Marc Savlov
Select another critic »For 2,177 reviews, this critic has graded:
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41% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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57% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 12 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Marc Savlov's Scores
- Movies
- TV
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,039 out of 2177
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Mixed: 612 out of 2177
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Negative: 526 out of 2177
2177
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Marc Savlov
If Victorian Manchester had been remotely like this, H.G. Wells never would have bothered to pen "The Time Machine" – he'd have just stepped outside and into the fray.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
At times it feels almost too busy with plotting. There's so much going on, and so much to take in, that it leaves you winded. But that's origin stories for you. No one ever said setting up a savior would be simple.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
It's not quite quick enough to be anywhere near as gloomily engaging as the cast's original outing.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
For those willing to submit to its terrible charms, it may be the single most important debut to come out of the Americas in years.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
It's a shame that the subjects of Gazecki's film come off as so many quasi-mystical loonies.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
The Nines is the feature-film-directing debut from screenwriter John August (Go, Big Fish), but it feels much more like some Bizarro World collaboration between Jean-Paul Sartre and Charlie Kaufman, and not in a good way, either.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Ultimately, though, and despite an enormously creepy turn from Bentley (American Beauty), the story has nowhere else to go but into the standard (albeit judiciously-used) stalk-and-slash territory.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
This is an impressively realized (and, yes, occasionally, unavoidably humorous) valentine to Hollywood's sci-fi glory days – all heart, no snark, and one big eye.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
You know you're watching some sort of bizarre classic when King of Trash John Waters gets half his face burned off by sulfuric acid in the first act.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
The Dennis Miller Show… with nekkid vampire-vixens. That's it in a coffin-nail.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Offers too small a dose of the blood-and-sand adventure you expect from this sort of big-budget Hollywood remake. As it is, it borders on The English Patient's on again-off again heroics, minus Anthony Minghella's patient skill in eliciting romantic suspense.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Inoffensive and sporadically funny, its chief charm is Arnold's ridiculous noggin, and that's not saying much.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Michael Lehmann's "Heathers" followed the same sort of story line to much better effect in 1989, and Clueless leaves you itching to race over to the video store in search of just that.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
The Yes Men’s bravery and unflagging sense of optimistically doomed humor – which comes across as a quixotic version of Monty Python by way of Upton Sinclair – is to be applauded and, wherever possible, acted upon.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
October Sky falls flat (despite its rich tone and some startling cinematography by Fred Murphy) due to its all-too-obvious third act and the vague fact that, really, not that much happens.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Pink Flamingos is, in its own unique way, the quintessential American Family Film. Not my family, certainly, and probably not yours, but a family nonetheless. So here's to family values. And shock values, too.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
If you can work your way past Vantage Point's goofy casting that places a bland, blank-eyed Hurt in the White House, then I suppose you can manage to forgive this "Rashomon" rip-off's other glaring idiosyncrasies, of which there are many.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Like rocky road ice cream, The Rundown is chunky stuff, full of calories and easy to take in small doses. Also like rocky road, it’s bound to attract flies if you leave it lying around, and, more to the point, too much of it is likely to make you gag.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Don’t leave until the final credits finish rolling or you’ll miss what many are considering Kill Bill: Vol. 1’s best bit. Trust us on this one.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Suicide Kings' morbid sense of humor does nothing but muddle the film's overall tone. Comedy? Caper flick? It's all too much, and simultaneously not enough by a long shot.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Wildly entertaining, "Shakespeare in Love" minus the Bard and the babe, but with substantive style to burn.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Petrie (Richie Rich) has crafted a snuffling dog of a comedy that's far too reliant on less-than-amazing CGI effects.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Do we like John Wilmot, the second Earl of Rochester? As played by Depp, this 17th-century nobleman-cum-travesty is a carriage crash of epic proportions, and so it's difficult not to crane your neck around to get a better view of the proceedings.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
An altogether more viscerally engaging film, from its relentless pacing and slam-bang effects work to the fine, appropriately heroic score by John Ottman. That the movie has an obvious gay subtext neither adds nor detracts from the film’s smashing popcorn appeal.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Despite its high tech sheen and overstuffed cast of characters, played by some of the best actors in the land, this mega-mecha melee manages to give short shrift to both the airborne action set-pieces that define Iron Man's zoomy panache and incoming supervillain Whiplash, aka Ivan Vanko (Rourke).- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
There are, of course, the requisite trial sequences, and some mildly horrific shocks along the way, but Ruben and company fail to make any of this very interesting.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Ultimately, Meyjes focuses too much on Max when he should be filling the screen with this tortured, dull artist and monster-in-the-making.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Kids will revolt, parents will snooze, and I will be downright giddy if I never encounter another Pokémon movie as long as I live. Ack!- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Tyler Perry has already been here and done that to such a degree that this particular cinematic field should now be plowed under and salted so that nothing might grow thereupon forevermore. Amen.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
As scripted by Craig Titley, this first in a presumptive franchise is a dull, scattershot affair that owes much to both "X-Men" and Greek mythology, but which never seems to slow down enough to make any sense whatsoever.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
The overall tone of this rocket-paced updating is exhilaratingly giddy, making it by far Disney’s best animated film since "Mulan."- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
A disturbing, spare story and a return to Polanski's earlier thematic grounds; it's not Knife in the Water, but it does feature fragmenting marriages and a big boat.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Charmless, unfrightening, and even devoid of the requisite gratuitous nudity, Anaconda just plain bites.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Go see it, get the adrenaline rush, and then go home and forget about it. It's noisy and fun, but that's all it is.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
This is a war film with precious little war, which was also the crux of Swofford's book.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
When you've got Maya Angelou and Cicely Tyson in the kitchen, laying on the sophomoric laughs is just plain stupid.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
It's exasperating watching so much top-drawer talent wasted in a film that wraps itself up with one of the most preposterous (not to mention obvious) endings the genre has ever seen.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
The resulting film makes Sam Raimi's "The Quick and the Dead" look like a stone cold neo-Western thoroughbred.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
While the climax is admittedly something of a letdown after all the build-up, it's a hopelessly, helplessly original film, all guts, no glory.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Feels awfully rushed, as Ryan flies from the Ukraine to Moscow to the Russian hinterlands and back to Baltimore to make sweet, sophomore agent love to his physician girlfriend (Moynahan). It has the feel of one of 007's globe-hopping adventures, but without any of that franchise's giddy sense of fun.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Like a car crash in slo-mo, it's a riveting, beautiful mess.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Should be required viewing for prospective parents still sitting on the spermatazoan fence; after all, you're going to need a good sense of humor, aren't you?- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Phillippe does a dark, searing turn with a character that could have easily been little more than Taps-era hubris, and Gordon-Levitt, as one of King's more fragmented former charges, is riveting and convincingly small-town Texas.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
When Dangerous Beauty grows up, it wants to be a Merchant/Ivory film. Too bad puberty is still such a long way off.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
The film's very title is a tease, however: It never gets all that loud, and you might doze off after 30 minutes of watching this unwieldy power trio recount their formative years and visit old haunts before heading on to a soundstage for their minimum rock & roll "summit."- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
So great are the charges raised against the Bush administration in the film, and so combustible the current state of geopolitics, that Moore’s film could actually prove to be the first in history to help unseat a sitting American president.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Hardly a comic masterpiece -- the jokes are awfully broad and obvious -- but I couldn't help feeling relieved at the film's absence of malice.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Alive is no Oscar-challenger, certainly, but it does treat a very dicey incident with the even-keeled direction the story deserves.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
One of the most affecting and certainly the most intimate of the cinematic arguments against the war in Iraq yet made.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
This is nobody's idea of a happy family story, but it is a pristinely chilling depiction of familial meltdown in a post-Stalinist, Twilight Zone anti-place, the dark heart of heartlessness and mysterious parenting techniques.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Much has been made of the film's ending, vis-à-vis whether or not it's a pro- or anti-organized religion commentary of some sort. The Hughes Brothers, for two, say they just wanted to make a kickass piece of contemporary entertainment, and I, for one, believe them.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
It's dumb, to be sure, but then again, so were most of the old movie cliffhangers, from which Timecop is obviously derived.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
All I can seem to muster, post-screening, is a modicum of fondness and a probably impermanent relief that the film isn't anywhere near as awful as it might have been in less capable hands.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
At its core the film is as standardized as the exam it seeks to debunk, and nearly as tedious.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
There's not as much bombast here as there was in Parker's Commitments, but then Frears is an entirely different kind of director. He prefers the ensemble to the character study, and here he does a wonderful job of it.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Is it classic cinema? Perhaps not, but then again, American shores and citizens have never been lacerated by atomic weapons. What do we know?- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Cobbling together so many different characters (nearly all of them familiar to regular viewers) has left the Kids' feature debut as something of a letdown. We've seen it all before, and better, on HBO and Comedy Central.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
While Linklater's version has its own unique pacing, mounting up more like a series of innings than a series of acts (even if you think you know how it ends, that bottom-of-the-ninth screwball still beans you silly), it lacks the screwball-to-the-noggin punch of the original.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
The Descent may not be everything you've heard, but man, it's also a lot of things you haven't.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
There's a manipulative streak to the proceedings, and you'd have to be stone cold dead not to grasp the inevitable outcome long before the third act, but it's a professionally handled sort of emotional manipulation common to its genre, dating back to "Blithe Spirit" and, somewhat less memorably, "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir."- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
This is classic Hollywood, at its best and worst, sticky rich and scabrous. It may not be the truth, per se, but it sure sounds good.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Schizophrenia never looked so good or so mesmerizing as it does here, and Paprika, while certainly not suitable for kids, manages to capture the childlike, helter-skelter chaos and curiosity of the human mind better than any other animated film.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Remains an above-average and affecting descent into both heretofore unknown Soviet naval history and the always popular submarine-in-peril genre.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
The script fires off clunker after clunker so fast you don't know whether to laugh or cry. (I chose to laugh as I'd already done enough crying at The English Patient.) Vintage bad Stallone, this lost-in-the-shuffle Summer of '96 blockbuster is just what you thought it would be: loud, boisterous, and without a single original line of dialogue. It's enough to make you miss Judge Dredd.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Calling The Unborn a dull, plodding, exposition-crammed slog through a twilight of barely maintained tedium is like calling "Valkyrie" a yawn. It's too easy.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
There's plenty of doom, gloom, and outright despair on hand here but very little genuine human emotion.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Retelling of White's classic children's book is a spun-sugar treacle-bomb, though a darn good-looking one.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Full of period locations, costumes, and one very clever Lana Turner gag, it's easy to see why Ellroy is so pleased with the film.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
A poke in the eye of genre convention with a flensing blade and a disarmingly charming razor-blade grin.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
This is not your mother's murder mystery, unless your mother's maiden name is de Sade and she has an appallingly bleak vision of modern society that occasionally fixates on the historical misdeeds of the corporate/industrial world and the correction thereof.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Nowhere near the Hollywood disaster that was foretold, Waterworld is a near-model summer fantasy: two hours and 21 minutes of loud, expansive fun.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
It's a mess best left to the nitrate ashes of forgotten film and television history.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Like its protagonist, it never hands you explanations on a silver platter, and it makes you think a bit, something far too few thrillers do these days.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Torpedoed by its own overarching idealism -- the film targets the new star system, the media, the studios, digital technology, and pretty much everything else you might care to think of -- and not enough script to back it all up.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Who among us can explain the enigma wrapped in a riddle surrounded by fierce, ravening, razor-toothed conundrums that is German director Uwe Boll?- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
The film itself is an effective enough metaphor for out-of-control bullshit that frankly, Koepp aside, was part and parcel of King’s novella from page 1.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Absolutely delightful filmmaking, chock-full of gorgeously goofy animation and a storyline that cleverly echoes everything from "Stalag 17" to "Cool Hand Luke."- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
What is notable, though, is the amount of compassion invested in the film by Cameron and co-screenwriter William Wisher. There's a fairly well-drawn moral message in T2 that was more or less absent in the first film.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Mamet's dialogue is still on the mark, rapid-fire, and as cutting as an antique straight razor.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Equal parts French sex farce, Mai-Decembre romance, middle-aged white male fantasy, and wannabe Hitchcockian intrigue, Fontaine's film can be a chore to sit through, but not for any of the obvious reasons.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
It's all one big blur: sound, fury, and Martin Sheen devouring scenery as if it were going out of style (and in Spawn, it's definitely not).- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
There's so much information and so many finely honed arguments in this ultimately joyous film that it's liable to send audiences scurrying home to their computers to download the bands they've just heard.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
All of the major players turn in powerhouse performances, and Fishburne nails his best role yet as Furious.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
The barrage of information in Rebels is at times wearying; indeed many of the speakers look somewhat battle-weary, but there's clearly still a holy fire burning deep within their now-hooded eyes.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Not since Mario Bava's "Hercules in the Haunted World" has Greco-Roman movie-house mythmaking been so thoroughly well-conceived and executed.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Unlike anything you've ever seen before, Final Fantasy is, finally, one for the history books, and tremendous fun to boot. It makes Lara Croft look like an old maid.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Splice is a twisted little genetic updating that's not half as electrifying as Shelley's novel twist on the whole man/God/creation situation (and the perils thereof).- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Egregiously mediocre and flagrantly ill-conceived in every department, this is, truly, the cinematic equivalent of finding a single solitary Saltine in your stocking and a pair of old tube socks beneath the tree. Humbug!- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
It's nasty, brutal stuff, but it's also unlike anything else out there.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Highwaymen is an also-ran. It lacks the sprawling, Westernized mythos of The Hitcher and feels, in the end, like a previously owned nightmare sorely in need of a new universal hell joint.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
It’s most definitely not for the squeamish nor the easily offended -- the death scenes in Final Destination 2, of which there are many, are immensely bloody and imaginative affairs, full of exploding limbs, squashed bodies, and graphic, gory ultra-violence.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Once you get past the admittedly breathtaking shots of our national landmarks being turned into kindling, the rest of the film is a tired and empty two hours of feel-good patriotism and oddly cast characters.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Less a traditional martial-artistry marathon than it is an exercise in filmic frustration, lovely to look at by small degrees, but a mud-spattered mess of a movie overall.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
The result is a vacuous feel-good movie that leaves you feeling nothing at all.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Vaughn did a cracking good caper film with a pre-007 Daniel Craig called "Layer Cake" six years ago, but Kick-Ass has little of that film's heady panache and instead batters you about the face and neck with wildly over-the-top fountains of gore, bone-cracking slow-motion, and, yes, Cage, who dials his acting down a few notches from the kicky Herzogian mindf---ery of "Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans."- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Effects-driven chills rarely work as well these days as good old-fashioned audience imagination (a fact firmly driven home by the breakaway success of The Blair Witch Project). Unfortunately, De Bont has wedged so much bang-pow drivel in his film that it ends up being about as tantalizing as a desiccated Gummi Bear.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Some people might find Chunhyang a chore to sit through, including me. Despite all of its accumulated period gorgeousness, or perhaps because of it, the film moves at a snail's pace, telegraphing plot twists miles before we actually arrive at them.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Even Cathy Moriarty-Gentile's role as a rival mob boss (with a nod to "Raging Bull") can't save this DOA affair.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Despite the sheer gorgeousness, it ends up feeling false and, towards the end, rushed.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
There's a deep, bone-weary melancholy to the proceedings, offset by the mad parties and vicious displays of machismo.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Lehmann has dropped the ball -- or the pick, whichever the case may be -- again. Instead of playing up the inherently silly, goofy nature of heavy metal, he sinks to its level, offering nothing more than the occasional chuckle and some ratty old combat boots.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
As for Legion, well, if you've seen one plague of flies and death and angels at war with each other, you've seen 'em all.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
McTiernan is an old hand at actioners and, like the pro he is, keeps the film rushing along from fiery stunt to stunt.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
While never dull, The Cup is a leisurely, quiet film, rife with staid, sometimes ponderous moments reflecting the seriousness of their situation in exile.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Might also be the best date movie ever, depending on your idea of a good time.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Seems more like a subtle, elegiac tone poem than an indictment of human banality and the evil that men do.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
This South Korean pseudo-epic is some of the most ambitious cr-- I've ever seen.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
I've had mosquito bites that were more passionate than this undead, unrequited, and altogether unfun pseudo-romantic riff on Romeo and Juliet.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
An antidote to holiday cheer like no other, this French tale of psychological horror is as harsh as they come -– it’s like finding a severed finger in your stocking and then finding it’s even better with hollandaise.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Without a doubt, the animation is vibrant and electrifying; it's only the story that lacks.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Funny weird and funny ha-ha go hand in hand in this small Icelandic town, apparently: It's a nice place to visit, but you wouldn't want to live there.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Like everything else Parker puts his mind to -- is equally outlandish, part skewed morality play, part sophomoric slapstick, and wholly ridiculous.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
A bold (and lovely) experiment that will almost certainly bore most audiences into their own brightly colored dreams.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
As befits a comedy monolith based around a loose series of old Saturday Night Live skits, Blues Brothers 2000 is essentially a series of flamboyant comedy and musical set-pieces, some of which soar and some of which merely twitch, but all of which are infused with a ceaseless beat-your-head-in comic sturm und drang; if one gag doesn't do it for you, surely the next one will.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Moves with the stately speed of most Merchant/Ivory productions, which is to say too damn slow, but the film is snatched from the jaws of tedium by Doyle's resplendently lush camerawork and Fiennes and Richardson's spot-on performances.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
This romance isn't a sunshine-dappled meadow, it's a thicket of thorny rosebushes atop a rocky precipice. Both actors are alarmingly natural in their roles and Ade's direction is a model of subtly shifting tones and tempers.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Nemesis, by comparison, is about as exciting as a Tribble on Vicodin.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Maybe it’s time for Woo to finally make that musical he keeps talking about.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Thankfully, The Nomi Song should go a long way toward re-cementing this striking creature's legendary status.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
This Godzilla is lacking both the awesome spirit of the original and the sublime silliness of the more recent Toho outings.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Laughably and knowingly preposterous, cheerfully un-PC, and violent in a way that makes the myriad slaphappy deaths of Wile E. Coyote seem downright dull in comparison.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
"Always be good to rock and roll and it will always be good to you," the film quotes Phil Spector as saying, and a more fitting explanation of the Bingenheimer mystique you'll likely never find.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
It's an uncomfortable, distressing, and altogether provocative take on the global culture of media violence that not only draws in hapless viewers, but also forces them into fait-accompli acceptance, like it or not.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Apart from the fang-restraint of the nosferatu, however, there's precious little that's altogether new or for that matter shocking about this by-the-numbers thriller.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
The first film was near-mythic in its tone and treatment of its characters, while this remake barely serves as a primer in how not to generate suspense.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Backed by a soundtrack of hip-hop and edited to within an inch of its life, Kennedy’s film has sleek gutter charm to spare.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Gere is excellent as this disturbed fellow; his twitches and too-happy smile are right on the money, but this only serves to illuminate the ramshackle state of the rest of the film, which is a shame: good, honest films dealing with mental illness are exceedingly few and far between. This, however, is not one of them.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
A middling urban thriller that's one part "Rear Window" and three parts "Seven."- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
For a film that's ostensibly about modern American society's love affair with addictive behavior – sex, drugs, rock & roll – its bark is much worse than its bite.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Irony and unwavering idealism are bound up in this lengthy but instantly engaging and informative documentary.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
A zippy, energetic, automotive free-for-all, a caper extravaganza minus the bleak overtones that have come to figure in so many 9mm movies these days.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
There's no other woman acting today that even remotely resembles Parker Posey. For that matter, there's never been anyone quite like her that I can think of. She has the dynamite improvisational instincts of a born grifter who wandered too far from one con and ended up in another – acting – and her tricky-risky game of onscreen three-card monte is, again and again, a jewel in indie filmmaking's oft-tattered crown.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Coixet’s film begins with the quiet patter of rain on skin and holds that somehow sweetly sorrowful tone throughout.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
It's a comic book movie in the broadest sense of the term, and although it's neither as emotionally resonant as "The Crow" nor as surreally goofy as "Tank Girl," Barb Wire still manages to get you going, Anderson Lee fan or not.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Sugar Hill is arguably the most beautiful-looking crime drama since Coppola's Godfather, Part II. Forsaking the glitz and over-the-top grittiness of New Jack City and other recent NYC gangster films, director Ichaso instead opts for the lush, burnished earth-tones of the Corleone clan. It's a dark, rich film, and its lengthy running time of over two hours glides by with only a few annoying snags.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
So lazy it's downright boring, something not even a naked Leslie Nielson (!) can salvage.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Silent Hill's main attraction, for genre fans, certainly, lies not in its plot nor in its characters (you could place anyone in this particular township and whatever might happen, you could be sure it'd be unnerving), but in its relentlessly nightmarish imagery.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
It ends up seeming more real and more artistically, morally, and spiritually honest than any dozen bedrock documentary films you'd care to name.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
The quiet respect Venus displays toward lions in winter, defanged though they may be, is rare enough; the film's respect for unfinessed lionesses-to-be is rarer still. Wherever they're going, no one here is going quietly.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
There are some good gags here, and I caught myself grinning more than a few times, but Hughes and Columbus are so set in their ways that everything they work on seems to look, feel, and sound the same.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
The pleasure of The Chronicles of Riddick comes mostly from the fascinating and outlandishly detailed production design, which sprawls across the screen in nearly every shot, with the Necromonger’s gigantic starships looking similar to those strange stone heads on Easter Island.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
You can't help but feel conflicted watching this superb documentary about the seminal New York-based punk rock vanguard, the Ramones.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
That they were just hormonally blitzkrieged kids at the time, unaware of their role in history, only makes Peralta's superior doc that much more winning.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Does it make any sense? Nope. Does this detract from the film? Not at all. It's classic Italian Grand Guignol at its most disturbing; a car crash, autopsy, and disembowelment all wrapped up in a nice, soggy package.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Brilliant, wacky, and utterly charming fluff, with millions of mad monkey minions to boot.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Taken as a whole, Thirst meanders too far from the crossroads of life and death; it gets outright dull in spots, although they are few and far between.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Utterly devoid of merit, fantastic or otherwise, a more exasperating descent into the feline world is difficult to imagine.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Fresh and raw like a blown-out vein, Narc takes a walking-dead, cop-flick subgenre and beats new life into it.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
It's a strictly date-night-rental affair, and if you still get Ryan Reynolds and Dane Cook confused, this will do little to help sort things out.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
It is a harmless and occasionally hilarious pop comedy good for a few bargain yuks.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
12 is every bit as much of a moral powerhouse as its predecessors but with the added bonus of being simultaneously intellectually riveting and, at times, almost indescribably poetic.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Loud, abrasive, and featuring performances seemingly calibrated to be heard over the cacophonous roar of Travolta's mad, bad overacting.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Not nearly as clever at taxing the audience's knuckles as its forerunner, Speed 2 still manages to stay above board long enough to merit a look-see, if only to relish the once-in-a-lifetime pleasure of Mr. Dafoe and his pet leeches.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Go for the gore (there's lots of it), but stay for the immortal line: "Now let's go find the body this arm belongs to."- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
It's a sympathomimetic monoamine that stimulates the central nervous system! Hooray epinephrine! And that's all I'm going to say about Crank.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
American Hardcore encapsulates a largely forgotten (by the mainstream, that is) moment in maximum rock & roll history.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
It's a grim, dark, and relentlessly violent film throughout; James Bond as Terminator rather than Templar – but it delivers the goods in bloody high style: explosively, sexily, and with 007 shaken (not stirred) to his icy core.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Provides that rarest of documentary accomplishments: a glimpse into the artists' sunny, dark hearts.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
A moribund Harrison Ford vehicle, stodgily dull, and seemingly endless in its monotony.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Manages to capture the essence of one of the world's most surprising success stories.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
A violent, sober cautionary tale, strictly middle-of-the-road when it comes to its much-ballyhooed politics and grimly obvious in its telling.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
A genuinely outrageous and occasionally brilliant coupling of American animation and classic early-Eighties heavy metal (does anybody even remember Riggs and Trust?).- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Watchmen is worth seeing, fan or no, for Haley's squirmy presence alone, and all the other characters are also well-served.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
There is a sense of ambiguity at the core of The Reader that makes it all the more brutal, all the more honest in its deflowering of love and what one imagines love ought to be instead of what it too often is.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Palmetto follows the rules of film noir so slavishly that it's tough not to like it just on its own dopey, headstrong merit.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
It's hobbled by odd plot contrivances and some less-than-stellar acting from DiCaprio.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Who doesn't love an animated, anthropomorphized-chimpanzee-starring, sci-fi romantic comedy?- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Might make a terrific double bill with the equally inane (but considerably more entertaining) "Con Air," with the French electonica duo Air chirruping in the background. But, you know, only if you're stoned out of your head.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
This second incarnation of the Mike Judge and Don Hertzfeldt-produced animation anthology is, if anything, even better than the first.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
So syrupy-sweet in its depictions of the game, angels, orphans, children's wishes, and estranged parents, that it may be all you can do to keep from taking a Louisville Slugger to the projectionist.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Derrickson's staid direction, coupled with Wilkinson’s sad-sack priest and a general air of dreariness make for a courtroom thriller that’s somewhat less apocalyptic than the "L.A. Law" episode involving the death of Benny's mom.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Once in a Lifetime's only major failing is the fact that the iconic Pelé is seen only in period footage.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
As pure a summer popcorn overdose as you're likely to find, M:i-2 is breezy, breathless, brainless fun, falling just short of Woo's own "Face/Off" but head and shoulders above anything else out there just now.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
As Timeline so adequately proves, not every bestseller will render a good film.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
But for anyone who assumed Kennedy's experiment couldn't sink any lower than "Malibu's Most Wanted," there are, it appears, ever deeper depths in the realm of comedic misfires.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Quite possibly, this could have been a hit back in 1975 or so, and almost certainly for Blake Edwards, but here and now it's just a puzzling aberration.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
It's a one-note gag, but a superior gag performed with a minimum of cheese and a surplus of laugh-out-loud moments.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
While neither as outlandish as its sequel, Police Story III: Supercop, nor as emotionally turbo-charged as the series opener, this second Ka-Kui adventure rests comfortably in-between the others, overflowing with Chan's patented stuntwork and comic high jinks, and as such, it's a fine introduction to the Jackie Chan phenomenon.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Besson's visuals are, as always, vibrant and decidedly European. He fills the frames with odd-angled shots and alarming riots of color that catch you off-balance.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
The only evolution in question here is that of Emmerich's skills as a director of motion pictures.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
It's a tonally confused comedy which, for once, doesn't go far enough comedically.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Millennium Actress has more layers to it than the proverbial onion, but Kon’s sure hand keeps things moving right along and into the next historical period.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
The Punisher is such a bad film that it becomes inadvertently entertaining; it’s enough to make you pine for the original version of the black-clad Marvel Comics’ badass, played to awful imperfection in 1989 by Dolph Lundgren.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
A Woman in Berlin is like a tour through the blast-cratered psyche of two colliding cultures, each with its own nightmarish tales to tell or acts of violence to experience.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
If you really want the kids to see a colorfully cryptic meta fairy tale, be subversive and go rent 'em some Alejandro Jodorowsky. No child deserves Happily N'Ever After.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
None of this made a lick of sense to me, nor did it appear to be all that obvious to either the cast or screenwriter Hodge, whose work here feels as though he'd given up in frustration halfway through before deciding to see how far he could push the vaguely Harry Potter-esque shenanigans before getting sacked.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
"It's difficult for people to believe our story," says one kid, succinctly, eloquently, "but if we don't tell you, you won't know."- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
With such a frenetic, brain-melting load of images to ponder, it's easy to forget that there are also some terrific actors at work here, not the least of whom is the amazing Vinnie Jones.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
It's just not all that interesting to watch two pretty young things go through the muddled rituals of the pas de duh when I can, you know, do it just as poorly myself.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
It's a messy, overlong film, but it's impossible to take seriously and therefore more than a little entertaining.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
The voice acting, from new Batman Bale to the almost unrecognizable Bacall is fine – even Crystal reigns in his usual Borscht Belt bravado – if a little plain.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
It's an existential, Kafka-esque nightmare with no real resolution, although if you've been biding your time waiting to see some high-strung, ham-handed bickering on-screen, this is your A-ticket.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
There are precious few things for a Zorro fan – or a film fan, for that matter – not to loathe about The Legend of Zorro.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
A suspenseful breath of fresh air following on the heels of one of the dumbest Hollywood summers in recent memory.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
It's not just a bad movie it actually manages to suck the very hope out of the air, leaving behind a cinematic vacuum populated by mobsters, sadists, pedophiliac demon-people, and an overwhelming sense of futility that just makes you want to run in the other direction.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Get out your handkerchiefs. No, scratch that -- get out a pair of windshield wipers and staple them to your brow. Perhaps they'll obscure the screen.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
MBV 3D is full-on, old-school, Fangoria-approved, gorehound heaven – a supersaturated arterial goregasm with zero socially redeeming values for anyone other than first-year med students.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Still, every generation deserves its own coming-of-age cinematic snapshot; if this is that, though, things are tougher than I thought.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Bad as it may be, though, the film falls that one precious inch shy of being quite so awful that it achieves cult status; in short, it's just not bad enough to be any good.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Hostel certainly delivers in the gore department, and Roth, who knows and loves his favorite genre at least as well as the gang over at the Alamo Drafthouse, peppers the proceedings with various witty in-jokes.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
A horror film (or, more accurately, a shocker film) that takes such exuberant, gleeful delight in the unspeakably gory dispatch of assorted teenagers that it may well be the most fun you'll have at the movies all week.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Take this one for what it is, an entertaining Disney comedy of really large proportions, and you'll have a ball.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
I'm not entirely sure, but near as I can tell, this adaptation of Augusten Burroughs' memoir of family dysfunction finally and irrevocably lost me right about where the cat ended up in the stew pot, stirred with maniacally morose glee by Paltrow.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
It's contemporary French cinema without a dollop of Besson and Jeunet's beloved CGI theatrics, and all the better for it.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
The marketing weasels over at Disney deserve to have their beady little eyes gouged out with flaming icicles for the fast one they've pulled on audiences with Snow Dogs.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Nearly a perfect film, from its bold and epic man-vs.-nature conflict to the breathless scripting, editing, acting, and direction.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
It's a love story, though, and all the more poignant for being one that actually survived under such tempestuous circumstances.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
God forbid this should ever play on an IMAX screen -- the concussive soundtrack and relentless visuals would likely strike viewers deaf and blind (but what a way to go!). Simply breathtaking.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
If nothing else, this adaptation of Peter Mayle's umpteenth ode to livin' la vie en Provence will make you wonder about Ridley Scott and the directorial aging process.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
What we're left with -- Kubrick or no -- is a muddled, messy disaster of a film, something that seems more like a drastically edited miniseries, cut down to incomprehensible levels with whole sections missing.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
There's no denying the kick you get from seeing Borgnine (forever lovelorn Marty to me, when he's not tooling around my head as Cabbie, from John Carpenter's Escape From New York) and company kick ass, take names, and go batshit crazy one last time.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
It's a film so filled with sex and violence that many critics have derided it as nothing short of hardcore porn.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Whether or not Murakami intended this rambling, erotic nightmare as a metaphor for modern-day Japan is a question I'm not going to get into here, but the fact remains, Tokyo Decadence is a powerful, disturbing film, teeming with episodes of rampant passion, abuse, and beauty.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
While it's a well-constructed doc, full of relevant information and geared toward those people who still might be fence-sitters on the subject, there's something missing from The 11th Hour's lengthy procession of talking heads: a sense of maddened outrage.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
It's big, it's loud, it's dumb, and all things considered, it's not completely un-fun.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Far from being atypical, the events of June 12 and the litany of tiny nightmares that led up to that day are brutally obvious.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
They've taken a classic and they've battered it senseless and, boy, does it stink. It’s so bad it’s amazing it's being released, and box office-goers might soon end up fleeced. And annoyed and bewildered, perhaps even creeped-out by this cacophonous mess which is awful throughout.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
North Face is a gripping, at times downright epic, account of men vs. mountain vs. other men (and, what the hell, one woman).- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Surjik's skewed Canadian vision keeps WW2 from descending to the level of Thanksgiving leftovers, with frequent touches of out-and-out weirdness and the sure-footed knowledge that this is a comedy, period. It doesn't have to try to be anything more, and that, I think, is why it works so very well.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
It turns out globalization has its good points after all, and they're sporting Chucks, Kangols, and post-Gomi DIY gear. Spin again.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Adamson's pulled a more morally nuanced rabbit (or badger, actually) out of his directorial hat this time out, and the result is a far more engrossing film than its predecessor.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
Williamson's directorial debut is a sad affair, devoid of shocks, surprises, or even his clever trademark diologue.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marc Savlov
This debut feature from Australian director Duncan is still a wonderful sociopolitical experiment, dripping with sarcasm and bizarre, oddball humor, which make it all the more potent.- Austin Chronicle
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