Michelle Orange
Select another critic »For 222 reviews, this critic has graded:
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74% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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24% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 0.2 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Michelle Orange's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 65 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Goodbye to Language 3D | |
| Lowest review score: | Silver Circle | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 139 out of 222
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Mixed: 72 out of 222
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Negative: 11 out of 222
222
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Michelle Orange
An awkward, frequently transcendent document whose sense of rhythm, purpose, and narrative is as unlikely as it is ultimately persuasive, and whose fascination with moments of haunted impermanence signals, perhaps more than anything else, the mark of its maker.- Village Voice
- Posted Aug 4, 2016
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- Michelle Orange
Insofar as Ushpiz succeeds in putting the most provocative, salient, and damning aspects of Arendt's work into a lucid context, she exposes the limits of her own approach.- Village Voice
- Posted Apr 7, 2016
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- Michelle Orange
Heavy with pop allusions and references to other crime underworld movies, including The Godfather and Chinatown, Zootopia is impressive in its visual conception and scope: At once straightforward and densely layered with wit and incident, it manages a lively clip and the odd fresh joke.- Village Voice
- Posted Mar 1, 2016
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- Michelle Orange
What anchors Two Days, One Night, and eases its gaps, is Cotillard's extraordinary performance.- Village Voice
- Posted Dec 23, 2014
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- Michelle Orange
Directors Jason Sussberg and David Alvarado present a study of two eccentrics without pushing too hard against their premise.- Village Voice
- Posted Nov 25, 2014
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- Michelle Orange
The assessments offered in 21 Years manage to feel like too little arriving a little late.- Village Voice
- Posted Nov 4, 2014
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- Michelle Orange
To muddle through confusion, boredom, vaguely formed interest, brief elation, and confusion again is to experience the work as its creator intended.- Village Voice
- Posted Oct 28, 2014
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- Michelle Orange
Nymphomaniac is a jigsaw opus, an extended and generally exquisitely crafted riff. Story, theme, and character (despite Gainsbourg's captivations) bow to von Trier's gamesmanship, which makes his own promiscuities the film's true subject.- Village Voice
- Posted Apr 1, 2014
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- Michelle Orange
Generation War seeks the epic, creating multiple, lavishly realized worlds and moving with confidence between them. What it finds of both history and its individuals is less complete.- Village Voice
- Posted Jan 16, 2014
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- Michelle Orange
There are no simple denials, nor anything simple at all in Last of the Unjust. Only stories, recovered and retold, of a reality beyond their reach.- Village Voice
- Posted Dec 10, 2013
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- Village Voice
- Posted Nov 26, 2013
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- Michelle Orange
No longer silent but still the lesser talker between them, Ilya is marvelously fluent in spatial forms.- Village Voice
- Posted Nov 12, 2013
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- Michelle Orange
[A] powerful, exacting depiction of Egypt's struggle for meaningful change.- Village Voice
- Posted Oct 22, 2013
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- Michelle Orange
The film's delighted affinity with Ungerer's well-turned perspective does lend an advertorial slickness to what might have been a more challenging study of a fascinating and famously elusive subject.- Village Voice
- Posted Jun 11, 2013
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- Michelle Orange
With some focus and critical perspective, The Source Family might have documented more than a spectacle of its time.- Village Voice
- Posted Apr 30, 2013
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- Michelle Orange
Off-handed and yet quite artfully observed, The Happy Poet's winsome deadpan offsets its skewering of class and sustainability issues, right through to a tricky ending that, like Bill himself, may not be what it seems.- Village Voice
- Posted Mar 26, 2013
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- Michelle Orange
The charms of what might charitably be called Silver Circle's homemade look and feel are limited.- Village Voice
- Posted Mar 19, 2013
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- Michelle Orange
Change may be elusive, Optimists confirms, but the will to make it blazes.- Village Voice
- Posted Mar 12, 2013
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- Michelle Orange
At its finest and most affecting, The We and the I is a window onto youth’s forever moments- Village Voice
- Posted Mar 5, 2013
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- Michelle Orange
Proof that Ruiz was still teeming with ideas himself, Night is a characteristic work of surreal wit and circuitousness—and the filmmaker's winking but mournful goodbye.- Village Voice
- Posted Feb 5, 2013
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- Michelle Orange
Oblique and thickly layered with rhetoric, this account does little to illuminate Mumia the man, but it sets Mumia the statue aglow.- Village Voice
- Posted Jan 29, 2013
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- Michelle Orange
The existence of The Gatekeepers is its own chief statement. You don't get the sense that it's any easier for these men to question Israel's leadership from the safety of retirement.- Village Voice
- Posted Jan 29, 2013
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- Michelle Orange
Greenfield works against her own interests with absurdly selective arguments and sloppy filmmaking.- Village Voice
- Posted Oct 17, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
We also gain a keen sense of how chess in particular helps otherwise academically challenged kids find a way into their own brains.- Village Voice
- Posted Oct 17, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
Former "Frontline" producer Brian Knappenberger's fascinating, incisive social history of the online network known as Anonymous.- Village Voice
- Posted Oct 17, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
Sugar Man is most interesting when it touches on the conditions that combined to draw a cult hero out of some decent music and a generously enabled, imagination-firing mystique.- Movieline
- Posted Jul 28, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
In its own way and to its own detriment, William Friedkin's splattery, southern gothic return to the screen seeks to amuse as well as shake and stir.- Movieline
- Posted Jul 26, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
It's not that The Watch is terrible – it's not not terrible, but there are sufficient diversions and more punitive ways to spend your evening – but that it's one of those smoke bomb comedies that seems to disappear even while you're watching, leaving no trace of itself behind.- Movieline
- Posted Jul 26, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
The Dark Knight aspires to the epic and reaches it on a number of impressive and less impressive levels. That it is a frequently, unnervingly glorious triumph of brawn over brains is not despite but in spite of Nolan's admirably stubborn - if persistently, risibly serious - insistence that the modern superhero can have it all.- Movieline
- Posted Jul 19, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
The climax errs on the side of the overwrought and overdetermined, like an earnest adolescent's first attempt at a short story. And yet Papoulia's extraordinary performance lingers, as does the film's provocative existential fog.- Movieline
- Posted Jul 13, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
With its small cast and focus on performance, Union Square promises to be a welcome showcase for Sorvino, and the early rhymes with Miss Linda are intriguingly open-ended.- Movieline
- Posted Jul 12, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
The writing is relaxed in the right places and heightened to a largely effective degree when it counts.- Movieline
- Posted Jul 7, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
Despite this careful (and successful) depiction of a warm and decent person, Perry the pop star remains stubbornly two-dimensional.- Movieline
- Posted Jul 5, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
The latest from brothers Mark and Jay Duplass (who co-wrote and directed) seems to expose the limits of a certain kind of realism by stretching them one man-child too far.- Movieline
- Posted Jul 5, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
The success of this exuberant, affecting debut feature from director Benh Zeitlin depends on his ability to universalize the particular, in this case by drawing us into the perspective of a six-year-old girl living in squalor and feeling and uncertainty in the Louisiana bayou, then telling our own story from behind it.- Movieline
- Posted Jun 29, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
The audience is never seen and only faintly heard. This puts a lot of visual pressure on a very inward performer. Young is a beast onstage, to be sure - he seems to re-grow an appendix for each song.- Movieline
- Posted Jun 29, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
It's a mark of Shelton's ability to create living characters from seemingly minor shared moments -- the ones that wind up meaning everything.- Movieline
- Posted Jun 16, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
An elegantly observed, sleekly packaged look at an artist whose career-long balance of enigma and self-exposure culminated in a 2010 retrospective at New York City's Museum of Modern Art.- Movieline
- Posted Jun 14, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
Manages to surprise with a charm and wit all its own.- Movieline
- Posted Jun 10, 2012
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- Movieline
- Posted Jun 7, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
There's enough froth along the way to keep the memory of Will Ferrell's recent "Casa Di Me Padre" close at hand.- Movieline
- Posted May 31, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
Girl in Progress feels a little trapped by its own conceits: It plays with the idea that all rebellion is in some sense performed and makes a caricature out of the immature, attention-hungry mother, but it never liberates its characters from their molds.- Movieline
- Posted May 10, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
It's still a kick to watch Kathleen Turner don a housedress and trade soothing pieties with Richard Chamberlain. The Perfect Family feels like it could have been more than that, but I suppose counting its blessings is the more Christian thing to do.- Movieline
- Posted May 2, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
It's all rather casual - not unengaging, exactly, but lacking a narrative energy all its own.- Movieline
- Posted Apr 27, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
Inter-chimp and territorial fighting are facts of nature, but the extreme anthropomorphism of Chimpanzee makes what is natural feel bizarre.- Movieline
- Posted Apr 19, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
Scene by scene The Hunter, adapted from a novel by Julia Leigh, holds your attention like a pair of big, inquisitive eyes, or perhaps the point-blank scope of an automatic rifle.- Movieline
- Posted Apr 5, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
It would be a real shame, with this much money and this many effects artists, if there were not a few purely visual wows. Wrath manages exactly two, and not where you might expect.- Movieline
- Posted Mar 29, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
A movie about childhood nightmares that plays too much like an actual, incoherent nightmare to make a good movie, Intruders is a psychodrama divided against itself.- Movieline
- Posted Mar 28, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
It wouldn't go so far as to say it feels like you went through Jeremy's ordeal for nothing, but I did wish I had come to know as much about Dorff's character as I did about the size and shape of his nostrils.- Movieline
- Posted Mar 21, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
For a movie with a comedic premise this simple – essentially: can you believe we made a movie with a premise this simple? – Casa de Mi Padre can feel pretty exhausting.- Movieline
- Posted Mar 15, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
When the recessive style works with the characters and the kooky international-incident story, Salmon Fishing in the Yemen has an absorbing, old-fashioned sweetness.- Movieline
- Posted Mar 8, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
A party disaster movie targeted at kids who find the "Hangover" franchise too sophisticated.- Movieline
- Posted Mar 1, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
The plot might be summed up this way: America's having a war, and everybody's invited!- Movieline
- Posted Feb 23, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
It's a matinee treat for the very little ones, after all.- Movieline
- Posted Feb 15, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
By the time he's putting the entire metro area on notice -- having thrashed his father and all the local bullies -- Andrew has no camera and the metaphor has run away with the story entirely. The crazy thing is it almost works.- Movieline
- Posted Feb 10, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
Rather than beginning with the assumption that there is no possibility of our coming to know that kind of suffering exactly and using imagination and insight to truly take us inside the Lvov Jews' plight, Holland makes the base conditions of their confinement a narrative as well as aesthetic priority. And frankly it's boring as shit.- Movieline
- Posted Feb 9, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
Without a strong story to dance with, all of those fabulous tracking shots, lovingly uncanny art direction details and flickering shafts of light can make The Innkeepers feel more like an exercise in craft than a scary movie.- Movieline
- Posted Feb 1, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
What ultimately makes the film compelling is the extent to which it uses the shared language of cinema to telegraph the caustic feelings of a people toward their own history.- Movieline
- Posted Jan 19, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
Unfortunately, outside of the proxy satisfaction it will give those who are dying to see the grim reaper let loose on the set of a very special episode of "Glee," the pleasures of Don't Go in the Woods can't quite compensate for its straggly bits.- Movieline
- Posted Jan 12, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
Tectonic pacing builds to a series of imperceptible and yet earth-moving moments in Nuri Bilge Ceylan's Once Upon a Time in Anatolia, a habeas corpus procedural stretched across two and a half discursive hours.- Movieline
- Posted Jan 5, 2012
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- Michelle Orange
As Mr. Albert Nobbs, Close wears a discreetly waved cap of cropped ginger hair and the bright, blank expression of a small animal caught mid-nibble.- Movieline
- Posted Dec 21, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
Number of chipmunks who speak fluent chola when necessary: three. Number of Spider-Man/Pepe Le Pew mash-ups I can't really get into: one.- Movieline
- Posted Dec 15, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
In another light the group's - and the film's - portentous resolution looks a lot like quitting, in true slacker style.- Movieline
- Posted Dec 8, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
There's something immobile at the center of The Lady, a kind of Botoxed biopic with an unlikely director - Luc Besson - manning the syringe.- Movieline
- Posted Dec 1, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
Arthur Christmas is a Grinch-style story of rekindled Christmas spirit told from inside Santa's compound at the North Pole.- Movieline
- Posted Nov 22, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
Embedded in The Lie is a sharp look at the moral limbo of a complacent life, the self-defeat of committing by halves, the self-interest of false equivalencies - but only the shallowest attempts are made to chip its themes out.- Movieline
- Posted Nov 17, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
A few shots of full frontal and an actual devil to point to are poor substitutes for exposure and depth of character.- Movieline
- Posted Sep 1, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
Farmiga closes in on moments that express mood and character so lightly and perceptively that you don't notice them gently - sometimes too gently - moving the story forward.- Movieline
- Posted Aug 25, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
In catsuits, swimsuits, and skimpy underthings, Saldana is as potently elusive as a shadow can be.- Movieline
- Posted Aug 25, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
The film is being released in both 2- and 3-D, and from what I could tell the 3-D version is still almost 50-50. What use is made of the technology is hardly worth the effort, unless you've always wanted to experience a cascade of cheesies in 3-D.- Movieline
- Posted Aug 19, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
The result is the double shrift of a thinly sketched background and a story that has trouble standing up on its own.- Movieline
- Posted Aug 18, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
Fright Night glides into its first climax with some funny touches but without building much structure or suspense.- Movieline
- Posted Aug 18, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
Aside from the showy, overwrought credits sequence, it's silly and self-conscious and still scary as hell.- Movieline
- Posted Aug 11, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
I'd say you had to be there, but over the course of Magic Trip we learn that the majority of the people who were there didn't want to be there.- Movieline
- Posted Aug 4, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
Tainted by a script (by Jon Lucas and Scott Moore) so risibly broad it makes "Wedding Crashers" look like Bergman in the Hamptons.- Movieline
- Posted Aug 4, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
July is more of a presence than an actress, or even a believable persona.- Movieline
- Posted Jul 28, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
Like the recent "Perrier's Bounty," The Guard feels like it might play better at home than overseas.- Movieline
- Posted Jul 28, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
As it is, The Devil's Double, a handsome and occasionally dazzling thriller with at least one dynamo performance from its star, is ultimately dominated by its style.- Movieline
- Posted Jul 28, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
Like the Inuit and their many words for "snow," Jake has a thousand squinty faces and they all mean "Bugger off."- Movieline
- Posted Jul 27, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
It looks more like your teenage world than such films generally allow, and it's not pretty. It's beautiful.- Movieline
- Posted Jul 21, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
Though the picture is lovingly and often quite strikingly shot and styled, there are too many dangling and swiftly clipped threads for the film to amount to more than another tasteful Sunday matinee set against one of the worst atrocities of the 20th century.- Movieline
- Posted Jul 21, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
The scenes between the young actresses are the film's most compelling: Both first-timers, Manamela and Makanyane are possessed of extraordinary faces and plain attitudes.- Movieline
- Posted Jul 14, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
The effect recalls the beguiling lightness of the good old Disney, where clever visual and thematic feats are deftly interwoven and yet tossed off with an insouciance that favors playfulness above all.- Movieline
- Posted Jul 14, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
The story's obvious and various potential is left to stand on its own, and the scares are largely uninspired.- Movieline
- Posted Jul 9, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
The talking animals, though less tough to look at than those in "Marmaduke," are murder on the ears: Maya Rudolph as a neurotic giraffe and Sandler voicing a monkey could take the paint off of a Buick.- Movieline
- Posted Jul 7, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
"A chimp could not have a better mother," Terrace declares of his decision. The people in this film say stuff like that a lot.- Movieline
- Posted Jul 7, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
As in "Country Strong," Meester's crack timing and irresistible poignancy illuminate a part that would leave other actresses simpering themselves off the screen.- Movieline
- Posted Jul 2, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
The film is so busy rifling through genres that it fails to develop a coherent flavor of its own.- Movieline
- Posted Jul 1, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
You'll have to hang on to something to get through the hairpins in The Perfect Host, a chamber piece hostage thriller black comedy undone less by its twists than by the stretches of bad road between them.- Movieline
- Posted Jun 30, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
The goof on New York's awful elite only gets grimmer and less viable as the film goes on.- Movieline
- Posted Jun 23, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
Bichir - who played Fidel Castro in "Che" - resists the pathetic impulse, bringing dignity and distinction to a man who wakes up every morning knowing it's not just his burden but his job to be invisible.- Movieline
- Posted Jun 23, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
Soft-spoken and stoical, Brannaman is a firm but sensitive presence in front of the camera and facing down a spooked horse.- Movieline
- Posted Jun 16, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
I found myself forgetting The Art of Getting By as it unfolded, as though the Looney Tunes art department were two steps behind the characters, rolling up the scenery like so much carpeting.- Movieline
- Posted Jun 16, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
Despite its tai chi pace and genre-friendly characters, it's almost impossible to tell what's happening in the intriguing, intractable Road to Nowhere.- Movieline
- Posted Jun 11, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
The casting of Jespersen, with his sub-Wookie intonations and granite stare, is key: If this pillar of masculinity says there be trolls, I don't have to be bitten by one to believe it.- Movieline
- Posted Jun 9, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
Ultimately, the effort, however rough in patches, is to be admired. We need our best minds on this subject, in all arenas, and Beautiful Boy is another jagged, early piece in a puzzle whose borders haven't formed yet.- Movieline
- Posted Jun 2, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
Divided into three chapters in a largely unsuccessful attempt at structure, the voice and the style don't combine as explosively as they should to pick up the material's slack.- Movieline
- Posted Jun 2, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
Scenic, inventively playful, and successfully serious when it wants to be.- Movieline
- Posted May 27, 2011
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- Michelle Orange
Portman is also a producer of Hesher; it is the first of her new company's films. It's not too tough to see what might have drawn a producer to the project: The story's mix of the mythical and the mundane has become an indie staple, and Hesher's edge might have proved artful instead of shredding everything in its path. For any actress, however, the part of Nicole is embarrassingly thin.- Movieline
- Posted May 12, 2011
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