Michael Wilmington
Select another critic »For 1,969 reviews, this critic has graded:
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75% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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23% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 7.1 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Michael Wilmington's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 73 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Sweet Sixteen | |
| Lowest review score: | Repossessed | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,505 out of 1969
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Mixed: 305 out of 1969
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Negative: 159 out of 1969
1969
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Michael Wilmington
This is a movie that, for all its often high intelligence and skill, seems emotionally underdone, bogged down in tony literary and cinematic cliches.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
I.Q. has a commendable idea. Brains aren't everything. You should follow your heart. Fine. Agreed. But just like E=MC2, you gotta prove it. With brains and heart.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Girlfight, for its skill and theme, will please many. It's a shame it's no knockout.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
No period of Italian history has produced more great movies than the WWII years . But, Malena romanticizes and even sentimentalizes those years.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Overall, The Brothers is glossy fun, but it should have given us more ideas and energy.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
So stunningly shot and visualized--and scored so hauntingly well by Anja Garbarek, the daughter of saxophonist/composer Jan Garbarek--that it works even if you don't pay attention to the story. Maybe it works better that way.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
By translating the voluptuous Elizabethan sensibility to the drier post-Edwardian era, and then cutting much of the play's great rhetoric and poetry, McKellen and Loncraine actually flirt with ennui rather than excitement. [19 Jan 1996, p.C]- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
A classy but over-contrived topical thriller about bomb plots and anti-government groups.- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Strong, hard, dirty, funny, moving atmospheric and laced with scabrously musical street dialogue.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The movie doesn't really jell. Glossy, good-looking and well-produced, it affects you and even sometimes moves you, but it doesn't really convincingly connect.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The kind of movie that gives sequels a bad name, even though, strangely enough, it's better than the 1995 hit that spawned it.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
An independent American art film that seems to be masquerading as Victorian-era pornography--and it's not quite as interesting or provocative as that description might make it sound.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The movie contains its moments, charms and felicities-even its sharp stings of pleasure and pain. [20 May 1994]- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Completely successful or not, films like Saudade do Futuro are needed. And we need people like the Nordestinos.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
As beautiful as all the film's technology is, it needs more real human beings around - to pull the switches, man the pumps and scuttle through those corridors.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
A bawdy comedy that convincingly celebrates the resilience of the urban poor and the power of friendship in the teeth of despair.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Serial Mom is a typically funny and cheerfully outrageous John Waters' comedy about the conjunction of suburbia and hell, perfect families and serial killers. [15 Apr 1994, p.C]- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Though I wouldn't call He Loves Me a total success, it's smart, intriguing and quite ambitious, a first film by a talented young filmmaker that displays superstar Tautou's gifts in an eerie new light.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
It's a big, smiley, free-floating blimp of a comedy: a farce about reluctant fatherhood that could use some parental guidance. [12 July 1995, p.N16]- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
It's an engrossing peek at an era that now seems as meteoric, crazy and distant as the Roaring Twenties.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Just because a movie was inspired by real life and has good intentions doesn't mean it can't wind up as phony as a three-dollar bill.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
In this defiantly ridiculous movie, David Zucker, of the old Zucker-Abrahams-Zucker Airplane! movies, once again unleashes on the world the sexiest (and dumbest) 66-year-old accident-prone cop in the history of the movies, Leslie Nielsen's Lt. Frank Drebin. The jokes still come at you in a dense Hellzapoppin' blizzard. But more of them seem crude, mean-spirited, a little sour.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Director Richard Rush is one of the more talented and mysterious figures in American filmmaking. But though it has been 14 years since his last feature (the 1980 live-wire classic "The Stunt Man"), his new movie, The Color of Night, is sometimes just as hip, lively and blast-your-eyes funny as ever.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
A big, creepy dollhouse of a movie--a sometimes engrossing shocker with a surprise ending that isn't especially shocking or surprising.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Like the cerebral palsy-stricken Irish artist Christy Brown of "My Left Foot," Daniel Day-Lewis' Oscar-winning role, Ami is forced to fight such overwhelming odds to express himself that his very limitations become an aid to his vision.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
It's an extraordinary performance in an often brave and intelligent film that, unfortunately, tends to collapse around him in the end -- just as the world of Kline's character, tweedy but likable William Hundert, deconstructs around him.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Kika is kind of a mess. But it's a charming, stimulating, talented and ingratiating mess, none-the-less.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The movie overflows with action, slapstick and cliches, but the cliches never impede the action, and the slapstick is so expertly performed, it doesn't annoy you -- much.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The men here are negligible, but all the actresses are good -- especially Dunst, who shows a previously unrevealed gift for blending cold conservative roots, starchy appearance, forgiveness and unexpected redemption.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Tries to blend old film noir and new high-tech thriller styles with only sporadic impact.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Democracy might not really come from a bottle of shampoo, but "Beauty Academy" teaches us that, sometimes, mascara really matters.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
It's a misfire--but a fascinating, magnetic misfire, a film full of first-rate talents forced into absurdity, struggling to bring believability to nonsense. [22 September 1995, Friday, p. C]- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Is this the modern version of "Going My Way," with those squabbling, heart-warming Irish Catholic priests mixing up pop songs and hymns? Well, in a way it almost is, though its mood is far different and it's set in a far different world that moves to a different tempo and has graver and more troubling social crises.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
It's a slick, ambitious movie that doesn't always nail all the many moods and themes it's after.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The role sounds like a sentimental trap, but Penn doesn't fall into it. It's a sensational performance, and he illumines a movie that sometimes seems in danger of descending into modish Hollywood political correctness.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Melodrama triumphs. But here's at least some muted applause for a fine cast and filmmakers trying to confront the real world and its shadows.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Disappointingly, X-Men: The Last Stand slides back between the first two episodes. It's not stuporous, and it's not super.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
All too obvious, all too easy, the sort of tongue-in-chic L.A. comedy that mistakes glibness for high style, heartfelt pop choruses for wisdom.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Takes a fascinating true story and turns it into a conventional cop thriller, hoking up the provocative three-generation saga of the LaMarca family.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
More than "Natural Born Killers," it's a real deconstruction of the whole love-on-the-run crime genre: drab, grim but effective.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Gives us a lot to enjoy and something most studio movies don't even try for: an attempt at the richness, density and sheer contrariness of life.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Sweet-tempered, good-looking, goofy and not too sharp. The movie doesn't make much sense and neither does Danny, played by Welsh heartthrob Rhys Ifans.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The movie A Good Man in Africa contains the book's funniest, saltiest scenes, but it's less controlled and assured. [09 Sep 1994, p.C]- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Though one can question the movie's quality as a documentary -- Broomfield is a dogged but often annoying interviewer, and Churchill's photography is sometimes slapdash -- Aileen raises such troubling issues that it stays, hellishly, in your mind.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
A movie best suited for a lazy afternoon or a languorous night, particularly if you're a Francophile. Charming, glamorous, emotionally suggestive but slight, it's full of beautiful and colorful people.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Mary Reilly is a thinking person's horror movie, done with such obvious intelligence and artistry that it feels strange to watch it and be so unmoved. [23 Feb 1996]- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Following in the footsteps of "Thelma & Louise" and all the other fugitive comedy-drama-romances, "Manny & Lo" can't quite convince us it really belongs. Paradoxically, it's because much of the movie rings so true, that some crucial parts of the story ring so false. [30 Aug 1996, p.J]- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Though it's sweet and likable to a fault, it's also a movie that never seems heartfelt or deep.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
This overrated backstage TV nostalgia comedy, set in 1954, does boast standout performances by Peter O'Toole and Joseph Bologna as characters modeled on Erroll Flynn and Sid Caesar. [07 Nov 1997]- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
It's the equivalent of our "Gone With the Wind," Russia's "War and Peace" or, to take a more modest example, South Korea's "Chunhyang." Sheer ambition and grandiose make the film interesting -- up to a point.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
A gentle film, not very controversial despite its gay content, Chop Sue is valuable as a record of beauty and obsession, much less interesting as a human document.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
It's another slick-and-quick muscle car of a movie, racing along for a couple of hours, taking you nowhere as fast as it can.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Koepp, an often ingenious writer, should have followed King's example and covered his tracks better. If he had, Secret Window might have been as good as "Stir of Echoes," and not simply a mini "Misery" and a not-quite "Shining."- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Proves, unhappily enough, how U.S.-style media politics is spreading around the world.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
A movie meant to explode off the screen -- and it's at its best when those explosions are going full blast.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
One of the most discouraging things about many big studio movies is the way they waste resources, mainly talent and money. Pushing Tin manages to waste an excellent cast, a glossy production and what initially seems to be a bright, funny script. [23 April 1999, Friday, p.A]- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
As a director, Buscemi is drier than he is as a performer: more quietly funny, less intense and sometimes weirdly compassionate.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
It just doesn't swing (or bop), but the stars always click. [15 Jul 2005, p.C8]- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The movie, one of those surprise-twist detective stories, doesn't really stand up to scrutiny in the cold light of the theater lobby.- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
No revelation, but it’s a more honorable, interesting effort than many of the crass, dopey recent big-studio schlockfests like "Say It Isn’t So" or "Tomcats" that tell similar coming-of-age tales.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Kazan does have his father's fierce erotic curiosity, that sense that once you unravel a story's real lusts and greeds, you've solved it.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
A bloody strange movie--and a surprise. Who would have thought that you could put together an anthology of "extreme" Asian horror featurettes by three cutting-edge Asian directors where the most tasteful, restrained contribution was the one by Japanese mad dog moviemaker Takashi Miike?- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
It's a bit too muddy, dismal-looking and smoky to beguile us, too fixated on filth and too dreary-looking to really shock us.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Almost as uncompromising, and sometimes as funny, as "Dollhouse" or "Happiness."- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Packs so much hell-for-leather action, gorgeous Moroccan scenery and eye-popping Industrial Light and Magic visual effects into its two hours that, after a while, I began to get tired of it.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Makes compromises itself, but only because of its small budget and its director's mixed dark-and-rosy vision, at once cynical and sentimental. Yet at least it has a vision -- of both life and cinema.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
If Hollywood is really a dream factory, then it's the movie moguls and movie stars who live that dream to the hilt. In the late 1970s few lived quite as large as Robert Evans.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The film is De Palma's tribute to film noir, to Paris and to the cinema itself.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
You either go for a movie like this or you don't. But though I didn't like it much, I've got to admit that The Descent is a nerve-jangler.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Sometimes one performance makes a film worthwhile, and Junebug has one: an astonishing, moving portrayal of down-home innocence and optimism by Amy Adams.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Strikes me as something of an elaborate mistake, a wasted opportunity and a script Hartley should have discarded. But I liked it anyway.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
As bizarre, provocative and almost deliberately off-putting an indie picture as anything that's popped up in theaters recently.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The King simply unsettles and bothers us -- and it finally misses both the true terror and the twisted redemption it needs for its wicked song, a would-be "Heartbreak Hotel" of horror, to really chill our spines.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
It's not that the movie is bad; it's merely uninspired and relatively clueless about Kaufman.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The Statement is an older man's film, and compassion is one of its strengths; Jewison and Caine make us feel pity and terror for the victims as well.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Even if you enjoyed the mean, funny 1995 John Travolta-Elmore Leonard crime comedy "Get Shorty"-and many of us did-this forced sequel isn't likely to help you repeat the experience.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
There's something light and insubstantial about this movie. It almost floats away as you watch it.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Robin Williams is such a great comic virtuoso that it can almost hurt to see him straining to pump life into a conventional, uninspired, sometimes-goofy big-studio comedy such as RV.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
M. Butterfly, David Cronenberg's visually stunning but oddly cold and sparkless adaptation of the much-prized David Henry Hwang play. [08 Oct 1993]- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Like an episode of "Friends" where the entire cast has been given aphrodisiacs and locked up.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
It's still strangely remote, only fitfully romantic, never really convincing.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The late U.S. Rep. Sonny Bono and his widow and successor Mary Bono have spent a good deal of time trying to save it. It's a hard task, but the film does suggest there's more to the sea than meets the eye.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
This is a better movie than the vacuous "Insurrection," thanks largely to a sympathetic screenwriter, longtime "Trek" fanatic John Logan ("Gladiator"), and a crew (headed by Patrick Stewart's Capt. Jean-Luc Picard and Brent Spiner's android Data) determined to go out in glory.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Despite Fiennes' splendid moodiness and Tyler's radiant vulnerability, despite lovely settings... this movie is dull.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Hoodwinked treats "Red Riding Hood" as a detective story we've never really understood until now, with nuttier motivations, more complex characters and a screwier climax.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
An offbeat, poetic piece that eschews the terse, hard-boiled style of the standard cop movie or TV show for something softer-centered and more nakedly emotional.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Carrera's style is hard-hitting, lucid and technically superior (if unimaginative). El Crimen del Padre Amaro eventually moves and stirs you, even if it often resembles those steamy Mexican TV dramas/soap operas called telenovelas.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The script isn't really good enough to worry about whether it's being over-directed; in fact, E. Elias Merhige's over-direction is one of the best things about this movie--along with Ben Kingsley's grimly unstoppable killer-of-killers, Benjamin O'Ryan.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
In some ways it's not a film that surprises us much. But it's a notable directorial debut anyway -- smartly written, very well cast and skillfully done.- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
There are better holocaust dramas than Grey Zone -- "Schindler's List" for one, and due later this year, Roman Polanski's magnificent "The Pianist." But few will disturb you like The Grey Zone -- mostly because it won't try for tears.- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The movie isn't quite spry, warm or hip enough to carry out its very ambitious serio-comic agenda. Even for an ace like Levinson, Belfast is a long way from Baltimore.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
While the movie is never dull, its romantic fodder doesn't do justice to any period at all.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Begins like a house afire and then fizzles out into a quasi-supernatural dead end.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
This time around, the razors are a little duller, the clicks not as slick, the patter not as snappy.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Something that gets your motor racing briefly, but which you've seen all too often.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau, the co-stars of Out to Sea, keep fooling, beguiling and surprising us. Nothing can sink or ruffle them. Even with substandard scripts or dubious projects, they remain one of the greatest comedy actor teams the American movies have had: two longtime stars with formidable talents who complement each other perfectly. [02 July 1997, p.2]- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The film is not exactly a documentary, and not quite a period horror movie either. But it has elements of both. At its best, it's hypnotic and provocative.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Good in many ways, full of talent and intelligence, and marks the debut of a promising young American writer-director, Dan Harris.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The movie loses its magic by the time the solution is revealed.- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Turns out to be a Hollywood sequel of surpassing silliness and wasted talent.- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Overall, King Arthur sinks into a grim, gray torpor - though it's an odd, not unentertaining movie. The approach is different, if not edifying or convincing.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Pseudo art can be fun, though, even if it doesn't quite awaken all your senses.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Almost nothing new to offer -- despite its good actors, flashy visuals and well-textured New York gloss and grit. But there are teasing hints of another, better movie buried inside somewhere.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Between the two Murphys, "Metro" is no waste of time. But it's no life-enhancing experience either -- unless you're into trolley-hopping, perp-snuffing and vows of vengeance. "The Nutty Professor" proved Eddie Murphy still has it, 10 times over.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The Theory of Flight is built from the kind of material that either soars or crashes with audiences. And here, it doesn't quite hold together. But if the film, as a whole, never takes flight, the actors do. Watching them bicker and sail up is so delightful, you only wish their vehicle could keep them aloft longer.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Fun to watch it may be, but it's shallow fun. Like the drugs and booze the characters keep using -- and even the sex -- it's a passing pleasure.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Wayne's World 2 may not be much of a movie, but at least it's funny. And, hey, what else does it have to be? What do you want from a movie? Blood? Rock on, Wayne. Party hearty, Garth. [10 Dec 1993, p.A]- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
It's just another case of mourning over what might have been.- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
While it's done well enough here - written smartly, staged crisply and acted to the hilt - it doesn't last, except as a brief virtuoso piece for three players.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
A somewhat bewildering and unsatisfying film that nevertheless contains more inspired moments and brilliant scenes than many movies we call successes.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
A wildly improbable story that neither Newman nor co-stars Fiorentino and Mulroney, for all their panache and chemistry, can make much sense of it.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
I don't think it will seriously disappoint longtime fans, but it made me itchy as I watched it unfold in ways that the comics never did when I read them in the '60s.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
This is a movie where you can get drunk on the B2], sloshed on the scenery. But perhaps not quite drunk enough. [11 Aug 1995, p.C2]- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
There is a thrill in seeing them wooing and pursuing each other through the streets of New York, a city that here again, for a while, becomes a movie isle of joy.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Trying to be more antic and cuttingly funny, it misses the premise's shivery tension. The story loses us at precisely the moment it should put us in the vise.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
As is often the case in Loach's films, all the acting is exemplary. Padilla, who learned English only shortly before making the film, is a natural actress, a smoldering presence.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
There's something too slickly contrived and hollow about this film. It's a yuppified wish-fulfillment piece dangling between real world and fairy tale, and it's mostly the actors --especially Lindsay and Elaine Hendrix (as the conniving publicist who is trying to marry Hallie and Annie's dad) -- who manage to bring it off. [29 July 1998]- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Good action movies live on style and excitement. But they also need credibility, and in Hostage, ALMOST a good genre piece, plausibility keeps getting slaughtered.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Don't expect a lot, and you'll probably enjoy Happy, Texas, as I did -- mostly. At the very least, Steve Zahn will make you laugh.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
An erratic but enjoyable sci-fi action movie with an extremely bent sense of humor. [09 Aug 1996, p.F]- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
A second-rate nightmare: the Reagan generation meets Leatherhead with flickers of brilliance drowned in blood and snobbery, a corpse dressed by Bloomingdale's.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Dark as it is, the humor makes it work, especially Greene's typically witty and compassionate portrayal of Mogie.- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The movie is dedicated, in a nice touch, to early Farrelly fan Gene Siskel. And Gene was right: The Farrellys are often very funny filmmakers. .- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
I liked the idea of the movie more than the movie itself -- though sections of it are mind-blowing.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Thanks to the actors and the way the movie lets them loose, it's often funny or moving at all the right moments.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
An outrageously unlikely prison action movie made with lots of eye-catching pizzazz and undeserved expertise.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Bopha!, a movie about emotional and political turbulence tearing apart the family of a black South African police officer, is good, but a little disheartening. Not because of the injustice and misery it reveals-but because you want it to be better.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
This is a movie that really has little to offer but performances and ideas. For a while, that's enough.- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Its fascination may be limited to those already very familiar with his works and collaborators - and his sensual, highly subjective style.- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Jade, like many another recent erotic or techno thriller, is packed with talent, polished and technically dazzling. But, daring as it might seem in its sexual content and exposure of bad behavior among the mighty, it's curiously soft at conveying what these characters really believe. [13 Oct 1995, p.J2]- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Underneath, it's a flashy crock-another piece of self-congratulatory formula wish-fulfillment masquerading as hip. This would-be "inside" comedy about not selling out sells out in virtually every scene.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
It's a depressing story made even more of a downer by the absence of any Stones-performed music from their prime '60s years.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The subject of Iraq haunts and divides us so much these days that a film like Laura Poitras' documentary My Country My Country is valuable, no matter its level of achievement.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Muppets from Space has silly gags and cute cosmic fish swimming around in its space. It just doesn't have the right awe and wonder -- except, perhaps, for the children who should be its prime audience. Adults, beware -- at least this time.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
It's a movie that starts off nicely, offers two marvelous performances (by James Coburn and Mick Jagger) and then slowly, unaccountably loses itself.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The movie tries hard to duplicate the original's mood and story, but, like Gere or Lopez, is too much of a visual knockout to rope us in.- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Jolie and Banderas are two hot actors, in many senses of the word, and their scenes together have a lewd excitement.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The whole film, in fact, seems too fast for its own good. It plays like a synopsis, jumping from scene to scene, grief to grief, and it doesn't let us relax into the various worlds it's creating.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The movie -- directed in such a frenziedly self-conscious style you often wonder whether the camera will topple over on his actors.- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Always watchable and cinematically lively, but it never quite engages the emotions -- despite torrents of sentimentality and would-be heart-tugging scenes interspersed with the carnage.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
More spirit and grace and less blood and guts may be what Passion needs.- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The movie may lack a lot of things, but it doesn't lack comic timing--or, in its own way, a nose for the news.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Likable as it is, suffers from that modern big-movie vice: overkill.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
It has ideas as well as jolts, themes as well as special effects, characters as well as gore. But, as adapted by writer W. D. Richter and director Fraser Heston, these Things seem disappointingly diminished, squeezed and stuffed into a box too small.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
It’s not a bad film. Brightly designed, slickly paced, it has its cargo of youth elements: laughs, sexual tease, action and music. But, halfway through, you can almost feel everyone relaxing, waiting for the next bit of spiritless slapstick or car-chase to carry them through to the end.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
Everything about the movie is overscaled, overbrutal, overbroad, full of holes. Yet there's something cheerful and wacky about it; it's a light-hearted blood bath.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
The talk and plot twists both have a flavorless, perfunctory quality.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
Despite its good performances--Minns, Lumbly, Shelby and Best, as well as Plummer--South Central lacks a certain juice, heat and life. It doesn’t boil with the energy you’d expect from a gang picture, and it doesn’t have the density or rich atmosphere of a Boyz N the Hood, Do the Right Thing or New Jack City.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
The movie is like a big, smug, sunny ball of fluff, batting around in a crystalline cage. It's bright and well-meaning, but there's little to grab onto or feel. Not even the presence of those expert actor/farceurs, Steve Martin and Diane Keaton, give it any real presence or bite. [20 Dec 1991, p.16]- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
The Bedroom Window engrosses you in theory more than practice. As a thriller, it has elements that many recent Hitchcock pastiches have lacked: interesting characters and a somewhat complex plot. But perhaps this story simply looks good by contrast. The movie also lacks sheer juice and voltage. [16 Jan 1987, p.C17]- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
London's Fang was, fundamentally, a loner and a killer; the movie Fang is a big, friendly dog, temporarily derailed into the fight game by snarling villains. That makes this White Fang, rather oversunny, overaffirmative, primarily a movie for children. But I liked it anyway, despite the softened tone, the coincidences, despite Hawke's constantly gaping mouth.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
Witchboard is smarter, and better acted, than much of its bloody competition. But it isn't crazy or original enough to stand too far above them. It's makers and its monsters alike deserve the same salutation: Better luck next time. [16 Mar 1987, p.8]- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
It's a mixed bag; parts of it are awful. But it has, and needs, only one major defense: It's full of Grade-A rock 'n' roll, rousingly well performed. It moves, it swings, it jumps and vibrates. It's a musical. [05 Nov 1990, p.F10]- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
The film now seems less urbane and innovative, more coldly flashy and bluntly affected -- full of sound and Furie, signifying little. [2 June 1987, p.Cal-1]- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
It’s a low-budget production with major-league acting by Mary Steenburgen, Holly Hunter and Alfre Woodard. It’s not directed sharply enough; Thomas Schlamme is particularly weak on the fight scenes.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
Light of Day is a sympathetic, intelligent movie, with one great performance, but it suffers from the malaise rock 'n' roll is supposed to cure: inhibitions, a lack of spontaneity. [06 Feb 1987, p.4]- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
Despite the movie's ruinous cliches, Neeson puts some genuine anguish into his phonily written scenes as the '60s burnout. Bateman plays to him well, and Phillips, making her feature debut, has some funny moments in the flashy kook role.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
Chevy Chase has not been on a roll lately, and to say that in National Lampoon's Christmas Vacation he's funnier than in his last six movies combined may sound like high praise, until you remember those six movies. "Caddyshack II" alone almost throws them into the "minus" laugh range. But here, he does what he does best: flat-out slapstick and subversive tear-downs of his own smooth image. This sweet, goofball, manic middle-class daddy brings out his sharpest reflexes and he gets good support from D'Angelo, the bulging-eyed slob-in-excelsis Quaid, and from Questel and Hickey as his dottiest relations.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
Jennifer 8 is smarter than most of the swanky scare machines, but it’s also too hemmed-in by convention and programmed scares. The game is too rigid: the player’s skills are being wasted. The movie, perhaps, should have been built entirely around those Garcia-Malkovich scenes--because it’s in the exchange of glances between those two, the scraped wariness of Garcia, the quiet, almost lazy sadism of Malkovich, that it really chills the blood.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
The boys are breezy; their companions glib and glittery. This big studio mix of bang-bang and badinage isn’t really a bad movie. But a lot of it suggests a fancy misfire: a super-powered evening at the town’s most expensive eatery, where everybody starts out psyched up to have Big Fun, and things start to slide. What happens? The food disappears. The music is too loud. The conversations are brittle, the jokes are pushed too hard, everyone laughs too much. And, at the end, in case your attention starts wandering, people start pulling out guns and killing each other.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
Though it doesn't really work, there are enjoyable things about it.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
Norman Taurog's The Caddy is a sometimes subpar 1953 Martin & Lewis golfing comedy enlivened by a Dean and Jerry duet on "That's Amore" and a snatch of their great stage act. [22 Jul 1988, p.23]- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
Midway through The Lost Boys there's a brief scene that suggests the magic and power it could have had. This scene suggests a fable of seductive evil-but nothing in the movie is ever half as evocative again. It's more lost than the Boys: a glossy fiasco with most of the real blood sucked out of it.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
It's one of those movies that, however well it works now, might have been pretty bad with a different cast and director. It doesn't really transcend its genre; it just stretches it in amusing and sometimes surprising ways.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
As a concert film, judged from the music, Sign O' the Times is near the top. As a movie -- carrying inside it the embryo of other movies -- it's not fully satisfying. But you sense it could be; however he stumbles, Prince gives you the impression he'll always, catlike, leap back. [20 Nov 1987, p.4]- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
We're No Angels proves that a great ensemble is no guarantee of a great movie -- but it also proves that the misses of the brilliant can still give you something extraordinary. [15 Dec 1989, p.F12]- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
The best thing about High Heels are the performances - [Victoria Abril]'s tense, voracious daughter, Parades' star-turn mother, the sinister Bose, the arrogant Atkine - and the lucidity of Almodovar's narrative style, which by now seems as natural as breathing. [20 Dec 1991]- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
There are misfires in Sucka, but there's also some funny stuff. Wayans shows a refreshing taste for self-mockery. [17 Feb 1989, p.8]- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
The Fourth War doesn't make much sense, but it's powerfully acted and beautifully directed. [23 Mar 1990, p.F4]- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
Like the movies its modeled after, it's shallow, frequently silly. But there's something about the mix--maybe something about Parillaud as the screechy, dangerous Nikita--that may make the movie a powerful engine of wish-fulfillment. [12 Apr 1991, Calendar, p.F-10]- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
It’s cute and high-spirited, and it shows some talent and verve. Watching it, you feel that Beaird is capable of something really good; even when his material goes stale and tasteless, there’s a joie de vivre in his direction.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
In the end, even in the howling high frequencies and the nihilistic night, this R-rated movie misses its best shot. It doesn't talk hard enough. [22 Aug 1990, p.5]- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
Decline's redeeming grace is its jocular, damn-the-proprieties air and, for the first half, its staccato editing rhythm. It's damnation is most of the music and its relative avoidance of heavy metal's darker corners: the pith and point that Alex Cox gave punk in Sid and Nancy.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
The movie has the same problem as Davis' Chuck Norris vehicle, Code of Silence. Starting in the semi-realistic framework of the '70s cop movies, it veers off into '80s action movie cloud-cuckoo land: the paranoid one-against-a-hundred cliches of the average Schwarzenegger-Stallone heavy-pectoral snow job. [08 Apr 1988, p.14]- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
Most of the rest of this Hamlet effective or lovely as parts of it may be, just keeps sawing at the air in a drafty hall and pouring all its light on Mel Gibson and his angelic stubble. [18 Jan 1991]- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
It never cuts loose. No matter how much come-hither villainy Gere generates, or how much envy and menace Garcia throws back at him, they're still trapped there in that bare, empty story, waiting for the dry ice and the steam to arrive.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
Brighton Beach Memoirs may be one of Simon’s best plays, but the film’s heart seems to be beating in a plastic wrapper. There’s a kind of glace over everything, a sugary show-biz coat that dulls your taste buds. Everything is bigger, brighter and broader than it should be--though remnants of that simpler, more honest story often peek through.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
It’s not the gem it wants to be, but it’s good in comparison to many of the sensation-hungry pictures around it; it’s not just a movie only a mother could love.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
When it's just roaring along through a kaleidoscope of Los Angeles locations, the camera perched behind, above or below the skateboarding heroes and villains, the movie can be fun. It's shot in an extravagant, try-anything, music-video style. It's rattlingly paced, vibrant and splashy. Then we get to the story. Stop me if you've heard this one: Boy meets girl; boy loses girl; boy gets girl. Sound familiar? Try this for extra spice. Two warring teen-age gangs clash--the free-and-breezy Valley Guy "Ramp Locals" and the swaggering, black leather, bone-in-the-nose "Daggers."- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
You’d have to stretch hard to call this movie--a young-love-on-the-run chase thriller with political undercurrents--a success. The story often lacks credibility or a mainspring; its heart sticks too hard to its sleeve. But there are compensating factors: warmth, guts, ambition.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
The second film never has the hardness or urgency of the first. Its best moments, perhaps happily, tend to come from the actors rather than the story or Richard Edlund's effects: especially newcomers Geraldine Fitzgerald and Julian Beck. [23 May 1986]- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
Kill Me Again doesn't look like the noir classics; instead of black-and-white, it's shot in slightly muddy color with vagrant green tints. But it feels like them. It has that nerve-jangling mix of pungent cynicism and thick gobs of pseudo-Expressionist style. It's not brilliant or original, but it's still a lean, fast, wide-awake sleeper.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
It's Whoopi Goldberg, however, who gives you something extraordinary. At the center of all this formula tongue-in-cheek thriller pablum, she keeps sending out weird curves and bent splinters of off-center energy. She's a remarkably empathic actress, and you only hope she'll get a few vehicles that push her to the limit.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jun 28, 2017
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- Michael Wilmington
To give the movie its due, it's been directed, at least on the visual level, with unusual elegance: filled with graceful, gliding tracking shots, and icily precise Hitchcockian setups of the bleak decor and scary effects.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
For the right audience, it'll be fun. It's for action movie fans with a taste for something off the beaten track -- but not too far. And for people who like to rail and spew against the vulgarity and stupidity of TV -- but keep watching it all anyway.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
No one who sees the last half-hour of this movie will ever forget it--though quite a few may want to.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
It wins a few, loses a few. It makes us laugh, gets mileage out of the Four Seasons’ “Walk Like a Man.” In the end, the actors save it, especially two of the actors: star Robert Downey Jr., who may have moved into the Robin Williams-Steve Martin-Whoopi Goldberg category, and supporting actor David Paymer, who never hits a false note.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
Poltergeist III is another sequel that seems to exist for no better reason than justifying its title and number.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
The phrase "by the numbers" was invented for the way Harper crafts this script. After coming up with a good notion, opening and close, he simply fills up the middle innings with the detritus of several decades of TV sitcoms and high-concept kid movies. [07 Jul 1993, p.F1]- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
A modernized version of that great sentimental horse movie, 1943's "My Friend Flicka," and it comes with the shiny trappings, high professionalism and glamorous accessories you might expect...Something is missing though.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The two halves of Hiding Out--thriller and teen sex comedy--never meld, working against each other rather than together. Hiding Out never escapes its absurd hook, this mechanical collision of genres. After all, if someone really needs to hide out, isn't the best plan to simply . . . hide out?- Los Angeles Times
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Freaky Friday commits a lot of sins; luckily, it has Curtis and a few others to cover them up.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles never rises above its marketing-hook origins. It's a product, a commodity, a toy tie-in, a trailer for the comics, an advertisement for the cereal. It's a naked sell.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
An uninspired misfire of a TV-series knockoff that, despite its great cast and smart filmmakers, never manages to scare up much magic.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
A pumped-up, flag-waving, outrageously hokey and ridiculous -- but sometimes incredibly exciting -- war movie.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
In movies as in life, superior technology doesn't necessarily trump humor, magic or really shaggy dogs.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The sense of the unknown that "Padgett" created are largely absent. And the movie fails to supply us with an antagonist to work up some dramatic conflict. Nor are the toys themselves very interesting and Mimzy is a toy bunny of no distinction.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Less a movie than a loud, heavy, money machine, a think tank where nobody thinks. The movie seems intended to extract maximum profit with minimum artistry -- and if you like having your pockets picked by experts, this is probably the show to see. [15 Mar 1996, p.C]- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The film tries to mix the two 1930s movie comedy strains: screwball romance and populist fable. But there's something nerveless and thin about it. Hawn and Russell are good, but their scenes together have a calculated spontaneity--overcute, obvious. Director Garry Marshall keeps the lines slamming off each other briskly but with a shallow, hectoring energy. And he doesn't have much visual flair.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
This film has so many good ideas, it tends to seem better after you've left the theater. But the mock TV stuff is just too faux to be funny.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
A big, hearty fantasy-adventure with spectacular fire-breathing effects and a fizzling story. [31 May 1996, p.C]- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
By creating a kind of politically correct version of Andy Griffith's "Mayberry," director Bezucha has drained the movie not only of bigotry but also of dramatic conflict.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The trajectory of the film -- despite its excellent cast and intelligent mounting -- is too preordained.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
A wildly expensive movie full of computers, nonsense and violence, a film where wit, romance, elegance -- everything -- is sacrificed on the altar of giganticism, cliche and over-the-top action.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Boyle's new movie is mostly a zombie fiasco, closer to the vacuities of "The Beach" than the scintillating social satire of "Trainspotting."- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Keith -- a consistent hit-maker who wrote the controversial 9/11 song "Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue" -- has a future in movies if he wants it. Hopefully, they'll be better ones than this.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
What the movie doesn't have, besides too many laughs, is either the pungent style and sociology of true film noir, or the sheer yuppie desperation of the hard-core erotic thriller. Instead of being hard-boiled, it's over easy.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
A breakthrough for karate comedy king Chan, but not necessarily the kind we've all been waiting and hoping for. It's an ultra-digitized DreamWorks show crammed with elaborate special effects, the kind that physical-stunt specialist Chan has always avoided.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
A likable little movie without much to offer but cute tots, recycled gags and a talented cast amiably wasting their time and ours.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The movie is like the bikers; it's best and freest when it's just racing ahead. Whenever it stops, you ask too many questions.- Los Angeles Times
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Pink Cadillac has a strong visual design and lots of juicy, self-confident acting. But it doesn’t transcend its star vehicle trappings or chemistry. The construction of the story is so soft, you get the impression that if the driver and navigator were replaced, the movie might turn rattletrap and fall apart.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
In Nightbreed neither the coyly horrible killers nor the horribly coy monsters register strongly enough. It's a dark beast with a flabby hide.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
This rich, gorgeous music and the wistful pastoral scenes create a rhapsodic mood that the rest of the film doesn't really sustain.- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
A business-as-usual blockbuster blueprint that rarely surprises you.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
This is a picture in which the barf scenes standard in the usual crude youth comedies aren't gratuitous. They're logical climaxes.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Parents is all leftovers, despite the tasty little tidbits that Quaid and Hurt keep sporadically cooking up: Dad's spotless collars and loopy grin, Mom's brittle Cutex-lacquered claws. [27 Jan 1989, p.7]- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
The movie doesn't deserve any of the talent bestowed on it, from Reiner's amiable direction to the occasional grace notes in the performances of Hudson, Marceau and David Paymer.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
It's a movie that robs the story of its politics and point and never really matches the charm of the '60s film.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Hobbled with pedestrian direction, a dull visual style and a last act awash in obvious bang-bang melodrama.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
This seems to be a movie made by people who love the old classic movie swashbucklers but don't have a clue how to make or modernize them.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Unfortunately, the humans only have scripts to support them. So for every bear triumph, Country Bears also features cliched jokes, corny sentiment, ludicrous shtick and the most flabbergasting set of star cameos since Martha Stewart and Michael Jackson wandered into "Men in Black II."- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Most of the jokes in Eddie Murphy Raw are the kind you regale buddies with to show off. Anyone as good as Eddie Murphy should have outgrown that years ago.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jun 29, 2017
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Like too many movies these days, takes a clever little idea and all but pounds it into the ground.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
An overblown, overspectacular, oversold movie without an original idea in its head.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Despite some impressive technical achievements, it too looks like a movie with little reason for being.- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
It's a comedy about maniacs: a tasteful murder-comedy, which isn't that laudable a goal.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
Slick, expensive and filled with good-looking actors flexing muscles, but once it grabs our attention it doesn't really reward it...this movie doesn't have fear -- or sheer wonder and marvel -- enough.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
There's barely a scene in this movie that taps his (Murphy) special brilliance.- Chicago Tribune
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- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
It’s a big, frothy, high-tech, cutesy-poo musical comedy.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
One of those movies that promises much but doesn't deliver. Despite a lot of misplaced talent, this movie is as silly and forced as its title.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Maybe Georgia Rule should be required viewing for Paris Hilton during her term in the slammer. But not for us.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
This movie can spot the handsome face that lies beneath an ugly exterior, but it seems to get fooled by the rot that sometimes lurks beneath the sweet and the safe, the formula and the sure-fire.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
It's really a crock: a coming-of-age boys' prison film that has only a fanciful link with Behan's life. The film is a bastard grandchild of Tony Richardson's 1962 "The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner."- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
It's a middling film that wastes a lot of good opportunities, as well as two fine, charming co-stars.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Hitchcock adapts another Daphne Du Maurier novel -- a tale of pirates and distressed damsels on the Cornish coast -- with less memorable results than either "Rebecca" or "The Birds." But Charles Laughton is a nicely nasty two-faced villain and Maureen O'Hara a staunch heroine. [18 Jun 2000, p.22]- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
It's a shiny, glib, hollowly good-looking movie that always seems to be cooing at us-coldly. [23 Nov 1994, p.9C]- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
This isn't a particularly good movie, and it's offensive in the way mid-range low-budget slasher shows usually are. But it works better than some, largely because Etheredge-Ouzts has a more original slant and a deeper sense of character than horror movies usually allow.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The flabbergasting scenes here-written by a team of "Tonight Show" and "David Letterman Show" writers and directed by hot, young TV-commercial and music-video director Michael Bay-are slick, fast, loud, mostly derived from other movies and often senseless.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
A light, breezy, often charming little film, with a good cast playing mostly shallow characters.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
There are some premises that absolutely aren't going to work--no matter how much intelligence, talent or craft the film makers bring to them. And Marshall Brickman may have stumbled onto such a premise in The Manhattan Project.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
The filmmakers' instincts may be sound, but Permanent Midnight is no killer. Stahl hated most of what he wrote in his TV heyday. So one really wonders why he, and maybe Stiller, didn't write this script. Surely, it's one script Stahl could have delivered.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
A bright and zippy, but alarmingly over-campy and lighter-than-fluff cartoon feature.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Like its title heroine, it's sparkly, pretty and flirty--but often all wet.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Strikes me as a pure, unadulterated crock. [12 February 1999, Friday, p.A]- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Though it’s basically a kids’ movie with a cartoonish structure, it’s laced with lewd innuendo: jokes that suggest teen-age sex, homosexuality and even pedophilia. The core of the humor is raunchy, but the tone is sunny and even-tempered. It even tries to go for a few inspirational moments: feminist statements or sermonettes about overcoming fear and realizing potential.- Los Angeles Times
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