Marjorie Baumgarten
Select another critic »For 2,069 reviews, this critic has graded:
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37% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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61% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 6 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Marjorie Baumgarten's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 60 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Born in Flames | |
| Lowest review score: | Superbabies: Baby Geniuses 2 | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,117 out of 2069
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Mixed: 663 out of 2069
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Negative: 289 out of 2069
2069
movie
reviews
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
An additional change in the film's adaptation from Scott Phillips' novel substitutes the author's original ending for a redemptive conclusion that seems indicative of The Ice Harvest's unwillingness to really plumb the real depths of the darkness it has set in motion.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The man whom the FBI described as "extremely eloquent, therefore extremely dangerous" here seems about as threatening as Mother Teresa.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
My be a gearhead's delight, but its appeal to middle-of-the-roaders will be stop-and-go.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Graham maintains a casual charm throughout it all, but she lacks the kind of emotional depth that might have pulled this hodge-podge together.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The film is at its best when painting the atmosphere and detail of 1953 Dublin.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Crude's moving testimony and careful documentation make it hard to turn away from this issue. It will certainly remain in your mind the next time you stop for gas.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Sex may, indeed, be all in the mind, but Romance fails to score in the mind's eye.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
A phantom of a movie whose beautiful flakes fall into the deep crevices of memory long after the seasons change.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
In the wake of the debacle known as Showgirls, Striptease has had to fight to establish its separate identity and credentials. In retrospect, it appears to have been wasted energy.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The problem with The Third Miracle is that it is thematically ambiguous and never lays out its position on whether it thinks saints are or are not real.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
None of it is handled with any emotional believability or grace. Well-worn phrases and plot developments are repeated here as though the world had never heard of "Cinderella."- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Certainly movies are a business, but it's only good form for them to at least pretend that they have some reasons for existence other than the purely mercenary. The goal of entertainment has been forgotten here in the mad dash for formulaic guarantees. These comedy nun pushers have forgotten that there's no bottom line at heaven's gate.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
A movie that’s so profoundly ridiculous that it has to be admired, if for no other reason other than its sheer willingness to run with its premise and take it to the end of the line.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
What's more, they toss a few original twists into a familiar generic set-up and thereby create a thoroughly entertaining and stylish thriller.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The performances are all terrific, but Together never jells as a compelling narrative.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Cadillac Records bobs and weaves, strides and duckwalks, samples and smiles on the sounds that made urban Chicago such a blues melting pot.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
This crude live-action takeoff on the Cabbage Patch phenomenon ought to have had star Anthony Newley humming "Stop the Movie, I Want to Get Off."- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
This French import is a worthy entrant into the adrenalized cadre of action films like "Run Lola Run" and "Ong-Bak: The Thai Warrior" (which Besson produced). What District B13 lacks in story development it compensates for with stunningly realistic action.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Despite flashes of originality, is a formulaic quagmire that traps bits and pieces from all these genres without really satisfying any of their true aims.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Meets the required minimum dosage of feature-film attributes, and then nods out when it comes to going any further.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
More than an appreciation, Pete Seeger: The Power of Song is an inspiration.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The action can be bloody, but is mostly routine. Ultimately, the film’s most eye-catching special effects are reserved for bikini waxes and implants.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
When embraced on its own terms, the film will provide an ironic bridge for those who want to share a greater closeness with Smith.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Audiences may find this pap brimming with heart and sympathy for the little guy, but as prescriptions go, Patch Adams is pure placebo.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Redgrave still manages to inspire awe, yet a poetically prosaic moment like the one in which she goes chasing after a butterfly is enough to throw a net over the whole thing.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The performances are extremely good, and the tone maintains a droll continuity throughout.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The sketchy visual traits that differentiate the many characters in this avian universe will leave viewers crying, "Who, who" along with the owls.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Bottle Rocket's minimalist pop has a refreshing flavor but insufficient bubbles for a long, cool drink. Maybe someone ought to think about culling this thing down into a sustainable short film.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
There's a comment in here somewhere about leadership and authorship, and it's not that we're laughing too hard to fully comprehend it. In von Trier's world, the laugh is often ON the audience, not WITH the audience.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Nolan creates an effective thriller, although he keeps his stylistic pyrotechnics to a minimum.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
What can you say about a movie that includes its outtake bloopers reel before the closing credits?- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Director Duke (A Rage in Harlem and countless TV work) rivets our attention with his tightly framed shots and crisp editing that intelligently revives that bygone tradition of jump cuts (though they confusingly disappear completely midway through the movie).- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Repulsion's depiction of a young woman's dissolution into madness is one of the most harrowing mental descents ever depicted onscreen. (Reviewed 11/24/97)- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Farcical mayhem. A convoluted plot that's easy to follow but hard to describe.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
It is rich with ideas and contemplations and packed with the sort of existential jokes that tickle the Coen boys so.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Narratively, we all know where the trajectory of the story is headed, thus the culminating match (nearly 20 minutes) takes up too much screen time without adding anything new to the drama.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
A forgettable and lackluster fish-out-of-water rom-com.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Jackson does it all in this movie: writes, directs, stars, produces, and designs the makeup.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
With a startlingly climactic finale, Body Snatchers only underscores the ultimate illogic of placing your trust in your kin.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
This modern cult classic is a triumphantly dark comedy directed by one of the film world's truly original visionaries, Terry Gilliam. "Imagination" is this futuristic film’s middle name.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Benjamin Bratt ably depicts both sides of this character and creates a memorable portrait in the process.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
It's an endearing romantic daydream, but misses the bus where matters of reality are concerned.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The movie is a lot of fun if you don't think about it too much, the stuntwork should satisfy the genre fanatics in the crowd even though it doesn't set any new plateaus, and the rapport between Davis and Jackson is enough to keep the sticklers for realism in abeyance at least until the final credits roll.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Tennessee Williams’ study of a crumbling Southern patriarchy is riveting stuff. Although the word homosexuality is never uttered, this Hollywood reworking brings a certain understanding of the son’s latent “immaturity” and his wife’s childlessness. Bolstered by extraordinary performances, this tale’s a summer sizzler.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
A masterful synthesis of generic conventions and creative imagination, a sublime amalgam of some of the best tendencies and talent our times have to offer.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Just look at the cast and try to resist the testosterone pull of this movie.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Coprophiliacs looking for a movie that really rings their chimes will be positively tintinnabulating from this arthouse horror number.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Cyrus is very funny, and Keener's supporting work as John's divorced ex also amuses. A pat conclusion nevertheless negates the strength of the restive narrative that precedes it.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
If anything, A Few Good Men errs by throwing almost too many elements, themes and moral debates into the mix thus, by default, they sometimes seem shallowly developed and overly simple. Then again, that perhaps allows them to connect with more universal experiences.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
There's no denying that Pacino's performance is superb. The rest of the movie plays like a bunch of inconsequentially strung together sequences.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
You’ll leave the film wondering why you've never seen a TV ad for an electric car, or why GM is all about selling Hummers these days.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
A movie that amply delivers on the epic promise of its title, entertaining, enlightening, and emboldening viewers with its deceptively simple premise and execution.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Chills to the bone -- and beyond, but for pure excitement it's best not to look far beneath the surface.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Henkin's vision of Mona Demarkov (Olin) as a remorseless, amoral, lethal, and sexually devastating (you should see what she can do with a prosthetic limb) arch-criminal is a nightmare come to life. But perhaps like dreams, the story works best when played out in the furtive dark spaces of the mind's eye.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The bulk of the documentary observes Pipkin as he traverses the world showing us a score of examples of solutions that are presently working.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The movie brings no new material to the screen and banks on the fact that its underage audience has an unschooled memory. Don't insult your kids with this choppy, unimaginative film product.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
I can think of no other movie that has dared to analyze grief and its aftermath with such naked honesty and precision.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Thornton, who wrote, directed, and stars in Sling Blade, has created an unforgettable character and situation, a film that's sure to become an American classic.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
I Stand Alone uses a cannon ball to shatter the psychological horror at the heart of human society.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Any sincere investigation of the situation's ethical dilemmas is hampered by a plot run amok with transparently nefarious evildoers and ever-more ludicrous complications, until it sputters to a conclusion and a thoroughly preposterous epilogue in which all animosities are neatly put to rest. Somebody call a doctor.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The hit-or-miss nature of the gags makes NBT too uneven to recommend, but it's a great calling-card movie for guys who want to become professional comedy writers.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Taylor, Burton, and Harrison are sublime in this sweeping epic of love and nations.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
With great subtlety and knowing humor, Eat Drink Man Woman emerges as one of those unforeseen treats.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Preminger strips the musical of all excess and frills. He creates an austere, depoeticized, anti-lyrical world in which nothing obstructs his camera's detached recording of the action. The great themes of Preminger's oeuvre are obsession and the conflict between freedom and repression, themes which are central to Carmen Jones.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
It's neither the fulfillment of our worst fears nor the surprise of the week.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
It's too bad the language prevents this independent film from being rated PG-13 because this is the kind of movie that might be capable of realistically reflecting teens' lives to other teens.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
I'm sorry. I laughed...There's something pleasurable about a comedy that has no pretensions about where it's coming from.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Despite an A-list cast and director, it's astonishing how bad this movie is.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The loosely scripted story is further burdened with clunky dialogue and performances, shoddy continuity.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
This is director Pouliot's first film, so perhaps some of his excess cuteness can be overlooked. But then again, maybe not.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
A sumptuous ride with breathtaking scenes and a soaring musical score.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The obvious thing is to say that Keep the River on Your Right has unfortunately bitten off more than it can chew -- but not more than we can digest.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The pleasure of watching two alpha males -– Al Pacino and Colin Farrell -– circling each other mano a mano substantially beefs up this otherwise routine spy thriller.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The story is one of those great mad scientist tales in which the potion invented with the best intentions for its enhancement of human life becomes instead an evil force bent on its destruction. The visual effects here are pretty great - and at first comedic - as the Invisible Man smokes and brawls and rocks in a chair. Oh, but then the horror happens.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Lymelife arrives with an impressive pedigree but, unfortunately, little originality.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
As arduous to watch as your neighbor’s poorly focused vacation slides.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Like "Bring It On," Stick It is so much better than most of its insipid teen-movie peers yet like her earlier movie, Bendinger's new one is also not all it might be.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Associated with the modernist architectural movement centered in Southern California during the mid-20th century, Shulman’s still photographs are essential to any study of the style’s vast popularization and commercialism.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
I’ve seen sick kids exploited for all sorts of reasons – usually as easy ploys to manipulate emotions but sometimes to sell things or encourage philanthropic outpourings – but Letters to God takes the cake (make that the holy wafer).- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Everyone knows that the villains are usually the most interesting characters in any movie. So the makers of Despicable Me were wise to cut to the chase and make the megalomaniacal Gru (voiced by Carell) the central character in this animated film.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
La Promesse is a penetrating coming-of-age story, one that argues that adulthood begins with the emergence of moral convictions.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
It's a shame to once again witness Martin Lawrence squander his considerable comic talents under a fat suit and fake breasts in this shoddy sequel.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
There is no better way to while away a Sunday afternoon than with this sprawling saga about the growth of Texas and the families that matured along with the state. If Texas had a state movie, then Giant would be it.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
For my money, this Freudian tale about a beautiful kleptomaniac and liar is one of Hitchcock's best accomplishments, certainly one of his most perverse.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Searingly potent and suggestively supple, Carax's images are rich with emotion and ideas.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Despite the film's abundant gory effects, its best technical achievement may be its English subtitles, which move about the screen for better visual and emotional impact, and sometimes dissolve into poofs of blood or other colored effects.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
For the most part, it's all fairly predictable material, although McAvoy and his costars invest the movie with dynamic performances that manage to keep the story's characters just this side of stereotype and mediocrity.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Teenthrob Efron will be missed in future episodes by both adolescent girls and their moms who are only too happy to accompany their daughters to the theatre, but he's a handsome talent who's graduated to bigger projects.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Miike's graphically violent Japanese actioners are not everyone's cup of sake. But if you can handle the bloodshed, Miike's films will open your eyes to the number of ways it can spurt, splat, and drizzle out of a whole variety of natural human orifices and man-made bullet holes.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Lottery Ticket is ultimately no "Friday," but that 15-year-old film's communal vibe is clearly the model Lottery Ticket is chasing.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Lovely to look at, Year of the Fish is an animated feature that pops off the screen like a goldfish leaping free of its bowl.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Among the many things that Baadasssss! is, it is also a movie about moviemaking. In fact, the film should be a primer for anyone about to make an independent film.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Screenwriter Steve Conrad has less success with the female characters: The always dependable Davis is forced into shrewish territory, and David's mother (Judith McConnell) is so barely present that it's a wonder she's written in at all.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
At the very least, The Aristocrats provides a survey of some of the best comic minds in the business.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
A moving tribute to this legendary artist's life and career.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Blades of Glory, although mildly amusing, has the dank odor of having gone to the well once too often: Ooh, let's dress up Ferrell like an elf – or an anchorman or a NASCAR driver – and see what happens.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Unfortunately, the actors don't all behave as though they're performing in the same movie.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
This portrait of 1940 France on the verge of capitulating to the Vichy regime is intriguing. However, what keeps the movie engaging is its nutty tone.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The worlds of the natural and the artificial are compared and contrasted in this non-narrative visual orgy.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Knockout ensemble performances like these don't come around all that often, though, and when they do they ought to be savored.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The hypocrisy, sexual repression, and backwater snobbery here is enough to make Peyton Place look like Vatican City.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Cairo Time may be your ticket if you're in the mood for love, but the excursion is a cut-rate journey.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Neither slave nor mammy, junkie nor maid, these dawn-of-the-twentieth century African-American women are an unstereotypical breed unto themselves.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
A stunningly impassioned and articulate study of a writer's life and the censorial demons that can strangle that voice.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
It's the kind of story that shows more than it tells, a story that's forged in the spaces that exist in between characters and spaces.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
If taken merely as a vaguely historical spy thriller, Farewell is a dandy tale.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Though formally astringent, Police, Adjective is dotted with lots of humor.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Yet even though Forever After is not as fresh-seeming as its predecessors, it provides passable entertainment, especially for the kids who won’t be familiar with the George Bailey storyline retread – or midlife crises, for that matter.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
While Fried Green Tomatoes often veers between being too pat and too vague, too obvious and too unclear, too much of the “I laughed, I cried” school of storytelling -- it still has a charm that stems from its vivid and unique characterizations.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
It's a movie perfectly designed for tossing back popcorn (the jumbo kind so you don't have to leave your seat during the show); not until later do you get the empty feeling that you've swallowed an entire bucket of popped air.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Though the soundtrack comes on kind of heavy, the cinematography (by Enrique Chediak) has a beautiful clarity. Yorick's skull or not, Charlie St. Cloud is no Shakespearean drama, but the film should prove to be another solid stepping stone for Efron on his way to a long adult career.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The three-and-a-half-hour-long movie revels in talk as this man ponders life, philosophy, the sexual revolution, the workers' revolution, love, death, and so on. He smokes, drinks, flirts, and talks – and the movie is exquisitely of its time.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
It's not until the film is over that we fully appreciate the originality of an Israeli film that focuses completely on the family crisis while leaving politics behind altogether.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
From its silent opening moments to its breathtaking double-cross conclusion, Le Samourai is the work of one of the film world's great directors working at his expressive peak.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Although slowly paced, it is always stunning to look at -- decadent and perverse in that certain Eurotrashy way.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
A movie about life and death; its underpinnings are soaked in the perfume of artistic expression.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Even at 82 minutes in length, Superstar feels uncomfortably stretched.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Grindhouse raises the bar for a certain kind of movie lollapalooza (and also for the kind of filmmaker who is also a showman, along the lines of a William Castle or Cecil B. De Mille). It's this injection of playfulness and fun and attention to the entire movie-going gestalt that will probably become Grindhouse's lasting contribution to movie history rather than any on-the-screen content of the movie itself.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Cast aside any preconceived expectations you might have regarding this documentary and remember simply this: Winnebago Man is one of the best films you're going to see all year.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
More lethal than a nuclear waste dump, Kubrick's komedy at least kills us with laughter... It's one of the greatest - and undoubtably the most hilarious - antiwar statements ever put to film.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Me, I’ve now seen the movie three times and I’ve laughed and I’ve cried. It comes the closest to any movie experience I’ve had in re-creating the aftermath of unexplained suicide. Sometimes there just aren’t any answers.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Christopher Plummer is delightful as this movie’s master magician and impresario of the rickety Imaginarium.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Furry Vengeance would be innocuous enough if only it didn't look as though no effort was made to expand the images past the storyboard phase.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Fails in a pretty spectacular manner but, to its everlasting credit, it goes down swinging and sometimes even connecting.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Scores its ultimate coup de grace though its interviews. Macdonald has lined up an amazing collection of interviewees.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Day Watch falls prey to the curse of most sequels in which "more" is often a thin concept stretched beyond its limits and misconstrued to mean "bigger and better."- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Adults may have a hard time swallowing this toothless tale of PG-rated bloodsuckers, but kids may relate better to its lessons.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Best of all, is this knock-out, though overused, optical effect of a bullet hurtling and whizzing through space toward its target. Sniper is sure to appeal to armchair assassins and fantasy war-gamers. Beyond that audience, Peruvian director Llosa's American debut will appeal to anyone interested in well-made and well-acted pictures that compensate with skill for what they may lack in inspiration.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Although the narrative hiccups in The Holy Land can be chalked up to the mistakes of a beginning filmmaker, they are not disruptive enough to diminish the film’s realistic impact.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
In the end, Machete may not be all that original, but it is fresh – fresh as a steel blade to the gut.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Kind of funny and kind of scary, Baghead's central horror motif is merely a structure on which to hang its four-character story about the depth of relationships and the drive to find meaningful work.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Occasionally, the unevenness of the performances in Star Maps becomes distracting and the dastardliness of the characters' dysfunction impinges the bounds of dramatic believability, yet you will be hard-pressed to find another directorial debut this year that equals the narrative and structural audacity of Star Maps.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
With The Ice Storm, Lee seems to have emphasized the details of cultural accuracy over the rudiments of telling a gripping drama.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
As things turn out, Clooney’s butt is just one of the many delights to be found on a trip to Solaris.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The film is never less than absorbing to watch. However, in the end, I think Catfish lives up to its namesake's reputation as a bottom-feeder.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Either you cotton to Zemeckis’ motion-capture aesthetic or you don’t: To me, it seems like an awful lot of effort for an insignificant payoff. But it appears that the filmmaker is stuck on the technique – at least until holographic movie technology comes along.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
If the mother-child bond is the core human relationship, then this movie implies that we are an emotionally doomed species, though I do not think this was writer-director Garcia’s intent.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Cross of Iron is a WWII movie seen through the eyes of German protagonists. Incredible montage sequences and another parable about Peckinpah’s embattled position within the film industry can be found within.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
To its credit, A Time to Kill allows the debate to snake through the entire movie, engagingly pitting characters and speeches against each other, creating a dramatic forum for ethical debate uncommon in most commercial American films.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
A welcome and appropriate treat is the flurry of Bob Dylan tunes that can be heard playing in the background of this northern Minnesota story.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Moore succeeds, even though the film as a whole does not fare as well.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Moments of great suspense are sometimes invested with intrinsic humor, moments of trauma can yield great compassion. Often, these seemingly conflicting tones exist all at once, while the oblique mystery never clearly identifies the correct emotion.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The little drama queen who lives inside each of us will find Being Julia hard to resist.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
A smart and delightful romantic comedy, yet in the course of creating his new charmer Alexander Payne has sheared off some of the rambunctious edges that made his previous films, About Schmidt, Election, and Citizen Ruth, such marvelous studies in social parody.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
A formulaic family melodrama whose craftsmanship and sensitivity to its characters raises it to the level of sublime group portrait.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The title, The Last Song, may be wishful thinking for some, but the best they can probably hope for is the close of the era of Hannah Montana movies.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The story's parallels with the present are sometimes inescapable, as when Saladin's fireballs catapulted at Balian's castle strike an eerie resemblance to the "shock and awe" of the U.S.-led coalition's initial assault on Iraq.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
There's no getting around this dumb script that's just too silly for words.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
This is an amazing allegorical study of the life and death of a donkey named Balthazar, whose nasty, brutish life as a slave parallels that of a young farm girl.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Spacey, whose Trigger Street Productions is one of the film's producers, digs into his role as the story's snarky mastermind and lure, yet it's all the kind of stuff we've seen him deliver in so many movies before.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
This time the acclaimed filmmaker tackles an entire “ism” and, much like its ambiguous title, Capitalism: A Love Story, Moore’s film is an unmethodical survey of a gargantuan topic, one that has only grown more so in the year since he began work on the project.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
One of the cinema’s very best car-chase sequences – set amid the hilly, windy San Francisco streets – caps this quintessential Steve McQueen policier.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Dench deserves better, and unfortunately it will probably be a long time before she gets another starring role in a movie custom-made for an actress her age.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
This Romeo & Juliet is a rich visual feast, besotted with the fervor of its acrobatic camerawork and kinetic staging and its mind-bending aggregation of unrelated but resonant fragments of 20th-century iconography.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Despite a few scattered moments of visceral excitement, the only thing truly frightening about the oh-so-ominously titled Fear is how so many talented people came to be involved in so inane a project.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The end result is a delightful, though a smidge too long, reminder of one of the reasons we so enjoy going to the movies: perchance to dream.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Ultimately never slices things as sharply as it attempts, but it’s definitely a cut above.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
A sweet German movie by a first-time filmmaker, who, I would bet, is more than a little familiar with the early work of Jim Jarmusch or just about any Aki KaurismŠki film.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
As good as it ever was, and improved slightly by hindsight, experience, and extra cash.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
A big generational saga that woos the audience with its humor, spirit, style, and ability. Genius here is an evolutionary thing.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
We will be comparing Up with classics like "The Wizard of Oz" for years to come.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
A small-scale pleasure, a movie that truly stops and smells the roses.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Emerges as an artful, courageous, experimental work that is as compelling as it is impaired.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
A lighthearted action adventure starring four of the most likable guys on the planet.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Junior is passable entertainment, but it could hardly be called fully developed.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
William Shakespeare's Merchant of Venice may help in bringing some of the Bard's language to life, but this rendition is hardly a freshman course.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
This is a bad movie, but one that awakens your senses every so often with flashes of originality and abundant self-belief.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
So fascinating is Brother's Keeper that you almost don't quarrel with things like the biased portraits of the prosecuting team and the Deliverance-like banjo-shuffling soundtrack. Brother's Keeper intrigue factor is enormously high and, it could almost be said, that this movie is good enough to be fiction.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Opens strongly and front-loads its best gags into the first third of the film. After that, the jokes begin to repeat themselves, and the plot becomes mired in unintelligible details of the white-collar crime.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
It's a good thing this movie has been sitting on the shelf for a year or more, because, apart from the difference in release dates, there's little to distinguish this new cop drama from last year's cop drama "We Own the Night."- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The interfacing of the two-dimensional and three-dimensional characters is so shabbily accomplished that it makes you start noticing all the other technical glitches in the work.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Experiencing Evita is like watching one uninterrupted long-form music video divided only by different arias or costume changes (of which there are untold numbers).- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Aiming to be this year's Basic Instinct, Body of Evidence never raises a discernible pulse.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Just about as great as a movie's ever gonna be... As for the storytellng, The Godfather is an intricately constructed gem that simultaneously kicks ass.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Neither a change of seasons nor truly wonderful performances can breathe life into the dismally enervated Winter Solstice.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Déjà Vu has enough style and forward (or is it backward) momentum to viewers aroused. It's only after you leave the theatre that your head starts to throb.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Succeeds as a moody, evocative, and pleasing film, one that underscores its indie roots in sentiment as well as style- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Dunye's film is smart, sexy (the interracial lesbian lovemaking scene prompted an infamous little ruckus over at the NEA a while back), funny, historically aware, and stunningly contemporary.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Brooks’ early reputation as a film director rests with the success of this raunchy Western spoof. A great cast is eclipsed by the hilarious performances of Korman and Kahn, who plays a Marlene Dietrich-like chanteuse.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The movie's tone concurrently embraces melodramatics and wry humor, a twisted suburban Oedipal knot seen through a sardonic, yet deeply involved, eye.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Cheadle takes what could have been a role as a mere foil and creates a rich portrait of a vaguely discontented married man. Yet the drama sputters once it reaches a contrived and melodramatic climax that feels undernourished and artificial – both less than and more than one had hoped for.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The one thing that is clear from Japón is that a major new visual stylist has hit the screen and that Reygadas’ first film represents the beginning of an auspicious career.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
If it weren't so rivetingly realistic, it would be an easy film to dismiss. And if it weren't so easily dismissible, it would be an easy film to defend.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Ultimately, the film feels as glitzy and superficial as the fashion industry itself, a bauble in full regalia, and it’s likely your interest in the documentary will depend largely on your prior interest in the subject matter.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The film is a biting critique of American race relations in the Fifties and a complex study in contrasts and paradoxes.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
You simply want the story to go on and on. Let's hope that Holofcener's movies do: Her peregrinations through the lives of contemporary women know few screen equals.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Christian filmmaking has entered a new phase in which its creators have discovered how to soft-pedal their message under wraps of a conventional story.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Time and again, Devor sabotages his own attempt to bring "zoos," literally and figuratively, into the light.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
I have to report that I, personally, just don't get it. I intellectually understand what occurs in the movie; I just can't make the leap into calling it a humanistic treasure about life's big questions. Slow and monotonous, the film moves at a deliberate pace and culminates in a meta-fictional moment that is either infuriatingly trite or enigmatic.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Campanella’s script (which is adapted from a novel by Eduardo Sacheri) bogs down, however, when the focus of the story is on Benjamín, who is dogged by his memories and his inability to make a play for Irene.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
An additional treat is seeing Hollywood good guy Henry Fonda playing one of the nastiest curs in the West. Once Upon a Time in the West is one of the great films in cinema history. (8/30/2000 Review)- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Talk about your baby boys – Cagney takes the cake here as a psychopathic gangster with a seriously perverse mother complex. A gangster classic.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Though the history and the palace intrigue are not at all difficult for Westerners to grasp, a tighter running time would probably help this epic reach more eyes in America, where it has received the biggest release ever for a Bollywood- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Filled more with character studies than narrative intrigues, The Merry Gentleman also provides only sketchy personality details and background information.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
In many ways, Not One Less resembles the socialist-realist dramas of the early Communist regimes.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
A stunning work of beauty, mystery, contemplation, and grit -- and like sands through the desert hourglass, these are the days of our lives.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The logic of it all will be Greek to anyone not predisposed to the movie's rude and crude humor.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
A gripping presentation of a little-known true story and its historical lessons.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Ageism, sexism, classism, and unabashed snobbery rear their ugly heads in a provocatively told story by probably the greatest film melodrama stylist who ever lived.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
A movie worth viewing. Besides, it's the only movie to boast NYC millionaire mayor-elect Michael Bloomberg as its executive producer.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Each of the characters is dull and boorish instead of witty and urbane.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Never rings true. It's a dramedy whose blend of melodrama and humor is awkward and incongruous, leaping between the two modes like a fat frog jumping lilypads.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The film moves swiftly and vividly, but in retrospect, numerous plot holes come to mind. Not Forgotten presents a fascinating microcosm but ultimately loses believability when placed in a larger context.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Director Brill makes no stylistic advances from his recent work with Adam Sandler (Little Nicky, Mr. Deeds), and shows no signs of seeking growth or improvement.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Co-directors Rubin and Shapiro deliver the rare documentary that totally entertains, informs, and inspires.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Probably the ultimate writers' film, but it's also a brash, daring, and dynamic film -- as delicate as an orchid but as durable and malleable as the species.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Technically, I Am a Sex Addict is a stellar achievement, as it coaxes viewers to accompany Zahedi down avenues of sexual desire that have had little frank exposure on film.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
If nothing else, the performances of Connery and Hepburn are welcome delights.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
One of the all-time great action movies, The Great Escape also features an all-star international cast. The first half of the movie sets up all the various characters who have to drop their prickly differences and unite to outwit their German captors. Steve McQueen as the Cooler King is a genuine classic.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The height of drollery, a cheeky ode to the liberating power of popular culture, and a fascinating look at an old dog learning some new tricks.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Excellent performances and the steadying camerawork of Haskell Wexler make Limbo a supremely engaging work, but this place to which Sayles condemns his viewers is just one rung removed from Purgatory.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Its cheeky, good fun is what makes Psycho Beach Party an enjoyable, if weightless, romp.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
There is no surprise or justice or sense to the whole thing. Just sadness. And a sense of all the lonely people and where they all come from.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
But 'neath its candy-coated shell lies several solid grains of truth -- not to mention some fab choreography, a solid-gold title, and a couple of pristine examples (in Swayze and Grey) of what is meant by the term "career-making performance."- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The Basketball Diaries is a stepped-on product that never scores.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
This comic Disney Western is at its best when Don Knotts and Tim Conway are onscreen as the bumbling bandits who try to steal from a bunch of orphans. Few people remember anything about this movie apart from the hilarity generated by this scene-stealing duo.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The Mighty Ducks may satisfy the Pee Wee hockey players in your household but the rest of you may be turned off by the simplified penance and redemption formula.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The two fantastic performances by Allen and Costner that anchor The Upside of Anger are the reason to see this contemporary drama.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The costume design, however, is the film's most enthralling aspect; replicas of actual Chanel designs were created for the film, and a fresh costume graces nearly every sequence. Alas, Coco Chanel & Igor Stravinsky unfolds on a screen instead of a catwalk.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Hitchcock's comedic charms shine in this delightful story about a corpse that just won't stay buried.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The wonder of The Piano is that such an outwardly simple story could emerge into such a complex swirl of lingering memories.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Eastwood finds the humorous aspects of the character as well, no more so than when the appetite of the widower who lives on beef jerky and Pabst Blue Ribbon becomes the center of attention among the Hmong women cooks.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
The director's distinctive editing style, so commonplace today but so unusual for its time, is scarcely apparent in this movie. Also, Meyer's films tend to share a ribald and genuinely funny sense of humor that here gets usurped by a mean and nasty impulse that tends to block out the humor and exaggeration.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
There are moments here in which Shore actually behaves like a recognizable human being with some semblance of feelings, emotions and conscience. Happily, his acting skills are adequate to the task.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
In the dark of the theatre Fracture keeps it together – mainly through the sheer will of Hopkins and Gosling.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
An interesting though not extremely successful experiment, but it definitely makes you want to see what Duncan Roy does next.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
In this enduringly transcendent love story, Truffaut traces the relationships between three lovers and friends over the years. Moreau dominates every fragment of the movie with her magisterial eroticism. The film works in ways that touch the heart more than the mind.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Just sputters along, albeit pleasantly, while revisiting the realm of the abundantly familiar.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Instead of using actors, Greengrass employed many of the actual air traffic controllers and military commanders who were on the ground that day. Also aiding his film's universality is Greengrass' use of little known actors in the central roles, preventing stardom from affecting our ideas about heroism and patriotism.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Even though the movie is made with an abundance of heart, it's sad to report that the final result has only a weak pulse.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Yet, like it or not, the MPAA ratings is a system in which we all participate – which makes this film important to see if anything is ever going to change.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Mother finds Brooks in top form as he dons the tri-fold hat of director, star, and writer (with co-writer Monica Johnson). His humor has more of an observational zing than a jokey, one-two patter. Within this structure, Brooks uncovers many of the fidgety truths about the relationships between parents and their grown children. The film comeback of Debbie Reynolds is also a most welcome offshoot of this movie.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Viewers should be warned that Irréversible means what it says: Your experience of this movie can not be forgotten once the die is cast.- Austin Chronicle
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- Marjorie Baumgarten
Certainly merits attention, although it shouldn't be mistaken for one of Eastwood's greatest works.- Austin Chronicle
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