Michael O'Sullivan
Select another critic »For 1,854 reviews, this critic has graded:
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48% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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50% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 5.6 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Michael O'Sullivan's Scores
- Movies
- TV
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,051 out of 1854
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Mixed: 394 out of 1854
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Negative: 409 out of 1854
1854
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Liman knows how to keep the convoluted, almost impossibly far-fetched story on the rails, without losing our attention, and he adds many details that will bring a smile.- Washington Post
- Posted Sep 28, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Birthright suggests that the loss of women’s bodily autonomy — via laws limiting access to abortion — is a human rights issue. But it raises the alarm in ways that are as unflashy as they are disturbing.- Washington Post
- Posted Sep 21, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Lessons will be learned about teamwork and reconciliation, and many jokes will be told along the way. Some of those jokes are pretty funny.- Washington Post
- Posted Sep 21, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
In tone, School Life feels like a recruiting film for prospective students. It isn’t exactly profound, except perhaps in the way it makes a case for the theory that happiness comes first, and then learning.- Washington Post
- Posted Sep 14, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
This very thinly sliced character study of beautiful if benighted adolescence is more a pre-coming-of-age tale, one that takes us close to, but not through, the transformative acquisition of good judgment.- Washington Post
- Posted Sep 7, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
If it doesn’t rewrite the rules of horror, it calls attention to them, in a manner that is not just flamboyant, but also baroque.- Washington Post
- Posted Sep 7, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
As Polina, Shevstova delivers a performance that feels wonderfully unforced, if that’s the right word, in a role that can only be called “driven.” There’s almost an emptiness about her character. Polina’s expression of self is all on the surface — at least initially.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 31, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
About a musical genre not known for quiet contemplation, “Rumble” asks us to be still for a moment and to listen to the heartbeat — at once familiar and newly strange — that pumps the lifeblood that flows through the songs this country is known for.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 24, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Ingrid Goes West doesn’t quite go south, but in diving headfirst into the swamp of Internet addiction, its vision gets a little murky.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 24, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Despite all the mayhem, The Hitman’s Bodyguard is a surprisingly bland dish.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 17, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Horror works — or it doesn’t — in the flickering, moving images of the screen, not the page. Sandberg knows that. His artistry, for that’s what it is, is like that of the dollmaker Sam Mullins: to take inert material and create a living, breathing thing.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 10, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
How ironic then, in a movie about wordsmithing, that The Only Living Boy in New York is tripped up not by tawdry behavior, but by terrible writing.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 10, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The Dark Tower isn’t frightening, or even, despite some serviceable action and special effects, very interesting, except perhaps for viewers too young to know better, or for Stephen King fans especially susceptible to outright pandering.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 7, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Escapes is an eccentric portrait of a not especially eccentric — or even terribly interesting — subject: Hampton Fancher.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 3, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The new documentary about Al Gore’s continued climate crusade lacks urgency.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 3, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Provost’s film is, in the end, a story about attaining the wisdom that comes from forgiveness and the acceptance of those things — namely the past and the future — that none of us can control.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 27, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Ultimately, Atomic Blonde is, like its heroine, something of a machine. Lit by glowing neon, fueled by the rhythm of ’80s power pop and fashioned from stiletto heels, cigarettes, guns and sunglasses, it looks and sounds good, but it isn’t much of a conversationalist.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 27, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
"Valerian” is an expensive, handsome but dozy invalid of a movie.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 20, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Dunkirk isn’t comfortable to watch; it never relents or relaxes. At the same time, it’s impossible to look away from it.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 20, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The most interesting parts of this conversation come when Dorfman talks about the art of portraiture.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 13, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
By the standards of the traditional ghost story, A Ghost Story isn’t much of one. By the standards of the moody art-house meditation on love, loss, memory, forgetting, attachment, letting go and the nature of eternity, it’s pretty darn great.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 13, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
War for the Planet of the Apes may have the body of an action film, but it has the soul of an art-house drama and the brains of a political thriller.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 13, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
In the end, 13 Minutes isn’t about the timing or logistics of one man’s plot to kill Hitler at all, but about what made that man tick.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 6, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The film, for much of the first two acts, takes itself just about that unseriously, maintaining a jokey, self-aware tone that is nicely evocative of the original comics.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 6, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Sami Blood is a beautiful, haunting film, anchored by a startlingly accomplished lead performance.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 29, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Despicable Me 3 disappoints, if only mildly, not because it’s bad, but because it only aspires to be good enough.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 29, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
In addition to presenting a parable about the collapse of society, Amirpour’s film is also a kind of postmodern Adam-and-Eve story.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 22, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Hawke is good at playing bad, but Hawkins is better, rendering, in Maudie, a portrait of a woman that feels raw, real and revelatory.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 22, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
What little dancing we do see is lovely to watch, but it’s also lovely to see a performer who once seemed to have an iron grip on the barre finally learn how to be gracious and let go.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 15, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
It’s the filmmaking equivalent of a monkey with the head of a goat, the tail of a fish, wings and teeny-tiny rat claws.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 15, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
There isn’t quite as much pep to the film’s narrative engine on this trip.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 15, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
I wouldn’t call Band Aid profound, but it’s wiser and deeper than the average pop song, if not by much.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 8, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
For much of its brisk running time, It Comes at Night teeters between delicious atmosphere and almost unbearable tension.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 8, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Stenberg and Robinson are enormously appealing young actors, but charisma only goes so far in a story that manages to be, as directed by Stella Meghie (“Jean of the Joneses”), sterile and wildly far-fetched.- Washington Post
- Posted May 25, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Cranston is consistently watchable in the title role, although Howard’s journey into — and, at least potentially, out of — madness is a tough one to keep up with.- Washington Post
- Posted May 25, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Loud, overstimulating and hard to take in all in one sitting, it feels like the vacation that you’ll need a vacation from.- Washington Post
- Posted May 25, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
While Last Men in Aleppo could stand a trim here and there, it mostly uses its length to good and heart-rending effect, delivering a lingering, close-up — and ultimately tragic — look at the misery and joy taking place, side by side, under the eyes of the world.- Washington Post
- Posted May 18, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The Wall is a fairly hopeless film. In a sense, the fragile structure of the title acts as a double metaphor: for a barrier between enemies that keeps them from killing each other, as well as one that must come down if true understanding is ever to occur.- Washington Post
- Posted May 11, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
King Arthur: Legend of the Sword is a fun, if sacrilegious, first step in a franchise creation — one that observes the first commandment of storytelling: Thou shalt not be boring.- Washington Post
- Posted May 11, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
It’s crazy and ridiculous at times. But I can’t help agreeing with Assaf, who observes, of his companions’ rescue plans, “I like it. It has the logic of a dream.”- Washington Post
- Posted May 4, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The new film is more expansive, more beautiful, funnier, nuttier and — this is the most difficult trick for any comic-book movie to pull off — more touching than the first film.- Washington Post
- Posted May 4, 2017
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- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 27, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The film looks handsome and expensive, building up a nice head of suspense before sputtering to a less than wholly satisfying conclusion.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 27, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Tommy’s Honour is never boring, but at best it invites a smattering of polite applause, not an upturned barrel of Gatorade.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 13, 2017
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- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 13, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Frantz contains revelations unrelated to the manner in which it protects, and then peels away, its central mystery. Ultimately, it addresses the question: Why go on living when life itself betrays us?- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 6, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
It is redeemed by an appealing cast, tart dialogue and the preponderance of genuine emotion over the manufactured variety.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 6, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Your Name is still highly watchable, even when this mystical Young Adult love story cloys — or confounds.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 6, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Though Kidman delivers a workmanlike performance, the story manages to be soppy and ploddingly dull, told via a screenplay that drives home the fact that it’s not really about momentous events, but momentous feelings.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 6, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
[A] solid yet subtly sphinxlike new drama from filmmaker Hirokazu Kore-eda.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 30, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The Blackcoat’s Daughter is a visually striking masterpiece of mood and carefully calibrated storytelling. If only its technical gifts...were in service of a better — or at least more original — story.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 30, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Life has cool effects, real suspense and a sweet twist. It ain’t rocket science, but it does what it does well — even, one might say, with a kind of genius.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 23, 2017
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- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 23, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Betting on Zero makes such a strong and effective case that the company does, in fact, engage in shady business practices that it’s likely to leave viewers in a state of Documentary High Dudgeon (that brand of cinematic outrage that is not entirely unmixed with a pleasurable feeling of moral superiority).- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 16, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Depending on how you take your twee — sparingly or, as is the case in this preciously concocted tale of English misfits, slathered like marmalade over a crumpet — it will either delight or quickly cloy.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 16, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Director Mark Pellington (“I Melt With You”) at least recognizes that the setup is little more than a freakish showcase for MacLaine do her blunt-spoken-battle-ax thing.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 9, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
It has, simultaneously, the exhilarating feel of a departure and the finality of a full stop.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 2, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
It may not sound like it, but calling this barely 70-minute Swiss stop-motion film “heavy” — as in substantial and almost swollen with feeling — is a true compliment.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 2, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
There ought to be no lack of firepower in telling this shameful tale. Too often, however, Bitter Harvest is guilty of overkill.- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 23, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The slapsticky, sight-gag-heavy yukfest, which is filled with the kind of phallic humor you may have sniggered at when you were 16, floats like a dead butterfly and stings like a B-movie.- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 16, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
When the climax does come, it arrives with a bracing blast of campy absurdity so flamboyantly deviant that it glows with a kind of perverse brilliance. But the setup is starved of logic, the film’s vital oxygen.- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 16, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Like a miniature universe made entirely of millions of tiny plastic bricks, The Lego Batman Movie looks and feels like it could only have been put together by a roomful of mad geniuses, moving in a ballet of well-choreographed creativity: It’s simultaneously epic and humble.- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 9, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
It isn’t easy to explain the appeal of the “John Wick” movies, and they are inarguably not for every taste, but there is a purity to them that transcends their barbarity and has something to do with the central character.- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 9, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The real problem, when all is said and done, isn’t the movie but the man with the microphone in its spotlight. Despite two comedy consultants who worked on the film, De Niro’s Jackie never comes across as especially funny on stage (or especially likable off).- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 2, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Even if you agree with the film’s argument that teenagers shouldn’t be locked up for life when there are other ways to save them, “Monsters” doesn’t offer a convincing argument that a screenwriting class is that lifeline.- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 2, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The purpose of A Dog’s Purpose isn’t to solve philosophical riddles but to warm the cockles of dog lovers’ hearts. That, it does — as well as a wet kiss from a slobbery tongue can.- Washington Post
- Posted Jan 26, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The most ironic thing about Gold is this: For all its efforts, the movie seems to know it’s sitting on a gold mine of a backstory, but it just can’t figure out how to get the stuff out of the ground.- Washington Post
- Posted Jan 26, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
For all the outrageousness of Kevin’s alters, the movie falls oddly flat: less tantalizingly enigmatic “et cetera” than “blah blah blah.”- Washington Post
- Posted Jan 19, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
After dispensing with the sluggish setup of the film’s first act, Berg shifts into high gear, powerfully evoking the feelings of dread and white-knuckle excitement that much of America no doubt felt as the manhunt progressed.- Washington Post
- Posted Jan 12, 2017
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- Washington Post
- Posted Jan 5, 2017
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Sing ends, predictably and without straining, on a high note, with everybody’s problems resolved. If only real life could so easily be realigned, by a singing pig.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 20, 2016
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- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 20, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
For sheer inventiveness of story, language, visuals and theme, The Brand New Testament is, quite nearly, a divine comedy.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 15, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The film’s success is due to the twinkly commitment of the large and talented cast.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 8, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The Eyes of My Mother looks marvelous.... But that’s about all this absurd, illogical and underwhelming thriller has going for it.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 1, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
As the espionage plot surges toward its nail-biting conclusion, the path it’s traveling feels less open-ended than preordained.- Washington Post
- Posted Nov 22, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Jokes about race, women’s anatomy and little people are sprinkled, like rancid pepper, over a script that depends on the inherent humor of cuss words. Not that coarse language can’t be funny, but here it appears to be evidence of a toxic mix of laziness and sociopathy, not defiance of seasonal propriety.- Washington Post
- Posted Nov 22, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Kennebeck may be a newcomer to feature filmmaking, but her grasp of the material is accomplished.- Washington Post
- Posted Nov 17, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
It’s a tale bluntly told that arouses intense, evanescent emotion and then leaves you haunted, long afterward, by provocative but arguably answerable questions.- Washington Post
- Posted Nov 17, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The plot thickens, along with the emotional tension, which was always the best part of the Potter universe, and not the dazzling special effects.- Washington Post
- Posted Nov 17, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
By looking closely, clinically and ultimately compassionately at one eccentric practitioner of a dying way of life...Peter and the Farm nevertheless manages to harvest not just understanding of one peculiar, broken little man, but a broader wisdom about the cycle of seasons that we all must endure on this planet.- Washington Post
- Posted Nov 10, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Despite a solid central performance by film veteran Lynn Cohen and a Detroit setting that will please expats and current residents of the Motor City, there is little here to lift this film beyond its regional appeal.- Washington Post
- Posted Nov 3, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
All in all, Doctor Strange is a fun and trippy excursion to a place where Marvel rarely seems to go: that is, to the retinal roots of the comics.- Washington Post
- Posted Nov 3, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Say what you will about Dan Brown’s books. They may be, as some have noted, poorly written, formulaic and pretentious. But at least they hold a reader’s attention, in ways that this excursion — as sleep-inducing and rigidly predictable as a train ride — does not.- Washington Post
- Posted Oct 27, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
As far-fetched as it sounds, such torque-y plotting works, catching the audience off guard, even if the quasi-feminist payoff is less satisfying than it should be, thanks mostly to the film’s puerile fascination with girl-on-girl action.- Washington Post
- Posted Oct 27, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
A great performance does not necessarily make for great tragedy, and Christine remains mired in the minutiae of its portrait of a doomed, bitter young woman.- Washington Post
- Posted Oct 20, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Long Way North combines thrilling adventure with a slightly somber mood. It’s a beautiful trip, even if it’s a little chilly and sad when it finally gets to where it’s going.- Washington Post
- Posted Oct 13, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Arnold also brings to bear a euphoric appreciation for the spirit of freedom and the optimism — if not the innocence — of her subjects, who can seem at once world-weary and hopelessly naive. Call it a form of ecstatic naturalism, one that revels in the ugly paradoxes of life.- Washington Post
- Posted Oct 6, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The relatable theme of the magical misfit may not be entirely original. But as brought to life by Burton, Riggs’s fictional vision of a world in which the nonconformist can flourish serves as both a self-portrait of the auteur and a “Wonderland”-like looking glass in which many in the audience will no doubt see a reflection of themselves.- Washington Post
- Posted Sep 29, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Far from being a historical cautionary tale, Command and Control looks forward, not backward. Kenner’s unsettling film casts its worried gaze not at the accidents that already have taken place, but at the ones yet to happen.- Washington Post
- Posted Sep 22, 2016
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- Washington Post
- Posted Sep 22, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
At times, In Order of Disappearance is a bit too self-consciously clever. But what saves it, paradoxically — even, at times, delightfully — from skidding off course into cliche is the profound appeal of its middle-of-the-road, but never dull, protagonist.- Washington Post
- Posted Sep 1, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Disorder is, in other words, more of a technical achievement than an artistic one. The movie is at its best when it recreates what it must feel like to be in a constant state of paranoia and pain. If only that feeling were accompanied by one or two other emotions.- Washington Post
- Posted Sep 1, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
In order for the trick of the film to work, however, one must hold Morgan to a standard that the movie is unlikely to live up to.- Washington Post
- Posted Sep 1, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Moretti mostly avoids weepy melodrama, choosing instead to focus on a side meditation about the slippery nature of reality.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 25, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
"Kubo" is both extraordinarily original and extraordinarily complex.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 18, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Bekmambetov and Co. have created a redesigned product that is at once inferior to the original and a slavish imitation.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 18, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
With a firm grasp on the duality implicit in its title, Little Men is a story that’s neither tragic nor triumphal in the way it resolves itself, but rather one that’s sadly, even satisfyingly true.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 11, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Despite the vastly improved visuals, the new film is just as soft-hearted — and, unfortunately, just as mush-headed — as the earlier one.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 11, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Sadly, Suicide Squad feels like a watered-down version of what could have been a stiff drink.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 3, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
There’s an appealing quaintness to the storytelling that calls to mind the Tintin books of the artist and writer Hergé, especially that series’s old-world charm.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 28, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Jason Bourne belongs to Damon and Greengrass, whose admirable — and entirely appropriate — goal of playing it for kicks comes across, this time around, as an oddly joyless chore.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 28, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
It may not boldly go where no “Star Trek” film has gone before, but it gets there at warp speed, and with a full tank of fresh ideas.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 21, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
For a movie that relies so heavily on a single, not especially groundbreaking visual effect — now you see the bogeyman, now you don’t — Lights Out is crazy scary.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 21, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
It’s pretty obvious, with the controversy surrounding Trump’s political ascendancy, that there is a built-in market for a film that makes him and his business surrogates out to be both callous bullies and buffoons.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 14, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Microbe and Gasoline doesn’t reinvent the wheel, but it just might ride four of them into your heart.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 14, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The vérité style of filmmaking is slow and sometimes monotonous, making it all the more surprising that you will probably find yourself bawling your eyes out — without ever knowing how you got to that state — at the film’s profoundly, heartbreakingly somber conclusion.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 7, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The humor is generic. And the film’s most obvious comparison — it’s been called “Toy Story” with animals — only points up the one thing “Pets” lacks, and that any animal lover will tell you their furred and feathered friends have, in spades: personality.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 7, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
There’s little of the poetry that Perry teaches in the script, but the story’s mechanics are solid.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 30, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Is The Shallows a thriller for the ages? No, but it’s decent popcorn fare. It’s about as deep as the titular lagoon on which it’s set, but the breakers promise a short and heart-pounding ride, with no wipeout.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 23, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
If Refn is trying to skewer our cultural fixation with youth and good looks, his blade isn’t up to the task. The Neon Demon attacks, but indiscriminately. It’s sharp-looking but dull, hacking and plunging every which way, yet drawing no real blood.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 23, 2016
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- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 9, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The film is, at times, almost sinfully fun, assuming you have a taste for self-indulgently logic-free hedonism.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 9, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The climate change documentary A Time to Choose takes what often seems like an oblique approach to the subject of global warming.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 2, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
"Out of the Shadows” isn’t going to win any awards, good or bad. Neither an embarrassment nor a triumph, it is nevertheless an improvement over the last film.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 2, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Director Rodrigo Plá, working from a spare yet jangly screenplay by Laura Santullo, steadily builds suspense, craftily calibrating subtle shifts in perspective that allow us to alternate, seamlessly, between impartial observers and, as it were, active participants.- Washington Post
- Posted May 26, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
At times, “Apocalypse” can be great fun, even if it doesn’t know when to hand its car keys to a friend and ask to be taken home.- Washington Post
- Posted May 26, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
It’s hard to know which of the film’s many flaws to cite first, so here’s one thing it does fairly well: scare the bejesus out of you. That’s assuming you have read nothing about the subject of vaccines and autism, and are of a generally lax and incurious mind when it comes to the rigors of scientific inquiry.- Washington Post
- Posted May 19, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Sunset Song is a gritty and gorgeous film. Perhaps a little too gorgeous, in fact, and not gritty enough.- Washington Post
- Posted May 19, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The overly schematic nature of High-Rise does not entirely diminish its pleasures as a story, which include, in addition to Wheatley’s richly lurid visual sensibility, an effective metaphorical tool in Laing.- Washington Post
- Posted May 12, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
There’s something admirable about the fact that Being Charlie exists at all. It’s a testament to Nick Reiner’s survival. That doesn’t mean it’s a great movie.- Washington Post
- Posted May 12, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The director Alexander Sokurov is a visual virtuoso. So it’s odd, not to mention a bit disappointing, to find that the Russian filmmaker’s latest project, Francofonia, is so talky and, with rare exceptions, visually dull.- Washington Post
- Posted May 5, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The story is slightly melodramatic, but director Paddy Breathnach finds ways to make it surprisingly moving at times, in the same way that he makes the Havana slums look paradoxically beautiful.- Washington Post
- Posted May 5, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The Man Who Knew Infinity tells a great story. It’s just that it’s a little too by-the-book to make anything other than a so-so movie.- Washington Post
- Posted May 5, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Mrazek, who certainly knows the workings of this city from his 10 years in office, has written a script that feels accurate in its depiction of the mudslinging, lobbying chicanery and constituent grumbling that come with the job of politician. It’s just that little of it is terribly fresh or funny, and it draws no blood.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 28, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Garrone has created a world of both rich and ugly textures — visual, narrative and imaginative — that transports, delights and imparts disturbing lessons.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 28, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Nina filters the singer’s voice — and her life — through tinny-sounding speakers and an out-of-focus lens.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 21, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Along with his regular co-writer Eskil Vogt, Trier has crafted a profoundly beautiful and strange meditation on secrets, lies, dreams, memories and misunderstanding.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 21, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Aficionados of gore and guts may not mind the comfortably lived-in feel of this blood-spattered Green Room. But anyone looking for the ferocious originality, and unexpected humanity, of “Blue Ruin” will be disappointed by Saulnier’s uninspired cover version of a song we all know.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 21, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Although genuinely gripping — at times, uncomfortably so — the tale of Lena and Daniel’s efforts to escape from Colonia and expose its abuses suffers from a heavy-handed telling.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 14, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Like its brain-damaged protagonist, Criminal just shouts and shoots its way into, not out of, an oblivion of illogic, plot holes and emotionally unengaging scenery-chewing.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 14, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The sense of goofy, if gory, good humor [Copley] brings to Hardcore Henry goes a long way toward mitigating the film’s tedious barbarity.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 7, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
I Saw the Light isn’t just incohesive, but ultimately — and far more frustratingly — incoherent.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 31, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
It’s slightly fussy, in-your-face filmmaking, but it’s viscerally effective.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 24, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
In the end, Marguerite isn’t a comedy so much as a love story. True love, it seems, isn’t just blind; it must be deaf, too.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 24, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
There’s a whiff of autoerotic indulgence that carries over to the entire film, which despite its handsome black-and-white aesthetic and gloss of social critique seems a bit too smugly self-satisfied for its own good.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 17, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Everything is needlessly tangled and bewildering.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 17, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The filmmaking, by first-time feature director Dan Trachtenberg, is suitably claustrophobic and suspenseful, working up to a level of stress that may be unhealthy for anyone with a weak heart.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 10, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Fans of Greenaway’s work — a mix of the brainy, the controversial and the grotesque — won’t necessarily be surprised by any of this. They may, however, be disappointed at how little of it actually works.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 3, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Small moments take on larger meaning in this exquisite memoir. That’s as true of the plot — in which nothing terribly significant happens, except life — as it is of the visuals.- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 25, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
A startlingly inappropriate tragedy in the final act drives home the film’s pacifist message, while virtually ensuring that the youngest and most sensitive viewers will be left in a puddle of tears.- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 18, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
That A War both delivers the results one might wish for and denies a sense of closure is not a failing but its chief virtue.- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 18, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Toward the end, the film veers a bit out of control, as the residents engage in behavior that is incomprehensible, even given their previous transgressions.- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 18, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Winter on Fire has all the immediacy and power of drama. If it lacks the dispassionate context of more balanced journalism, it makes up for it with a complex, contradictory emotional impact that is simultaneously demoralizing and hopeful.- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 11, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
It’s a voraciously self-aware comedy, one that dines out on the inherent inanity of its own premise as much as it does the movies it’s competing with.- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 11, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Monday at 11:01 a.m. would probably work well as a half-hour television episode or a short story. As a feature film, unfortunately, it feels a bit like clock watching.- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 4, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The make-believe world of Boy and the World is confusing, scary and gorgeous. But then again, so is the real one.- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 4, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Somewhere in here, there’s a pretty decent movie. The Finest Hours is probably the best of a bad bunch of recent releases. But it’s a shame that this terrific story’s engines keep flooding in the face of wave after wave of narrative inertia.- Washington Post
- Posted Jan 28, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
As an action film, it is intense and gripping. As a drama, it is bombastic and unsubtle.- Washington Post
- Posted Jan 14, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Neither Grint nor the hoax subplot are compelling enough to hold our attention. Perlman, on the other hand, is a commanding, if peripheral, presence, diverting the focus of the film from silly historical speculation to the tale of a damaged psyche.- Washington Post
- Posted Jan 14, 2016
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Even Lawrence, in the end, is a letdown. As entertaining and committed as she is — and she’s easily the best thing about Joy — the actress ultimately can’t sell a souffle that’s half baked.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 24, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
There are a few laughs here and there. Most come at the expense of Ferrell, who plays the kind of hapless (and occasionally shirtless) straight arrow that the actor could turn out in his sleep.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 24, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
This cinematic Macbeth possesses a terrible beauty, evoking fear, sadness, awe and confusion. Presented with the aesthetic of a dark comic book, it’s also a mournful masterpiece, rendering Shakespeare’s spectacle with all the sorrow and majesty that it deserves.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 10, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Youth is intoxicating, I’ll admit. Had I never tasted this wine before, I could easily see myself yearning for another glass. But this time it feels like an old vintage in a new bottle, one that’s grown slightly stale rather than better with age.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 10, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
As this film’s engrossing character study makes clear, this woman of extraordinary tastes and appetites was ahead of her time, in more ways than one.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 3, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Hardy is extraordinarily good at evoking the fraught fraternal connection between the Krays.... But the film is ultimately unable to plumb the Krays’ deepest souls, if they even have any.- Washington Post
- Posted Nov 24, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The themes of love, loyalty, ambition, honor and legacy that lend sinew to the story are delivered with such a clean punch that they as feel as fresh as they did in 1976.- Washington Post
- Posted Nov 24, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Just when you’re about to write off your investment in Criminal Activities, the third-act dividend pays off, in spades.- Washington Post
- Posted Nov 19, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Most of the pleasure of Mockingjay — Part 2 comes from watching Lawrence, not the story around her. Her aim is true, even if the narrative arc of the movie traces a long, wobbly path toward its eventual, and not exactly happy, resting place.- Washington Post
- Posted Nov 19, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
My All American plays like an extended highlights reel, not a movie.- Washington Post
- Posted Nov 12, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
After a somewhat tedious and overly episodic first half...Trumbo becomes a far more successful movie.- Washington Post
- Posted Nov 12, 2015
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- Washington Post
- Posted Nov 5, 2015
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- Washington Post
- Posted Nov 5, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The Armor of Light is a fascinating little piece of storytelling.- Washington Post
- Posted Oct 29, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Sexist, racist, overlong, dull, visually ugly and, worst of all, unfunny, “Kasbah” squanders its cast.- Washington Post
- Posted Oct 22, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
As Kaulder, Diesel does what he does, rumbling out lines of silly dialogue in his subwoofer of a voice. As far as acting goes, there’s not much.- Washington Post
- Posted Oct 22, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
In some ways it plays like a horror movie, in other ways it’s almost a documentary. The most interesting thing about the movie is the balance of tone that Laurent strikes between recognition and repulsion.- Washington Post
- Posted Oct 16, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The film by the stylish fantasist Guillermo del Toro looks marvelous, but has a vein of narrative muck at its core.- Washington Post
- Posted Oct 15, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Simultaneously violent and droll, The Final Girls is a way to have your blood-soaked cake and eat it, too.- Washington Post
- Posted Oct 8, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
If there’s a quibble with the film, it’s that it glosses over what it’s like to grow up in the glare of worldwide celebrity.- Washington Post
- Posted Oct 8, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
It’s hard to say what is most difficult to digest about Prophet’s Prey.- Washington Post
- Posted Oct 1, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Peace Officer piles up evidence of outrageous excess, provoking what is likely to be a response, from its audience, that is far less measured than that of its main subject.- Washington Post
- Posted Oct 1, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
It’s a masterful example of genre filmmaking’s ability to transcend its limitations, leaving a viewer not just frightened, but also changed.- Washington Post
- Posted Sep 24, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
As Finders Keepers gets weirder, it also gets better and deeper. Somehow, Carberry and Tweel have managed to fashion an inspirational tale out of what one local newscaster calls a “freak show.”- Washington Post
- Posted Sep 24, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
It’s Rainn Wilson who steals the show as the cocky physical education teacher who takes charge when the pint-size monsters corner him and his fellow educators.- Washington Post
- Posted Sep 17, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
It’s not a bad movie. It’s like several pretty good ones.- Washington Post
- Posted Sep 17, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Everest gets several things right, but it fails to find a way to make the average viewer relate to the people on the mountain.- Washington Post
- Posted Sep 17, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The cast of mostly unfamiliar actors also serves The Visit well. Shyamalan has a gift for eliciting strong performances, even when his material is lacking.- Washington Post
- Posted Sep 10, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The first “Transporter” delivered an unexpected kick, courtesy of Statham, who made for a brooding, magnetic — and reliably kinetic — action hero. Skrein is an inferior stand-in, scowling like his predecessor, but lacking Statham’s cool, coiled power.- Washington Post
- Posted Sep 3, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The picture that emerges is fractured, making for a portrait that’s as fascinating as it is baffling.- Washington Post
- Posted Sep 3, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Rosenwald isn’t just a portrait of a great, selfless American and his powerful company, but an excavation of an ugly strain of our own history, and a reminder of what one person can do to uproot it.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 27, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The acting is strong, with Robbie and Ejiofor turning in performances that feel powerfully authentic, even in moments of ethical confusion. Maybe especially in moments of ethical confusion.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 27, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
American Ultra has a clever premise. But it misses several opportunities to at least comment on, if not skewer, the spy movies that it only halfheartedly pokes fun at. As it is, it’s content to generate a low-grade buzz, rather than deliver a true high.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 20, 2015
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- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 13, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The threat that this mess of a movie might be followed by a sequel is enough to make anyone cry uncle.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 13, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
A surprisingly intelligent and effective (if slightly pulpy) psychological thriller.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 6, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The special effects look cheap, the acting is wooden, and the shouted dialogue consists largely of throwaway action-movie cliches (“Let’s do this”) and B-movie sci-fi jargon (“His bioenergy is off the charts!”).- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 6, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Although Gameau’s film includes a fair amount of science, he and his helpers sweeten the film’s statistics, delivering them in clever, accessible ways.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 30, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Thorpe doesn’t flinch from whatever awkward or controversial findings his subjects offer up, especially when they concern himself. The filmmaker’s curiosity as a reporter is tempered by an unapologetically subjective perspective.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 23, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
You’ll be glad that A Hard Day isn’t happening to you, but you won’t regret observing it all from a safe distance.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 23, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
If the movie is cheesy at times, it more often presents an understanding of life’s contradictions and compromises.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 16, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
One wonders what someone who has never heard of the guy...would make of the film, which is defiantly, even, at times, obnoxiously, obtuse. Which, come to think of it, is actually kind of like the Russell we see in the film.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 16, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The second half of this nearly two-hour film is a pure delight — fast-paced and funny and filled with special effects and humor as great as any recent Marvel movie, with the possible exception of “Guardians of the Galaxy.”- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 16, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Batkid would be easier to swallow if it focused less on self-congratulation than on the epidemic of unselfishness that inspired the magic in the first place.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 9, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Cartel Land reveals a culture that spans the border, full of death and dismaying behavior on both sides, but thriving all the same.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 9, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Sure, there’s an undeniable pleasure from watching Pacino and Hunter work the screen, but the syrupy, symbol-heavy script by first-time feature writer Paul Logan is weighed down further by cliches and false notes.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 9, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
I, too, once enjoyed the Minions, in the small doses that they came in. But the extra-strength Minions is, for better or for worse, too much of a good thing.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 9, 2015
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- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 2, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Genisys goes back to what made the franchise work in the first place: not the machine inside the man, but vice versa.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 30, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
What Polar Bear really lacks is hindsight. It is a little girl’s valentine to her father, without the benefit of bittersweet wisdom that comes with age.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 25, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Despite the overplaying, Max gets its job done, which is to celebrate the sacrifices of military dogs, while warming the cockles of your heart.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 25, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Servin and Vamos clearly have a healthy sense of the absurd, which they use, like good satirists, to highlight hypocrisy, greed and corruption.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 18, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
More than a testament to the power of cinematic storytelling as food for the human spirit, The Wolfpack also is a portrait of a family that has had to rely on each other to survive.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 18, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Live From New York! is a fun, not academic walk down memory lane.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 11, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
There is a quality of enchantment to When Marnie Was There that can’t be faked, and that the studio behind this animated feature is justifiably famous for.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 11, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Vikander never goes for the easy emotion, though, choosing instead to play against what conventional melodrama would dictate her reaction should be. This understatedness is always the right choice, and it makes for a far more effective — and affecting — film.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 11, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The “Insidious” franchise, after three attempts to exorcise its real demons, still can’t seem to shake what really haunts it: the ghost of B-movies past.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 4, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The characters in Aloft seem to float over their strong passions, like birds riding on columns of air, without ever alighting. I kept waiting for the sharp sting of a talon to take hold of my heart, but it never came.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 4, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
While the movie is best viewed as an examination of a specific place and time, it also can be seen as a celebration of a larger, more generic cultural phenomenon that one might call creative foment.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 4, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Although he comes across as a sort of elfin crypt-keeper in this intriguing portrait by documentarian Belinda Sallin, Giger was also, quite literally, close to death.- Washington Post
- Posted May 28, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
What happened to almost an entire generation of musicians in Cambodia isn’t a scandal. As “Forgotten” makes powerfully, passionately clear, it’s a tragedy.- Washington Post
- Posted May 28, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The dialogue in San Andreas is lame, its plot both predictable and implausible, and the character development beside the point. Even Dwayne Johnson, that force of cinematic nature and rock-ribbed charisma, doesn’t have enough charm to dig this mess of a movie out of the rubble of cliche it’s buried in.- Washington Post
- Posted May 28, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
To call Poltergeist laughable is not the same thing as saying it’s bad (although it is that, too.) It’s just that it seems less interested in scaring you than in making you chuckle. At least on that score it succeeds.- Washington Post
- Posted May 22, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
That we almost don’t question the plausibility of this oddest of odd couples is a tribute to the sensitive direction of French Canadian filmmaker Maxime Giroux, who wrote the relatable yet keenly observant script with Alexandre Laferrière.- Washington Post
- Posted May 21, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The movie by Jean-Pierre Améris milks the tears in the home stretch, making little effort to hold the melodrama at bay. The result is a story that everyone can feel great about feeling terrible about.- Washington Post
- Posted May 21, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
[A] meandering, deliberate and tearless — yet oddly moving — western vehicle.- Washington Post
- Posted May 21, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
To say that there is also a monomania to the film is, if anything, an understatement. But it is precisely that sense of tunnel vision that makes Fury Road such a pulse-pounding pleasure.- Washington Post
- Posted May 14, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The Christian-themed Where Hope Grows wears its heart on its sleeve, hawking its message of salvation through faith to anyone who’s in the market for cheesy uplift and saccharine sentiment. It’s a soft sell, to be sure, but it’s salesmanship all the same.- Washington Post
- Posted May 14, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
As she demonstrated in “The Skeleton Twins,” the former “Saturday Night Live” comedian has grown so adept at rendering troubled characters without offering sideline commentary that you can’t help but fall in love with her, even as laughter gives way to uncomfortable silence.- Washington Post
- Posted May 7, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
I would call the movie a trainwreck, except it’s really four or five separate trainwrecks.- Washington Post
- Posted May 7, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The film suffers a bit for its slowness. But once you get used to the fact that this is not “World War Z,” it has its small pleasures, which are both cerebral and emotional.- Washington Post
- Posted May 7, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Georgian writer-director Zaza Urushadze avoids histrionics or moralizing, relying on a strong cast that expresses the film’s central argument about war’s absurdity largely through taciturn action, not words.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 30, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
See You in Valhalla, which is being released simultaneously in select theaters and on demand, is as deadly as its funereal subject matter.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 23, 2015
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- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 23, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Black Souls has a deep and startling soulfulness that, despite its shocking conclusion, is profoundly moving.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 16, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
If you can hang on for close to two hours with almost no resolution, it’s worth the ride.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 16, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
There are goofy, primal pleasures to be had in the first two-thirds of the film. But Beyond the Reach exceeds even its humble grasp in the final act, collapsing in a clatter of blockheaded manhunter-movie cliches. Crazy is one thing, but dumb is unforgivable.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 16, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The bigger mystery is whether the models actually work. Though the Armstrong partisans in the film strongly suggest that they do, director Marcus Vetter struggles to convince the lay viewer.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 9, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Although Kill Me Three Times includes a few murders, it does nothing to justify its title. Mostly, it just shoots itself in the foot, over and over.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 9, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The movie marches so quickly past the many milestones of Welles’s career and life that it doesn’t have to time to linger — lovingly or otherwise — on any of them.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 4, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Stirring at times, soggy and overly sentimental at others, the film moves surprisingly slow, even though its action, which takes place over many years of legal maneuvering, has been condensed for narrative expediency.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 1, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The film’s steady accumulation of little quirks... soon grow tedious. After a while they’re less delightfully oddball touches with a promise of more to come than dead weight with no payoff.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 26, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Like a fat slab of pastrami, Deli Man is the cinematic equivalent of comfort food: warm, generous and made with love.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 26, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Weber’s main point — that bullies are often victims of bullying themselves — gets lost in a tsunami of sorrow and sadism.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 26, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
It Follows sticks to you — yes, even outside of the theater — with a grim unshakability that is at once stylish, smart and deadly serious.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 19, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
In the end, An Honest Liar becomes a far more layered tale than it starts out to be.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 19, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
There is, however, a certain urgency to the action that will prevent most people from noticing the film’s flaws.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 19, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Despite some cool camera work and the kind of noir-lite moral ambiguity that barely gets your shoes dirty (courtesy of a shallow script by Brad “Out of the Furnace” Ingelsby), the movie is the cinematic equivalent of junk food. It satisfies the craving for the sensation of nihilism, without its substance.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 12, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
While by no means a masterpiece, the comedy, by Canadian director Ken Scott, is a careful calibration of crass gags and genuine sentiment that succeeds more often than it fails.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 5, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Yes, it’s all in good fun. And there’s a certain verve to the way Lynch handles the violence, even if he’s less of a stylist than Tarantino. But the film’s brutality... is so excessive, even if tongue-in-cheek, that it leaves a bad taste in the mouth.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 5, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Despite Blomkamp’s efforts to make some kind of commentary about the human soul, which the auteur bolsters with his trademark social consciousness — a tone of preachiness that, after three films, has worn out its welcome — the movie exhibits precious little humanity.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 5, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Despite the seemingly uncinematic nature of this inert, even claustrophobic scenario, the film mesmerizes, utterly.- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 26, 2015
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- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 26, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Despite classy lead performances by Mark Duplass and Olivia Wilde, the movie, from horror factory Blumhouse (known for cranking out sequels in the “Paranormal Activity” franchise, among others), relies too heavily on reanimated monster movie cliches and scientific gibberish to keep it alive.- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 26, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The film’s writers, directors and stars lovingly impale bloodsucker mythology with the sharpened wooden stick of comedy. As with “Shaun of the Dead,” their satire is a crude but effective tool.- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 19, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The film isn’t bad, although it is somewhat repetitive. If it has plot holes, conceptual laziness and an overreliance on dumb-insult humor, the film at least seems to know it. There are lots of self-referential jokes that acknowledge its own stupidity.- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 19, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Kingsman delivers on its promise of escapist fun, with a touch that alternates between Galahad’s old-school polish and Eggsy’s roguish charm. Like the rookie who knows that you have to make a few mistakes while following the master, the movie shrugs off its missteps with a wink and a smile that makes them easy to forgive.- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 12, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The film’s patina of richly textured grime lends the film a gloomy, claustrophobic beauty that serves its mood, as well as its satisfyingly misanthropic message: Greed isn’t good, and most people aren’t either.- Washington Post
- Posted Jan 29, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Without at least the tawdry pleasure of a little bodice ripping, the film moves along sluggishly, even though it is well acted and handsomely shot.- Washington Post
- Posted Jan 29, 2015
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- Washington Post
- Posted Jan 29, 2015
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- Washington Post
- Posted Jan 22, 2015
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- Washington Post
- Posted Jan 15, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
It is the four young actors who play the students who truly shine, and who elevate the formulaic film above and beyond its familiar proceedings.- Washington Post
- Posted Jan 15, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Blackhat is also one of the most visually unattractive movies I’ve ever seen.- Washington Post
- Posted Jan 15, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The battle scenes are alternately tense and thrilling, especially during one climactic sequence.- Washington Post
- Posted Jan 15, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The film dutifully cleaves to the contours of a well-established and viscerally satisfying formula.- Washington Post
- Posted Jan 9, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
It’s a haunting story of love between two misfits who shouldn’t be together. In its doomed yet somehow hopeful spirit, it’s closer to the noir sensibility of “Let the Right One In” than the pop-horror of “Twilight.”- Washington Post
- Posted Jan 8, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Not quite documentary, yet by no means drama, Inside the Mind of Leonardo is what might be called poetic biography: maddeningly fragmentary and idiosyncratic, but 100 percent true.- Washington Post
- Posted Jan 1, 2015
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Unbroken may not exactly be mired in sanctimony, but it’s standing, almost up to its ankles, in an unhealthy sense that its subject — about whose simple humanity the film otherwise goes to great lengths to illuminate — is a candidate for sainthood.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 23, 2014
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The aptly subtitled Night at the Museum: Secret of the Tomb is a blast of dead air and mummified humor.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 18, 2014
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Jackson’s storytelling at this point is so driven by green-screen trickery and digital legerdemain that he seems to have forgotten about human emotion.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 16, 2014
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The feature debut of writer-director Jennifer Kent is not just genuinely, deeply scary, but also a beautifully told tale of a mother and son, enriched with layers of contradiction and ambiguity.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 11, 2014
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The air inside the pyramid isn’t the only thing that’s stale in this ludicrous yet mildly likable horror film.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 5, 2014
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Yes, it features some of the most rapturous footage of calving glaciers and ice floes — alternately freezing and thawing — that you’re likely to have seen (much of it captured on equipment designed and built by the filmmaker). But it is the simple glimpses of ordinary life in an extraordinary place that are the most stirring moments in the film.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 4, 2014
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- Michael O'Sullivan
Miss Julie is a strangely clinical movie experience. It’s a story that makes an impression without leaving a mark.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 4, 2014
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- Michael O'Sullivan
The screenplay by John Aboud, Michael Colton and Brandon Sawyer has a fizzy, pop-culture pizazz, tempered by a distinctly vaudeville sensibility. It’s smart, but not brainy; dumb, but never inane.- Washington Post
- Posted Nov 25, 2014
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