Michael Phillips
Select another critic »For 2,578 reviews, this critic has graded:
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56% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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42% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 1 point higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Michael Phillips' Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 67 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | The Third Man | |
| Lowest review score: | Did You Hear About the Morgans? | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,779 out of 2578
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Mixed: 510 out of 2578
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Negative: 289 out of 2578
2578
movie
reviews
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- Michael Phillips
It has flashes of inspiration and raw emotion, and beyond the famous faces in the cast, Disney’s Wrinkle in Time is graced with a wonderful, natural Meg courtesy of the young actress Storm Reid. Now 14, she’s easy and versatile screen company. The movie around her is a little frustrating and rhythmically stodgy, however, partly for reasons inherent in bringing tricky, elusive material to a different medium.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Mar 7, 2018
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- Michael Phillips
This is a gentle, diffident concoction. But it has barely enough pulse to power a hummingbird.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 13, 2011
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- Michael Phillips
Outlandish weddings aren't much of a satiric target, but Confetti isn't really going for satire; mild-mannered japes are more its style.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Around the midpoint Alpha Dog becomes less sociological and more personal, developing a real sense of suspense.- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
The best material in the film is the loosest, capturing the perpetually insecure and overcompensating Pineda in his early concerts, leaping, bouncing, careening around as if every moment in every song were an audition for the next moment in the next song.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Mar 7, 2013
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- Michael Phillips
It relays an uplifting story that, ill-advisedly, is not so much Holocaust-era as Holocaust-adjacent, determined to steer clear of too much discomfort.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 14, 2013
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- Michael Phillips
Nice. The film itself is more nice than good, but nice isn't the worst trait.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Nearly two hours long, 30 Days of Night makes you feel the cold (though it was shot in New Zealand) and feel the fangs, but it also makes you feel like 30 days is a pretty long time.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Irrational Man is full of holes. Abe's supposed to be a disillusioned activist, yet that side of him is so half-assedly developed, it's as if Allen himself didn't believe it.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jul 23, 2015
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- Michael Phillips
Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker does the job. It wraps up the trio of trilogies begun in 1977 in a confident, soothingly predictable way, doing all that cinematically possible to avoid poking the bear otherwise known as tradition-minded quadrants of the “Star Wars” fan base.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 18, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
A screwy assassination thriller for these murky times, it takes half its pages from Soldier of Fortune and the other half from links provided by conspiracytheories-zapoppin.org.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Set in 1973, amid a forest of shag carpeting, Annabelle Comes Home is a nice little summer surprise, and quite unexpectedly the freshest of the three “Annabelle” movies spun off from the larger “Conjuring” galaxy of horror films.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jun 25, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
What strikes me about the new Robin Hood, directed by Ridley Scott, is how its preoccupations and sensibilities lie almost precisely halfway between the derring-do of the 1938 film and the harsh revisionism of the '70s edition- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Ritchie, who shoots and cuts everything in RocknRolla like an ad for a particularly greasy brand of fragrance for men, delivers the beatings and killings in his trademark atmosphere of morally weightless flash.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
As stand-alones, some of these work better than others. Director Jon Favreau’s “The Jungle Book” came off as a real movie unto itself, as did Kenneth Branagh’s sincere, well-acted “Cinderella” (I was in the minority on that one). Aladdin, though, feels pointless. It’s cinematic karaoke. It’s an ice show without the ice.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted May 22, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
Only the architecturally refined bone structure of Kristin Scott Thomas' face rescues Keeping Mum from full-on tedium.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
This is a fantasy grab bag in which nearly anything can happen.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Feb 7, 2013
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- Michael Phillips
Emancipation is never dull, but it’s rarely without its box office instincts for falsification front and center, alongside its star. And while it has been built on the scarred back of a real man, the movie is too busy with the business of entertainment to focus on the “real” part for long.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 2, 2022
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- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Sep 20, 2018
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- Michael Phillips
The saving graces are Agudong and Kealoha. Their characters’ sibling relationship, fractious but loving, keeps at least five toes in the real world and in real feelings, thanks to the actors.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted May 22, 2025
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- Chicago Tribune
- Posted May 24, 2012
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- Michael Phillips
Ozon’s style as a filmmaker favors smooth technique and easy proficiency, and his resume is full of comedy. That would appear to put him at odds with this material. But his handling of difficult subject matter carries a welcome, borderline-dispassionate restraint and a respect for each character’s value.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 6, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
The Dawn Treader doesn't so much reinvent the "Narnia" franchise as do what's needed, and expected, with a little more zip than the previous voyages.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 10, 2010
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- Michael Phillips
Folks, I confess: I'm coping with a mild case of arachno-apatha-phobia, defined as the fear of another so-so "Spider-Man" sequel.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Apr 30, 2014
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- Michael Phillips
Mainly, Cage keeps finding the damnedest ways to topspin his line readings so that you never know where a sentence is going. May the next outing with Renfield and Dracula, should the public and Universal decree it, be a little funnier and little less too much.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Apr 14, 2023
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- Michael Phillips
Ross' smooth, steady film is just interesting enough to make you wish it were a lot grittier, and better.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jun 23, 2016
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- Michael Phillips
For some reason I was under the impression Jim Carrey already made his penguin movie. Doesn't it seem like it?- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jun 16, 2011
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- Michael Phillips
Beyond Affleck's, the performances here lack amplitude and dramatic impact.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jul 27, 2014
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- Michael Phillips
It's a lot of fun. Its spirit is genuine and, even with the odd vomit gag, fundamentally sweet.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
But Haley Lu Richardson’s in it. She’s excellent. In fact, she’s reliably excellent. In “Five Feet Apart” she goes 10 rounds with dreckdom, and wins. Scene after scene the movie becomes a two-hour demonstration in the art, craft and mystery of what a performer can do to make you believe, in spite of the things they actually have to say.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Mar 14, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
The film itself, which has everything from erection jokes to a computer-generated tornado, comes down to a battle between the interpreters and a screenplay riddled with convenience, cliche and well-meaning contrivance.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
The Book of Eli works, even if the preservation of Christianity isn’t high on your personal post-apocalypse bucket list. Establishing its storytelling rules clearly and well, the film simply is better, and better-acted, than the average end-of-the-world fairy tale.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
At times the film appears on the verge of morphing into a singing-cowboy musical.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
The cast is full of strong actors, among them Tahar Rahim (riveting in "A Prophet") as Samba's allegedly Brazilian friend and confidant. It's easy to enjoy what the cast does on screen; it's harder to buy the nutty mood swings.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jul 30, 2015
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- Michael Phillips
I wish the film version of Astro Boy provided a stronger antidote to mediocrity.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
An interesting misfire. It's also the victim of lousy timing.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 17, 2016
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- Michael Phillips
The cast excels at transcending its material. The script by Justin Haythe matches Francis Lawrence’s direction; it’s workmanlike and steady and pretty flat.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Feb 28, 2018
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- Michael Phillips
The acting's strong; in addition to Moretz and Moore, Judy Greer is a welcome presence in the Betty Buckley role of the sympathetic gym instructor. But something's missing from this well-made venture. What's there is more than respectable, while staying this side of surprising.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 17, 2013
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- Michael Phillips
The script never quite feels itself; it feels like contradictory impulses playing out in shuffle mode. And the scale of the movie does the putative romance no favors.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jul 11, 2024
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- Michael Phillips
I like a lot of the film despite its drawbacks; its violence isn't rote or numbing, and there's a simplicity and elegance to the digital-countdown effect.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 27, 2011
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- Michael Phillips
Like Martin Scorsese's "Shutter Island," Stonehearst Asylum starts with the hysteria knob set at 11 and goes up from there.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 23, 2014
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- Michael Phillips
An uneven but strongly acted debut feature from co-writer and director Sheldon Candis.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jan 17, 2013
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- Michael Phillips
The Holiday is a 131-minute romantic comedy for those who, if they had their way, would still be watching "Love Actually."- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Black Snake Moan strikes me as hogwash. It fundamentally does not work; its consciously far-fetched, out-there notions of the things damaged people do in the name of love are reductive and go only so far. It's as if the premise were tethered to a radiator or something.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
This is a modest but expertly performed piece. And this summer, surrounded by lesser, louder, bigger and dumber diversions, it's especially welcome.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Do not expect dynamic filmmaking from Love Is Strange. It's about other things, and Lithgow and Molina are splendid, their eyes full of wisdom and experience.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Aug 28, 2014
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- Michael Phillips
It’s the last thing he wanted, I’m sure, but Eastwood’s latest ends up feeling like a stunt.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Feb 8, 2018
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- Michael Phillips
A thickly plotted disappointment, yet it has three or four big sequences proving that director Michael Mann, who gave us "Thief," "Heat," "Collateral" and others, has lost none of his instincts for how to choreograph, photograph and edit screen violence.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jan 15, 2015
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- Michael Phillips
Around the halfway point it starts getting interesting and the people who put it together are at least working in a realm of reasonable intelligence and wit and respect for the audience.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Good, bad or middling, very little of Shyamalan’s works can be described as tightly plotted, well-sprung suspense.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Aug 5, 2024
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- Michael Phillips
I liked Death on the Nile a fair bit more than Branagh’s previous Christie film, partly because it’s a less predictable and schematic narrative to begin with, and partly because Branagh the actor has a way of outfoxing his own pedestrian direction.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Feb 10, 2022
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- Michael Phillips
This movie is more risk-prone than the majority of Marvel titles. Yet it frustrates, even beyond a screenplay full of self-competing interests. And as far as MCU fatigue goes — well, at this point, it goes pretty far.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 3, 2021
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- Michael Phillips
The movie — certainly Daniels’s best since “Precious” — is as turbulent and zigzaggy as Holiday’s life no doubt felt like to the woman who lived it. If this risky movie hits some bum notes, Andra Day cannot be found anywhere in the vicinity.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Feb 25, 2021
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- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Sep 2, 2013
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- Michael Phillips
Midway through a middling film adaptation, like this one, you realize it’s the same old clue-delivery mechanism, in a darker mood but also a less lively one.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 9, 2017
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- Michael Phillips
Too much of the contrasting comedy in Nanny McPhee Returns is shrill, laden with routine computer-generated effects and pounded into dust by James Newton Howard's shut-up-already musical score.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
I wish there were as many big payoffs and clever jokes as there are Bosleys in this movie. But Stewart and company have their fun, and we have a reasonable percentage of theirs.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 12, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
Just when movie theaters don’t need another one, The Amateur comes along to join the roster of 2025 releases that lack the knack, the juice and exciting reasons for theatergoers to theater-go.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Apr 10, 2025
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- Michael Phillips
If you can forget about the movie’s general moral vacuousness, the extremely uneven digital photography and the slavish devotion to designer assault weapons...the screenplay by “Watchmen” scribe Alex Tse keeps the shifting alliances and power plays in clever circulation.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jun 12, 2018
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- Michael Phillips
Dermot Mulroney takes the largest male role, that of the driven ex-soccer star and patriarch of the onscreen family. From certain angles he looks like a Shue too.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Anyone But You isn’t terrible, or a travesty. It’s eh-notherthing ehltogether.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 21, 2023
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- Michael Phillips
Self/less hews closely enough to the premise of the 1966 John Frankenheimer thriller "Seconds" to qualify as an unofficial remake. Then again, anyone who remembers that one is not in the target audience for this one.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jul 9, 2015
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- Michael Phillips
If you want a list of comics-derived spectacles less successful and worthy than this one, "Suicide Squad" heads the list. And that's the only list it'll ever head.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Mar 30, 2017
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- Michael Phillips
Magic Mike’s Last Dance might’ve worked better if it had fully embraced the mantle of 21st century comedy of manners. As is, it’s tentative, wanly comic. As the great Russian stripper Anton Chekhov showed us: Without the funny, the serious has a harder go of it.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Feb 9, 2023
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- Michael Phillips
Laughing at the freaks and then feeling bad about it is the sole reason for the existence of this pale little film.- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Mar 31, 2011
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- Michael Phillips
Meryl Streep excels as Margaret Thatcher. And the movie itself does not work.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jan 12, 2012
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- Michael Phillips
How you respond to the totality of Exodus: Gods and Kings will, I suspect, relate directly to how you responded to Ridley Scott's "Robin Hood" from 2010. Square, a little heavy on its feet, much of that film held me, even when its bigness trumped its goodness. Same with this one.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 11, 2014
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- Michael Phillips
It took J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter-adjacent franchise exactly one film for the shrugs to set in, even with all those fine actors up there amid expensive digital blue flames.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 8, 2018
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- Michael Phillips
Boasts one moment, perhaps three or four seconds in length, so delightfully intense and uncharacteristically juicy that the rest of the film - most of the rest of the whole series, in fact - looks pretty pale by comparison. Not vampire pale. Paler.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 15, 2012
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- Michael Phillips
It’s ungallant to single out MVPs in this ensemble. Nonetheless: If it weren’t for Moreno’s wizardly comic wiles and Field’s unerring, unforced timing, “80 for Brady” would not be here, there or much of anywhere.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Feb 3, 2023
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- Michael Phillips
McKinnon’s apparent improvisations and inventions create a second, better movie in the margins.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Aug 7, 2018
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- Michael Phillips
The film doesn’t hold together. But it’s the work of a real director, however fantastic his sensibility.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
More than anything Casa de mi Padre is an exercise - and to those who find it more clever than I do, a valid one - in tone-funny, as opposed to joke-funny.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Mar 15, 2012
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- Michael Phillips
This is a mixed blessing. For a story replete with open-air combat 300 is strangely claustrophobic. And for a film with lotsa flesh and even more blood, it's light on flesh-and-blood characters.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
The action beats are so relentless, no sooner does one chase end than another begins.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Mother of Tears can't rival the David Lynchian otherworldliness of "Suspiria," but at least you know you're in the hands of a director.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
It's fun to see that charming underreactor Neve Campbell, looking about 20 minutes older, back as Sidney Prescott.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Apr 14, 2011
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- Michael Phillips
Like "The Notebook," but with an elephant, the unexpectedly good film version of Water for Elephants elevates pure corn to a completely satisfying realm of romantic melodrama.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Apr 21, 2011
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- Michael Phillips
This one’s no gem. It’s simply large, and long (two-and-a-half hours, the usual length lately with these products). I remain unpersuaded and slightly galled by the attempts to interpolate the history, locale and tragic meaning of Auschwitz into what used to be known as popcorn movies.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted May 9, 2016
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- Michael Phillips
Clooney's attempt to honor unsung real-life heroes while recapturing the ensemble pleasures of some well-remembered Hollywood war pictures, notably "The Great Escape" and "The Guns of Navarone," comes off as a modestly accomplished forgery at best.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Feb 5, 2014
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- Michael Phillips
While its globe-trotting itinerary recalls the mad whirl of a "Bourne" picture, nothing about this film's style resembles the second or third "Bourne" outings (which I loved).- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
It's not a ridiculous degree of complexity per se, but screenwriter Matt Cook mistakes solemnity for gravity, and a high body count for dramatic urgency. The cast is terrific, unfortunately.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Feb 26, 2016
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- Michael Phillips
The animated result isn't bad. It's an adequate baby sitter. But where's the allure in telling the truth? Twentieth Century Fox and Blue Sky Studios present "Adequate"?- Chicago Tribune
- Posted May 23, 2013
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- Michael Phillips
Director Espinosa shoots virtually everything in tight but wobbly close-up, and the human and vehicular combat often brakes right at the edge of visual incoherence. Just as often the brakes give out completely.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Feb 9, 2012
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- Michael Phillips
Kate Winslet has such sound and reliable dramatic instincts (That Face doesn't hurt, either) she very nearly makes something of Adele.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jan 30, 2014
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- Michael Phillips
This movie comes at you with an idea or two, as well as every available gun blazing.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Feb 12, 2014
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- Michael Phillips
When classy, pedigreed British actors go hog-wild under the flowering dogwood trees of a Southern Gothic setting, often the results are good. Just as often they're so bad they're good. And sometimes, as is the case with Jeremy Irons and Emma Thompson in Beautiful Creatures, they're simply doing the best they can under the circumstances.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Feb 13, 2013
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- Michael Phillips
Has its bright spots but is practically blinded by its own privileged perspective of life among the landed gentry of Brooklyn.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Sep 24, 2015
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- Michael Phillips
The actors and director Lemmons accomplish what the screenplay does only partially: make us believe the circumstances and the behavior.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 22, 2022
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- Michael Phillips
It's not a difficult picture to watch. All you want from A Walk in the Woods, honestly, is a chance to enjoy a couple of veteran actors. But the book's comic tone hasn't found a comfortable equivalent for the screen.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Sep 2, 2015
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- Michael Phillips
I like the new “Jurassic World” movie better than the 2015 edition. Bayona’s direction is considerably more stylish and actively mobile than Colin Trevorrow’s was.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jun 20, 2018
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- Michael Phillips
If You’re Cordially Invited strains to bring its amped-up, often wearying feud to a satisfying conclusion, the stars give it their best shot, while the ringers do their thing with blithe assurance.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jan 30, 2025
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- Michael Phillips
A large amount of dope is smoked in The Pick of Destiny, perhaps the most since the salad days of Cheech & Chong. This may be the problem. Pot rarely helped anybody's comic timing.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
The funky, enjoyable Hamburg-set comedy Soul Kitchen is a celebration of co-writer-director Fatih Akin's home base, a spacious, moody city of apparently limitless industrial warehouse space - like Chicago.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Wahlberg has the presence, the glower and the laconic line readings to guide us through a mess of pain, painlessly.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jan 12, 2012
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- Michael Phillips
Writer and director Alex Sharfman’s splurchy dark comedy carves itself into halves, a clever first half followed by a more routine second one. Yet it’s a feature film debut signaling a filmmaker of actual wit. So you go with it — I did, anyway, most of it, more or less — even when its sense of tone and direction goes sideways.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Mar 27, 2025
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- Michael Phillips
The movie's smooth to the point of blandness, but its faces really do tell a story. And having Gere's silverly mane share the same film with Strathairn's is almost too much fabulous hair for one diversion.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Mar 5, 2015
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- Michael Phillips
Lapica isn't yet enough of a writer or director (or an actor) to make the dramatic arc unpredictable in any way. It may be effective for some as therapy. It is far less so as cinematic storytelling.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Robert Benton’s recent films have been vexing combinations of gentility and stiffness, and despite a fair bit of nudity "Feast of Love" behaves itself all too well. It’s as neat as a pin; it ties up every loose end in careful "Playhouse 90" style. Despite some awfully smart actors, Benton’s movie made me long for a few interrupted sentences and the occasionally conflicted character.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
The pathos really are shameless, arriving with killing regularity and false humility.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 15, 2010
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- Michael Phillips
Roughly half the scenes are terrible, nervously edited and predictable. The other half transcend the innate shrugginess of the script. At the end there's a dose of voice-over narration assigned to Johnson that is so, so very Carrie Bradshaw, you half-expect Sarah Jessica Parker to show up with a lawsuit.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Feb 11, 2016
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- Michael Phillips
The film is ruled by sound and fury signifying an attempt to launch a new franchise.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Feb 28, 2013
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- Michael Phillips
Gets by for many of the same reasons "Date Night" got by, all of them performance-related.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Besson's commercial instincts for sleek, violent fantasy are often sound, but "Valerian" is more sedative than show.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jul 20, 2017
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- Michael Phillips
It's funny what you buy completely onstage and resist completely, or nearly, on-screen. Case in point: Mamma Mia!- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Think Like a Man is what it is. But its hangout factor is considerable, because the actors' charms are considerable.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Apr 19, 2012
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- Michael Phillips
It's an entertaining picture — pulp, coming from a place of righteous indignation.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Feb 21, 2013
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- Michael Phillips
Ferrell may well shoulder the blame for Land of the Lost, even if he doesn't deserve it. He did, however, willingly participate in this coarse, sloppy big-screen version of the old Saturday-morning time-warp adventure.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
This debut picture never makes up its mind about what sort of comedy it wants to be. But at least it has one--a mind, that is.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
This movie also offers less: less wit, less charm, and only a few scraps of the old movie’s crucial songs (though “Baby Mine” receives its moment, in a campfire rendition).- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Mar 26, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
Rough Night is good one minute, weak or stilted or wince-y the next, though even with seriously uneven pacing and inventiveness it's a somewhat better low comedy than "Snatched" or "Bad Moms," or (here's where I part company with the world) the "Hangover" pictures. Yes, even the first one.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jun 15, 2017
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- Michael Phillips
It’s a morose sort of screwball comedy with heart, and right there that’s three elements going in related but separate directions.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Aug 15, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
There's really no other word for what Helen Mirren is doing in certain reaction shots, out of subtle interpretive desperation: mugging. She's mugging. She is a sublimely talented performer, and this is material with fascinating implications, and I doubt there's a moviegoer in the world who doesn't like Helen Mirren. But even the best actors need a director to tell them to tone it down.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Apr 2, 2015
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- Michael Phillips
Then there's screenwriter Steve Conrad. He's interesting. He likes his protagonists to suffer a little en route to finding a better place, and not in the usual sitcomic ways.- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Clarke has loads of talent, but in Me Before You she's undermined by director Sharrock's technique, and an endless slew of overeager reaction shots (She's clumsy! She's twinkling!) exacerbated by editor John Wilson.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jun 1, 2016
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- Michael Phillips
The script is half-a-fortune at best, and visually the picture is staid. But you stick with it, because it's Williams and because certainly no one since Williams has written this sort of embroidered dialogue.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
I admit I would've had a hard time getting through it without the help of Simmons and Addai-Robinson, over there in the B plot. The character at the center of the story is treated with respect and admiration, but in dramatic terms he's about as real-world plausible as Batman.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 13, 2016
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Predators, plural, starts well and ends poorly, and in the middle it's in the middle.- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
The reason Just Wright works is simple. It finds ways to let familiar characters move around inside a familiar premise like living, breathing, likable human beings.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
A bit of a tweener, neither triumph nor disaster, a war-games fantasy with a use-by date of Nov. 22, when the new "Hunger Games" movie comes out.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 31, 2013
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- Michael Phillips
It's all very "Scarface"--the De Palma remake of "Scarface," not the Hawks original. In other words, it doesn't feel modern at all. It feels about a generation late and 400 years short.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
I liked the movie mainly for Barrymore. The way she handles the crucial, early "I love you" moment (he's saying it to her, and the camera shows us what she's thinking), you think: This is one canny actress.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Hunnam’s reliably charismatic in suffering and in joy, but with most of the political and wartime context shaved off the story, once again, we’re left with the basics.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Aug 23, 2018
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- Michael Phillips
I didn't laugh much, nor did my 10-year-old companions, but nobody had their soul crushed by the experience. This is the film industry's Hippocratic oath: First, crush no souls.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Mar 24, 2011
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- Chicago Tribune
- Posted May 2, 2012
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- Michael Phillips
Before long in 21 Bridges, the extent of the corruption becomes the top line of a vision test — far too easy to spot from a distance.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 21, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
Cameo appearances by everyone from James Franco (as Hugh Hefner, putting the moves on Lovelace at her own premiere) to Hank Azaria (as a film "investor") dot the grimy landscape.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Aug 8, 2013
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- Michael Phillips
Those looking for some human interest in their human interest may be equally frustrated.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 3, 2013
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- Michael Phillips
John Carter isn't much - or rather, it's too much and not enough in weird, clumpy combinations - but it is a curious sort of blur.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Mar 8, 2012
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- Michael Phillips
The harder this assault weapon went at my tear ducts, the more duct tape I wrapped around them as a defensive measure.- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Anonymous is ridiculous, and like Oliver Stone's "JFK" it sells its political conspiracy theories by weight and by volume. But dull, it's not.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 27, 2011
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- Michael Phillips
McQuarrie... is a real writer; his banter has snap and bite. His directorial skills are still catching up with his writing skills; the movie loses steam in the final half-hour.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 20, 2012
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- Michael Phillips
Wilson does amusingly steely work, while Page goes bonkers, giving her gleeful nut job one of the more memorable horselaughs in recent American film history.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Apr 7, 2011
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- Michael Phillips
The results are equal parts marital crisis, sins-of-the-father psychodrama and visceral body horror. They’re also a bit of a plod — especially in the second half, when whatever kind of horror film you’re making should not, you know, plod.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jan 15, 2025
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- Michael Phillips
True Story is a case of a well-crafted film, made by a first-time feature director with an impressive theatrical pedigree, that nonetheless struggles to locate the reasons for telling its story.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Apr 16, 2015
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- Michael Phillips
The script is just so-so, but Ball’s directorial eye, clear in the first “Maze Runner” film though largely AWOL in the second, saves the third and final adventure from its own bloat.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jan 17, 2018
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- Michael Phillips
The sequel's themes of friendship and interdependency fail to generate much momentum.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 17, 2011
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- Michael Phillips
Clarke, among others, deserves so much better. If you watch her amid the suds of “Me Before You” (2016) and now Last Christmas, you see an actor of sound comic and dramatic instincts at the mercy of pushy material. This encourages actors to over-exert themselves in the name of delivering the goods with a smile that threatens to turn into something more like Jack Nicholson in “The Shining.”- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 6, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
Crowe's feature directorial debut, The Water Diviner, stems from an honest impulse to dramatize ordinary people who honor their dead. Yet the results are narratively dishonest and emotionally a little cheap.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Apr 23, 2015
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- Michael Phillips
If more of the picture had the inventively grotesque payoff of the scene set at the gymnastics tryout, capped by a female character's inarguably poor dismount, we might have something to puke home about.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Aug 11, 2011
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- Michael Phillips
Too often the movie’s franchise mechanics and green-screen overload have a way of dragging “The Marvels” into generic sequeldom. But the stars give us something to hang onto, even if Larson — so good in so many films — has yet to master the useful trick of looking neutral yet invested in her many, many reaction shots.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 8, 2023
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- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jan 20, 2011
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- Michael Phillips
The satisfactions of the film are in seeing what a screen full of excellent players can do to steer you around the holes. Bana never quite seems enough to anchor a picture for me; all the same, he acquits himself sharply here.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Aug 27, 2013
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- Michael Phillips
Aiming for a piece with the raw impact of "Precious," on which he served as executive producer, he (Perry) ends up with 134 minutes of misjudged intensity.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 4, 2010
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- Michael Phillips
Hit & Run is pretty rancid as comedy. Worse, the chases are strictly amateur hour, all shortcut editing and no gut satisfaction.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Aug 21, 2012
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- Michael Phillips
The very elements of Eat Pray Love that helped make it a success in 40 languages -- the breezy prose, the relentless sorting-through of dissatisfactions, a steady stream of intriguing sights -- turn the film into a travelogue with a little spiritual questing on the side.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Contrivances come, and go, but The Ballad of Wallis Island rolls along, with just enough casual wit to buoy the story.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Apr 2, 2025
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- Michael Phillips
There are flashes and occasional whole sequences when Edwards’ directorial eye snaps into focus.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jul 2, 2025
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- Michael Phillips
It’s a lame and weaselly thing, made strangely more frustrating by some excellent performers.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Mar 11, 2020
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- Michael Phillips
After seeing No Reservations you'll be hungry for a really top-flight meal. And, to go with it, a better film.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Aubrey Plaza is so deadpan she's undeadpan, and not just in her new zombie movie.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Sep 4, 2014
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- Michael Phillips
Not bad, not good, Ice Age 3 may be OK enough to do what it was engineered to do, i.e., baby-sit your kid for a while and rake in the dough.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Director Marc Webb moves it along, with a rock-solid lead, very well sung, courtesy of Rachel Zegler.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Mar 19, 2025
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- Michael Phillips
It's an up-and-down movie, honest one minute and a fraud the next, but you stick with it mainly because of Hahn.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Sep 5, 2013
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- Michael Phillips
Going in Style stays in the safe zone every second, nervous about risking any audience discomfort, as opposed to Brest's quietly nervy ode to old age and its discontents. Times change.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Apr 6, 2017
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- Michael Phillips
The cast's newcomers mix and mingle with ease with the hardened alums of Disney and Nickelodeon TV series.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Apr 28, 2011
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- Michael Phillips
Well, it's a masterpiece compared with 'Little Fockers,' the last movie featuring Barbra Streisand.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 18, 2012
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- Michael Phillips
Blunt’s derring-do has its stray moments, and her comic wiles are most welcome. But this is blockbustering from a talented director whose talent has been pounded flat by the dictates of a script in the quality range of Disney’s “Lone Ranger.”- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jul 29, 2021
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- Michael Phillips
Padding disguised as a feature-length screenplay, adapted from Belber's one-act.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Disarming one minute, baldly manipulative the next, Champions is a tricky one.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Mar 9, 2023
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- Michael Phillips
Because The Campaign tries to say something about truth vs. hogwash in election season, it's doubly sad the efforts of screenwriters Chris Henchy and Shawn Harwell come to so little.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Aug 9, 2012
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- Michael Phillips
It’s a premise for a pitch, not a screenplay, at least not a sharp-witted or interesting one. I’m not fussy. I’m not looking for the most interesting romantic comedy in history with this one. But I do wonder if some writers are so determined to stick to a formula so slavishly, they forget to make the characters funny, or to make characters rather than vaguely delineated personae in the Clooney vein or Roberts vibe.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 20, 2022
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- Michael Phillips
She delivers a solid and easy star performance. Some young performers lack a relatable quality; Seyfried has it, even with those old-school, big-screen peepers.- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
With a smooth overlay of LA sights and sounds, and a side of blueprints stolen from “Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner” and “Meet the Fockers,” “You People” ends up a lot less insightfully funny than “Black-ish.”- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jan 27, 2023
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- Michael Phillips
Human-spirit cliches and all, the movie accomplishes job one: It moves. It also has a choice soundtrack, spiced by the likes of Missy Elliott’s “Shake Your Pom Pom” and Digital Underground’s immortal “Humpty Dance.”- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
It's sort of fun, certainly more so than the "National Treasure" pictures, as well as less manic (a little less) than the recent "Mummy" films.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
The component genre parts coexist, excitingly, without veering into camp or facetious desperation. Alien-invasion aficionados should be pleased. Western nostalgists may be pleasantly surprised. Fans of cowboys-versus-aliens movies, well, it's been a long wait and here's your movie.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jul 28, 2011
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- Michael Phillips
Dominik drains the complication and, saddest of all, the screen wiles, from a plainly complicated legend.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Sep 24, 2022
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- Michael Phillips
The film doesn't pretend to be anything other than what it is: a story of one woman overcoming low expectations. Gugino and Burstyn and the young performers playing the young players do likewise.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 20, 2011
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- Michael Phillips
Allen is obsessed with the notion of getting away with murder, mulling over which personalities can shoulder the psychological burden of killing without remorse, while others crumble under the pressure. The problem is, you don’t feel the human sweat and strain in Cassandra’s Dream, despite game work from Farrell and McGregor.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Warming up this material, as Johnson tries to do, doesn't make it warmer; it just makes it seem warmed-over.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Mar 23, 2017
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- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 20, 2013
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- Michael Phillips
The flaw in Death of a President isn't one of morality. It's one of dramatic interest.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
The Good German is just stiff. When Soderbergh tries one of those patented swoop-in-on-the-diagonal moves at a key dramatic moment, the effect is comic. And at that precise moment, the story starts dying a slow, oxygen-deprived death.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
For what it is - recessionary wish-fulfillment escapism, with a lot of highly skilled familiar faces in its amply qualified cast - it's fun.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 3, 2011
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- Michael Phillips
Gyllenhaal certainly holds the screen; at this point in his career, he has found a way to rise above whatever needs rising above. But midway through Demolition, I longed for a sequel to "Nightcrawler" instead.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Apr 7, 2016
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- Michael Phillips
For visual noise by the ton, Emmerich is my kind of hack, the pluperfect blend of leaden self-seriousness and accidental-on-purpose self-satirist.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Most of this doc is content to wander through Franken's recent show-biz resume, to no particular end.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
The story is a lot harder on its female protagonist than the 2000 film was on its male equivalent. This makes a depressing amount of sense, given what women are up against in most workplaces. Henson’s Ali plays both the dramatic encounters and the slapstick opportunities for higher stakes than Gibson ever did.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Feb 6, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
The results impart that "trapped" feeling all too well. It's a sullen affair, dominated by a grim visual palette that intrigues for about 30 minutes.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 15, 2010
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- Michael Phillips
In the end Tropic Thunder is an expensive goof about an expensive goof, and the results are very impressive and fancy-looking.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
While I wish van Heijningen's Thing weren't quite so in lust with the '82 model, it works because it respects that basic premise. And it exhibits a little patience, doling out its ickiest, nastiest moments in ways that make them stick.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 13, 2011
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- Michael Phillips
We're snowed by a great deal of intersecting and crisscrossing information in The Fifth Estate, and Singer's script lacks organizational skills. I can relate. But that doesn't make parsing this busy film, or — crucially — its true, contradictory feelings about Assange any easier.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 17, 2013
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- Michael Phillips
It’s a sidewinding but often effective L.A. crime thriller saddled with the wrong leading man.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jan 18, 2018
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- Michael Phillips
Now and then the movie rouses itself to deliver. If you go to American Reunion - and many will, if they harbor fond memories of the first one, and if they can find a sitter - you should stay through the end credits.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Apr 5, 2012
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- Michael Phillips
In a funnier world, Zoë Chao and Tig Notaro are starring in their own romantic comedy together.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Feb 17, 2023
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- Michael Phillips
Provides some compensatory satisfactions, thanks mostly to the actors, as they make the most of a series of pencil sketches.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
A fine and moving film could be made from this story, which was inspired, loosely, by events and situations in the lives of Kurtzman and Orci. But the script sets an awfully low bar for Sam's redemption.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jun 28, 2012
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- Michael Phillips
It sets a tone, all right. A lot of gamers (sorry, "filmgoers") may well enjoy writer-director Michael Davis' ultraviolent lark. It's not meant to be taken seriously. But films like this are worth taking seriously because they're genuinely cruddy and hollow and, yes, vile.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
For an hour or so, aided by the autumnal glow of Ben Seresin's cinematography, director Hughes maintains a firm handle on the story's turnabouts. Then the script goes a little nuts with coincidence and improbability.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jan 17, 2013
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- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jul 12, 2012
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
I’m inclined to agree with a colleague who told me he could swing with Antichrist when it was simply unstable but couldn’t go with it when it turned insane.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
The spirit’s almost there to pull it off. But the movie does grind on.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Aug 2, 2022
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- Michael Phillips
Caine and Law may not be playing human beings, but Pinter’s sense of humor is at least more interesting than Shaffer’s. Caine in particular appears to enjoy honing his cold-eyed stare.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
David O. Russell’s Amsterdam is very plush in the looks department. Enjoying the costumes and cinematographer Emmanuel Lubezki’s lighting and some of Russell’s shot designs will get you through it. But only if you don’t have to listen to it, or track it, or believe in the people on screen.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 6, 2022
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- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Mar 10, 2011
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- Michael Phillips
A more honest script might’ve supported Reda Kateb’s laid-back, medium-effective portrayal of Reinhardt more fully. As is, he’s depicted as an artist man floating through his awful times, living for the music.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Feb 1, 2018
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- Michael Phillips
The results fall short of the grown-up comedy about seven-year itches it could've been, asking the Hamlet-like question: to scratch or not to scratch?- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
It's fun! Extremely violent, cleverly managed fun, full of eviscerating aliens.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Sep 5, 2013
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- Michael Phillips
Doesn't provoke bittersweet inquiries regarding one poor actress' grisly fate. Nor does it stir up much provocation on the matter of why, as a popular audience, we're still taken with this lurid symbol of sex and dread and desire. Rather, the movie raises a much simpler question: Huh?- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
The actors do a lot to dimensionalize the material. Parker's Chavis is especially sharp, creating a man with a subtly burning fuse.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Cinematographer Zhao Xiaoding manages some lovely images, and some of Spottiswoode’s compositions remind you he's capable of fine work. But Hogg never comes to life, on the page or on the screen.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
The movie doesn't really work, but it's fascinating in the ways it doesn't. Then again, I enjoyed the spacey insanity of the Wachowskis' "Speed Racer," which they didn't even like in Asia.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 25, 2012
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- Michael Phillips
The movie is shot and edited like a two-hour trailer for itself. As such, it's not hard to take, but you do tend to wonder when the film itself is going to start.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
The movie ends up being just sharp enough at its peaks to be frustrating in its valleys. But the laughs are there.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Aug 11, 2011
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- Michael Phillips
The funniest bit in the crude but diverting Soul Men really makes you miss Bernie Mac, who died in August, a few months after completing the picture.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
It’s a surprise and a small wonder, then, when The Best of Enemies starts getting good and pretty much stays that way to the end. This may be an apples/oranges comparison, but: For a true-ish story of racial animus, bone-deep prejudice and the American South in the civil rights era, it’s a better, more nuanced and more interesting feel-good movie than a certain, recent, less interesting Best Picture Academy Award winner we could mention.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Apr 4, 2019
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- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jan 27, 2011
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- Michael Phillips
An honorable, evenhanded but curiously flat interpretation of events.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Mar 15, 2018
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- Michael Phillips
Chapter 1 feels like throat-clearing — a serviceable horse opera overture to a curiously dispassionate passion project.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jun 27, 2024
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- Michael Phillips
Rio 2 offers roughly the same approach to story and to story clutter as did the first movie.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Apr 10, 2014
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- Michael Phillips
The damper here is Affleck, who appears to have been too concerned with placing himself just so, and then posing, so that nothing drew attention away from cinematographer Robert Richardson's pretty light.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jan 12, 2017
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- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 26, 2013
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- Michael Phillips
A fine ensemble, some gorgeous Italian Riviera locales, intermittent flashes of magic amid a more manufactured air of whimsy.- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
I wish the movie were messier, more surprising. But as with most of what we see, made on small budgets and large: The performances are not the problem.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jan 22, 2015
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- Michael Phillips
The Instigators isn’t that bad, but it’s lazy, low-stakes stuff. Everyone on screen has done and been better.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Aug 8, 2024
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- Michael Phillips
One of the problems with the new comedy Run, Fat Boy, Run is that it’s not English enough, even though its antagonist is a thoroughly detestable American go-getter.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Some of this is slick and enjoyable in what I'd characterize as the wrong way, the painlessly bloody, box-office-friendly way.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jan 14, 2016
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- Michael Phillips
Of the 141 minutes in The Judge, roughly 70 work well, hold the screen and allow a ripe ensemble cast the chance to do its thing, i.e., act. The other 71 are dominated by narrative machinery going ka-THUNKITA-thunkita-thunkita.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 9, 2014
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- Michael Phillips
Certainly Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's creations have suffered permanent damage thanks to Ritchie's films.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 15, 2011
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- Michael Phillips
The movie's fun, a lot of it having nothing to do with its specific subject.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Sep 15, 2013
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- Michael Phillips
I laughed three or four times, mostly at verbal byplay since director MacFarlane struggles when it comes to timing, filming and cutting sight gags.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jun 24, 2015
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- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Mar 19, 2014
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- Michael Phillips
A genial "Hangover" for the AARP set, Last Vegas is roughly what you'd expect, or fear, but a little better.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 31, 2013
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- Michael Phillips
Writer-director Silver, who trained in documentaries, appears flummoxed by the challenges of getting the audience inside the heads of these young men.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Apr 21, 2011
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- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 24, 2013
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- Michael Phillips
It's a scramble, marked by the unruly variety of visual strategies Lee prefers.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Aug 23, 2012
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- Michael Phillips
This one's likely to vex both history buffs and those who require some drama with their drama.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Mar 7, 2013
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- Michael Phillips
The Lara Croft reboot Tomb Raider isn’t half bad for an hour. Then there’s another hour. That hour is quite bad.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Mar 14, 2018
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- Michael Phillips
21 isn’t pretentious, exactly, but it’s damn close, and in trying to whip up a melodramatic morality tale the film becomes an increasingly flabby slog.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
A clammy little number that might've been funded by the Department of Homeland Security.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
This is digital fake-ism all the way. Audiences bought it the first time; they're likely to buy it a second time.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Mar 6, 2014
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- Michael Phillips
The aftereffects of watching Lockout include an inability to focus or to complete a simple declarative sentence without an ill-timed cutaway in the middle.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Apr 12, 2012
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- Michael Phillips
It's junk, and it's excessively violent, which is a given. Approach it as a Stallone movie (which it is) or as a Hill movie (which it is), but it's more interesting as a Hill movie. If it gets this director back into the hard-driving action game, then it will have done its duty.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jan 31, 2013
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- Michael Phillips
Rarely has the question of a documentary's artifice mattered less. I genuinely hated this picture, almost as much as I've admired Phoenix's work in everything from "Gladiator" to "Walk the Line" and even the hackneyed but affecting "Two Lovers."- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
For one thing, and it's a big thing, it's filmed all wrong. Director Taylor and cinematographer Charlotte Bruus Christensen favor handheld, Rachel's-eye-view close-ups, by the woozy hundreds. The toggling editing rhythms get to be a bit of a chore.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 6, 2016
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- Michael Phillips
Astonishingly, Angels & Demons IS the same sort of lumbering mediocrity.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
What proved tasty in book form comes across a little more like work in the movie.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Aug 18, 2011
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- Michael Phillips
Too often Tolkien lumbers up to its big moments, such as the preposterous climax involving the title character scrambling around the western front, calling out his schoolmate’s name. Fact or fiction isn’t the issue. Either way it plays like hokum.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted May 7, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
Twenty or 30 minutes into Mr. Magorium’s Wonder Emporium the urge to flee may rise within you like an oceanic tide. But stick with it. The film is very sweet--in fact it represents the dawn of a new sport, Extreme Whimsy.- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
There's a good movie in this story. The one that got made is roughly half-good.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Mar 21, 2013
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- Michael Phillips
Writer-director Thom Fitzgerald's ambitious but hopelessly inchoate AIDS drama is actually three separate, sequentially-told stories.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
The movie, let it be said, is not awful, but the kinetic battles are chaotic, and the look of the Quantum Realm is oddly drab in its interweaving of digital and VFX elements, seeming at times to be more like several first drafts of a new “Star Wars” franchise instead of a natural extension of this one. Midway through, as everyone on screen was restating their interest in getting home again, I thought: Same!- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Feb 14, 2023
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- Michael Phillips
This one's just OK, but at midnight, after who knows what, OK might be enough.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Mar 24, 2012
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- Michael Phillips
Everything not right with Don’t Worry Darling wasn’t right from the beginning. Even a good director — and Wilde is that, though her hand in developing this material clearly wasn’t without some wrong turns — must deal with script problems if they’re there, in the story, lurking and waiting to mess everything up and send audiences out muttering, wait what?- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Sep 23, 2022
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- Michael Phillips
It’s just not funny or fresh enough, and that has everything to do with the material and how it’s handled visually, and nothing to do with the people on the screen.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Apr 18, 2018
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- Michael Phillips
This dizzy sequel can’t match any of the first “Detective Chinatown” action highlights, such as the food fight at Bangkok’s floating market. Here’s hoping the third outing, which will take the main characters to Tokyo, returns to the amiable, artful high jinks of the first.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Feb 15, 2018
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- Michael Phillips
Whitaker's performance is the rock here. Even when the confrontations and evasions get a little ridiculous, he's neither wholly saint nor sinner, but something like a human being.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 26, 2013
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- Michael Phillips
Stranded in this charmless fantasy, Stiller is reduced to his old halting, squirming tricks.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
The movie's heart, of course, is with poor addled Mike and his kids, but 17 Again works only fitfully to make the Efron/Perry character worth a story.- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
All you want from a movie like this, really, is a little brainless fun, and it keeps holding out on you. Everyone looks fatigued. Even Cage’s toupee seems ambivalent about having signed on for a sequel.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
The script’s quippy streak could’ve used better jokes. But this is one franchise that doesn’t feel fished out or exhausted or exhausting.The monsters, Toho studio classics redesigned but faithfully so, are pretty swell and monumentally destructive.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted May 28, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
I like the end-credits sequence best, which has nothing to do with hoary complications or the miseries of stardom or the magical spellbinding powers of a cheap wig.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Suggests that this could be the start of something adequate. Something big would've been nicer, though the movie's limitations are less a matter of scale than of imagination.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
It’s hard to shake the familiarity of the premise and the set-ups in “Lake of Death The story rhythms wander instead of screw-tighten, and while Robsahm has little interest in Raimi-style pulp or dynamism, the placid surface of Lake of Death rarely gets disturbed, or disturbing.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jul 21, 2020
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- Michael Phillips
Writer-director Stewart Wade expanded his festival-circuit short film into a blobby, watery feature-length enterprise, unredeemed by its cast (though Sally Kirkland shows up as Todd's mom).- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
The pacing throughout is languid. Your eye becomes fixated on the hideous 70s wallpaper behind them. If only the story's interstellar narrative developments had the intensity of that wallpaper. Rod Serling might've gotten a great hour out of it (the story, that is, not the wallpaper). It simply is not two hours' worth, no matter how many quantum leaps into the unknown Kelly takes.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
My favorite thing in the movie is the way co-star and Korean action icon Byung Hun Lee uses his feet of fury to hoist a paint can and send it flying.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jul 18, 2013
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- Michael Phillips
Rates as more determinedly heartfelt than the first and not as witty as the second (and best). Also, no Amy Adams as Amelia Earhart in jodhpurs this time around.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 18, 2014
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- Michael Phillips
Kasdan has inherited much of his father's surface skills; he knows how to round out a scene and keep things on story point. But In the Land of Women doesn't for a moment feel messy and chaotic where it counts.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
I wish Howard's film had more of a distinct personality and drive behind it; Howard's made some supremely enjoyable films, in various keys, but this waterlogged, effects-crazed picture isn't one of them.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 10, 2015
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- Michael Phillips
The movie’s partially redeemed by Seyfried, who makes her character more than a repository for audience sympathy. (Her make-out scene with Fox is handled with more suspense and care than anything else in the movie.)- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Timberlake is not afraid to make himself look like an idiot. He is, in fact, already the comic actor Diaz may yet become: a looker who knows how to use his looks to get away with murder.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jun 23, 2011
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- Michael Phillips
This is the sort of film where a character says “Here we are, having a high-minded debate ...” and you wonder if countless moviegoers will be rolling their eyes in unison.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
The choicest dialogue in Burlesque provokes the sort of laughter that other, intentionally funny films only dream of generating.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 9, 2010
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- Michael Phillips
The latest Reacher film is directed, with reasonable skill and no trace of personality, by Edward Zwick, based on a screenplay taken from the 18th novel. I wish I had more dynamic news to report, but contrary to Reacher's own violent tendencies, some things in life and the movies practically defy a strong reaction.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 20, 2016
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- Michael Phillips
Just about everything in the video-gamey World War I picture Flyboys rings false, although the planes certainly are terrific.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
This one may be soft and derivative. But the actors establish a groove and stay on-message.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Midway isn’t bad, really. Certainly, it gets a lot more done than the cinematic cinder block that was the 1976 historical drama also titled “Midway.”- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 6, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
Hiddleston, his eyes full of fire and melancholy longing, was an inspired choice. Everything not-quite-right with most movies, however, goes wrong long before the actors arrive on set.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Mar 31, 2016
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- Michael Phillips
The result is passable stupidity leaning hard on its wily leading men. The movie’s also pretty galling in its unceasing brutality for laughs.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Aug 17, 2017
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- Michael Phillips
The eerily precise Heigl, who provided confident back-court support as the exile in Guyville also known as “Knocked Up,” has no trouble filling a leading lady’s shoes. She’s just snarky enough to be interesting, and she knows how to take a fall.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
The emotions and crises feel pre-sanded, smooth to the point of blandness.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Whole sections of “Godzilla X Kong” shove the humans off-screen for many minutes at a time. Few will complain.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Mar 28, 2024
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- Michael Phillips
It's not a lousy experience. Taylor Swift shows up in a glorified cameo. Thwaites has promise; Rush has more than that. But for a movie decrying the concept of societal "sameness," The Giver is a hypocritical movie indeed.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Aug 14, 2014
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- Michael Phillips
Dominated by Adam Sandler's D-minus Bela Lugosi impression, the 3-D animated feature Hotel Transylvania illustrates the difference between engaging a young movie audience and agitating it, with snark and noise and everything but the funny.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Sep 27, 2012
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- Michael Phillips
The movie, full of talented performers in search of a more propulsive vehicle, settles for workmanlike cover-band status, which makes this a cover-band tribute to a jukebox musical - a long way from true, trashy exhilaration.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jun 13, 2012
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
DePietro struggles to reconcile the perceived demands of the romantic comedy genre (though his film is more bittersweet than most) and the tang and hustle and detail of real life.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Hedges is a determined romantic and a bit of a saphead. He's also humane.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Aug 15, 2012
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- Michael Phillips
The court scenes are rarely funny, either in the trash talk or the slapstick.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
One wishes LaBute, a bleak satirist and, at his best, a crudely compelling dramatist, had taken the script and made it his own sort of twisted comedy instead of a routine thriller- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
"Relief" is the word for it. It's a relief to see Robert De Niro giving an honest, effective starring performance in a project that does not stink and that, in fact, rises to a respectable level of filmmaking proficiency. How long has it been?- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
I realize writing a new Christmas screenplay can’t be easy; to get made, it must check a certain number of predictable boxes. Murphy is game, but only in a few moments with Ross — small-talk scenes not dependent on forced wonderment or reaction-shot gaping — do they appear to relax and enjoy the company.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 30, 2023
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Phillips
Olsen is pretty good, too, though with her bald-faced, moon-eyed disdain for everyone around her, the material loses some of its tension between repressed surface and roiling underbelly.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Feb 20, 2014
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- Michael Phillips
It's quite thin, but at least Black Rock plays its "kills" for more than stupid gamer's diversions.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted May 16, 2013
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