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
An icily seductive parable about family, power, unconventional justice and the perils of answered prayers.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Canet and Lefevre pruned subplots and fixed the novel's ending -- it's now merely preposterous rather than patently absurd – but it's the cast that makes the genre clichés feel vivid and even fresh.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The wholly invented character of unattainable love interest Julia Cook (the real Kelly once referred to an enigmatic "Julia" in a letter) is the film's weakest link and smacks of a desperate attempt to shoehorn a pretty woman into a story about grubby men with tangled beards.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Swaddled in terms so trite and cliched that they're almost guaranteed to bring out the closet cynic in even the most sympathetic viewers.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Although phenomenally well-acted, the film's leisurely pace ultimately makes it feel as oppressive as the tropical heat and humidity that gradually turn the characters into slow-moving heaps of damp, dirty rags.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Its power lies in the intense, subtle performances of the ensemble cast and Bellott's ability to keep the tangled narrative threads from becoming a knotted mess.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Despite some lovely performances (though, sad to say, Patricia Neal's isn't one of them) and charming moments, this meandering ensemble piece and its Tennessee Williams-ish finale is oddly out of character.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Ejiofor's polished, energetic performance -- including several song-and-dance numbers -- enlivens what's basically comfort food in movie form, but sometimes comfort food is exactly what the doctor ordered.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The complications are predictable, as is the resolution; what keeps the film from sinking into its own inconsequentiality is the throaty-voiced Henderson, who can make the most preposterous behavior ring absolutely true.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Given the controversy, which strongly suggested that the filmmakers had it in for President Bush, the film's biggest shocker may be how kind Range and coscreenwriter Simon Finch are to him.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
It may not be by-the-book history -- a relative term in any event, when discussing the ancients whose worldview embraced men, gods and monsters -- but what a spectacle!- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The formulaic mechanical plot machinations benefit greatly from the presence of the vivacious Stiles, gravely beautiful Blair and personable Lee, who radiates fundamental decency without seeming like a sap.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Lafosse's razor sharp dissection of relationships strained to the breaking point is hypnotic in a road-accident kind of way.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
A sprawling, messy, frustrating and impassioned examination of the psychological fallout from America's obsession with a highly artificial and all-but unattainable standard of beauty.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Simultaneously groundbreaking and remarkably faithful to the classic play.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This is first-rate comedy of discomfort, so don't sample it with a date unless you're looking for a very queasy evening.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The film works best when it's sticking to the guns and poses conventions of macho crime pictures. When it reaches for emotional resonance, the results range from unconvincing to ludicrous.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This tedious hodgepodge of martial-arts mayhem, bogus mysticism and computer-generated special effects doesn't even pretend to have a plot.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Black comedy requires perfect pitch: Pedro Almodovar has it and cowriters/directors Michalis Reppas and Thanasis Papathanasiou don't, at least by the evidence of this film.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Ultimately, Bubble is less important as a film than as an experiment in simultaneous cross-platform film distribution.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
A taut, literate tale of civilized men pitted against implacable nature, encumbered by a meaningless and not especially enticing title.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
It's sad to see such subtle, wrenchingly emotional work expended on such trifling material.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Crowe preserves the original film's plot twists and turns, but his version lumbers when it should be whipping along, daring you to keep up. The wall-to-wall pop music soundtrack eventually becomes oppressive, and Cruise's oily smile doesn't really constitute a characterization.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
It's all pure, brainless fluff, but it's unpretentious and "Wannabe" is damnably catchy.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This psychological sci-fi thriller was originally made as a 40-minute segment of an unrealized portmanteau picture, then expanded into a freestanding feature. That's probably why it's padded with shots of Olham running down corridors.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Overall it's a frustratingly uneven movie, delicate at one moment and bluntly obvious the next.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The film's tone is set by a bravura opening sequence that follows a single bullet from a factory conveyer belt to its resting place in a child's skull, and by Cage's flawlessly sardonic voice-over.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
John Walter's documentary suggests that Johnson, who made no distinction between his life and his art, designed every detail of his own mysterious 1995 suicide with the same whimsical care that went into his painstakingly assembled pieces, and provides an engaging overview of Johnson's eccentric career in the process.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Mitevska telescopes centuries of conflict between nations into an intimate story of siblings whose hopes for the future are being slowly poisoned by the sins of the past.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Since her claim to fame is having brought the first living panda -- a cub named Su Lin -- out of China, Harkness's success is a given, but the footage of pandas in their natural surroundings is enchanting.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Barnes, now in his seventies and relocated by the Witness Protection Program, is shot only in silhouette, but there's plenty of footage of him in his heyday, dressed to the pimpalicious nines and playing to the cameras like a movie star.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The film vacillates between inanity and flat-out lameness, and the decision to recut from an R-rated version to a PG-13 sucked out whatever life might have been left.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This flashy and ultimately conservative morality tale relies on shockingly frank sex talk to cover the fact that the characters are shockingly poorly developed.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The fact that it was shot at the picturesque Utah resort is a huge plus and the film is so unabashedly eager to please.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Old-fashioned fun that goes down as smoothly as a vintage cocktail.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Ambitious, deeply flawed and studded with sequences that achieve pure, majestic greatness.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
What really sinks the film, though, is the utter absence of chemistry between Perry and Willis.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Sweet, likable and consistently engaging, if so insubstantial that it's always on the verge of blowing away.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Xiao's bittersweet film is superficially a swoony love letter to the cinema. But her valentine has a hidden sting, rooted in some hard truths about movie mania.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
But what truly distinguishes the movie is Cage's performance, which is so off the wall that even if you don't like it you have to watch in awe.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Bello is phenomenally good as the embittered Marcia, while Stuart and Christensen do their best with their less complex roles, but they're all undermined by Alfieri's shrill, mannered dialogue and cliched backstories that wouldn't be out of place in a dysfunction-family-of-the-week movie.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
It's easy to envision the big-budget remake, but hard to imagine a mainstream American production capturing the original's sour, sweaty immediacy.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Pekar's autobiographical chronicle of day-to-day banality is a rich, if dingy, tapestry of ordinary life in all its infinite, homely peculiarity, which filmmakers Sheri Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini bring to uniquely eccentric life.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This version moves like a freight train, but suffers from a debilitating charm deficit. Wahlberg is no Michael Caine and Norton delivers what must be the sourest, most lifeless performance of his career to date.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The ensemble performances are perfectly meshed, and the Sprechers deserves special credit for bringing the desperate underside of Posey's brittle self-assurance to the surface.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Director Joseph Ruben's best efforts can't keep Gerald Di Pego's puzzle-picture script from toppling into absurdity as it lurches from melodrama to psychological thriller with supernatural overtones to full-blown exercise in X-Files-style nuttiness.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
MacKinnon's film draws on his past as a youth worker and features a standout performance from first-time performer Harry Eden.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Clearly, there's the germ of a good -- potentially even great -- movie here, but it's thoroughly smothered by a pair of lazy, self-congratulatory star turns by Hoffman and Travolta.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Simultaneously gorgeous and forgettable, sentimental and prurient.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Canadian-born choreographer Alison Murray draws on her own experiences as a 15-year-old runaway living in squats and on the streets, in her feature-filmmaking debut, which is a clear-eyed look at the pleasures and price of abandoning conventional mores for experimental lifestyles.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
There's less than meets the eye to writer-director Flowers' time-hopping narrative, and what could have been a routine but entertaining crime story gets hopelessly muddled in its telling, despite the efforts of a generally strong cast.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This second installment is heavy on battle sequences, which will thrill some viewers more than others.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Not a terrible movie exactly, just a dark, edgy idea relentlessly worn down into mildly diverting blandness by the mega-wattage presence of stars Mel Gibson and Julia Roberts.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Were the film's tone not so hysterical it might be provocative; as it is, insights and insults are inextricably intertwined.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This by-the-numbers (no pun intended) psychological thrill ride is efficient and utterly soulless.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Despite the futuristic setting, which relies so heavily on GGI effects that it looks like a feature-length production concept painting, this film is painfully predictable.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The stripped-down production give a disturbing sense of immediacy to an otherwise fairly conventional story about boys being prepared for war.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This dreary science-fiction/historical-action hybrid is a misfire of staggering proportions.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Ultimately the sci-fi fillips — human cloning, memory wipes, empathy viruses — are subordinate to screenwriter Frank Cottrell Boyce's doomed romance.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This soft, formulaic comedy/drama has a far better cast than it deserves, and they work their hearts out trying to bring life to a cliched script.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This limp, forgettable fluff is as preachy and heavy-handed as the "Goofus and Gallant" cartoons that a generation of children far less media-savvy than today's recognized as ham-fisted lessons in good behavior masquerading as funny strips.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Nathanson's script has a disheartening let's get on with it air, and the film feels like marathon training...- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
If Griffin were a jowly Southern redneck, his mean-spirited rants would make him a pariah.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The film's saddest contention is that five decades later American public schools remain economically segregated by economics, which too often produces classrooms whose complexions have changed little since the pre-Brown era.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
There's nothing hugely wrong with this picture, if you allow for the fact that it's derivative, predictable and crude. There just isn't anything especially right with it, except for a pretty creepy black-and-white nightmare sequence and a scene that reveals more than most people want to know about vampires' urinary peculiarities, but is certainly something you haven't seen before. Unfortunately, both occur within the last 20 minutes of the film, and there's a formulaic lot of nonsense to huff and puff through first.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The film is simultaneously sweet natured and sharply observed, and if love eventually conquers all, it takes its own sweet time doing it.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
There are echoes of Stephen Spielberg's "Duel," as well as "Roadgames," "The Hitcher" and "The Hills Have Eyes," but director/cowriter Mostow isn't interested in hommages: He's just looking to crank up the suspense (not the in your face action, thank heavens), bit by miserable bit, and does a very nice job of it.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Pacino is a one-man three-ring circus, blustering, capering, cursing, raging and weaseling his way through this predictable morality play like a trickster Satan on speed.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Brooding ghost story is rich with psychological and political implications that never obscure its fundamental creepiness.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Jelski's screenplay, a finalist in the fiercely competitive Walt Disney Screenwriting Fellowship competition, is repetitive and stagy.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
It's a show we don't see, presumably because of issues with music rights, and while "much ado about nothing" might be overstating things, after more than an hour and a half of buildup, it would have been nice to see Wu-Tang perform.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Rymer's film doesn't revitalize vampire clichés in any significant way and, frankly, "Velvet Goldmine" is a more seductive movie about sex, death and rock and roll -- and it's not even about vampires.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The supernatural plot elements are developed so unconvincingly that the story seems to be about people ruining their own lives by believing in stupid superstitions, so it’s a shock to realize the ghostly goings-on are meant to be taken seriously.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Fresnadillo's film is little more than a gloomy and attenuated Twilight Zone episode, reminiscent of Alex Cox's portentous "The Winner" (1997) without the truly breathtaking conclusion.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Frenetic and cheerless action aside, the film's real problem is the Cat, who looks most unmagically like a second-string college sports mascot and conducts himself like a risque baggy-pants comedian.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Cunningham tackles a complicated subject, rejecting the stridency favored by filmmakers of the Spike Lee persuasion in favor of a more even-handed tone.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Tony Scott's thriller is flashy, but it's not dead stupid and it's never dull.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
He (Anderson) manages to guide his cast of characters through an epic story of self-delusion with a skill and grace that many more experienced filmmakers would be hard put to match.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
An awkward amalgam of road movie, buddy comedy and melodramatic conventions, first-time writer-director Jordan Roberts' male weepie ricochets between affecting scenes and insufferably maudlin ones.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Once it settles down, it becomes a star-making vehicle for Jackman, and a supremely polished example of the sort of swoony love story cherished by women who secretly hope that some day their prince will come.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The whole lurid business is undeniably entertaining, but it leaves a bad taste.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Though the script's twists and turns are fairly conventional and the Davis subplot is handled in an awkwardly obvious way, first-time feature filmmaker Robert Connolly understands the power of style.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This whimsical weeper gets off to an awkward start and never finds its footing.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
A breezy romantic comedy in which opposites attract against all the reasonable odds, this slight but thoroughly charming film benefits immeasurably from the assured performances of leads Juliette Binoche and Jean Reno.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
What begins as a sorry exercise in cynical seduction becomes a case of amour fou.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
An Arthurian tale minus everything the average person knows or cares about Arthur and his knights.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
If the movie overall had the bitter brio of Malcolm McDowell's brief turn as Globecom guru Teddy K, a Franken-mogul stitched together from bits of Richard Branson, Barry Diller and Rupert Murdoch, it would be a pointed black comedy.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
For a movie rooted in reality, Italian filmmaker Saverio Costanzo's taut psychological drama is in desperate danger of drowning in metaphor.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Raised in Mumbai, classically trained actor-turned-writer-director Khanna addresses the volatile issue of women's rights within Islamic households, and if his sensationalistic debut feature makes its point with a heavy hand, it's also starkly effective.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Inlike many directors with music video backgrounds, Tim Story keeps the flashy cutting to a minimum and lets the story unfold at its own unhurried pace.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Raimi and company deftly balance spectacle and character-based drama, occasionally tweaking the comic-book mythology but always respecting creator Stan Lee's idea that costumed crime-fighter Peter Parker's life as Spider-Man isn't all derring-do and public accolades.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Ice Cube is so genial and laid back it's hard to believe he's the same snarling thug who ass-kicks his way through action pictures, let alone the seethingly angry rapper who emerged from NWA in the early 1990s.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Fingleton turned his own story into a feel-good fable; neither Martin McGrath's gorgeous cinematography nor the hypnotic score by Run Lola Run(1998) composers Johnny Klimek and Reinhold Heil's can compensate.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
But once you're good and drunk on the look, details like the tin-eared tough-guy dialogue (which sounds especially stilted issuing from flesh-and-blood mouths) don't seem so important.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Overall the film is a stylish lark with no resonance, a mean-spirited one-night stand of a movie.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The only constant in Park's brilliantly cruel world is this: No matter how badly things seem to be going, there's a twist of fate lurking around the next curve that will make them worse.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The writers get the mix just about right, and first-time Bond director Martin Campbell moves things along fairly briskly.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
There may be a way to remake 1973's cult thriller The Wicker Man, in which a deeply Christian cop has his religious convictions shaken to the core as he investigates the disappearance of a child from within a cheerfully pagan community, but Neil LaBute didn't find it.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Director Stephen Purvis and writer Chris Haddock never rise above the material's inherent pulpiness, but they keep the twists coming until the very end.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Characters find themselves in absurdly complicated situations, but respond with sardonic cool rather than hot-blooded hysteria.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Shelly was murdered before she could continue developing as a writer and director, and while this, her last film, is extremely uneven and undermined by an excess of quirk, Keri Russell's performance as a pregnant pie-guru is a charmer with a bracing streak convincingly desperate determination.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
No aliens. No firefights in space. No robots. Just an eerily attractive, sleekly costumed cast in a stylish, cooly intelligent throwback to the Twilight Zone era of deeply serious science fiction.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Carrey's relentless showboating is almost its undoing.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The result is an unpleasant slog to an unrewarding conclusion that feels far longer than it is.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The film ends on an ambiguous note that will infuriate some viewers and strike others as the only possible finale to Don's sad absurdist journey.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The love story is pretty conventional stuff, but Linney's finely calibrated, low-key performance as Callie goes a long way towards making it more interesting than it might otherwise be.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Formulaic though it is, the story hits the right emotional buttons and promises that hope and dogged work trump despair.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
If ever a movie cried out to be French, it's this one, and not just because it's a remake of Claude Chabrol's notoriously icy La Femme Infidele (1968).- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Surprisingly, Hurley comes off better than either of her demonstrably more versatile co-stars; she's not much of an actress, but she has an engagingly saucy swagger and her open-mouthed expression of outraged disbelief is priceless.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
For parents who were unable to secure tickets for the young fans in their households, it's nothing short of a godsend.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
What divides opinion is the film's tone: Are those naive, portentous pronouncements about media, voyeurism and the numbing, pornographic allure of atrocity footage a sly reflection of the YouTube generation's boundary-free narcissism and callow youth, or evidence that Romero – never one to underplay a metaphor – has become a hectoring, tin-eared fogey?- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Whether this measured exercise in romantic melancholy moves you to tears or bores you to them is probably a matter of personal susceptibility to the sting of bitter regret for love lost.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
A riot of artfully grungy hotel rooms, sleazy costumes and sordid behavior, Allan Mindel's directing debut gives off the smug air of hipsters at play, making it hard to care what happens to any of its lost souls and inept opportunists.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Watts is good -- occasionally very good -- and her willingness to be filmed at unflattering angles, in pore-wallowing or with bright blue ice cream smeared on her face is admirable.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Renner's performance as Dahmer is unimpeachable, fascinating without being charismatic, and Kayaru's Rodney is a marvel of complicated characterization under difficult circumstances.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This thin, clichéd comedy of crime and social climbing contains some scattered laughs and whole lot of padding.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Markowitz 's low key coming of age/coming out story isn't particularly original, but features subtle performances and a vivid sense of place.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Without Bullock, the film's frantic antics would be painful to watch; with her, they're just trivial.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The technology for twinning a single young actress is considerably more seamless than it was in 1961, and Lohan is a perky charmer.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
There's a caper and there are some laughs, but this isn't a larky caper flick; it's a pulpy little story that could at any minute go straight to hell.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Though consistently handsome, the film never quite achieves the shallow but hugely seductive intensity of its MTV-style opening credits sequence.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
It's too fundamentally light-hearted to wallow in grinding poverty and despair.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The battle sequences and lightsaber battles are gripping, and for every scene that doesn't deliver the goods, there's another that hums with surprising intensity.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
It quickly becomes clear that Nijinsky's disordered thoughts are simply the rantings of a man losing his grip on reality. They're sad and occasionally evocative, but they're not especially interesting in and of themselves, and do nothing to evoke or illuminate Nijinsky's genius.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Westby's sympathy for the Scottys of the world is evident, but like them he doesn't always know how to put his best face forward.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
There's little room for ideas when there are flaming cars to be crashed, and overall the film is an infelicitous hodgepodge that lifts as liberally from "The Quatermass Experiment" (1956) and "28 Weeks Later" (2007) as "Body Snatchers" while leaving all the best bits behind -- even the iconic pods are gone.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The trouble with this precious fable isn't that the Whitmans are self-absorbed ninnies: It's that they aren't characters at all.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Katzir's documentary is as much a labor of love as Spaisman's theater, and it's often rough around the edges.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The result is undeniably offensive and occasionally very funny, but the gags fall flat as often as they hit their mark.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
A quietly harrowing chronicle of addiction and fragile recovery anchored by Vera Farmiga's intense performance.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The film's seriousness of intent is unimpeachable – Forman and Carriere see disturbing echoes of the modern world in 18th-century Spain -- but the execution borders on farce.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Absolutely breathtaking documentary whose close-up shots of birds in flight are so freakishly intimate that the film is compelled to open with the statement they're not special effects.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Mukherjee's charm keeps the child-like Geeta from being thoroughly annoying, and the musical numbers are pleasant, if not particularly memorable.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Shot in the warm sepia tones of bittersweet memories, this whimsical, unpretentious shaggy war story is the sort of film that looks like a small gem when you accidentally stumble across it on TV or at the video store. But it feels a little unsatisfying when its small virtues are stretched to cover a big screen.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Davaa and Falorni's film does suggest that camels have inner lives as rich and complicated as the human beings with whom they live in such intimate proximity. But they're also wholly camels, matted, goopy-eyed, gritty with sand and quick to knee an adorable calf in the snout when its demands become annoying.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This film pivots on a romantic triangle as overwrought as it is stylized. It's like a Douglas Sirk melodrama ratcheted up with fists of fury and wrapped in apparently endless yards of shimmering silk.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
A brightly colored, picaresque adventure that's equal parts telenovela melodrama and pop-magic realism.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The breakout star is retired English bouncer Lenny McLean, 49, who memorably declares, "I f***ing hate violence."- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The brouhaha aside, this chronicle of SNAFUs foretold doesn't have much new to say but says it with biting precision, and Phoenix's sharp, sneakily sympathetic performance is a pleasure to watch.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Murphy is a revelation as James, and what American Idol castoff Hudson lacks in technical acting craft she makes up for in raw energy and a voice that could melt the rhinestones off a beauty queen. To complain that Beyonce pales by comparison is to fault her for nailing the essence of the infinitely malleable Deena.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This coolly beautiful film is both a superior thriller and an engrossing study of a sociopath's progress.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Mines familiar territory and does nothing especially new with it. On the plus side, Kishitani is a spectacular villain.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Although inspired by actual events, the film proceeds along formulaic wish-fulfillment lines, its dynamics unaltered by the casting of a mixed-race actor in what was originally a redneck role; it's a sign of some sort of social progress that justified ass-kicking trumps race.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The movie takes a desperately wrong turn about 45 minutes in, and you can almost hear the great sucking sound as the whole thing churns down the drain in a swirl of narrative contradictions.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Unfortunately, Flicker wasn't able to rise above the limitations of his microbudget, and his message is compromised by student-film production values and performances that range from adequate to pretty awful.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
It takes a certain genius to make butchered corpses, sociopathic lunacy and meth-fueled debauchery nerve-scrapingly dull, and German director Marc Schoelermann and screenwriters Mark Neveldine and Brian Taylor (Crank) possess it.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Ricci brings her trademark gravity to the wary Suzie, but Blanchett's role is the dazzler.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
A buzzed-up gloss on the original, it's entertaining -- if fundamentally shallow.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Ultimately, though, the film is forgettable even by the standards of prefabricated pop ephemera.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This simplistic animated feature falls firmly within the long tradition of bland, upbeat and earnest religious instructional films.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
A preposterous wilderness adventure (the kind that makes kids think sneaking into the zoo's bear pit is a cool idea) laid over a touchy-feelie story about good parenting.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
You can't help but wish the set up were shorter and the dilemma longer.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
While the film is shot in shades of gray, the drama is played out in black and white.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Banned for many years in director/cowriter Alfonso Cuaron's native Mexico, his debut feature is a bawdy comedy that pivots on the comeuppance of a serial philanderer.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This intimate coming-of-age story benefits from excellent performances, notably Gregory Smith's.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Tatou IS adorable, but Michele is a such a brainless flibbertigibbet that it's hard to take her spiritual quest at all seriously, and if you don't feel in your heart that she's really TRYING to grow and mature as a spiritual person, then who cares about her idiotic antics?- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Cocaine cash financed Miami's renaissance, but the film never downplays the human cost at which that urban renewal was purchased.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The trouble isn't just that this haunted-house story, written by Mark Wheaton and directed by Hong Kong filmmakers Danny and Oxide Pang, is both formulaic and derivative. It's that it's completely free of atmosphere, the very thing that their 2002 "The Eye" had in such creepy abundance.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This sly, subtle and very French psychological drama dissects the relationship between three insecure Sorbonne students and their deeply flawed idol.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Lurie's film never fully reconciles the story about newsroom ethics with the sentimental drama about bad dads and bereft sons.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The film's mix of cheap gags, macabre coming-of-age story, social satire and Cronenbergian body horror is apparently meant to gel into black comedy, but it never quite does.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This rambling exercise in local color has been a pet project of Duvall's for more than a decade, and it's to his credit that he managed to get such a low-concept picture produced. It's also to his credit that he resists the temptation to take easy potshots at religion, particularly of the revivalist variety.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The war between highly specific coming-of-age angst and icky-sticky overcoming-adversity cliches eventually brings the whole thing down.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This amiable picture talks tough, but it's all bluster -- in the end it's as sweet as "Greenfingers."- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Even the film's ironic ending is deftly handled, its cynicism is tempered by a certain rueful wisdom.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The screenplay is blessedly free of mediocre songs and light on flashy pop-culture in-jokes.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
It's Jagger's bone-dry, mournfully brittle delivery that gives the film its bittersweet bite. Michael Des Barres and Anjelica Huston make the most of their supporting roles.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
For anyone unfamiliar with pentacostal practices in general and theatrical phenomenon of Hell Houses in particular, it's an eye-opener.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
fans of this venerable Eurotrash form will welcome any evidence that it's still alive and writhing lasciviously.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
A disappointment that mines the same vein of gross-out romantic comedy as"There's Something About Mary," without that film's oddball charm.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Harlin's brisk pacing leaves little time for reflection, but the whole house of blood-spattered cards dissolves upon even cursory reflection.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
To call the film noisy and brainless isn't even a criticism - it's unadulterated auto-porn, as shallow and shiny as it wants to be.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The lanky, wide-eyed Tautou is so phenomenally charming -- her smile could sweeten vinegar -- as to make Amelie irresistible.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This potent drama might be dismissed as therapy in the guise of filmmaking if it weren't so clear-eyed. At its core are three remarkable performances.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Mena's characters rarely do the sort of spectacularly stupid things that provoke derisive laughter from seasoned horror-moviegoers.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Genuinely gripping, balancing the travails of constructing the tunnel against the characters' stories with considerable skill.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Amiable, brightly colored spoof of '60s pop culture.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The film's title refers both to tiny, fish-shaped vials of liquid heroin and the small fry flitting around the edges of the urban drug scene.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The larger message remains clear: Unified communities have more power than they realize, and the most vicious enemy of progress is learned helplessness.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
A textbook illustration of the American movie industry's ability to take an offbeat foreign film and systematically alter or soften every provocative and original thing about it.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The pace is brisk and the details are carefully arranged, but there's no sparkle -- and what's a romance without that?- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
There's a terrific movie buried in Woody Allen's tale of two American girls broadening their horizons in Barcelona, and every once in a while tantalizing glimpses penetrate the twee narration and mannered performances.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The plot is more of the same old running and screaming, but Weaver is worth the price of admission all by herself, which is just as well in light of the less-than-fleshed out characters by whom she's surrounded.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
As a debut it holds out the promise that Montias might do something more interesting in his next film.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
If not precisely charismatic, Statham brings authentic athleticism and a certain cheeky presence to his lightly written role.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
This stylized tale of guilt and retribution is a surprisingly sleek and affecting drama.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The film falls short even as a record of Broderick and Lane's crowd-pleasing rapport: Both have done the show so many times that every scrap of life is gone.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Scenemaker Dito Montiel's rough, grating memoir of growing up in a poor, violent section of Astoria, Queens, in the mid-1980s features a few too many arty flourishes, but also packs a raw power that's hard to shake.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The acting is flat, and the scientist's ideological speeches too bluntly designed to mirror post-9/11 rhetoric. But there's a dreamy fascination to the iconic images of machines fighting a perpetual war for the human creators they'll inevitably outlast.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The plot unfolds exactly as you expect, but Gedeck imbues Martha with a remarkably subtlety of spirit.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Surprisingly compelling, if not up to dealing with the larger political issues it raises.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Narrated by NAACP Chairman Julian Bond, the film's form is measured, but its message is incendiary.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Clichés negate bona fides; hence, the movie feels like a corny Mickey Rooney/Judy Garland vehicle with cussing. That said, the tapping is fabulous.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Characters are undermined by the inexpressive animation that mars the majority of animated films: Their haunted inner lives are clearly meant to take center stage, but their faces are blank and two-dimensional.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
For all the bloodshed, it's fundamentally a cold, cold fable, the icy whisper that turns every happy thing to ash.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The movie's mimicry of reality TV clichés is eerie, from the use of re-creations and supplemental footage (especially the experimental video Dawn and Jeff made together for a high school art project) to the smarmy commentary.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Fluffy, candy-colored and aimed directly at tweens -- girls between the ages of 10 and 12.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
It's a serious and well-researched consideration of natural childbearing vs. hospital delivery that explores the larger social conditions and assumptions that shape women's choices.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Formulaic to the core, this reworking of the fondly remembered high-school slasher picture works surprisingly well on its own terms.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The truly creepy thing is that there's no bizarre, COMA-like conspiracy behind the malfeasance, just an awful betrayal of trust -- the kind of thing that sends an icy, paranoid chill through the blood just as the anesthetic takes hold.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Slick and glib when it means to be profound yet ruefully witty; its rhythms are pure sitcom, complete with emotional rimshots.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
These lessons are driven home via silly dialogue ("Her name was Marion and she loved volcanoes...") and painfully predictable plot complications, repeated often enough that there's no need to take notes, except for the benefit of friends who fall asleep.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The juvenile gags seem aimed at moviegoers who hate the whole idea of independent/art/foreign-language films and the stuck-up eggheads who like them -- so what's the point?- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
You come away from the film wishing her the best, but fearing the worst.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Director Rick Rosenthal ("Halloween II") seems to have forgotten everything he ever knew about generating suspense, relying on cliched shadows and grainy, handheld images supposedly shot by the increasingly terrified students.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Though the movie is clearly meant to work on its own, the relationship between Starling and Lecter plays best if you're familiar with "Lambs."- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The sequence in which the crew acquires press credentials to the Republican National Convention by helping organizers desperate to book a rock band (they deliver Leitch's scruffy pals the Interpreters USSA) is priceless.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Part of the problem is its length; at two hours and ten minutes it meanders rather than building up a head of steam and barreling straight through logic and plausibility on the way to Hell.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Adapted from J.G. Ballard's cult novel, a dispassionate exegesis of warped desire, Cronenberg's movie is suitably cold, cold, cold: proof positive that movies about sex aren't always sexy movies, at least by conventional standards.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The film is graphic without being lurid, and the naked emotions onscreen are far more shocking than the naked bodies -- though there are plenty of those, in all shapes and sizes.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
While the subject is potentially fascinating, Gosling's unfocused, sluggish film is a case study in missed opportunities.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
French up-and-comer Alexandre Aja's full-bore do-over is a shockingly successful update of a seminal 1970s shocker.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
A tragicomic Holocaust fable that's by turns silly, triumphant and achingly sad.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Wongpim pays tribute to classic Italian Westerns in his face-hugging close-ups, but his film is more silly than existentially anarchic, and its exotic quirkiness wears thin quickly.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Adventurous viewers will find this unusual genre hybrid an intriguing experience, and Donnie Yen's fight choreography is breathtaking.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Bizarre, utterly original and truly indescribable comedy...You just have to see it for yourself.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
A risky, not entirely successful comedy about mental disability, based on the novel by Sherwood Kiraly.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Well-written and surprisingly well-acted by a relatively inexperienced cast- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Noisy and obnoxious, this flashy action picture is so hell-bent on seeming smart that it fairly forces you to think about how fundamentally stupid it is.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
As M, Dench knows she has a tiger by the tail and isn't fazed in the slightest. Reservations aside, the film marks the beginning of a new phase in James Bond's history, and it promises to be a gripping one.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
It's sometimes hard to breath for the sheer volume of acting sucking the air out of the room, and keeping three narratives movie without muddling them all is a hugely ambitious undertaking for any director, let alone one on his second film.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The heart of the problem may be that real life youth-sports insanity has far exceeded the bounds of family-friendly comedy.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The banality of faceless evil isn't actually all that compelling on the hoof; the film's more interesting as a curiosity than as a film.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Overall, the book is a far more rewarding experience than the movie.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Cornish's raw, nuanced performance and Shortland's sympathetic but unsentimental portrayal of Heidi's fumbling steps toward maturity are underscored by Sydney-based band Decoder Ring's catchy, angst-ridden score.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
The result is a soggy swamp of nyah-nyah-nyah-nyah-nyahing, its only grace notes are Giamatti's fine, nuanced performance as Heep and Christopher Doyle's handsome cinematography.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Surprisingly effective supernatural tale in which there's more to fear from the living than the dead.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
A murder mystery wrapped in an experimental portrait of life in a rural Hungarian town, writer-director Gyorgy Palfi's engrossing feature debut is a breathtaking feat of filmmaking.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Though it includes a couple of sword fights, Yamada's epic domestic drama could easily be called an anti-samurai film. But its aim is less to subvert the genre's conventions than to deepen them, extending its parameters to include the minutia and rhythms of everyday life.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Offbeat documentary filmmakers Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbato dissect the history and legend of perhaps the best known and most profitable pornographic movies ever made.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Lee occasionally stumbles as a documentarian... But the material is so profoundly moving that it hardly matters.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
An odd blend of recycled American exploitation movie tropes and snarky Euro-art film attitude.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Could as easily be called "Spurlock: Cultural Learnings Of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation Of America."- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Though the ballets themselves are beautifully shot, they lean heavily in the direction of gimmicky and prop-heavy pieces; they're visually interesting but, by and large, they're not great dance.- TV Guide Magazine
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- Maitland McDonagh
Salvatores draws strikingly unsentimental performances from his young actors, all making their film debuts, and juxtaposes the petty meanness of children with the calculated cruelty of desperate adults to haunting effect.- TV Guide Magazine
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- TV Guide Magazine
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