Maitland McDonagh
Select another critic »For 2,280 reviews, this critic has graded:
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43% higher than the average critic
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4% same as the average critic
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53% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 10.7 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Maitland McDonagh's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 55 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Devil in a Blue Dress | |
| Lowest review score: | The Hottie & the Nottie | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 738 out of 2280
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Mixed: 1,265 out of 2280
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Negative: 277 out of 2280
2280
movie
reviews
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The film rings so consistently false that it's more likely to induce snickers and eye-rolling.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Sentimental, formulaic, predictable and shamelessly manipulative, Marcos Carnevale’s tale of late-life love is also genuinely heartbreaking and heartening.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Ultimately, the more intensely you buy into the notion that golf is a complex metaphor for the human condition, the more susceptible you'll be to the film's insipid blandishments.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
A caper comedy without chemistry is just a bunch of waiting around for something to get stolen.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Less a history of a specialty that scarcely existed before the '70s -- men habitually donned wigs and dresses to double for women -- than a portrait of two women, one beginning her career and the other in the twilight of hers.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The result is handsome and logical, but missing the spark that would make it thrilling.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The weighty themes of loss, regret and abdication of personal responsibility are undermined by the reverential use of baseball as a symbol of mankind's potential for selfless greatness.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
First-time writer-director Rian Johnson's gimmick is that his SoCal teens talk like film-noir yeggs and dames, slinging hard-boiled shade and spitting out terse, rat-a-tat dialogue peppered with slang that was yesterday's news 40 years before they were born. But the result is, against all odds, marvelously entertaining.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
It fails utterly as a horror picture, although it delivers plenty of PG-13-rated flesh and unintentional laughs.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Writer-director Henry LeRoy Finch's ripely overwrought exercise in Southern Gothic psychodrama, which happens to unfold in a picturesquely decaying house in Maine.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
A slicked up, perfectly watchable update of a movie that was just about perfect on its own bleakly seedy terms.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This tale may well weave a more compelling spell on the page; onscreen it's simply ponderous.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Smacks of a certain kind of TV movie filled with pious uplift, even as it makes token concessions to contemporary lifestyles.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Watching this string of sketches about small town wackos is like channel surfing a heavy sitcom zone.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The film's heart is Magdiel and the modest dreams that get him through the day but may also be the death of him.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Fincher gets it all right, and Donovan's hippie-dippy "Hurdy Gurdy Man," which bookends the story, has never sounded so hauntingly menacing.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
A romantic comedy whose sour take on romance never manages to be comic.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The air of low-budget Eurotrash is unmistakable. Almost everybody has an unidentifiable accent.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The result is slick, mainstream entertainment with just enough surprises that you don't have to feel like a fool for enjoying it.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Lacks the novel's drier-than-dry bite, but compensates with a strong ensemble cast and a series of glamorous party sequences in which the decor has at least as much depth as the guests.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Its high-definition video images -- are coated with a convincing sheen of disgust, and Huston's performance is riveting.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Beautifully edited and, appropriately, the sound is unusually well recorded and produced.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The film's tone is hard to pin down, especially with the actors dubbed flatly into English.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This is less a movie than a lecture. Perhaps Lee simply should have made a documentary.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The action is ridiculously overwrought, a state-of-the-art combination of CGI wizardry and Hong Kong-style wirework so removed from the laws of physical reality that it might as well be animated.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Both genuinely funny and authentically horrifying, it puts the average horror comedy to shame.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
There's no downside to a reminder that not every beefy, God-talking sheriff is a bigoted cracker, and Kraus' short, no-frills documentary is a model of fly-on-the-wall filmmaking.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Lasse Hallstrom's leisurely drama about remorse, forgiveness and spiritual healing is a film of big emotions and ferociously small gestures.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
A hip-hop reimagining of "The Great Gatsby" that fails both as an update of F. Scott Fitzgerald's dissection of American aspirations and class barriers and on its own boorish terms.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Most of the extreme Trek fans it features are obsessed in a big way, and if they were your children you'd probably be thinking therapy.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Herzfeld's sophomore movie is one long howl of rage over the relationship between criminals, journalists and thrill-hungry audiences.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
While it doesn't miss a cliche, it also invests every one with vigorous conviction.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Before it goes down in a soggy mess of scary movie cliches and insultingly stupid plot contrivances, director and co-writer Nick Willing's adaptation of Madison Smartt Bell's novel Dr. Sleep gets in some good, seriously creepy licks.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Eastwood's slow-building story of loss and deliverance is a fine, understated piece of storytelling that earns every emotional body blow it lands.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The film's measured pace may put off impatient viewers, but the brilliantly underplayed ending is worth the wait.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Roberts fans will, of course, be delighted to see her in a role that plays to all her strengths -- fresh-faced looks, charming gangliness, air of infinite approachability -- and neatly sidesteps her glaring inability to act by having her more or less play herself.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
With his spidery fingers and his velvet eyes, the lean, languid Snoop Dogg was born to be an undead player, and clearly relishes the role of Jimmy Bones.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Edward Zwick brings unimpeachable good intentions to his film about the bloody underbelly of the international diamond trade, but when social conscience jockeys for attention with movie-star glamour, glamour always wins. The result is a rip-snorting adventure set against the backdrop of African misery.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This film got made because Seinfeld is famous, but it's still hard not to wish the filmmakers had devoted a couple of years to following Adams instead. The guy's such a throbbing bundle of arrogance, raw nerves and self-destructive insecurity that you can see the flame-out coming.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
No two ways about it: The screenplay is derivative. But the location adds a little novelty to the standard-issue running and screaming.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Anyone looking for the comfort in a tense thriller ending in a satisfying restoration of order and psychological security will be bitterly disappointed, but Haneke isn't in the business of encouraging comforting illusions.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Everyone involved obviously had a blast, but in the end this is a one-joke movie, and the joke is stretched too thin.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
It's a must-see for horror buffs and anime fans; and while it lacks the haunting thematic underpinnings of "Blood The Last Vampire," -- it's a more satisfying movie-going experience.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Though screenwriter Dianne Houston spent time observing the real-life Dulaine, her screenplay is a showcase for triumph-of-the-underdog sports-movie cliches and coming-of-age-through-adversity moral lessons.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Filmmaker Barry Hershey's impressionistic documentary about the casting process is the antidote to years of comic "audition montages," those guaranteed laugh-getting freak-show parades of no-talents mangling monologues and pulling nutty stunts in hopes of standing out from the crowd.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
First-time feature filmmaker Oliver Hirschbiegel maintains a riveting sense of simmering brutality.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
It's a gee-whiz kiddie movie imagined by pervy grown-ups who get a giggle out of mixing bloodless fight scenes with close-ups of rubber-wrapped butts and baskets.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The result is a beguiling mix of the familiar and the exotic, vivid proof that a good story can withstand endless variations without losing its fundamental vitality.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Robles and Hidalgo ring enough changes on a stock situation that you're never sure where it's going.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Anderson is a master of detail, from the film's ubiquitous fish motif to the elaborate carnival set piece that unfolds inside the claustrophobic confines of a spook-house ride called "Route 666."- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Music video-trained director Francis Lawrence whips up a witch's brew of gray-on-gray atmosphere, but for all the end-of-the-world mumbo jumbo, nothing much ever seems to be at stake.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This is absolutely not a film for all tastes, but it's a masterpiece of pitiless power whose audacious, ambiguous climax strikes a note of insane romanticism as haunting as it is perverse.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
In the end it's all seductive surface and no substance, but Lough has a bold eye and a vivid sense of uniquely urban beauty.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Suffers from an excess of material crammed into too little screen time. There's so much story that the characters get short shrift; you have to wonder, for example, what became of Siddalee's three siblings.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
While the film isn't entirely amateurish -- shots are cut together and the cinematography is professional if not precisely stylish -- the story feels as though large pieces are missing and the characters behave so inconsistently that there's zero incentive to care about their tribulations.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The film's underlying themes dovetail efficiently with the action but don't generate the emotional gut punch the movie needs; overall it feels padded and logy.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The films of writer/director Francis Veber are a bracing reminder that French comedies can be every bit as broad, unsophisticated and cliched as their American counterparts.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
A thoroughly respectable affair: Your high school English teacher would approve, and parts are terrifically enjoyable.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Actor-turned-director Andrey Zvyagintsev's feature debut is haunted by an elusive past and suffused with dread about the future, and it's all suggestion without explanation.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
For the first hour director Arau and his co-writer and wife, actress Arizmendi, negotiate the story's tricky mix of comedy, social satire and science fiction with surprising aplomb.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
It features truly monstrous bogeymen in the Reavers, cannibalistic renegades who, legend has it, went to the edge of the universe and were driven mad by the abyss.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Johnny Depp's coruscating, rigorously uningratiating performance as debauched, self-destructive 17th-century aristocrat John Wilmot, the Earl of Rochester, is the glue that doesn't quite hold together first-time director Laurence Dunmore's adaptation of Stephen Jeffreys' 1994 play.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Despite its scant 48-minute running time (which many viewers will find frustrating), the film sets up a provocative equation between vampirism and American involvement in Asia.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Driven by sheer enthusiam (much of it for the worst excesses of Hollywood filmmaking), which makes it fun to watch in spite of its fundamental ridiculousness.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The film's poky pacing is a liability -- the setup takes an awfully long time.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The voice-over narration is obvious, but overall the message is integrated into an unusual story that's enhanced by Liberato's and Fulton's appealing performances as the youngsters who see through their elders' lies and help right a terrible wrong.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
An utterly formulaic, teen-oriented romance whose greatest asset is charming leads Julia Stiles and Sean Patrick Thomas.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The satire is broad and easy, while the romance is thoroughly unconvincing.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Epic, meticulously researched and ultimately disappointing, Martin Scorsese's bloody valentine to the birth of his beloved city is less than the sum of its parts.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
So clotted with back story that the Romeo and Juliet-style romance between a warrior vampire and a reluctant werewolf never has a chance to breath, Len Wiseman's revisionist horror tale is all look and no bite.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This shotgun marriage of coarse laughs and low-rent action cliches is, of course, utterly predictable: Cutting-edge comedy isn't lurking under the corpses of old TV shows.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
None of this is especially funny, nor is it particularly exhilarating; at best it's throwaway entertainment.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Cocaine Angel may be a fine counterpoint to glammy cocaine-scare films like "Less Than Zero" (1987) and "Blow" (2001), but it comes on so strong it risks being dismissed along with the "this is your brain on drugs" school of dope-scare PSAs.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Though his film is breathtakingly art-directed, Greenaway wallows in epater le bourgeois nastiness -- his inner naughty child could use a good paddling.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
And while it was always clear that Lucas cared more about special effects than acting, here his lack of interest has produced phenomenally wooden performances from newcomers and veterans alike: Only the imperious Christopher Lee, as baleful Count Dooku, emerges unscathed.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The trouble with director and co-writer Laetitia Colombani's debut feature is that the story isn't really interesting enough to be told twice, let alone dragged out another 20 minutes after that.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
A slack combination of faith-based inspiration and broad 'hood comedy.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The horror of LaBute's articulate, self-deluded characters is that they're both sharply drawn and just vague enough that you can insert face here.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The soundtrack, which ranges from Johnny Cash to Serge Gainsbourg to the Wu-Tang Clan, is admirably eclectic but can't be said to pull things together.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
British documentarian Peter Bate frames a mix of archival materials and re-creations with a "trial" at which Leopold listens to testimony against him from within a wood-and-glass booth, like Nazi Adolf Eichmann at Nuremberg.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Indie director Bezucha has held on to just enough individuality to breathe a little life into the cliches.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Abel Ferrara's gift for getting actors to dredge up the ugliest muck in their souls and bare it onscreen is used to strong effect in this psychological thriller.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
If the ending isn't conventionally happy, it's certainly deeply satisfying.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The bar scenes are the only reason to sit through this jello shot of a movie.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
There's no meat on this film's borrowed bones: They're polished to an exquisitely tasteful shine, but efforts to class up exploitation are pointless.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Everyone involved seems to have been operating from the presumption that gross and blasphemous equals hilarious. Would that it did.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The same super-heated visual imagination that made Guillermo del Toro's "Pan's Labyrinth" such a darkly thrilling delight is very much in evidence in his sequel to "Hellboy." It's a shame that it's at the service of such a blandly conventional story.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
For a mountain of muscle [The Rock]'s a surprisingly charming screen presence. And his low-key appeal helps nudge Peter Berg's derivative but good-natured light action picture in the direction of breezy entertainment, rather than painfully noisy macho posturing.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Engrossing documentary about the life and times of publisher Barney Rosset, who spent much of his career advancing the cause of free expression, is a flawless match of style and subject.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
From her speech patterns to her body language, Roberts's performance is wrong for the period.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Moore's desperate need for attention is irritating, but it's also his strength as a gadfly; it drives him to needle sacred cows and received wisdom that would otherwise go unchallenged.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Though there's some trashy fun to be had in the film's first half, this cynical sequel -- devolves into space junk even faster than the unfortunate Ross.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Ultimately, the material is so familiar that it's hard to work up any enthusiasm for another trip though the seamy underside of glittering gaming life.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Increasingly preposterous, thoroughly credibility-straining escapades.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Kapadia's intelligent, nuanced performance is the film's highlight, balanced by Khanna's portrayal of Nashaad, who could easily be a patronizing, chauvinist caricature.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
But the movie is long and didactic, undermined by the faintly pious air of an educational slide show.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
A lightweight parody of the porn industry and daytime talk shows that has the look and feel of a middling direct-to-video feature.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Luis Orjuela's sweet, slight comedy is about a middle-class Colombian family and the huge, cherry-red Chevrolet Bel-Air convertible that conveys them through several years worth of life's little dramas.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Too long and its tone is disconcertingly uneven, but Perry never betrays or condescends to his characters.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
As a document of the ever-mutable musician's signature persona, a wraithlike androgyne with a head full of apocalyptic dreams, it's fascinating.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
For all its crudeness, Phillips' tale of men behaving badly is remarkably toothless.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Culkin's Alig has the face of a debauched cherub, but the former child star never quite captures the charisma everyone swears was an essential component in Alig's success. Green's St. James steals the picture out from under him (poetic justice of a sort), and the supporting cast is nothing short of amazing.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Director Jesse Peretz, onetime bassist for The Lemonheads, cut his teeth on music videos and appears to have embraced the austere aesthetics of Dogme 95 filmmakers without comprehending that an interesting story and well-developed characters are supposed to be part of the package.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
It's not the bomb on the plane that scuttles this film: It's the mugging, ham-fisted direction and total absence of comic timing.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This being a Michael Moore film, the filmmaker is as enraging as the subject: His belligerent court-jester shtick wears thin fast and undermines the segments on universal health-care systems in Canada, the U.K., France and Cuba.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
As the mismatched interrogators, Travolta and Nielson seem to be in two different and incompatible movies.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This efficient but soulless funhouse ride eschews suspense in favor of frantic scrambling from disturbing specters, like the naked female ghost who lurks around bloody bathtubs.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Tim Burton's grand guignol fantasy transforms Stephen Sondheim's 1979 musical-theater piece into a cheerfully gothic morality tale.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This bare-bones plot is merely an excuse to string together a series of gross-out jokes involving bodily fluids, private parts, food and genetic deformities.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Chilly, muted and refreshingly free of cheap shocks, this stylish psychological horror tale is greatly enhanced by subtle (acting) performances.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Ejiofor's subtle, infinitely humane performance is the invisible glue that holds everything together and Chris Menges's darkly shimmering cinematography lends the story a gritty, coolly seductive glamour.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Duvall at his worst is still an accomplished performer; Pedraza is a modern-day Ali McGraw, lithe and beautiful but no kind of actress. For all her fluidity on the dance floor, she's a dead weight who drags the film down.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
A delirious fever dream of pulp-western conventions by way of 1950s Hollywood melodrama, Thai filmmaker Wisit Sasanatieng surreal oddity unfolds in heavily manipulated colors so rich they seem ready to leap off the screen, punctuated by spasms of over-ripe dialogue, floridly dramatic songs and maniacal villainous laughter.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The storytelling is jerky (perhaps in part because the running time was trimmed from 185 to 142 minutes for U.S. release) and character development takes a backseat to a breathless rush through battles, assassinations and dynastic plotting.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The costumes are phenomenal, the set design ravishing and the sadistic inventiveness extraordinary.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Cross an episode of "Friends" with an issue-of-the-week movie about gay parenthood and you have this glossy vanity project.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Depending on your taste, either much hilarity or a tedious barrage of tasteless, juvenile pranking ensues. Trust your instincts.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Douglas and Sutherland do crackling hostility with devilish glee, and the fireworks are nothing if not entertaining.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
There's nothing subtle about Pelegri and Harari's culture-clash romp, but it's sometimes frantically funny; that it's thoroughly forgettable is an issue only if you expect it to do more than poke easy fun at the thorny issues it raises.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Shot in gloomy shades of gray, this earnest but banal story about the legacy of bad parenting strands fine actors in a contrived situation and lets them squirm.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Dithery, nattering and a bit long for such a conspicuously airy trifle.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The acting is top-notch and some scenes are authentically well-observed.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The outtakes that accompany the end credits suggest that making the movie was a blast; it's a shame the same can't be said for watching it.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
More isn't always better; everything feels slightly forced, and the funny bits -- make no mistake, there are several -- are all but lost in the noise.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Overall it's a harmless disappointment, hampered by the thin story and a surprisingly dreary looking video-game setting, heavy on the floating platforms, cartoony future-cityscapes and goofy gadgetry.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Burnett and Lee's graceful, sympathetic documentary focuses on participants who embody Burning Man's ideals without being blind to the opportunists and party animals it inevitably attracts.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
There's a thin line between fable and twaddle, and this feel-good trifle veers dangerously close to the latter.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
It can hardly help but outrage at least some of the people some of the time.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The sci-fi wonders, including an army of shuddering robo-soldiers and one-man, steam-powered bombers with delicate wood-and-linen wings, are truly marvelous and go a long way toward making up for the film's erratic pacing.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
As for first-time feature director Mark Piznarski, he should be cited for excessive use of slow motion, sun-dappled trees and golden light; one more cliche violation and his license to direct would be forfeit.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
With its brisk pace, breezy dialogue and gently jaundiced view of the rites of filmmaking, this is one of Jaglom's most accessible and genuinely enjoyable films.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
For the first time, Allen's trademark shtick sounds less like the anxious kvetching of an endearingly neurotic New Yorker and more like the ramblings of a tired, elderly man fumbling for the right words.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The person who can resist a formerly homeless senior citizen gradually restored to sufficient stability to the degree that he can take in his own "castaway cat" is hard-hearted indeed.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Pearce can sing, but Drum's trademark "speaking out" -- free-associative ramblings that recall Jim Morrison of the Doors at his most embarrassingly pretentious -- falls far short of the hypnotic effect Tyler describes.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Blanchett's insouciant but steely performance alone makes the film worth watching, but it's Brenda Fricker's quietly underplayed turn as Guerin's mother that makes your throat tighten.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
If ever anyone earned the title "diva," it was the late singer Amalia Rodrigues.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
While Kudlacek lets some of the elder statesmen ramble, their recollections are a vivid, firsthand window into a bygone era of American art.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
It aspires to greater moral ambiguity than the average crime thriller, and if it doesn't entirely succeed it nevertheless avoids the lazy moral bankruptcy of movies like "Lethal Weapon 4."- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
An excruciating series of gags aimed at kids old enough to think it's funny when a grown-up acts like a small child.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The payoff fizzles, but the buildup is intriguing until it topples under its own weight.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The movie is simultaneously soft and icky; the gross-out effects are grafted onto a sub-"Tales from the Crypt" ghost story that never scares up any serious chills.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The character relationships are solid and there's blessed little in the way of smug, smart talk- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Colorful and deceptively buoyant until it suddenly pulls the rug out from under you.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Its talky, sluggish script is so bereft of thrills -- intellectual or otherwise -- that even the film's one masterfully staged sequence... falls flat.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
In stripping her potentially lurid material of salacious appeal, Martel also makes it murky and oddly arid, a mind-numbing exercise rather than an experience.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The movie's selling point is Schneider acting goofy, chewing on worms, making goo-goo eyes at a she-goat and licking his private parts.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The downside is that it all feels like a big in-joke, and you're not in on it.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
And if the film's 11th-hour CGI effects aren't entirely convincing, the notion that oil itself is haunted by the restless spirit of every once-living thing that time reduced and mingled into the earth's black blood throws off a primordial chill.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
If only the wit weren't overwhelmed by lame jokes about body parts, functions and fluids.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Sentimental and predictable, Meily's sweet-natured feature-film debut was hugely popular in the Philippines; its day-to-day details will be exotic to non-Filipino audiences but the characters' dilemmas are couched in the universal language of sitcom complications and fortuitous resolutions.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
A reductive spook show in which a bunch of puny humans get chased around by scary monsters.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The "Bullet" is an amusement-park roller coaster, and the title is a ham-fisted metaphor for facing your fears.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Froemke and Dickson's film opens a window onto rural poverty so dire it's almost inconceivable that it exists in 21st-century America.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
It's the rare action picture whose adrenaline-driven thrills neither overshadow the characters nor degenerate into cartoonish preposterousness.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Bar-Lev also explores the freakish popular appeal of child prodigies, the family dynamics that come into play when a child's celebrity and earning capacity overshadows the adults', and the remarkably conflicted and contradictory admissions drawn from Brunelli about Marla's work.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Shot on location in Manhattan, the film is steeped in understated New York City ambiance and discreetly tinted by Jeffrey M. Taylor's subtle score.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The parade of eccentrics never ends, and Stone's near-miraculous achievement is to drain the life right out of material so sordid you'd think it couldn't help but be interesting. A must to avoid.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Hopkins and Rock are a surprisingly good mix; Hopkins actually underplays his role as a company man with a barely acknowledged conscience, while Rock's manic impulses aren't allowed to run riot.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Like most contemporary romantic comedies, the film's plot works only if you accept that everyone behaves like a complete and utter idiot at all times.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
A sweet-natured ode to rave culture saddled with a ridiculously clichéd plot line.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Unfortunately, the result is little more than a glossy parlor trick, a stripped-to-the-bone "Of Human Bondage" recast with two women.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
While the cast is uniformly committed, some are able to make more of the material than others.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The story is compelling enough that even glib phrases like "healing through hip-hop" can't drag it down.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
It aspires to a documentary realism and keeps the focus on the characters at all times. Though the results can't really be called enjoyable, the intensity that bleeds off the screen is undeniably effective.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Though the material is familiar, Sciamma has a light touch and avoids many teen-movie cliches.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Affleck's gloomy, one-note performance exacerbates the problem, but the stellar supporting cast helps compensate.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
So inconsequential that it starts evaporating from memory the minute it's over.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The story isn't much -- the ever-evolving aliens are better served by the cute-but-icky effects than the simplistic script -- but it skims along on the cast's chemistry.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The first full-fledged Indian musical coproduced and distributed by a major Hollywood studio, this fanciful love story takes its unlikely inspiration from Fyodor Dostoevsky's short story "White Nights."- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Essentially an extended trailer for the 2008 Cartoon Network animated series.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Boursinhac and Bibi Naceri throw all the usual elements into the pot: Economic inequality, ethnic tensions, feverish family ties and the titular criminal code, which everyone invokes and everyone agrees is a load of claptrap.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Orenna, Thornton and Belton deliver strong, surprisingly subtle performances that make the modest fireworks genuinely engaging.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
It's seldom boring and always beautifully photographed, but it's also considerably less than satisfying, perhaps because its internal logic never comes into focus.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
While this cheerful film has nothing particularly new to say about the ties that hold family members together even when they're driving each other crazy, it's a pleasure to watch such a talented ensemble at work.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Situations don't come much more claustrophobic, and if the payoff doesn't quite live up to the build-up, the film is still an enjoyable exercise in claustrophobic suspense.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
But for all the sound, fury and spectacle, the film feels vaguely hollow and unsatisfying.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
It's an amiable enough picture, and genuinely insightful about the emotional appeal of devoted fandom.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Fergus' thriller benefits from Pearce's high-strung performance and the stark New Mexico landscapes, but the story is familiar and the pacing much too measured for a slight tale of ineluctable fate.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
For what could easily have been a slickly vulgar variation on "American Pie" or "Porky's", this libidinous comedy explores some unusually complicated territory, and benefits greatly from Verdú's unpredictable performance as Luisa.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The film is dull going, even for the pre-adolescents at whom it's aimed, and feels far longer than it actually is.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
It's earnest, well-intentioned and scrupulously even-handed, in the style of made-for-TV problem movies.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Despite the absence of dialogue -- the mice squeak and the oak creatures caw like ravens -- Cegavske imbues her scrappy little creatures with disturbingly complex personalities. And if the tale's moral is less than clear, its haunting images speak directly to some dark, preverbal corner of the heart.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Slight and pleasantly predictable film coasts along on the considerable charms of its cast and exotic setting.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Palindromes read the same way backward and forward, and Todd Solondz' sour tale ends where it begins.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
For all the updated riffs and personal noodling, it's best when it doesn't stray too far from the original material.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Were there more meat on the bones of this fable about hypocrisy and spiritual hollowness, Marsh's pacing might seem deliberate rather then merely slow.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Insipid, formulaic and suitable for the dumbed-down sensibilities of lowest-common-denominator couch potatoes.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Matheson's bitterly ironic ending -- which pivots on the nature of Neville's legend -- is gutted and turned into formulaic pap.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Portabella has no interest in conventional biography -- it's hard not to suspect that he included the tale of Felix Mendelsson (Daniel Ligorio) discovering the score for the "St. Matthew Passion" wrapping a meat delivery precisely BECAUSE it's probably apocryphal.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Most of the scenes fall flatter than a lead soufflé, and the film's sight gags -- Andy dumping campers' bodies by the roadside, Gene humping the refrigerator -- are outrageous without actually being funny.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Margaret Brown's documentary is actually an examination of the racial divide in a city that claims there is none.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
His epic reworking of their lurid conventions proved so long that it was divided into two parts, and this one ends on a hell of a cliff-hanger.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Walks a thin line between refreshing irreverence and shameless exploitation of offensive gay stereotypes.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Affleck is no more convincing as a flesh-and-blood action than as a superbrain, Thurman is cruelly photographed and director Woo appears to be imitating his own worst work.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Small children should be delighted by the menagerie of chatty critters, but their parents may be less than thrilled by what the animals have to say.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The aliens, meanwhile, are a fabulously nasty lot of slimy, tentacled, malevolent telepaths, but all their superior technology is no match for our red, white and blue ingenuity. Take that, space bullies!- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Funny, eye-opening and ultimately very moving portrait by director Kirby Dick.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
For most of its running time, this lunatic euro-thriller is creepy, stylish and occasionally suspenseful.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The script recycles clichés that go back to 1937'S "Dead End," the performances are one-note, and the whole thing has the flat, bright look of a TV cop show.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Hauser and Miles go for broke, lobbing their every comic idea at the screen. Some work better than others, and overall tomfoolery like this is a matter of taste.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The result is strictly for those who like their comic-book movies short and stupid.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Jeremy Irons, giving what is, hands down, the worst performance of his career.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Often rings painfully true, but would have benefited from judicious editing.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
It's so cool all the life has drained away, leaving nothing behind but a faint whiff of attitude.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
(Salerno-Sonnenberg's) determination and resilience should speak to a broader audience.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Film's real sticky wicket is that the bad guys not only threaten to nuke a major American city but do it — a conceit that might have been more amusing before terrorists destroyed the World Trade Center using hijacked commercial jets. Witnesses said the WTC attack looked like a movie; they didn't say it was a movie they wanted to see.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
It's ripe for an American remake, given the popularity of reality TV shows like "My Super Sweet 16" and "Bridezillas," but it's hard to imagine a better cast than this ensemble.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Though Estevez's achievement doesn't quite live up to his ambitions -- the climax of Altman's "Nashville" (1975) evokes the same brutal loss of innocence to more shattering effect -- it still contains enough powerful moments to balance the weaker sections.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This candy-colored animated fable is an awkward mix of corny bee puns, clever sight gags, kid-friendly action, adult-centric workplace angst and Seinfeld's distinctive navel-gazing wit. And what's up with those four-legged bees?- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
An excellent introduction to the subject, and a movie buff's delight.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The movie's tone fluctuates wildly, suggesting that no one was exactly sure what kind of movie they were making.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
A huge hit in France, this ensemble drama revolves around two very different social groups whose encounters with each other change several lives in surprising ways.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
A behind-the-scenes documentary that manages to be unabashedly sympathetic without being a puff piece.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
But it's also old-fashioned family drama that invites audience participation ("Don't you go making eyes at your cousin's husband, you little slut!"), and is surprisingly satisfying, in a gooey kind of way -- like macaroni and cheese or peach cobbler, perhaps.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Director Curtis Hanson keeps the hugely complicated story zooming along the boulevard of broken dreams without losing sight of the details that make the trip worthwhile.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Embry and first-time actress Sparks have charming chemistry, but Christopher's slight screenplay wears out its welcome long before the film - which runs a scant 80 minutes - is over.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This labored farce relies on an unpleasant collection of stereotypes for its comic effects, and Janger is a singularly unappealing leading man.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The film delivers what it promises: A look at the "wild ride" that ensues when brash young men set out to conquer the online world with laptops, cell phones and sketchy business plans.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Clearly a labor of love and a call to action, but it's undermined by the sheer volume of topics it tackles in addition to the main subject.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The bones of a great Western remain barely visible under the layer of mush he and screenwriter Ken Kaufman smooth over them, reminders of the viciously memorable film that might have been.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The result is often quite funny, without ever managing to say anything especially new or perceptive about fame and the culture of celebrity.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Caustic and despairing, Shrader's film lacks the delicate beauty of Atom Agoyan's "Sweet Hereafter," but has just as much bitter power.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The only famous person in the film, actor Peter Coyote, is an eloquent spokesman, but he was only a visitor to Black Bear; the stars are the full-timers, and their willingness to share their rich and sometimes painful memories is captivating.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
It's sometimes wrenching to watch, but it's too gripping to turn away from.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This dark comedy of addiction, delusion and humor as a weapon marks the feature directing debut of veteran writer Peter Tolan.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Cheerfully gross, deliberately retro horror picture pays tongue-in-cheek homage to the kind of genre movies Charles Band and Roger Corman's companies turned out in the 1980s.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Though Hearst is the hook, Stone's unwavering focus is on the heady mix of social and personal dynamics that spawned the SLA.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The narrative is cluttered with backstory, and the endless digressions overwhelm the efforts of a generally strong cast.- TV Guide Magazine
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