Lou Lumenick
Select another critic »For 2,489 reviews, this critic has graded:
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46% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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52% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 9.4 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Lou Lumenick's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 56 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | The Band Wagon | |
| Lowest review score: | Dirty Cop No Donut | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,242 out of 2489
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Mixed: 549 out of 2489
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Negative: 698 out of 2489
2489
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- New York Post
- Posted Jul 16, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
Thomas Vinterberg (“The Celebration”) directs with restraint that makes the story all the more affecting.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 11, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
De Niro mostly looks miserable and very tired (a document glimpsed on-screen hilariously claims his character was born in 1970) and prattles on endlessly about forgetting the past.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 11, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
There’s no shortage of brains, brawn, eye candy, wit and even some poetry in this epic battle between massive lizard-like monsters and 25-story-high robots operated by humans.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 10, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
This romantic dramedy tries to cram enough plot twists for a season’s worth of TV episodes into an hour and a half, but is still worthwhile for its fine performances, including the best work that Greg Kinnear and Jennifer Connelly have done in quite a while.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 4, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
Coogan is often very funny as the libertine Raymond, whose real estate holdings made him one of the UK’s richest men at the time of his death in 2006. But tragedy simply is beyond his range at this point.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 4, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
The sad truth is these durable 80-year-old characters, who peaked with a 1950s TV series, never even come to life in this bloated, misshapen mess, a stillborn franchise loaded with metaphors for its feeble attempts to amuse, excite and entertain.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 2, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
Nothing in Redemption quite adds up, including the paranoid hero’s insistence that he’s being watched by drones.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 28, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
A rare dud from great Spanish director Pedro Almodóvar, I’m So Excited! is a campy, sex-obsessed spoof of airborne-disaster movies that never really gets off the ground.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 28, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
The Heat, which provides enough opportunity for wholesale mayhem as well as laughs, is pretty much a guaranteed crowd-pleaser.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 27, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
You couldn’t ask for a more fun summer popcorn movie than White House Down.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 26, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
It’s not exactly giving away anything to reveal that Stamp also sings three numbers in Unfinished Song — the last one so stirring that you should bring at least one box of Kleenex.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 20, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
Less an awful movie than a totally uninspired one. The under-5 set may find it funny, though I suspect their parents will be checking their watches a lot, as I did.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 20, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
What makes Storm Surfers 3-D mesmerizing is jaw-dropping footage shot inside brute waves that’s unlike any I’ve ever seen before.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 13, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
Deploying an impeccable American accent, Brit Henry Cavill may be as charming as the late great Christopher Reeve.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 10, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
Silly enough for you? Did I mention that the immortal Ken Jeong of “The Hangover’’ plays God, who gets mighty pissed when hubby accidentally shoots Jesus out of the sky?- New York Post
- Posted Jun 6, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
The first filmed Shakespeare comedy in decades that’s actually funny.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 6, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
After a wickedly promising start, this pointed political satire quickly deteriorates into a fairly routine, if sporadically quite effective, home-invasion thriller.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 6, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
Basically, this is Smith and his real-life son, Jaden (both affecting ridiculous mid-Atlantic accents) talking the audience to death for something like 90 minutes before the closing credits.- New York Post
- Posted May 29, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
For my money, Furious 6 is more fun than “Skyfall" and a lot more fun than the deadly dull “Star Trek Into Darkness,’’ both of which ask you to take their silly plots way too seriously.- New York Post
- Posted May 23, 2013
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- New York Post
- Posted May 18, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
The only darkness here — besides the dingy-looking images dimmed by 3-D glasses — is the murky plot, which is as silly as it is arbitrary.- New York Post
- Posted May 14, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
The various witnesses tell contradictory tales that turn this into a real-life “Rashomon." The fact that two of the principals — Sarah and Michael, who delivers touching and eloquent on-camera narration that he wrote himself — are accomplished actors adds another level of confusion and interest that help make this compelling storytelling.- New York Post
- Posted May 9, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
While Greenwood and Posey turn on enough charm to make this a fairly painless experience, Zack Bernbaum’s And Now a Word From Our Sponsor is a mild, toothless satire — a “Being There’’ where there’s barely any there there.- New York Post
- Posted May 9, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
Baz Luhrmann’s The Great Gatsby is the first must-see film of Hollywood’s summer season, if for no other reason than its jaw-dropping evocation of Roaring ’20s New York — in 3-D, no less.- New York Post
- Posted May 7, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
The overall effect tends to be as chilly and monotonous as Shannon’s demeanor as Kuklinski — a real disappointment.- New York Post
- Posted May 2, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
Love Is All You Need is entirely predictable, and that’s OK in a film as lovingly made, well acted and enjoyable as this.- New York Post
- Posted May 2, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
The agent in this interesting little thriller — well played by John Cusack — is up to the Company’s usual dirty tricks.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 26, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
Mud runs over two hours, climaxing with a shootout that belongs in a different movie. It’s a rare misstep in an art-house movie that will pull mainstream audiences along as inexorably as the Mississippi River. Go see it.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 25, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
One of the best films released so far this year, At Any Price signals the arrival of Iranian-American Ramin Bahrani in the ranks of major US directors.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 25, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
“I’d rather gouge my eyes out with hot spoons!’’ De Niro exclaims at one point. I’m not sure exactly what he was talking about, but I’d like to think it referred to the prospect of being forced to watch The Big Wedding.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 25, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
Whatever the unanswered mysteries of Jay’s personal life, just watching this magician’s hands at work with a deck of cards is positively mesmerizing.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 18, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
As far as I’m concerned, death couldn’t arrive quickly enough for these eight stereotypically self-absorbed Los Angelenos gathered for Sunday brunch at which the hosts (Blaise Miller, Erinn Hayes) plan to announce the demise of their marriage.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 11, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
42 may not be a home run, but it’s certainly a solid three-base hit as worthy family entertainment.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 11, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
Gandolfini acquits himself well in a rare big-screen lead as the depressed operator of a rinky-dink amusement park in the waning days of winter.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 5, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
The disappointing The Company You Keep consistently stretches credulity way past the breaking point in its depiction of journalism, police procedure and political activism.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 4, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
Though it tries — with a much too heavy hand — the new Evil Dead is far less humorous than its predecessor.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 4, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
The hippie heroine of this wacky Aussie comedy cheerfully theorizes that Australia was actually originally settled not by convicts but by mental patients — which may possibly explain the antics of Russell Crowe and Nicole Kidman, among others.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 28, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
A long, tedious and often unintentionally hilarious adaptation of Stephenie Meyer’s sci-fi follow-up.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 28, 2013
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- New York Post
- Posted Mar 24, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
Although the golden-hued cinematography (a filming cliché that really needs to be retired) and the sometimes slack direction by Marc Evans are minuses, Hunky Dory does deliver in the musical department.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 22, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
Love and Honor may be politically clueless, but Hemsworth and the student journalist he hooks up with (fellow Aussie Teresa Palmer of “Warm Bodies’’) do make an undeniably attractive couple.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 22, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
She’s (Fey) so good that — up to a point — you can ignore Paul Weitz’ erratic direction and a patchy script, both of which clumsily handle shifts between comedy and drama.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 21, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
If I Were You has more than its share of laughs, but director Joan Carr-Wiggin needed to cut half an hour to make this fly without interest flagging. She had the exact same problem with her last movie, “A Previous Engagement.’’- New York Post
- Posted Mar 14, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
Steve Carell is fatally miscast as an arrogant, flamboyant third-rate magician in The Incredible Burt Wonderstone, which by all rights should have been a second-rate Will Ferrell vehicle.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 14, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
Admittedly, I’m far from a fan of Korine’s “Gummo,’’ “Julien Donkey-Boy’’ and the absymal “Trash Humpers.’’ But that he is proud of making intentionally sloppy and tedious movies doesn’t make them any easier to watch. Or all that much fun, for that matter.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 14, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
“Let’s show ’em some good old-fashioned American swagger,’’ MacArthur says on his arrival in Tokyo. It’s too bad director Webber and the screenwriters, David Klass and Vera Blasi, didn’t take his advice to heart instead of largely wasting Jones and some very nice period details.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 7, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
Save your money and wait for the new 3-D version of the 1939 classic that Warner Bros. has promised for later this year.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 6, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
Todd Robinson’s Phantom gives us a couple of things we haven’t seen in a while: the great Ed Harris and a Cold War submarine thriller. It’s not something you want to plunk down $12 for, but just diverting enough to check out when it arrives on Netflix Instant.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 28, 2013
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- New York Post
- Posted Feb 21, 2013
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- New York Post
- Posted Feb 13, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
Actually, Bruce, what stinks is the script — which is woefully lacking the kind of one-liners and memorable bad guys that helped make working-class hero McClane so iconic he’s still around after 25 years. Even the action sequences are pretty much by the numbers this time.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 13, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
So feeble it fails even as train-wreck exploitation. I’d be unkind, but not entirely inaccurate, to label Coppola’s sophomoric, er, sophomore effort as a director an offer you can refuse.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 7, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
I walked out of Steven Soderbergh’s Side Effects thinking to myself, “Finally, a mainstream 2013 movie I can whole-heartedly recommend’’ — then quickly added, “well, except that it will probably piss off a sizeable portion of the target audience.’’- New York Post
- Posted Feb 7, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
An entertaining if nonsensical variation on Hill's greatest hit from that bygone era, "48 Hrs.''- New York Post
- Posted Jan 31, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
Koch ends with the former mayor showing off a typically flamboyant gesture that embodies his contradictions - choosing to be buried in a Christian cemetery in his beloved Manhattan, complete with an already erected tombstone proclaiming his Jewish identity.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 31, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
If you mashed-up the worst parts of the infamous "Howard the Duck,'' "Gigli,'' "Ishtar'' and every other awful movie I've seen since I started reviewing professionally in 1981, it wouldn't begin to approach the sheer soul-sucking badness of the cringe-inducing Movie 43.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 25, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
An exceedingly dull and stillborn attempt to update the Brothers Grimm.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 25, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
Dan Schechter's no-budget comedy about the romantic and professional travails of a pair of financially struggling film editors offers a few laughs, all served up on eyeball-gougingly ugly digital video.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 24, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
Parker is watchable chiefly for Statham, who exudes effortless cool and excels in hand-to-hand combat, as well as demonstrating his skill at wielding some very unlikely weapons.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 24, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
Beautifully photographed over the four seasons - including Christmas, for the park's century-old bird census - Birders: The Central Park Effect is full of grace notes.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 17, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
Perhaps the most fascinating vintage footage...depicts what happened in 1961 when the city sent police into Washington Square Park to stop the longtime Sunday practice of singing without a required permit.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 17, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
To put it as positively as possible, there's never a dull moment in this flick - and that's not something you can take for granted at this time of the year. At the same time, though, there's rarely a believable moment in the script.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 17, 2013
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- New York Post
- Posted Jan 11, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
O'Brien also provided the lethargic direction and collaborated with Messina on the cliché-infested script, which is long on booze-filled confessions.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 10, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
The tin-earned dialogue and haphazard plotting are more reminiscent of Tarantino's frequent collaborator Robert Rodriguez.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 10, 2013
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- Lou Lumenick
Anything following that spectacular sequence is bound to be something of a letdown - especially when it ends up playing like standard-issue Hollywood melodrama.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 20, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
The acting is OK, but none of the leads has the kind of sizzle that might have turned this into something as special as another film set roughly in the same era, "Diner.''- New York Post
- Posted Dec 20, 2012
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- New York Post
- Posted Dec 20, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Like the fictional Clarice Starling in "The Silence of the Lambs,'' Maya is a consummate professional who brilliantly performs her job in an often hostile work environment.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 18, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Piles on enough eye candy and action sequences to please fans, plus more humor than the three "Rings" films - even if it only occasionally achieves the trio's grandeur.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 11, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Nuanced work by the great John Slattery ("Mad Men") as an emotionally distant dad isn't enough to sustain more than sporadic interest in Brian Savelson's underwritten, slow-moving indie, which plays distressingly like a photographed off-Broadway drama.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 7, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Half as long and twice as much fun as the self-important "Lincoln," Roger Michell's charming sex-and-politics comedy Hyde Park on Hudson is basically a frothy tabloid take on presidential history. And for my money, that's a good thing in a season filled with puffed-up prestige pictures.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 7, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
There's nothing you haven't seen before - and better - in Deadfall, which would seem to appeal mostly to fans of snowmobile chases.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 7, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
The extra money has bought a professional crew for scripted sequences, in which Jonathan and his mother too often mug for the camera.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 29, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Slicker than most attempts to document Monroe's successes and tragic trajectory, but even her own words don't provide much more of an insight into what made this troubled icon tick.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 29, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Even at his best, Sharma doesn't have sufficient acting chops - or enough Hanks-like charisma - to hold the screen alone for more than 70 minutes with the CGI Richard Parker (as well as a zebra, a hyena, an orangutan and a rat who quickly become food for the ravenous tiger).- New York Post
- Posted Nov 21, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Ultimately fails to make its case that five teenagers were sent to jail for a crime they didn't commit solely because of institutional racism.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 21, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
With much help from an exasperated off-screen prompter - the only other performer in this small gem - Plummer's Barrymore shows flashes of glory as he delivers bits and pieces of various Shakespearean roles.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 15, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
As cleverly adapted by Tom Stoppard, this is an Anna Karenina that's pretty much guaranteed to polarize audiences.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 15, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Jennifer Lawrence's smart, funny and altogether masterful performance as a troubled widow in David O. Russell's Silver Linings Playbook simply blows away the competition in this year's race for the Best Actress Oscar.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 15, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
It's a must-see for Daniel Day-Lewis' charismatic, subtly shaded performance as Lincoln - and an even richer one by Tommy Lee Jones.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 8, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Walken was largely typecast in quirky roles as a result of playing the title character's brother in "Annie Hall," so it's something of a delightful irony that 35 years later, Walken finds his most rewarding role leading a terrific ensemble in what amounts to one of the best Woody Allen movies that Allen wasn't involved in making.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 1, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
The Oscar-winning director of "Rain Man" - whose last film, the abysmal documentary "PoliWood" never went much further than the Tribeca Film Festival - demonstrates he can make a shakycam found-footage horror movie every bit as fake-looking, clumsy and unscary as your average college student working on a $200 budget.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 1, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
That 20-minute white-knuckle sequence - which includes Washington's character, Whip Whitaker, flipping the plane upside down to pull out of a tailspin - is by far the most effective part of director Robert Zemeckis' first live-action film since the underrated "Cast Away" 12 years ago.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 1, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Like with any great singer, it's often the telling pauses of the man born Anthony Benedetto that say the most in The Zen of Bennett.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 26, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
The surfing sequences are some of the best I've ever seen in a film, and the re-creation of Jay's climactic battle to ride El Nino-driven waves is real white-knuckle stuff...But neither Curtis Hanson ("L.A. Confidential") nor the fellow veteran director who replaced him when Hanson took ill, Michael Apted ("Gorillas in the Mist"), can do much with the hokey sequences on land.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 25, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
The posthumous campaign to polish Michael Jackson's tarnished reputation continues apace with this Spike Lee infomercial, commissioned by Sony and the money-grubbing Jackson estate to promote the 25th anniversary of his 1987 album "Bad.''- New York Post
- Posted Oct 19, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
The sort of enigmatic movie that many critics embrace because it's open to endless interpretation.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 19, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
The very sex-positive The Sessions treats intimacy with an explicitness and honesty that's very rare in movies. It may be the first film that doesn't turn premature ejaculation into a punch line.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 19, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Low on raunch but even lower on laughs. It also looks like half the lighting crew failed to show up.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 14, 2012
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- New York Post
- Posted Oct 11, 2012
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- New York Post
- Posted Oct 11, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
A blue-chip Oscar contender that's also a rousing popcorn movie, Ben Affleck's Argo offers plenty of nail-biting thrills as well as funnier scenes than you'd ever imagine possible in the grim context of the Iran hostage crisis.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 11, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
While there are laughs, the farcical elements of The Oranges are not presented with sufficient discipline to live up to the full potential of its cast. But as a seven-year veteran of the New Jersey suburban experience, I can testify that it nails the milieu's specifics.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 5, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
When Neeson engages in bare-knuckle fisticuffs at the climax of the cartoonish Taken 2, I honestly couldn't figure out if the 60-year-old actor was actually present at all except for the close-ups.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 5, 2012
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- New York Post
- Posted Oct 5, 2012
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- New York Post
- Posted Sep 28, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
An indie-inflected popcorn movie with major brains, brilliant acting and a highly satisfying payoff, Looper is the first must-see movie of the season.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 27, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
The acting is first-rate, and remarkably there's no sense that the sometimes tough material (which barely skirts an R rating) has been watered down to make it more palatable for a wider audience. I just wish Chbosky had changed that terrible title for the movie.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 21, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
America Ferrara ("Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants'') turns in an image-changing role as a tough lesbian officer who develops a grudging admiration for our heroes.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 20, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
The Manzanar Fishing Club has enough interesting footage for perhaps a 15-minute segment of a TV news magazine. Beyond that, my eyes started to glaze over with endless talk about rods, reels and bait.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 13, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
It's a sharply written, unforgettably directed character study with brilliant performances by Joaquin Phoenix, Philip Seymour Hoffman and Amy Adams - far more intimate but no less intense than director Paul Thomas Anderson's Oscar-winning last film, "There Will Be Blood.''- New York Post
- Posted Sep 11, 2012
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- New York Post
- Posted Sep 7, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Good acting and some very good scenes don't quite add up to a good film.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 7, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
The acting, script and direction - not to mention the syrupy score - conspire to make this a perfect storm of a hoot that will find its most appreciative audience among renters who have had a few glasses of wine beforehand.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 7, 2012
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- New York Post
- Posted Aug 30, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Side by Side is an eye-opening, comprehensive look at the biggest technological revolution in Hollywood history. One huge irony is that digital formats are evolving so rapidly that the only foolproof way to archive and preserve a movie shot on video for future generations is . . . to transfer it to film.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 30, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
It's hard to make a movie about moonshiners that isn't entertaining, but the lethargic, generically titled Lawless comes perilously close - at least a third of its two hours is devoted to "arty'' shots of landscapes.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 29, 2012
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- New York Post
- Posted Aug 23, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Burt Reynolds and Sally Field they're not, but you could do worse for mindless late-summer entertainment than Dax Shepard and Kristen Bell in Hit & Run.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 23, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
The feature directorial debut of Jake Schreier, has a smart script by C.D. Ford and an impressive supporting cast.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 17, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
ParaNorman is probably the year's most visually dazzling movie so far, and the stunning climax centering on an 11-year-old witch (Jodelle Ferland) is too good to spoil.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 17, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
More fun and somewhat more coherent than its Sylvester Stallone-directed predecessor, The Expendables 2 serves up a planeload of thickly sliced, well-aged beef and ham amid lots of stuff getting blown up.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 17, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Disappointingly, Bourne never resurfaces in this less-than-satisfying series reboot. The film is more a talky, convoluted, action-starved two-hour subplot.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 10, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Hope Springs could have been unbearably schmaltzy or crude. Instead, in the hands of these expert actors and filmmakers, it's a warm and wryly affecting mid-summer treat.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 8, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
I'd call Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Dog Days harmless if it weren't for some totally unnecessary gay-panic jokes that could actually encourage bullying.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 3, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
It may have the faintest relationship to any kind of reality, but Jones' tart performance cuts through the saccharine.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 3, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Klown turns out to be one long, brutal life lesson for Hvam's hapless character until it finally crosses the line into just plain creepy at the end.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 27, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
If Ruby were more of a person than a character, we might care more for her plight. But like Calvin, Kazan has written herself into a corner that can only lead to embracing the sappy romantic clichés that Ruby Sparks tries half-heartedly to mock.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 27, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
The Siegels make the Kardashians and Donald Trump look like tasteful pikers when it comes to egregiously conspicuous consumption, sheer hubris and utter refusal to take responsibility for their actions.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 20, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Christopher Nolan's dramatically and emotionally satisfying wrap-up to the Dark Knight trilogy adroitly avoids clichés and gleefully subverts your expectations at every turn.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 18, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Pinto's lack of dramatic range (she basically has two expressions) and an awkward third act do not provide a solid foundation for Hardy's tragic ending.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 13, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
The best evidence of this troubled man's genius is provided by ample samples of his music, much of which will be familiar to fans of Warner Bros. cartoons from the '30s and '40s.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 13, 2012
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- New York Post
- Posted Jul 13, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Even in an underwritten role, the delightful Madsen shines in her best performance since her comeback role in "Sideways."- New York Post
- Posted Jul 6, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Sometimes dull and mostly uninspired, it's much less a satisfying reboot like "Batman Begins'' than a pointless rehash in the mode of "Superman Returns.''- New York Post
- Posted Jun 29, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
The best reason to wade into this (let's be honest) challenging but hugely rewarding film is Quvenzhané Wallis.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 29, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Provides a fascinating tour of the city's past.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 22, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Has its laughs, but pretty much every single one of them is in the trailer. And even more unfortunately, the improbable new romantic comedy team of Steve Carell and Keira Knightley works about as well as you'd guess - like oil and water.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 22, 2012
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- New York Post
- Posted Jun 15, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
This extremely well-acted dramatic farce of grief and betrayal actually has a resonance beyond its target demographic.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 15, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Shankman's staging of the numbers - especially the leaden choreography and hackneyed locations such as the Hollywood sign - was far sloppier and less creative than for his last musical, the vastly superior "Hairspray."- New York Post
- Posted Jun 15, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
A crowd-pleasing comedy that isn't going to win any awards for originality.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 7, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
This is an exhausting, eyeball-gougingly ugly 90-minute assault of non-stop action, with an all-star voice cast shouting witless lines and a wide variety of objects lobbed at the audience in the crudest 3-D fashion.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 7, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Williams, who was elected president of ASCAP in 2009, speaks frankly and eloquently about his problems dealing with fame, and his recovery. And more important, he earns our thanks by resolutely refusing to let Kessler turn this into a clichéd documentary.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 7, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
The sometimes painfully sincere and slow-moving For Greater Glory clearly aspires to be inspirational, but history won't cooperate. The Cristeros triumphed not because of their faith, but because the United States exerted diplomatic pressure to protect its oil interests in Mexico.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 1, 2012
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- New York Post
- Posted Jun 1, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
The nearly two preceding hours often feel like three, as the patchwork script keeps introducing characters and subplots and dropping them, all while rushing characters through eye-popping environments.- New York Post
- Posted Jun 1, 2012
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- New York Post
- Posted May 25, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Through it all, Clayman struggles to keep himself, and OC87, on track - and it's easy to cheer his ultimate triumph.- New York Post
- Posted May 25, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
This only mildly bloated and convoluted action comedy has enough inspired moments to wipe out memories of the abysmal 2002 first sequel as surely as one of the black-suited heroes' neutralizer.- New York Post
- Posted May 22, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
His late father directed "Rambo: First Blood,'' but Panos Cosmatos' debut feature couldn't be more different - this would-be cult classic is the movie equivalent of gazing at a lava lamp for nearly two hours.- New York Post
- Posted May 18, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
While recollections of the participants in the rescue are often riveting, the subject of Jonathan Gruber and Ari Daniel Pinchot's film remains elusively out of grasp.- New York Post
- Posted May 18, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Alcoholics Anonymous founder William G. Wilson, known mostly as Bill W. before his death in 1971, was played by James Woods in a fine 1989 made-for-TV biopic. But the drama didn't have room for some of the darker corners of Wilson's life, fascinatingly explored in Kevin Hanlon and Dan Carracino's documentary.- New York Post
- Posted May 18, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Black loses control of Virginia as it lurches from political satire to unintended black comedy to mom-and-son melodrama. But the performances and the movie's sheer crazy audacity make it watchable.- New York Post
- Posted May 18, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
As for Baron Cohen, he's a great comic but his acting can still use work - most of his funniest lines appear to have been dubbed over other actors' reaction shots in post-production.- New York Post
- Posted May 16, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
The two lead actresses rise to the occasion when they're finally forced to confront each other at the climax.- New York Post
- Posted May 11, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Rebecca Hall is wasted as Sandvig's sister and the film's voice of reason.- New York Post
- Posted May 11, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Even an appearance by Alec Baldwin as Moretz's eventual - if highly unlikely - savior isn't enough to keep Hick from leaving a bad taste.- New York Post
- Posted May 11, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Maybe it's because I share Burton"s twisted affection for the 1970s, but for all its shortcomings, I'd sooner watch a sequel to Dark Shadows than another installment of the bloated "Pirates of the Caribbean" saga any day.- New York Post
- Posted May 11, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
With the abysmal A Little Bit of Heaven, Kate Hudson's possibly unprecedented losing streak remains unbroken: She hasn't made a good movie since Almost Famous, 12 long years ago. Even Nicolas Cage can't say that.- New York Post
- Posted May 4, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Make no mistake, though: The Perfect Family is Kathleen Turner's show. And when a series of crises forces Eileen to re-examine her values and beliefs, Turner rises magnificently to the occasion.- New York Post
- Posted May 4, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Even for a surreal black comedy, Jesus Henry Christ requires massive suspension of disbelief.- New York Post
- Posted May 4, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
This remarkable new documentary from Raymond De Felitta ("City Island") fruitfully revisits the aftermath of a TV doc that his father, Frank, produced for NBC in 1965.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 27, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Holds your attention for a while, but fails to build much suspense as it races toward a predictable climax. It probably would have worked better as a series of Webisodes, which reportedly was the original plan.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 27, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Jack Black gives the performance of his career in the title role of Bernie, under the pitch-perfect direction of his "School of Rock'' director, Richard Linklater, who expertly crafts a black comedy with a deceptively sunny surface. It's the best movie I've seen all spring.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 27, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
It might not have as many gut-busting laughs as "Bridesmaids,'' but there are still plenty - and for once in Apatow's phallocentric universe, most of them don't come at the expense of female characters.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 27, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
In the skilled hands of Cusack - who recites quite a bit of Poe's poetry - and director John McTeigue ("V for Vendetta''), it's good pulpy fun.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 27, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
There was no need to edit it in overly slick ways that often make the story line seem contrived, accompanied by gag-laden narration that frequently made me want to gag.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 20, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Yes, there's some spectacular footage. But there's also an awful lot of filler for a 40-minute movie.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 20, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
While it's not a disaster like Kasdan's last film, "Dreamcatcher'' (2003), Darling Companion doesn't amount to much more than a fairly painless way for the AARP set to spend an hour and a half watching a movie with stars their own age.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 20, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
There isn't a surprising moment, and it's an affirmation for hard-core fans and pretty much everyone else of William Shatner's immortal exhortation to Trekkies: "Get a life!"- New York Post
- Posted Apr 13, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Moves at a poky pace even by American indie standards. But it's worth checking out for the fine cast, which also includes Joanna Lumley as Rossellini's earthy pal, and scene-stealing Doreen Mantle as her tart-tongued but wise mother.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 13, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
For starters, it wasn't a great idea to basically borrow the premise of "The Blues Brothers'' and turn these quintessential Jewish characters (something that's not even hinted at) into the bumbling would-be saviors of the Catholic orphanage where they were raised.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 13, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
I have to confess that this surreal departure by the iconoclastic filmmaker tried my patience more than a bit.- New York Post
- Posted Apr 6, 2012
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- New York Post
- Posted Apr 6, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Juan Carlos Fresnadillo's Intruders looks great and has a promising opening, but this atmospheric Spanish psychological thriller is otherwise pretty underwhelming.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 30, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
It's powerful stuff, and probably a more effective approach than a series of talking heads decrying bullying, which is estimated to affect 18 million American children.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 30, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
The image that sticks with you here is a smoky pub where the patrons are singing "You Belong to Me.''- New York Post
- Posted Mar 23, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
The action is brutal, bloody and virtually nonstop in this adrenaline-packed riff on "Assault on Precinct 13.''- New York Post
- Posted Mar 23, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Completed four years ago, Seeking Justice is dutifully directed, with an absolute minimum of thrills, by Roger Donaldson, whose credits include the terrific "No Way Out" (1987)...That film's title is a pretty good description of where Cage's career seems to be headed.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 16, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
A bit too shaggy to totally live up to the potential of its fine cast. But there are moments of comedy gold - especially as Segel, who went full-frontal for "Forgetting Sarah Marshall" endures endless humiliations as the title character.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 16, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
These are characters with whom it's a pleasure to spend a couple of hours.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 9, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Interminably long, dull and incomprehensible, John Carter evokes pretty much every sci-fi classic from the past 50 years without having any real personality of its own.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 9, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Overlong and grim to the point where some scenes are virtually unwatchable.- New York Post
- Posted Mar 2, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
The real coup de grace for this would-be serious-minded drama is the sledgehammer-subtle direction of Paul Weitz (who is also the screenwriter), who enabled his star's paycheck mugging in the execrable "Little Fockers."- New York Post
- Posted Mar 2, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
A raunchy, often hilarious satire from the Judd Apatow stable that lacks any real bite.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 24, 2012
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- New York Post
- Posted Feb 17, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Nearly totally laugh-, chemistry- and coherence-free, this fiasco from the director of "Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle'' has a script whose sensible parts would fit on a napkin with enough room left over for the Gettysburg Address.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 14, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Return comes briefly to life when John Slattery of "Mad Men'' turns up as an acerbic yet sympathetic reclusive drunk whom Kelli meets during court-mandated rehab. But it's not enough for a film that limps along to a pretty much preordained climax.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 10, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
With cheesy-looking effects including a ride on the backs of giant bees and dubious literary references, Journey 2: The Mysterious Island comes dangerously close to giving books, never mind 3-D, a bad name.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 10, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Chico and Rita beguiles first and foremost as a bebop romance that evokes a bygone era as well as, or maybe even better than, "The Artist."- New York Post
- Posted Feb 10, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
There's little sense of the Carol Channing beneath the overdone makeup - if there is one.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 3, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Would the Mayans have predicted the end of the world in 2012 if they'd known it would inspire not only "The Tree of Life'' and "Melancholia'' but an endless supply of more dreary depictions of end-times like this one?- New York Post
- Posted Feb 3, 2012
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- New York Post
- Posted Feb 3, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Erstwhile boy wizard Daniel Radcliffe works no magic as a grieving lawyer in The Woman in Black, a creaky haunted-house story that's strong on creepy atmosphere but woefully deficient in the scare department.- New York Post
- Posted Feb 3, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
A well-acted, well-directed (by TV veteran Anthony Hemingway) popcorn movie with great aerial battles and solid dramatic scenes that hold your attention for two good hours.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 20, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
Latifah, a formidable actress who's almost always better than her movies, easily dominates this hokey cross between "Glee'' and "Sister Act.''- New York Post
- Posted Jan 13, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
The title It's About You is something Kurt Markus claims Mellencamp told him when he commissioned the film. With the elder Markus' self-important, egotistical narration rarely shutting up, it was a fairly prophetic remark.- New York Post
- Posted Jan 6, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
It's sad to see Quaid in sloppily directed (by Martin Guigui) dreck like Beneath the Darkness less than a decade after the performance of his career as a closeted married man in "Far From Heaven.''- New York Post
- Posted Jan 6, 2012
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- Lou Lumenick
This is a look at the joy, confusion and heartbreak of adolescence that's both culture- and locale-specific and, at the same time, universal.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 28, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
About as artistically profound as those framed 3-D photos of the Twin Towers emblazoned with "Never Forget'' that are still for sale in Times Square a decade after 9/11.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 23, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Genuinely charming, treacle-free family films are tough to find these days, so I'm happy to heartily recommend We Bought a Zoo as heartwarming holiday fare that even jaded adults can share with the kids.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 23, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Thankfully, Tintin is Spielberg at his most playful and unpretentious.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 19, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
It really couldn't have been easy for Jason Lee ("Almost Famous") to keep a straight face while saying, "I'm not in this for the money.''- New York Post
- Posted Dec 16, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
The film also wastes the coiled intensity of Jeremy Renner, as the newest member of the IMF team with a none-too-compelling past. Bird does keep audiences guessing whether Renner is the only leading actor in Hollywood who's even shorter than Cruise.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 16, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
In this pretentious art-house downer version of "The Bad Seed," the only surprise is that the folks didn't ship the little monster off to the looney bin before he reached puberty.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 9, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
It also boasts a killer breakout performance by comic Patton Oswalt as a former classmate who becomes Theron's unlikely co-dependent and sometimes co-conspirator.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 9, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
A little humor would have helped leaven a movie that is frankly often very difficult to watch.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 2, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
A root canal seems a more pleasurable way to pass two hours than this interminable vanity knockoff of "Traffic" about troubled Angelenos.- New York Post
- Posted Dec 2, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Literally the kind of movie they just don't make anymore, Michel Hazanavicius' French-sponsored charmer The Artist is a gorgeous black-and-white love letter to silent Hollywood with old-fashioned English intertitles and just a single line of audible (English) dialogue.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 25, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Gorgeously photographed by Peter Suschitzky, A Dangerous Method presents a vivid portrait of pre-World War I Europe that's at a considerable remove from the types of madness usually seen in Cronenberg's films.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 23, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Brilliantly playing doomed '50s sex bomb Marilyn Monroe, Michelle Williams gets under the skin of the troubled yet vulnerable icon in a way no one else ever has.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 23, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
O'Grady is very good, but she can't make the hard-to-watch Rid of Me dramatically credible.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 18, 2011
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- New York Post
- Posted Nov 18, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Expertly mixing tears and laughs with the sort of alchemy not seen since "Terms of Endearment," this superbly written, directed, acted, and yes, Oscar-friendly movie perfectly captures the blackly comic insanity that can overtake a family forced to confront an impending death.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 16, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Nutty Danish provocateur Lars von Trier -- long one of the most annoying filmmakers on the planet -- turns out one of the year's most emotionally resonant art movies.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 11, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
It's pretty sad if you're a comic and Al Pacino is the funniest thing in your movie.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 11, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
DiCaprio may well receive a Best Actor Oscar for his tour de force as the conflicted FBI director -- greatly abetted by Hammer (who played the Winklevoss twins in "The Social Network'') in his first major role as the flamboyant but frustrated Tolson.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 9, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Ineptly written and directed, the nihilistic The Son of No One flaunts an attitude best summed up by a cynical Pacino -- "A man has to live with s--t.'' Maybe so, Al, but audiences have the option of skipping this bomb.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 4, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Veteran character actor Dennis Farina gives one of the best performances of the year in a rare lead part as an aging, down-on-his luck small-time hood in The Last Rites of Joe May.- New York Post
- Posted Nov 4, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
There are moments of brilliance, like a claymation sequence that manages to simultaneously send up '60s holiday cartoons and "Ghostbusters'' (with Frosty the Snowman instead of Marshmallow Man).- New York Post
- Posted Nov 4, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Putting it as kindly as possible, this pitiful romantic comedy directed by Scott Marshall (dad Garry did "Pretty Woman'') peaks with its animated opening credits.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 28, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Where Anonymous has it all over "Shakespeare in Love'' is its detailed evocation of London from four centuries ago. The rowdy audience for Shakespeare's first works at the Globe Theatre is especially colorful.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 28, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Michael Brandt's soporific thriller is making a token stop in theaters before its January DVD debut. Miss it if you can.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 28, 2011
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- New York Post
- Posted Oct 28, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
There's a winning emotional truth in the father-son scenes in this Spokane-shot sleeper, directed with skill and sensitivity by Jonathan Segal.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 21, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Johnny English Reborn sounds like a reboot, but it's actually a tired recycling of something that wasn't exactly fresh to begin with.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 21, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Spacey does his best work since "American Beauty'' as a tired middle-aged corporate warrior whose greatest compassion, in the end, is reserved for an ailing dog he has to put to sleep.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 21, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
A dispiriting rehash of dysfunctional family clichés that seems to last longer than Thanksgiving Day dinner.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 14, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Make no mistake, Father of Invention is the hilarious Spacey's show all the way.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 14, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Basically "csi: East Texas,'' the debut feature of Ami Canaan Mann is long on style and short on coherent storytelling, not unlike numerous efforts by her director dad, Michael, who serves as a producer here.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 14, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Spanish master filmmaker Pedro Almodóvar offers up a grisly Halloween trick-and-treat in his first full-out horror movie, an eye-popping and genuinely shocking gender-bending twist on Alfred Hitchcock's "Vertigo.''- New York Post
- Posted Oct 14, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Yet despite the efforts of an excellent cast headed by three top comedy names -- Owen Wilson, Steve Martin and Jack Black -- and tons of beautiful scenery (mostly British Columbia and the Canadian Yukon), this movie stubbornly refuses to take flight, or generate more than a few chuckles.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 14, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
The Sons of Tennessee Williams, which offers touching interviews with many older gay men, somewhat awkwardly connects this history with the efforts of a gay Mardi Gras crew to keep going in the wake of Hurricane Katrina.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 7, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
There's nothing startlingly original about Estevez's screenplay, yet it has a modesty you seldom see when Hollywood tackles spiritual subjects.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 7, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
With Paul Newman gone, you couldn't ask for a better senior-citizen representation of Butch Cassidy than Shepard. In his best performance since "The Right Stuff'' turned him into a reluctant movie star, Shepard makes Blackthorn worth seeing.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 7, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
It's not up to the high standard of the Clooney-Heslov script for "Good Night, and Good Luck,'' or what you'd imagine that, say, Aaron Sorkin could have done with this premise (for starters, sharper dialogue). Or what Elaine May did with the similarly themed "Primary Colors" 13 years ago.- New York Post
- Posted Oct 7, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Fast, furious and often funny. But no blood is truly shed (except literally in a playground fight during the opening credits).- New York Post
- Posted Sep 30, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Extremely cool-looking in the manner of "Sin City,'' but clumsily staged, slackly acted and mind-numbingly dull, Israeli director Guy Moshe's English-language fantasy is set in a future when guns, and apparently coherent conversations, have been outlawed.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 30, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
It succeeds mostly thanks to stellar work by the wonderful Joseph Gordon-Levitt, who capably handles the dramatic heavy lifting, and Seth Rogen, who delivers big laughs as his raunchy bud.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 30, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
It would be possible to appreciate Shannon's fabulous work in Take Shelter far better if the filmmaker lost a quarter of the two-hour running time -- there are many overlong scenes that make this a needlessly tough sit.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 30, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Based on a memoir by Nigel Slater, a British celebrity chef who makes a cameo appearance, Toast also charts the budding chef's growing interest in hunky, scantily clad guys. Be warned: Some of the regional British accents would benefit from subtitles.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 23, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
While the Kassen brothers do an impressive job for newcomers -- the film looks great and performances are uniformly solid -- there's some overly blunt dialogue and dead-end subplots that would have been pruned by more experienced filmmakers.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 23, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Even if Corben hadn't photographed Gatien with lighting that makes him look like a horror-movie villain, he'd hardly come off as innocent.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 23, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
A crowd-pleasing baseball movie for people - like me - who don't like baseball movies...Probably the finest baseball movie since "Bull Durham".- New York Post
- Posted Sep 23, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Unlike Van Sant's grittier, less sentimental recent small films, it's twee enough to make your teeth ache. It's the director's biggest miscalculation since "Even Cowgirls Get the Blues" 18 years ago.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 16, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
It's fun, but the script, credited to Hossein Amini ("The Wings of the Dove"), is short on characterization and long on plot twists and wisecracks.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 16, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
The latter is played by Parker Posey, who looks baffled throughout. As well she should.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 9, 2011
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- New York Post
- Posted Sep 9, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Arriving two days before the 10th anniversary of 9/11, Steven Soderbergh's Contagion is a serious all-star thriller about the rapid worldwide spread of a killer virus that's easily the scariest of the disaster films that have followed the attack.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 9, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Seven Days in Utopia obviously isn't targeted at us cynical New Yorkers. But it goes down more smoothly than you'd imagine thanks to Duvall and an excellent supporting cast.- New York Post
- Posted Sep 2, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Markopolos repeatedly tells us he was scared for his life -- accompanied by hokey archival clips and music -- though nothing actually happened to him.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 26, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Spanning two decades in a little under two hours, Higher Ground is a well-acted if slow-moving drama that will reward adventurous audiences with fine performances and a thoughtful approach.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 26, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Should appeal more to those who like to watch stuff blow up than understand exactly why the carnage is transpiring.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 19, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
The overlong Amigo has its heart in the right place, but its approach to complex issues is too simplistic to win over unconverted minds.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 19, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
I might be able to get past that if Hathaway and Sturgess had any chemistry. There are no sparks whatsoever, and that's always a deal-breaker for me in romantic films.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 19, 2011
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- New York Post
- Posted Aug 12, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Gut-bustingly funny -- perhaps this waning summer season's ultimate guilty pleasure.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 12, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
It's basically left to the viewer to figure out the historical significance of this drug-fueled odyssey.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 5, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
You'd be better off renting "Eddie and the Cruisers" (1983) than slogging through this latest, far more dire recycling of the same rock clichés.- New York Post
- Posted Aug 5, 2011
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- New York Post
- Posted Aug 5, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
What follows is a hilarious, slam-bang series of chases and battles that cross "Gremlins" with "Assault on Precinct 13," the two most prominent of many genre films quoted by Attack the Block.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 29, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Ineptly directed by Raja Gosnell -- the genius behind the "Scooby-Doo" features, "Big Momma's House," and "Beverly Hills Chihuahua" -- this cheesy-looking flick has lousy animation, worse special effects and the most headache-inducing, blurry 3-D since "Clash of the Titans."- New York Post
- Posted Jul 29, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
This midsummer crowd-pleaser from the ateliers of Steven Spielberg and Ron Howard is still a great deal more rip-roaring fun than, say, the campy movie version of "The Wild Wild West."- New York Post
- Posted Jul 29, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Even with a clever final twist straight out of "The Twilight Zone," this crummy-looking two-hander is a tough sit.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 22, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
It's an engaging piece of filmmaking on its own, beautifully shot and acted.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 22, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Chemistry is the usually misfiring engine that drives romantic comedies, so it's a pleasure to report that Justin Timberlake and Mila Kunis are practically combustible together in Friends With Benefits.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 22, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Alas, the complications don't arrive nearly quickly enough for the overlong and slow-paced Lucky to really cook.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 15, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
By far the best scenes are shared by Sneider and his struggling but devoted mother, played by the seldom-seen Amanda Plummer.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 15, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
It's a reasonably funny religious satire that takes potshots at easy targets but is quite watchable due to the participation of two Oscar winners and two Oscar nominees.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 15, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Everything a summer blockbuster should be but rarely is - a whip-smart, slam-bang piece of entertainment where we deeply care about the fate of the central characters.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 12, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
There have been many untraditional film adaptations of Shakespeare's, but few have been as unorthodox as this one.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 8, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
Offers well-chosen selections from Aleichem's darkly humorous work.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 8, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
A long way from his TV portrayal of John Adams, Giamatti seems to be having an especially good time as a splenetic King John, who would not be out of place in a Monty Python movie.- New York Post
- Posted Jul 8, 2011
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- Lou Lumenick
A dull, by-the-numbers psych-ward horror thriller that's sadly a lot closer in quality to "Sucker Punch" than "Shutter Island."- New York Post
- Posted Jul 8, 2011
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- New York Post
- Posted Jul 8, 2011
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