent way... But casual sophistication and wiggy Australian self-awareness give this product of unreconstructed bourgeois decadence its idiosyncratic charm.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Duplicity doesn't have depth -- but it does have Julia Roberts, in full Hollywood movie-star mode.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The always surprising Watts creates a woman at once contemporary and retro. And Norton, as a producer as well as star, concedes enough space for Schreiber and the effortlessly fascinating Jones to earn their own spotlights.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
What a dull, nice movie, wrenched from a wild premise and battered into docility.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Darkly funny, twisty-cool existential tragicomedy, loaded with smart notions and filmed like a surrealist dream.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Diverges to become something quite powerfully unnerving and guilt-ridden.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Following 2009's "Bluebeard," French filmmaker Catherine Breillat continues her unique and psychologically, erotically daring deconstruction of classic fairy tales and the female condition.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jul 5, 2011
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
In a staring contest with his audience, Solondz never blinks. He picks and picks at the themes that consume him, and he doesn't care who stays and who leaves. Me, I'm rapt.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
For all its wispy fun, Small Time Crooks still tilts, with little-guy stubbornness, at windmills in Allen's mind.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Ang Lee's bloody but dramatically anemic depiction of the American Civil War as fought by boys without uniforms.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A traffic map of calls and responses, lessons and homework, wishes and fulfillment. All roads lead to acting-award nominations, but none lead to truth.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
This is a pretty, surface-y documentary rather than the kind of exciting one Vreeland would have demanded, declaring, "You gotta have style!"- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Sep 26, 2012
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Each joke and one-liner is a made-for-HBO zinger, each scene with Sandler a reaffirmation of the old friendship between the two successful SNL alums.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The superb screenplay won an award at Cannes this year for good reason.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Because the talk never gets beyond statement making, and because the characters emit none of Chekhov's radiantly lived-in soulfulness, there's plenty of time to appreciate the sun-kissed landscape.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Surprisingly square portrait of avant-garde artist and director Robert Wilson.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Adapting Satrapi's graphic novel about a violinist (Mathieu Amalric) in late-1950s Tehran who's got a broken fiddle and a broken heart and takes to his bed, willing himself to die, the filmmakers rely on expressive eyes to carry a narrative style suitable for a silent movie.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Aug 22, 2012
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Like a blue plate special at a theme diner, Sunshine State comes with a lot of overdone side dishes thrown on the table at the same time.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
With an outstanding screenplay by Brian Koppelman and disciplined direction by Koppelman and David Levien, a story that could have been generic (or worse, scented with flowery bulls---) turns into a precise, honest, and affecting drama.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Funny, ungirdled romp - a buddy picture about buddies who actually know what women want.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Ziplessness has rarely looked so inviting, nor have a couple of actors seemed so much like real people -- attractive, but hardly hunks of perfection -- who happened to get lucky, and are delighted to throw some of their guiltless good fortune our way.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Almodovar is positively mature, adapting a novel by Ruth Rendell so deftly that the plot now also describes the invigorating and sometimes disorienting effects of democracy after long years of repression under the Franco regime.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Underneath, 21 Jump Street is a riot of risks that pay off, the biggest of which might be handing Tatum funny business.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Mar 14, 2012
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Mamet regulars Ricky Jay and Joe Mantegna blend well with Mamet newbie Tim Allen, a treat as a spoiled-rotten aging Hollywood action star.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The tonal elegance of this black comedy set in a dark time -- is boldly dependent on performances that tug at taut lines of moral complexity.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Gray has an artful, understated way of conveying what's going ?on inside, often simply by focusing his camera on Kazan.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
There's a tidiness and affection to this British homage to John Hughes movies.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A stirring action movie -- in the international manner of ''The Fast Runner'' or ''No Man's Land."- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The movie is sometimes profound in its simple, optimistic message of friendship -- and sometimes it's plain simple.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Teasing drama whose relentless good-deed/bad-deed reversals are just interesting enough to make a sinner like me pray for an even more interesting, less symmetrical, less obviously cross-shaped creation.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Ong-Bak (taken from the name of the sacred statue) is delivered raw, with an on-the-fly compositional approach from director Prachya Pinkaew that includes dim lighting and jumbled editing.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
With a slow, relentless buildup focused on sexual humiliation, Compliance intensifies the "requests" put on Sandra, and eventually other employees, to behave immorally in the name of cooperation.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Aug 8, 2012
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A strange, black-and-blue therapeutic drama equally mottled with likable good intentions and agitating clumsiness.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The added value that writer-director Douglas McGrath has in mind is gossip -- and a goggly interest in gossip becomes the glittering gimmick of Infamous.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Like Crazy tells the truth, simply: Love is thrilling. And - just because of the way life happens - sometimes love hurts.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Oct 26, 2011
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A muscular, honorable, unflinching translation of Collins' vision. It's brutal where it needs to be, particularly when children fight and bleed.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Mar 20, 2012
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
When they're good, the Yes Men are astonishing, anarchic sights to behold.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Skarsgard's utter finesse in the role provides a satisfying warmth.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jan 20, 2011
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
In his debut feature, the director is wise enough to move his hand-held camera wherever Steen wants to go.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jan 20, 2011
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The filmmaker of August Evening creates a succession of quiet, elliptical scenes that accrue into an affecting big picture of family ties and immigrant experience.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Don’t miss this astonishingly bleak, inventive, funny, sumptuously designed film.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
This measured bio-production might be viewed as a lesser companion piece to "Vera Drake" -- although in the case of Pierrepoint: The Last Hangman, all the period-piece tastefulness makes for a story more instructive than emotionally tangible.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Nerve-rattling in the best way, the sharp, visceral urban police procedural End of Watch is one of the best American cop movies I've seen in a long time.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Sep 19, 2012
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
There's so much dark material jammed into this complicated, conflicted, challenging, and charismatic man's (Gibson) own noggin that sometimes he knows not, I think, what he's done. Here, behold, Mel Gibson has made the weirdest, most violent movie of the year.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
An Orson Welles-size Gérard Depardieu does gallant work as the town's leftist mayor.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Mar 23, 2011
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
It's as if, in exploring the scars that shape these personalities, Téchiné has forgotten to color in the flesh.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The cockeyed devotion with which writer-director Roger Donaldson dramatizes the story of New Zealand motorcycle legend Burt Munro and his classic 1920 bike in The World's Fastest Indian is in direct proportion to the cockeyed devotion with which Munro himself pursued his lifetime goal of setting a land-speed record at Bonneville Flats, Utah.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The title Ghost in the Shell 2: Innocence is a brain banger. But as sci-fi nomenclature goes, it's easy to read--no twistier, certainly, than "Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow."- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Using the droll, wise stories of Etgar Keret as her guide, Israeli filmmaker Tatia Rosenthal concocts an artful film that expresses deep thoughts, lightly.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Resonant examination of friendship, fame, cultural trends, and the creative process.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Kenan directs with a zingy sense of kids, comedy, fright, and visual perspective. But the movie also shimmers and shakes in all its motion-capture animated beauty with the slyly deep sensibilities of executive producer Robert Zemeckis.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Where "No End" is cool and measured, Taxi is hot, anguished, and sometimes as difficult to watch as pictures of torture ought to be.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Jim Sturgess (Across the Universe) makes a believable cocky lad who signs on for the con; an oddly bewigged Ben Kingsley is fussier and too actorly as his handler.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Slums of Beverly Hills has the kind of big heart, strong voice, vivid look, and original sense of humor many young artists -- particularly young female artists -- don't find until they're riper, and some never find at all.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Everything you've ever loved (or hated) but were afraid to laugh at in Asian martial-arts movies, ''Matrix''-ian bullet-time actioners, and Farrellyesque slapstick comedies -- all rolled into Hong Kong's highest-grossing local production ever.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A funny and intermittently sharp German satire that musters gentle nostalgia for East German communism while mocking the not-so-distant past.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The personalities in this well-drawn family combine to produce subtle new flavors — and in the end, no one is spiced as you’d imagined they’d be.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The Illusionist looks rigorously styled and measured, and every one of Norton's postures feels chosen. Yet the interesting actor has chosen so thoughtfully that we're riveted.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Each and every character in Christopher Guest's latest hilarious cultural corrective is something inspiring to behold.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Miracle -- the title taken from TV announcer Al Michaels' famous game-clinching cheer, ''Do you believe in miracles? Yes!'' -- wins not when it exhorts by word but when it shows by action.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Bon Voyage arrives like one of those old soldiers who stumbles from his hiding place unaware that the war is over and the world has changed -- and with it, French cinema.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
This is a character study more than a forward-moving drama, plopped down with exquisite photographic care in a beautiful New Mexico desert, and starring good actors who make a feast of their flavorful roles.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
It's a thin line between 20th-century Nazism and 21st-century corporate culture in Heartbeat Detector, Nicolas Klotz's rewardingly chilly psychological thriller.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Walking and Talking is saved from utter banality by a script dotted with occasional buoyant moments of tenderness and wit, as well as by the light touch of its attractive cast.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A dark and hilarious thwomping of the whole miserablist British gangster genre.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Oct 27, 2010
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
And for a movie that stars acts of God, this work of mortals provides surprisingly little liftoff. The stuff that whips through the angry skies in Twister is the most exciting part of the spectacle. Essentially, we're turned on by debris.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A loony attack on wacko liberalism and a ding-dong defense of wacko conservatism.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Toni Collette gives it the old "Little Miss Sunshine" try in The Black Balloon as an edge-of-kooky, very pregnant mama presiding over a chaotic household.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
There is also a manufactured symmetry, an every-gal's-got-issues roundness, an HBO sitcomitude to the movie that undercuts its own observational intelligence.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
X2 sparkles with a lightness of spirit that was missing from ''X-Men.''- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
True to his stolid, humanist instincts and characteristically stodgy directorial style, writer-director John Sayles creates a story more educational than engrossing.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The documentary takes on its own engaging shape - one of edgy editorial and political ambivalence.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Too often, Purple Butterfly is as impenetrable as Zhang's placid, obdurate beauty.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
It's not quite the same thrill as glimpsing the man behind the curtain of the great and powerful Oz, but for journalism junkies, the fascination of Page One: Inside The New York Times is something like that.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 15, 2011
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The rare footage of '50s and '60s L.A. alone is a treasure; the City of Angels has rarely looked so hip. Bonus: cool music from the likes of Charles Mingus and the Velvet Underground.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The nervy style of this newfangled Western, with its eerie, insinuating score by Nick Cave and Warren Ellis, is so effective that long after Pitt and Affleck have left the screen, emotional disturbance lingers like gun smoke.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A satisfying contraption of twists, missteps, and blithe repartee that produces old-fashioned, honestly earned guffaws.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
If all this sounds awfully classroom-bound, it isn't -- far from it. Each man's story as he tells it is riveting, truly stranger than fiction, and awesome, too, in the way of unfathomable humans.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
It's worth seeing this stark adaptation of Thomas Hardy's Jude the Obscure just for the extraordinary performance of Christopher Eccleston as Jude Fawley, the stonemason in turn-of-the-century England whose dreams of university scholarship are thwarted. And British telly director Michael Winterbottom sustains a fine atmosphere of dank misery.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The movie is Drew Barrymore's directorial debut (she also plays fellow Hurl Scout Smashley Simpson), and it's clear she's more attuned to grrrlishness than real athletic power.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The class warfare in The Housemade feels dated, but there's something nicely kinky in this lusciously photographed erotic Korean thriller by Im Sang-soo.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jan 20, 2011
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Consider Primer a successful lab experiment with, as they might say in techie chat rooms, significant indie-cred applications, IMHO. Oh, and :-).- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
These guys are not charming; they're horrifying in their ignorance, and they cause real damage. But there's a weird relief to be found in the opportunity to laugh ourselves sick at their expense, if only for an instant.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Nov 10, 2010
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
What matters for today's hero is the good fight, and Gladiator KOs us with a doozy.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Hanna's intriguing, disorienting pleasures - the movie is part poetic dreamscape, part sinister spy saga - lie more in the filmmaking flourishes than in the narrative.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Apr 7, 2011
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Nakedness has rarely looked so...naked. And innately, universally comic.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Spike Lee noisily attempts to place the hunt for real-life serial killer David Berkowitz at the center of a hotheaded sociological fantasy linking disco glitz, punk rebellion, ethnic insularity, sexual craving, and sizzling heat into one rattling chain of urban hysteria.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
There are times (and plenty of them) when Slither slops over from smart, affectionate homage into unmodulated frat goofiness as Gunn cannibalizes so many horror plots with such high spirits.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Neither star is sloppy, but both are loose and mellow -- a couple of pros who know they're the whole show.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Good times and bum times, they've seen it all and they're still here. Lucky us.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
It's the first futuristic disaster movie that's as cute as a button. Which, when all the special effects blow over, is what we Americans like in a monster hit.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
None of this detracts, however, from the terrific piss-and-merlot performances of Channing and Stiles, or from the committed participation of Frederick Weller as a Neil LaBute-era businessman caught in the lounge between two she-devils disguised as businesswomen.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The clammy power of Young Adam lies as much in the frank, emotional nakedness the actors bring to their roles under Mackenzie's care as in the baroque hopelessness of the plot.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Haywire cavorts around the world - Barcelona, Dublin, upstate New York, New Mexico - with Bourne-again energy and timeline shuffles, making only cursory attempts at plot coherence- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jan 18, 2012
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The three are so full-bodied and so powerfully affecting that you're carried along on the pleasure of being in the presence of their extraordinary talent.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Marvelously inventive, often-ironic Israeli storyteller Etgar Keret and his life- and workmate, Shira Geffen, spin in Jellyfish a dreamy, arty, alluringly cockeyed tale involving three unrelated women in Tel Aviv.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The title refers not only to particular music by Beethoven but also to the fictional string quartet of Yaron Zilberman's fussily genteel, overplotted Manhattan tale in which interpersonal stresses build to a crescendo when one of the foursome becomes ill.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Nov 1, 2012
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The best moments in his first movie outing are those that feel most TV-like, just another day in the eternally optimistic undersea society.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Fonteyne edges closer than most to capturing the mysterious rhythms of liaisons -- pornographique, romantique, and otherwise.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The discreet stink of the bourgeoisie perfumes the wonderfully mordant, dry-eyed family saga, The Flower of Evil.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
This patient, perceptive, nonjudgmental love story about age difference is the first to convincingly explain the temporal physics of May-December romances.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
This gallantly imperfect indie pops with attitude.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The film's lures, while undeniable, are synthetic, and we never do learn what fuels all the greed besides pints of beer.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
What feels enjoyably outré in the 1998 coming-of-age novel by Jonathan Ames (creator of HBO's Bored to Death) feels oppressively outré in this deadened, literal adaptation.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Certainly Garden State is a very American specimen of debut indie form, its loose, goof-about scenes of comic melancholy reinforced with the glue of quirkiness over cracks in the narrative development.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
In his elliptical and somewhat loopy drama about the slipperiness of love at any age, French filmmaker André Téchiné uses the sight of scudding motorboats on the waterways around workaday Venice as a visual reinforcement of time as a river.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 27, 2012
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Shaped and softened by producer Ivan Reitman, screenwriters Len Blum and Michael Kalesniko, and director Betty Thomas, however, the movie-star Stern is a defanged tiger, funny but tranquilized.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
By the end of Death at a Funeral's effortful farce about busted British propriety, you may feel that peculiar facial ache that comes from wishing to laugh with no really satisfying release.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Only when you look closer do you realize that While You Were Sleeping exhibits precious few genuine feelings. It's a movie cranked out by machine, about supposedly delightfully idiosyncratic characters who only do what they do because the highly structured plot requires it.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Working from a script by his wife, Sarah Koskoff, "High Fidelity" actor-turned-director Todd Louiso shapes the movie to Lynskey's rhythms.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Sep 5, 2012
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