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 3.5 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
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The troubles are broad, the plot twists giant, and the performances cheery in this carol to ethnic pride in Chicago's traditionally Latino Humboldt Park.- Entertainment Weekly
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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
Part punk-drab British art-house portrait of underclass despair, part bloody vigilante pic, Harry Brown is shakily held together by industrial-strength sound design and the expertly employed theatrics of Michael Caine in the title role.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Director Ira Sachs moves to the rhythms of his native Memphis, teasing emotional resonance out of geography.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Mostly about slapping together a bunch of clichés -- outdated clichés at that -- regarding the loneliness of ambitious women.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Moreau's few ripe scenes are choice, and she spices up the joint with her gravelly voice of je ne regrette rien.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
In one rotten production -- all involved have managed to create the most unlikable, man hating, woman hating, unfunny idiots since ''Whipped'' ended up on worst movie lists last year.- 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
The best thing going for Selena is Selena herself, played with verve, heart, and a great deal of grace by the increasingly busy Jennifer Lopez (Money Train, Jack, Blood & Wine).- 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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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Great, restrained performances of Beatty and Schreiber, delicately framed by the filmmaker's taste for visual compositions.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The chief frustration of this otherwise well-made, well-acted, well-heeled picture -- a movie classy in its artful modesty, with every detail of plot and period furnishings lovingly conceived, every lick of jazz-influenced score true to the times -- is that it is so very self-absorbedly graceful about something so very insular and...unremarkable.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A failing-grade comedy about the wishful triumph of high school dorks over high school bullies.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Best of all, there's a lot of Jolie, barrels blazing. The star's fearlessly sexy hauteur is unique in the biz today. And when she works it in Wanted, she kills, bullets optional.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The conclusion of Peter Jackson's masterwork is passionate and literate, detailed and expansive, and it's conceived with a risk-taking flair for old-fashioned movie magic at its most precious.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The inevitable heavy-handed life lessons about jealousy and responsibility are doled out — courtesy of writers raised with Dr. Spock and Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood as spiritual guides. But the creative team also dispatches overeducated parenthood and post-permissive childhood with wry, observant wit.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Brims with life and loveliness even as it meditates on the loss of childhood.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
But it is the steady accretion of hundreds of small moments in this elegant, high-spirited, intensely satisfying production -- the director's third American movie, but the first to approach the dazzle of his Hong Kong stuff -- that, toted up, makes everything right about this des- perately welcome thriller.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Working with an explanatory script by Dean Georgaris, Reynolds is much more confident in scenes of realistic battle, or even muddy marketplace dailiness, than he is with scenes of desire.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Ice Age: The Meltdown blithely looks on the bright side of life, amassing a screen full of vultures to sing and dance ''Food Glorious Food'' and daring us not to get happy.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Goes where all too few films dare to venture these days -- into the heart of moral darkness.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Maybe this well-loved Luke is who his neighbors want him to be, a good fellow who, with his father, reopens the old movie house in town -- the Majestic -- thus allowing his neighbors to dream in the dark again.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A stinker, the more so for the thespian excesses of the accomplished cast.- 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
Waltz With Bashir has transcended the definitions of ''cartoon'' or ''war documentary'' to be classified as its own brilliant invention.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The dramatic power, though, comes entirely from the eloquence of old people, shot in medium close-up, barely moving as they remember things.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A warm and honest portrait of a marriage at its most mysterious, and ordinary.- 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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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
As a horror picture, Blair Witch may not be much more than a cheeky game, a novelty with the cool, blurry look of an avant-garde artifact. But as a manifestation of multimedia synergy, it's pretty spooky.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Noyce's movie works because the director -- trusts himself, and his audience, to understand that catastrophe isn't always a matter of loud ideology. Rather, it's the result of age-old human weakness. And sometimes it's quiet.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A strange history lesson that leaves us more overlectured than properly overwhelmed.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The movie wants so badly to be mentioned in the same breath as "Heathers" or "Election" that it's not even funny. Really, I mean it, this charred-black comedy is not even funny.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The one valuable prize for audiences in this war pic Cracker Jack box is Jude Law. Once again the talented Mr. Law makes more of a role than most movies know what to do with.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The deliriously enjoyable noir comedy-thriller Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang does nothing by halves and everything by doubles.- 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
No worse than any disease-of-the-week TV movie, and no more moralistic than any Lifetime drama. But it's no better, either, and it ought to be.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The movie is a rare uncensored postcard from a ruined place, a document at once depressing and hideously beautiful that sketches the real hardships of trampled people -- specifically women -- with authority and compelling simplicity.- 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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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Feels delightfully organic, eccentrically rambling, the found artistic collage of a woman who herself loves to collect.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
In a world full of off the rack thrillers, it's fine boutique quality.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The nightmare is that the live guys in this Dreamcatcher lose the battle the minute the mechanical worm turns.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
This ill-fitting movie was mail-ordered from an out-of-date catalog of teen-com stereotypes.- Entertainment Weekly
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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
A painfully miscast Parker nervously flips her hair and waves her hands, sitcom-style, as a do-gooding dean of students.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A gaggle of hip actors squander their gifts in this unfunny, out-of-control comedy.- 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
The loveliest moments put both politics and theatrics aside, conveying the strange beauty of a hard life involving little else than fish, water, and gray sky.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The characters are tedious, as are the fussy performances of Bale and Beckinsale. Everything good in this rock & roll fantasy belongs to the sexy, worldly-wise McDormand, who makes Jane ripe, real, and irresistible.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
With sharp riffs on the intersection of '80s pop culture (ALF, Kid 'N Play, Ronald Reagan!) and 21st-century culture (Twitter, Viagra, Second Life!), this Time Machine is a fun dip into a pool of memories that are best forgotten again once the booze wears off.- 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
Jaoui neatly, gently, firmly slips political commentary into Let It Rain's articulate mayhem.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
This insanely busy, exceedingly long, and sometimes endearingly preposterous rendering has simply gotten the directions reversed in its insistence on sticking only to where men-who-make-adventure-flicks have gone before.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
There's unwieldy mess -- but there's also unruly brilliance to this dark and funny story about the havoc that ensues when a man's uncensored Freudian id is allowed the run of the place.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A talent-stuffed assemblage of barbs and giddy musical numbers that shouldn't be written off as a feature flop -- but savored instead for the cult-ready collection of late-night satirical skits and misses it is.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Bong Joon-ho's wildly entertaining saga should become the hip, thinking-person's monster movie of choice.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Mike Myers and Austin Powers may stick to their old Beatle boots, but they've both come a long way, luvvy. For proof, just look at all the A-list celebrities-I-won't-mention happy to crash the party.- 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
Think of Elizabethtown as Cameron Crowe's rambling amateur travelogue, one from a well-liked professional filmmaker momentarily so distracted by private notes scrawled on his souvenir map that he gets lost en route to telling his story of self-renewal. This undershaped, overlong warmedy is an homage to the memory of his late father.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Many have tried, but none can match Malick's touch for shuffling a deck of elegiac images (water/sky/clouds/rain) and fanning out the hand to express what speech cannot; he's a master, too, of incorporating sound that is often wordless but never empty.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The romantic troubles of three Irish-Catholic brothers on Long Island don't amount to a hill of beans in this crazy world.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Requires tremendous restraint not to conclude that this entertainingly apocalyptic mess is about nothing, since it may well be about everything. But I doubt it.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Really, all this movie is about is the joy of checks, calls, folds, rivers, and the acquired thrill of knowing what those words mean.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The Hunted stalks the masculine psyche with sharp knives, but it tracks its audience too noisily to bag us.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The Corporation has better manners and a longer fuse than ''Fahrenheit 9/11.'' But the acerbic, sardonically illuminating Canadian documentary shares with its American cousin a certain bleak leftist glee in pursuit of its cause.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
These tales are as highly designed as fashion layouts. But they're as relaxing to thumb through as those NYT Magazine trend pieces.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Enlightenment is good, Dai acknowledges. But the movie's more provocative assertion is the notion that ignorance was also a kind of bliss.- 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
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
The shallow frat-on-frat rivalry and the poor-boy-loves-rich-girl subplot don't mean a thing. But the stepping does got that swing.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
For Yank color in her soap-bubbly movie, director Daniele Thompson has her pal Sydney Pollack appear as...a famous director.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Kevin Bacon's passionate, sharply drawn portrayal of Billy Magic, a slick, finger-snapping, payola-pocketing disc jockey in early 1960s Cleveland, is the best thing about this conventional but heartfelt semiautobiographical coming-of-age story- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
More than a million people have been displaced in central China in the cause of generating electrical power to meet the needs of the future; Jia's flowing river of a picture washes over a few of them as they adjust to life's currents in the present.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
In Get on the Bus, director and material come together with perfect ease — one of those occasional confluences of subject and strengths that make a moviegoer go, ”Of course!” Of course Spike Lee throws all of his bravado, all his storytelling talents, and all his artistic chutzpah into a movie about last year’s Million Man March.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The movie follows convoluted narrative tracks. By the end of the drowsy journey, the characters are indistinguishable from the scenery.- Entertainment Weekly
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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
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
Robin Williams (yes, I'm afraid so) plays a kind of Manhattan-based Fagin with a touch of Midnight Cowboy to his wardrobe. And ants will play havoc in any cynic's pants as this loopy, goopy fairy tale about a kid looking for his parents oozes to its predictable finish.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The real soullessness here is built into the production, a polished adaptation of Hong Kong-style filmmaking that, with its cast of depressive characters, allows for little Hong Kong-style joy.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
While each Yorkshire playmate-of-the-month warmly assesses her own undewy flesh, the movie gives off a happy vibe of appreciation -- for the dignity of the real Rylstone lot, the actresses who play them so lovingly, and the simple, flower-bed borders of the story.- Entertainment Weekly
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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
Best of all, a revisit with Jedi makes a viewer appreciate spectacle, presentation, mythology -- that, and the power of a bitchin' helmet to speak volumes in a language even an alien can understand. [Special Edition]- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
All I know is that something has gone terribly, drum-beatingly wrong in Congo (Paramount, PG-13), and you can sense Jungle Trouble brewing from the git-go.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
There are mountain tunes as powerful as moonshine to be enjoyed in Songcatcher -- but there's also a mighty mushy heap of corn pone to be swallowed.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Thompson, who also wrote the script, has skittery, baffling fun enjoining her plummy guest actors (including Ralph Fiennes, Rhys Ifans, and Maggie Smith) to play broad Brit types.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Roots matter, is Angelou’s Hallmark-style lesson. So for good measure, novice screenwriter Myron Goble also includes an unsubtle subplot about a candelabra that has been in the family since slaves were freed, thereby throwing one more ingredient into this thick dramatic gumbo.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The new movie is an opulent-bordering-on-hysterical mass of chitchat and chase scenes.- 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
The only real heat among the group comes from Jennifer Connelly, who, as the bad-girl middle daughter, raises the stakes any time she's on screen.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
As for the splendid Spaniard Javier Bardem, now knocking socks off in "No Country for Old Men," his lot is worst of all. He's miscast as the romantic Florentino.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Nothing about this sputtering midlife-crisis family comedy is natural except the timeless notion that even the most latte-tamed baby boomer has the power to reclaim his inner Iron John. Ray Liotta provides the one true blast of comedic energy as the leader of a real, more pugnacious head-butting gang who tangles with the four amigos.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A marvel of warm collaboration and shared jokes about husbands and wives, shot both in dreamscape color and pristine black and white.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
If ''Finding Nemo'' is an awesome Pixar superpower, The Triplets of Belleville is a charming, idiosyncratic, self-governing duchy with huge tourism potential on the other side of the animated-movie planet.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
To a character, every man in this faux-homey burg has been castrated! They're all impotent buffoons!- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Want Jesuitical fineness of argument? Look elsewhere. This one merely answers the prayers of those looking for an argument.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
It's as self consciously arty and fragmented as ''Twin Falls'' was controlled and organically built.- 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
The premise, the structure, and the men-at-twilight conversation in Patrice Leconte's ingratiating drama feel cloyingly predetermined at times, but the sight of Hallyday and Rochefort luxuriating in their contrasting manly personas is a kick.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
There's nothing not to like about the movie, a teensy, hand-crocheted trifle, fitted with embroidered pockets of guest stardom, including Mia Farrow as the nice local lady who wants to see what "Ghostbusters" is all about and "Ghostbusters'" own Sigourney Weaver as a movie-studio corporate meanie, ha-ha.- 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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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The depth of the story and the characters is awfully slight to bear the weight of such fancy editing. But the performances are crisp and in focus, with Cox in particular showing a photogenic feel for expressing grief.- 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
The movie's mortal failing is echoed in the religious medal Pita gives Creasy in a gift of innocent, uplifting love: Finding heft or coherence within all the lugubrious agitation is a lost cause worthy of St. Jude.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
There's fun robot stuff, some good philosophical ideas, and a brief, nutty Willis-Ving Rhames reunion 15 years after "Pulp Fiction."- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A sad-but-hopeful, dramatic-but-gentle fairy tale intentionally made less upsetting for teens.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The premise of the short-story-size comic thriller Don McKay is as thin and crumbly as a corn chip.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
At least some Goode may come from Chasing Liberty: I hope we'll be seeing more of the handsome and unboyish young man with big star potential who looks ready to take on more, not Moore.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Storyboarded with precision, and enhanced with a resonant score by Deborah Lurie, Acker’s handsome, feature-length 9 is, for all its visual flights of fancy, grounded in an apocalypse-proof message graspable by any schoolchild.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Rachel Griffiths...is the best reason, nay, the only reason to pay attention to Me Myself I.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The audience for this grimly disquieting film is, or ought to be, self-selecting.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Lane and Gere mime adult courtship with the efficiency of synchronized swimmers. Yet in this ocean of emotion, they look like they're drowning.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The Other Man is self-conscious, overproduced, overacted Euro-marital hoo-ha.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The script is a steady accretion of small stabs to the heart, propelling the gorgeous performances of Berling, Regnier, and especially the 76-year-old French cinema veteran Bouquet, whose every faint smile is killing.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Undeniably powerful, the work also comes with its own built-in shield against feeling any one character's difficulties too deeply, or for too long.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Some sure symptoms: The movie demonstrates a smart movie geek's obsession with the rhythms and gory details of horror storytelling, undermined by a pompous insistence on spiritual lessons of the tritest kind.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
What matters is that Tiana triumphs as both a girl and a frog, that dreams are fulfilled, wrongs are righted, love prevails, and music unites not only a princess and a frog but also kids and grown-ups.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The Clearing is what's known in the biz as an alternative for adult moviegoers. Which is to say the film is a performance-driven drama devoid of special effects and loud noises. On the contrary, it's a meditation on midlife weaknesses and compensation.- Entertainment Weekly
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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
Congratulations are in order for Rachel's sexual awakening, but we might as well applaud the dull girl for falling in love with the nearest bunch of lilies rather than the florist.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The movie represents an earnest effort to compensate for all the love the media has shown to firefighters and other land-based first responders in recent years with little thought to the Coast Guard; the drama also crashes on wave upon wave of clichés.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Long before the second hour of Australia (which feels like the fifth), it's clear that Luhrmann hasn't found a satisfactory way to make a movie nearly as ballsy -- or coherent -- as he wants his creation to be.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Tim Allen doesn’t do anything new in Jungle2Jungle, but he’s got that Allen-via-Disney persona operating at maximum efficiency.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Perhaps the highest praise that can be given Paltrow is that there are no appreciable performance gaps between her green talents and the rest of the truly top-drawer cast.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Natalie Portman demonstrates tour de force weeping in the back of a taxi as an American searching for her roots in Israel.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
There's an adult life force in every frame of this luxuriously paced work, even in the sight of rain and a lady's stocking.- 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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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
At the bone, Zombieland is a polished, very funny road picture shaped by wisenheimer cable-TV sensibilities and starring four likable actors, each with an influential following.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Afterward, you'll want to listen to the Beatles sing ''She's Leaving Home.'' It might be a girl like Jenny the lads had in mind.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
What's ultimately shocking about Kika is how empty mayhem can be made to look.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Williams turns out to be exactly the wrong candidate for the job, a comedian singularly uninterested in letting anyone else get a word in, but with nothing to say.- 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
The movie's warm advocacy of hospice, with all the dignity such end-of-life care provides, does real, influential good.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Everything about Foster's ocular intensity is riveting, but little in this hushed vigilante drama makes sense.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
As the players enact the fall and rebirth of civilization, Meirelles suggests that even a society gone to hell looks better with a little music-video-like pizzazz.- 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
Simplest of its charms is the opportunity to watch Mortensen adapt his charismatic demeanor of wary, taciturn soulfulness from that of a Middle-earth king-in-waiting to one fitting a half-Lakota horseman in 1890.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A decent disaster pic comes down to the handful of colorful individuals who will live (or, depending on the prominence of their billing, die), as it has since the days of chewy disaster meatballs like ''The Towering Inferno'' and ''Earthquake.'' And the heaviest lifting in Emmerich's production falls to Dennis Quaid and Jake Gyllenhaal.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The screenplay, by Zemeckis and William Broyles Jr., plumps Van Allsburg's simple fable about the purity of childhood faith in what can't be seen with all sorts of wholly invented characters, complications, and declarations.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
It’s an unmitigated nightmare of crude, boorish tripe-and woe unto our nation’s future if kids find it hilarious.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The performances are relaxed. The open-ended, vignette-like structure of the filmmaking sometimes imitates the movement of weary, life-worn men nursing liquor.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
It's not the fault of "The Sopranos" charismatic, beefy star (Gandolfini) that he's an actor of such substance and quiet ardor as to make idle movie star ribbitting look frivolous.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Runs into construction problems, maybe from too many foremen. DeVito favors pushy slapstick; Stiller prefers hotshot sarcasm. Barrymore's comic talents are wasted; she's there for decoration.- 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
As directed by Dwight Little ("Free Willy 2: The Adventure Home," a morph of "The Day of the Dolphin" and "Lassie Come Home"), the tension-to-action sequences unspool efficiently.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Like choral singing and travel photography, this adventure is more fun for participants than it is for spectators.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The brittle, very ''written'' catty quips meant to characterize Washington hypocrisy sound perfunctory; the story of an aging, self-hating homosexual who goes home alone to his lacquered town house feels ancient as well as uncomfortable for the writer-director. (Harrelson seems both game and ill at ease.)- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
''Documentary'' is too impersonal a word and ''visual poem'' is too mushy a phrase to describe Of Time and the City, a short, beautiful, characteristically sublime memory piece by the great British auteur Terence Davies.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
It's got the pleasing proportions of a stocking stuffed with agreeable little treats in the absence of an exciting big surprise.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
When it's dull, which it is too often for a kidnap caper, this movie is about a woman chirping ''notice anything new about my outfit?'' to a man whose idea of style is a jacket not crusted in human blood.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Union, who looks so chic and can talk so bitchy-funny, doesn't so much establish a character as roll out a series of attitudes. That's all she's called on to do. That's all anyone is called on to do: Be very tame, and make much ado about zilch.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
This otherwise entertaining, aficionado-oriented production, with its circus-act technology that lets a viewer feel, briefly, like a member of the Petty racing dynasty, is as gaudily patched with corporate sponsorship as the sport itself.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
FYI, there's zero chemistry between P.S. I Love You's two commodified headliners. P.S.: The plus in the harsh grade goes solely to the divine Lisa Kudrow, delivering desperately needed laughs as the twitchy widow's husband-hunting best friend.- 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
With him (Schwarzenegger), we return to a franchise we never knew we missed, surprisingly grateful for the star's generosity -- and evident pleasure -- in strapping on the old sunglasses and blasting adversaries to hell.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A vinegary fable with a Splenda aftertaste -- is a harbinger of hope not only for future feminist comedies of any grit but also for ''SNL''-staffed feature films that don't disproportionately suck.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The movie implodes, with each actor less vivid than he or she ought to be and each character less connected to the others than necessary for such an arbitrary plot.- 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
There's piercing sadness, and fury, too, in this Everyman's isolation, and Cantet is singularly skilled at evoking the universal condition of such tragic ordinariness.- 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
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
Radio is assembled from small, hard stones of ignorance and intolerance paved over by large, mushy examples of community goodness.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The story is timeless; this could have taken place when Doyle graduated in '76 -- or any year, really, since the effects of high school linger throughout adult life and nerds are forever.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Van Damme and his cronies (including Lela Rochon, Paul Sorvino, and, for no immediately graspable reason, Rob Schneider as Van Damme's rabbity sidekick) race, speed, shoot, chop, and zip through scenes of such festive mayhem, plot is a clunky afterthought, like a lopsided fake Prada label on a cheap nylon knapsack.- Entertainment Weekly
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- 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
Another grotty drama about junkie love? Well, yes...I make an exception for Jesus' Son.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
There's nothing particularly revolutionary about writer-director Robert Edwards' grimly satiric political fable.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
We're in David Mamet World. William H. Macy -- the quintessential player of Mamet men in all their impacted rage -- stars in this claustrophobic adaptation.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Smith profiles five extraordinary American homes, and because the owners seem fully aware of the uses and abuses of fame, it's a pleasure to enjoy their eccentricities.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
This movie is as packed with flashy bogusness as a lead singer's tight leather trousers. On the other hand, there's nothing bogus about the charisma and tough sweetness of Wahlberg.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
What's new and nutty, though, is the physical comedy of Jackie Chan as Fogg's manservant.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
There's something almost too controlled, cerebral, and overdetermined about Winterbottom's Western notions.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A slight romantic comedy about five winsome Australian university students who fret and joke about their romantic woes when not talking about movies and cinematic theories. Each has a charming quirk — one (Frances O’Connor) is a cute lesbian, another (Alice Garner) is writing a thesis on Doris Day — but none is deeper than a bag of Reese’s Pieces.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Who knows whether the project is meant to be earnest, ironic, post-ironic, made for adults, made for kids, made to teach lessons, or made to be watched in an altered state? All or none...jeez, this thing is one bumpy ride.- Entertainment Weekly
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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
But while this piquant, tapas-like movie (a 2003 film- festival favorite only now being released) asserts that landscape is a kind of destiny from which one cannot escape, Sorin takes delighted, serious interest in how far a person can advance psychologically, even if all roads lead back to a home at the end of the world.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
"The Station Agent's" Peter Dinklage provides diversion as a gay wedding planner.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The movie, directed with a gym teacher's whistle by "Scooby-Doo's" Raja Gosnell, is a contempo soft-focus remake of the 1968 original starring Lucille Ball and Henry Fonda.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
As ungainly in its jammed-together East-meets-West-ness as Steven Seagal in a yoga pose.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Almodóvar's masterwork, is a spectacular synthesis of everything that has always interested him -- proud women, lovely boys, beautiful drag queens, grand movie stars, gorgeous frocks, wild wallpaper .- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The Promotion edges toward some pretty bleak stuff. Then it steps back and laughs, like an office slacker.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
As the reigning inhabitant, Redgrave adopts the swanning gestures of Maggie Smith in this mild adaptation of a Maeve Binchy story.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
If you see only one comic love story from Kazakhstan this year, choose this prize-winning honey.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
That Annaud and his deft production team create believable dramatic characters without compromising the dignity of the animals they've borrowed as stars -- is the striking (and sometimes unnerving) achievement of a film that also swoops and loops through fairytale hoops.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Overly fussy and self-conscious in its noir details. But in The Missing Person, Buschel makes striking use of the Mike Hammer/Philip Marlowe tradition.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The movie luxuriates in cinema references while laughing at its own fetishes -- a neat talent.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
This stunning movie -- one of the very best of the year -- makes a much read American classic feel new and freshly devastating.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
It's a buoyant, old-wave disaster pic for a generation of well-conditioned thrill seekers charmed by the revelation that Richard Dreyfuss really is the Red Buttons of our day.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The very opposite of a storybook romance, and also the very model of a great comedy for our values-driven time.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Enchanted is festooned with extravagant set pieces -- there's a great number in praise of romantic gestures, and a ballroom scene to make even grown-up girls swoon.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
There may be nothing more fun for actors than experimental exaggeration, especially when filming on a Caribbean island. But there’s nothing that makes an audience feel less welcome than not being in on the joke.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
To fully savor Jonas Brothers: The 3D Concert Experience, it's best to watch with an audience overwhelmingly populated by girls and young women.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
This galvanizing cinematic work is also gorgeous, experimental, alive with a Scandinavian strain of chutzpah, and artistically elegant.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The goons themselves, though, look rather chic, flying through the air in Galliano-goes-to-hell garments straight out of Vampire Vogue.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Educational and upstanding, a little overacted and more than a little overdramatized. But it's honorable.- 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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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
You could trawl the seven seas and not net a funnier, more beautiful, and more original work of art and comedy than Finding Nemo.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Writer-director Salvatore Stabile has a good eye for the details of hard-luck ordinariness, and he sketches believable family bonds with a minimum of flourish.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
To Winn-Dixie's great credit, both as a book and as a dandy, dignified movie, there's nothing condescendingly lesson-like in the wisdom India acquires.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The most unexpectedly audacious, exhilarating, wildly creative adventure thriller I've seen in ages.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
TV's ''I Spy'' knew how to swing. The movie 'I Spy knows only how to scramble and string together moments of Murphy braggadocio and Wilson stoner-ocity, and the sweat shows.- 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
Noyce honors the story best by standing back (and getting Kenneth Branagh, as a supercilious official, to stand back, too): Noyce lets the landscape and the untrained young actresses own the screen, particularly the naturally magnetic Everlyn Sampi.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
By not trying too hard, this remake of a dumb movie has got spring in its step. The bounce is on us.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Not your average divorce gift: Clean's writer-director Olivier Assayas created the role of recovering rock-world druggie Emily Wang for his ex-wife, art-house/action-pic royalty Maggie Cheung (In the Mood for Love).- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Bestows generous blessings on all that's good in Englishness, in moviedom, and, of course, in cheese.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
A conflicted entertainment, compromised by trying too hard to impress the restless, self-referential adults in the audience.- 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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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The big underachiever turns out to be DeVito, who is incapable of exhibiting believable warmth and complexity, or, indeed, of playing anyone who is not a cartoon.- 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
The Stoning of Soraya M.'s drawn-out torture sequence is harrowing and lurid.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
In hovering, The Squid and the Whale becomes its own realistic display of family entropy, as cautionary as it is educational.- 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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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Nightwatch is a horror for reasons that have nothing to do with suspenseful moviemaking.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Nothing I've read about Iraq or seen on TV in the past few weeks has felt nearly as real and intimate as this commanding fiction.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Hancock can revel in schmuckery, of course, because you and I and cute kids and peaceful oldies worldwide know in advance that there's no way on Hollywood's green earth Will Smith will ever play someone seriously, dangerously unsavory.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The charms of Evans (from 1995's oddball Funny Bones) and Lane (who's at his best playing to the balcony) are lost in all the detailed hubbub.- 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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- 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
The incisive, close up photography by ''The Sixth Sense'''s Tak Fujimoto outclasses the story by yards.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Known for distinctive horror movies like "Cure" and "Pulse," inventive Japanese filmmaker Kiyoshi Kurosawa finds just the right melancholy tone to suit a new and all too familiar kind of horror: economic downsizing.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
This jovial tour through changing attitudes toward cannibis is so plugged into pothead logic that the opening credits are rerun at the end.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
If your allergy to comedies bred from British style mugging crossed with Disney style prancing has, like mine, flared up in recent years, this hybrid from writer director Joel Hershman (''Hold Me, Thrill Me, Kiss Me'') will make you wheeze.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
And although director Paul Anderson treats the story with appropriate deadpan respect, there are enough sparks of humor (particularly generated by Linden Ashby as a shallow martial-arts actor who worries that he's a fake, with good reason) to amuse the adults accompanying the 10-year-old boys in the audience.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Hersonski quietly and insistently unravels reality from "reality"; her commitment to archival authenticity is its own tribute to those no longer able to testify.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Until he wraps things up much too neatly and idealistically, Koepp puts together a sturdy and efficient thriller.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Had the ghost of Paul Lynde swanned by in a caftan-clad cameo, you couldn't find a more outdated, miscalculated collection of stale, queen-size stereotypes than those trotted out on this ship of fools.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Like everything else in this superb work of art, ''Shrinking Lover'' is exquisitely Almodóvarian. It's funny, tender, a little shocking, and it pays homage to what we know about movies: that they can move us beyond words.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Don't be fooled: In this unpeaceable kingdom, the den mama is also ready to eat her young.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Although the big picture itself gets mushy, the small moments, especially involving Fey, are sharp.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Pushes and pushes and pushes the emotional throttle without respite.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
The superb character actor Celia Weston (In the Bedroom) is truly breathtaking as Ronnie's boozer mom.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Lisa Schwarzbaum
Plays out like a variation on an old design dictum: If you can't make it good, make it big.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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