Mick LaSalle
Select another critic »For 3,799 reviews, this critic has graded:
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52% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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46% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 4.1 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Mick LaSalle's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 61 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Sound and Fury | |
| Lowest review score: | Nightbreed | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 2,062 out of 3799
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Mixed: 1,037 out of 3799
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Negative: 700 out of 3799
3799
movie
reviews
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- By Critic Score
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- Mick LaSalle
A passionate, chronicle of an extraordinary artist, and a love story that can't be beat.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Hero was directed by Stephen Frears, who has made some of the better movies of the last few years (Dangerous Liaisons, The Grifters), but here his direction isn't nearly as sure-handed. Watching it I got the distinct sense he wasn't liking the movie he was making, or that, at the very least, he was struggling to keep up. [02 Oct 1992, p.C1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The strange case of a movie that clunks in every possible way but the ultimate way -- it entertains.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Wood is superb at delineating Tracy's slide into desperate incoherence, but equally impressive is Reed, who has to conceal her writer's intelligence in playing a character who's entirely instinctive and unreflective.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
True Colors is obvious and heavy-handed, loaded with cliches, and never really seems to inhabit the world in which it is set -- Washington politics. But more than just being mediocre, there's something obnoxious about the movie. It's a look at the ethics of the generation that came of age in the 1980s, presented by an older generation that has no more insight, sympathy or understanding of its subject than Gramps had of Woodstock. [12 Apr 1991, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
We are aware going in that Varsity Blues' cannot be a landmark of world cinema. Yet working within the tired formula, the picture turns out to be not so bad.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
There are lapses in character motivation, and at times the film takes on a cartoony feeling. But if you worry about those things, you shouldn't be watching action movies. For its genre, Broken Arrow is a class act.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The picture moves slowly but never sluggishly, and it never grinds down. The measured pace shows real assurance on the part of Costner. [9 Nov 1990, Daily Datebook, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Yet, even at its worst, Zombieland is better than most movies of its kind - disgusting but not too disgusting, and with a few laughs.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
One of the most witty, entertaining family films to come out in some time.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The new film's social message comes through loud and clear, but something in the comedy seems constrained -- effortful, yet muffled. It might be a matter of the right tone never having been found.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
To his credit, writer-director Jonathan Kasdan is sensitive and observant...But he doesn't know what he's talking about, not really, and though he structures the film around his areas of ignorance, that only works partially.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Buffy, the Vampire Slayer is lightweight and fun -- not great fun, but it has its moments. The high school satire angle is both authentic and good-natured. [31 Jul 1992, p.D1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Has a lighter spirit than its predecessor, but it arrives at the same warm and touching place.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It's not enough to say that Inglourious Basterds is Quentin Tarantino's best movie. It's the first movie of his artistic maturity, the film his talent has been promising for more than 15 years.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The Lovely Bones is difficult viewing, a meticulously crafted experiment that, it turns out, wasn't worth it.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Since the hit-man career is probably one of the most familiar non-law enforcement careers in films, it should come as no surprise that Little Odessa has nothing new to say about it.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It wimped out by blanding down the story and the characters to the point where she isn't really a shrew and he isn't really a maniac.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Not a heist film, a thriller, a twisted romance, a film noir or a character study, but a unique concoction that bends all these genres to its vision.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It is an exhilaration from beginning to end. It's the movie equivalent of that rare sort of novel where you find yourself checking to see how many pages are left and hoping there are more, not fewer.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The movie's flaw is impossible to ignore, turning on the most tired of romantic comedy conventions: Someone knows something, and all that person has to do is say it, and the movie is over and everything's great.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
What's immediately apparent -- and refreshing -- about Chasing Liberty is that it doesn't play cute with its premise.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The spectacle, which is colossal and at times staggering to behold, begins within two minutes of the fade-in and keeps coming until the finish. I thought I'd seen it all. I hadn't.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
When Costner is good, as he is here, his acting has a purity to it, an unspoken moral dimension. Underneath the sensitive, stoic facade is a loquacious, intellectually alert actor with an encyclopedic understanding of the film tradition he occupies: the rugged, humble movie hero, embodied by the likes of Gary Cooper and Henry Fonda.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
There's a real commitment to key moments; a sense of depth and understanding. It has labor of love written all over it. [22 Aug 1990, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Like every other action movie, it's designed for a 14-year-old boy's mentality, but it's enjoyable enough to turn most people into 14-year-old boys.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Even as a showcase for the actors, Bird on a Wire is disappointing. More than anything else it's an action movie, and not a very good one, with wall-to-wall chase scenes from start to finish. [18 May 1990, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
More intelligent than most summer blockbusters and features at its center a thought-out and committed performance by Will Smith. But in the end it's merely ALMOST good.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The fine quality of the new film is good news for anyone disappointed by "Star Trek Generations," which got the new "Star Trek" feature film series off to a shaky start two years ago.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
What lingers in the memory is the impression of having experienced a frolic, a ride through the park on a bright winter day.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Midway, Mondays in the Sun becomes as dull as a day with nothing to do.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
An intriguing document, and the first significant film ever made about a former U.S. president.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Whenever the movie's point of view turns omniscient, and we're seeing events from the director's vantage point, Man on Fire becomes a blurry, shaky mess.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Yet it fails to enchant for a reason that might not be fair, but that's just how it is: We've seen outer space simulated so well in sci-fi movies that the real thing seems like old stuff.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The most Stillmanesque Stillman movie yet. It's about a mood, part wistful, part sardonic. It's about a time of life, about repartee, about the vivid character saying the unexpected thing.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Gradually, FX2 ties itself into a knot it can't undo even with the most desperate of measures. Everything is left hanging, and by the end the plotting is so clumsy it's embarrassing. [10 May 1991, p.E3]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The heart of the picture has to do with the heroes realizing the error of their ways and finding redemption, but it takes a lot for an audience to forgive two murderers. Belly comes up short.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
This is kid stuff, but such well acted, well made stuff that inside 15 minutes you're sitting there like a teenager yourself wondering which girl Keith will wind up with. [27 Feb 1987]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Unique and courageous. It may be counted as one of the year's few steps forward in cinema.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A seriously good movie, a challenge to viewers, a rebuke of the way many Americans live their lives.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A long-winded indulgence in tear-and-a-smile whimsy, elevated above the merely irritating and saccharine by compelling art direction.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
If you've ever wondered what it would be like to be there - to actually be there, man - this movie gets it.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The problematic result is not that The New Age is bleak -- bleak is fine. We all like bleak. The problem is that The New Age becomes static. [30 Sept 1994, p.C1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Loses steam only when it strays from the sisters and attempts to depict their parents' loveless marriage.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Moretti's performance is low-key but detailed. He makes the psychiatrist a fascinating guy, rather austere and restrained, a Northern Italian, not an expressive Neapolitan.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The movie's storytelling is limp, and writer-director Neil Burger's ultimate unwillingness to commit to a point of view -- was this guy really the assassin? -- seems artistically chicken-hearted.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It's rough when it works and rough when it doesn't. Much of the first hour is made up of slow patches, while the last 20 minutes are ugly and terrifying.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Yet as ridiculous as Hefner's life sometimes seems, he has been an exemplary citizen, as this documentary by Academy Award-winning filmmaker Brigitte Berman spells out.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The Baxter is just an OK movie, but Showalter's performance is the gem to take from it.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Cate Blanchett has the title role, and she does wonders with it, bringing a degree of passion but also suggesting something essentially unevolved in Charlotte's character.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Its whodunit plot is easily figured out, and its story is a mess. Most surprisingly, its star, Bruce Willis, manages to pull off an entirely uncharismatic performance...Striking Distance passes through boring on its way from indifferent to laughable, with the last 20 minutes the most ridiculous. [17 Sept 1993, p.C1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Why was the sight of scrawny Woody Allen kissing pretty Diane Keaton never revolting, while scrawny David Spade kissing beautiful Sophie Marceau in Lost & Found is the creepiest cinematic sight of the year?- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Even at its silliest, it's a better picture than most, with surprises and inventive turns and performances that remain strong throughout. [14 Aug 1992, p.C1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
With her first feature, "Manny & Lo," writer-director Lisa Krueger reveals a distinctive style. Though employing no surreal devices and remaining within a realistic convention, Krueger takes the story of two young sisters on their own and somehow makes it seem unreal, strange, outside time.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The satire is unfocused, while the story goes nowhere. Too bad. The material is ripe for satire.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Brando's performance is so idiosyncratic -- the nasal delivery, the muffled diction and, of course, the screaming, ''Stel- lahh!'' -- that it's easy to forget its technical brilliance. But from Brando's first scene he exudes menace, even while talking calmly. His eyes always on the lookout for some slight, Stanley is ready to lash out every second he is on screen. He's impossible not to watch -- he's too odd, too dangerous. [Director's Cut; 11 Feb 1994, p.C3]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
CB4 has a good time parodying the rap world, and the mock songs and fake videos featured here are funny and dead-on. But more and more as it goes along CB4 gets bogged down in details. The inspiration goes out of the picture, and the last half hour is just a matter of going through the motions. [12 Mar 1993, p.C1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It gets worse and worse as it goes along and finally ends just as it's becoming unbearable.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Yes, the movie's watchable, and there are about six good laughs in it, but six good (not great) laughs in 90 minutes is pretty paltry for a comedy.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
An exceptionally perceptive film about what it's like to be 19 years old.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Unfortunately, the best jokes in Loaded Weapon were in the coming attractions. What's left amounts to just a lot of flailing around in search of a handful of half-hearted laughs. [5 Feb 1993, p.D5]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Though the film makers would probably like us to regard Guncrazy as a commentary on alienation in the '90s, in the end the picture isn't about much more than its own style. But this commitment to style and the movie's peculiar emotional honesty make it more than a self-conscious genre piece. [05 Feb 1993, p.D1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Washington, no surprise, is terrific, his sensitivity offset with touches of knowing, self-deprecating humor.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
As plain awful as Untraceable is, possibly the worst thing about it is that it pretends to mean something.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A near miss, a respectable but uninspired thriller that's intelligent and considered in its details, but ultimately weak in its impact.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
In its second half, Outlander falls apart completely, becoming nothing but a violent, mindless monster movie along the lines of "Alien vs. Predator."- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
As in "The House of Yes'' and "Freaky Friday,'' Waters keeps it wild but real, and the result is not only a series of lively scenes but lively close-ups: The big-eyed, expressive performances are just fun to watch.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Career Opportunities is a real strange one, a tasteless and completely off-key comedy that has the elements of the much-more serious and more interesting picture it could have been -- if only the film makers had a clue as to what sort of movie they were making. [30 March 1991, p.C3]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Adams sparkles with quick-mindedness and verbal agility. This is a worthy and underused talent.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
On its own terms, the film is overlong, repetitive and lacks impact. Even if this were the first gorilla-in-love movie ever made, audiences would come away vaguely dissatisfied, suspecting there was an intriguing idea buried somewhere in here, but it didn't quite come off.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Some people may be put off that For Your Consideration lands in a serious place. But I see it as evidence of an expanding vision, of continued artistic growth.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Scenes that should have been cut are included, so as not to disappoint anyone. What could have been a small, sweet and genuinely scary film is instead a full hour too long and many millions too fat.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
There's no joy and little playfulness about this caper comedy, which, despite a lighthearted script, has a sober undertone to it, almost a melancholia.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
This is Almodovar's stab at serious drama, and the result is bizarre and affecting but also unsettling in ways that the filmmaker may not have intended.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
And give credit to Stallone: He just leaves the camera on Rourke, in the tightest of close-ups, cutting only once, to himself, for a one-second reaction shot, but keeping the focus on his actor. A great actor.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It isn't elegiac, but enraged. It doesn't look back with sorrow, but forward in dread. And it's made with a clear intention - to stop the Iraq war.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A corny, overblown romance, and while it eventually wins you over with its atmosphere and good nature, it's far from the masterpiece you've been hearing about. [15 Jan 1988]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Radio is almost as bad as it gets. That it isn't is thanks to Ed Harris, who brings depth and focus to his performance.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The most enjoyable way to watch Surveillance - "enjoyable," in the relative sense - is to take its awfulness for granted and pay attention to everything Bill Pullman does.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Few pictures that start this well go so bad so fast. [7 March 1992, p.C3]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A modest documentary, small in scope and ambition, but it achieves one of the higher callings of art in that it forces viewers to look at a something in a newer, deeper and more humane way.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It's a film of tension and spectacle, with a singular point of view behind it. It grabs the viewer thoroughly, even as it invites audiences to watch it with a cold, careful eye.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Arrives in theaters today with a sheet over its head and a tag on its toe. So to speak. What we have here is a complete systemic failure, a comedy that's not funny, with action that's not thrilling.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Imagine the worst "Deadwood" episode ever, and you'll get an idea of the general tone of Beowulf & Grendel, which is full of anachronistic cursing, tortured syntax, dark humor and lots of hairy, homely, filthy-looking people.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The new Robert De Niro film with Bill Murray, Mad Dog and Glory, is just off-balance enough that it may throw audiences off, too. It is not a romantic comedy by a director who can't do that particular dance, but a strange hybrid between comedy and drama. [5 Mar 1993, p.C1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Along the way, My Best Friend offers insights into the emotional and psychological components of both friendliness and friendship. They're not synonymous, though both have value.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Bleak, dark and strangely arresting throughout, Blast of Silence is not quite a can't-miss proposition, but one comes away from it feeling as if one has seen a minor classic of some kind. Yes, minor - but still a classic. [04 May 2008, p.N36]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Serious Moonlight is a tonal disaster, distasteful and sentimental by turns. It was probably a mistake to have Hines try to walk that same delicate line that took Shelly her entire career to master.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The A-Team is a Joe Carnahan movie, i.e., an experiment in propulsion and personality over substance and story.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Won the Golden Spire Award at the San Francisco International Film Festival a few years back, and now, finally, the documentary is being released into theaters. It's a film with distinct virtues: It tells a fascinating story.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The film's impact has a lot to do with Fabio Vacchi's original score, which is both plaintive and coldly modernist, with echoes of Charles Ives.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It's up to Ellen Barkin to carry the movie, and she manages until the thing just becomes a dead weight. [10 May 1991, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Ross surrendered himself to the tale, lavishing time on the characters, getting the period details right and making the races look authentic. The result is a faithful, loving piece of work, and the love shows.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
One could argue about which "Lethal Weapon'' is the best, but No. 4 is certainly the funniest, warmest and most idiosyncratic.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The result is schizophrenic, an uplifting film that's truly depressing, a movie about cruelty that tries to be fluffy.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Where the movie goes wrong is that it sets itself up as a study of a pathological personality but never delivers.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Let It Rain touches on class issues, feminism, immigration and the particular challenges facing a single, driven career woman in her 40s. But it's graceful in presenting its ideas, and what emerges is not a polemic but a kind of snapshot of modern-day concerns.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A grim and sometimes funny examination of life on the margins and of a singular artist's world.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The pace is slow and the story neither takes off nor arrives anywhere.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The sweetest little movie about a neurological disorder that we're ever likely to see.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Would be worthy of the highest rating, except for a slight slackening of energy in the last 20 minutes.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The result is a film that's far superior to Neil LaBute's "Your Friends and Neighbors'' and more entertaining than Todd Solondz's "Happiness.''- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Adoration, despite a family resemblance to some of his finest work ("The Sweet Hereafter," "Ararat"), is Egoyan at his worst. The movie is slow and airless, with a script so weak one wonders why Egoyan bothered to film it.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It's all swell, though after two hours of nonstop yin energy, one does begin to wish that someone like Bruce Willis might show up in a sweaty T-shirt, scratching himself.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Light entertainment that doesn't quite work. The film has too many scenes that meander, and the picture's offhandedness begins to seem less like clumsy charm and more like pointless vamping.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A smart, sexy romantic drama, directed within an inch of its life by Hans Canosa.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The story, like the protagonist, floats along in a noodly sort of way, intelligent, benign and ineffectual.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Nonstop crudeness, vulgarity and unpleasantness. It's without any redeeming social value whatsoever. And it's funny from beginning to end.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Meandering and inert. Yet as an etching of an emotion and a vehicle for Costner, the movie makes a case for itself.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A dreadful exercise, with a script full of contradictions and empty gestures and a leading lady who's such a novice it hurts to watch her.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
This film, directed by William Friedkin and based on Mart Crowley's breakthrough play, is often dismissed (sometimes by people who haven't seen it) as sappy and dated. But on second look, it's one of the important films of the 1970s.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It's a good movie not because it says the right things but because it says those things well. [18 Sept 1992, p.C3]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It's surprising to see John Malkovich and Andie MacDowell together in such a meandering mess as The Object of Beauty. It's also surprising that their being in it doesn't help. [19 Apr 1991, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The best bits come in the first few minutes -- or maybe the jokes just seem fresher then.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
What's exciting is that the Sprechers have delved into territory that is normally the domain of literature and have emerged with a film that's neither overly literary nor simplistic.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
This is one of the greatest films of the 1950s, a prophetic film about the dangerous power of modern media.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
With its fake-looking technology and empty characters, Volcano eventually becomes as obvious as its what-if premise.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
With Kika Almodovar seems to be saying something about voyeurism, though what he is saying is never nailed down. [27 May 1994, p.C3]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
If Eddie Murphy gets an Oscar for "Dreamgirls" later this month, the deciding factor with voters may be his performance in Norbit. It's much more impressive than anything he does in "Dreamgirls."- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
One of the downsides of living in a free society is that every so often someone like Myles Berkowitz gets hold of a camera.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
This latest, from director Bille August, is merely respectful and respectable. It never sinks, but it never really soars either, though here and there it hits a powerful moment.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Neither funny nor outrageous nor horrifying nor conventionally affecting.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
An unlovable movie. It's morally ambiguous, which means there's no real rooting interest. It's episodic, with the same kinds of episodes repeated over and over, so there's little sense of forward motion. It feels philosophically and politically confused, so there's no message to take from it.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
By the standards of most IMAX films, this is a bizarre entry, a documentary about bugs that was produced by Terminix, the pest control company.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
This sixth installment, by far the worst in the series, is bland and deadening.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A disappointment, a precious and grotesque exercise reminiscent of Jean-Pierre Jeunet's "Delicatessen," only less amusing.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Hard to hate, but if you actually want to love it, you've got to force yourself. [27 Nov 1991, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Isn't all bad. It isn't good, either, but it's better than it deserves to be, and if one sits and watches, the laughs do come, a few.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Tony Scott's vigorous direction is sometimes too vigorous. Loud rock music underscores many scenes, and Scott's habit of shooting at odd angles begins to seem like a mannerism. But on the whole his ambitious attack helps make The Fan entertaining in the moment, even if it's forgettable immediately afterward.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A story so good that maybe anybody could have turned out something decent.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Feels positively Greek in its magnitude, a lament about fate, age, time and life.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Showcasing three individuals whose spiritual and physical journeys are both repellent and mundane, the film is just a long and pointless slog.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
There's no pretending this is a perfect movie. Yet I doubt I could have enjoyed it more if it were. [25 Nov 1992, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A better- than-average children's film, dolled up with some high-priced art direction and extraordinary special effects.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A cute movie, a little too cute and a little too aware of its own cuteness.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A sharp, engaging look at what it's like to be hungry and not-so-young in New York.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
For 70 minutes, Antichrist is a rare exploration of pain, featuring two actors collaborating with each other in agonizing and intimate ways. It also contains some of the best work Gainsbourg has ever done on screen. And then - if I put it more gently I wouldn't really be saying it - director Lars von Trier loses his mind.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The success of Chloe is largely due to the contribution of screenwriter Erin Cressida Wilson.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Expansive, but succinct. Leigh tells a small story and doesn't try to make something huge of it.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It's great to see cherished, longtime stars in big roles to which they can bring so much spontaneity and finesse; you wish only that this movie were sturdier and had aimed higher. Judging from the bloopers that unreel during Grumpier Old Men's end credits, the cast had lots of fun making this movie--more fun, it would seem, than it is to watch.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Embraces its identity as a sci-fi-summer-action-blockbuster extravaganza. Along the way, it actually comes close to finding the balance that Lee was looking for.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Though I wish Please Give were a little better, there aren't enough American movies like it.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
She-Devil is a witty picture that's not afraid to stoop for a punch line. [8 Dec 1989, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The picture is in the same sappy, soapy, maudlin vein as last year's ''Beaches,'' but I didn't hate it as much as ''Beaches,'' which might mean that everybody who loved ''Beaches'' will think Stella isn't quite as good. [2 Feb 1990, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Knocked Up has some rough edges, but it's a noteworthy film by a significant and blossoming talent.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Stays emotionally mired because of a static screenplay that fails to express its issues dramatically.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
As a work of entertainment, as a cohesive narrative and as an artistic whole, there's no way to call it anything but an on-balance average effort. Yet there's nothing remotely average about the movie's warm spirit, its imaginative and arresting cinematography or its handful of unique, brilliant scenes and shrewd, bizarre performances.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Stone tries to make us like Alexander because he's good, when he should have made us want to watch Alexander because he's amazing.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The most shocking thing about Harry and Max isn't the subject matter. The most shocking thing is just how tepid it is.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
In place of the tension, climax and easy resolution of the old "Perry Mason'' show, A Civil Action offers murkiness, bitter successes and frustration.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
By the end, The Diving Bell and the Butterfly achieves a victory over difficult material, but celebrating that fact doesn't preclude recognizing the story is not a natural for movies and remains an uneasy match.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A strong thriller, slick and sleazy in a summer-movie sort of way, but intelligent too.[22 May 1993, p.C3]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A poignant, quirky and effective alternative to the usual soulless, computer-generated summer fare.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The first and most honest thing to say about Miracle at St. Anna is that it's an awful mess.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Morgan finds the right elements of action and character through which to make history leap off the page.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
If Soderbergh's ambition was to make us feel just how dull it would be to a woods-dwelling communist guerrilla, he succeeded.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It's made by a director who knows comedy, working from a script founded on a surefire slapstick premise.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Valentine isn't scary, but it is unsettling; not ultimately satisfying, but arresting in the moment.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
You Kill Me is pretty light, but it's well made, and within the built-in limitations of its story -- a hit man goes to Alcoholics Anonymous -- it's fairly pleasing.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
There's valuable information here and some human stories that deserve to be heard.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Collateral is a good idea for a movie, backed up by expert execution... It's straight-up entertainment, not something to see and then talk about a month later, but definitely something to enjoy.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The essential mistake that's made about Lewis is assuming his movies were intended mainly to be funny. I suspect they were intended mainly to be really, really weird.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A romantic comedy that flirts with something serious but never gets past the flirting stage.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It's a strong, lean piece of writing that moves quickly. Nothing is wasted, and nothing happens the way you'd expect.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Army of Darkness has good moments and shows traces of wit right up to the end, though these moments wind up coming fewer and farther between. [19 Feb 1993, Daily Datebook, p.D1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Perhaps the most promising thing in 2 Days in Paris is that Delpy shows that she can direct herself.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It's a film of sensitivity, observation and humor - a must-see for Fellini enthusiasts and a worthwhile investment for everyone else.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
This is an embarrassing film. It's a sex comedy that sets itself up as a satire of middle-class mores, except there's no truth behind any of its observations. LaBute tries to be shocking and manages only to be shockingly puerile -- tasteless in a high-school-boyish sort of way.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The movie is more about how many things Michael Bay can smash up -- lots. That might not be a talent most people respect, but it gets through to people anyway, and here Bay does it exceptionally well.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
When Bertolucci points his camera out a window, it's like putting on your glasses. Everything is lush, drenched in color and right there for you to touch.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Its one flaw occurs when the film concocts a fake conflict between the women in an attempt to add some drama. The plot device doesn't do great damage, but it is enough to keep the film from being a hands-down four-star movie.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
At heart, ridiculous -- ludicrous in its conception and silly in its spectacle.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Will Smith has the right quality for the role -- he's an easy man to root for -- but he augments this by channeling some inner quality of desperation and need.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Alan Rudolph's direction is active but unintrusive, highlighting some of the more chilling moments with slow-motion sequences and odd cross-cutting. [19 Apr 1991, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Gets back the mood, the pleasure and even some of the freshness of its first installment.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
As presented in "What Just Happened?" the world of Hollywood looks like a very expensive, lethal version of high school, not fun to live in, but lots of fun from a safe distance.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Stop laughing long enough, and you'll see that it's a picture about compromised lives and love for sale. But no one who watches Priceless will stop laughing for that long.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A disturbing film about grim subject matter, but the overall experience is more exhilarating than saddening. There's just something satisfying about seeing a movie so well made.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
That Sunshine Cleaning was made by women is best revealed in the filmmakers' willingness to let the story breathe on its own terms, without bringing in anything extraneous, unwelcome and exciting.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It's the lightest of the Batman movies, the most cartoony, the dumbest and the least ambitious. But it holds the audience's attention, brings on a few laughs and never really gets boring.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The Net is a scary film that could have been terrifying but for something slightly earnest and plodding in director Irwin Winkler's attack.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
An intelligent, well-made film about a seemingly well-adjusted, likable and loquacious woman.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Connery's charm and integrity make all his scenes worthwhile, and Lithgow's stiff-backed turn as the classic British imperialist is in good fun.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The film is thorough and entertaining. It's enthusiastic about his contributions, but it's no hagiography, and it serves as both a celebration and a cautionary tale.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The most daring thing that Jonze and Eggers have done is make a children's film that might not really be for kids.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Anyone with any doubt as to the importance, in a functioning democracy, of American newspapers - with working newsrooms full of professional, paid journalists - needs to see this movie.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It's an endurance test. Though never boring, the movie is a fairly long slog through the snow.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The mysteries of Dolores Claiborne are never gripping enough to consume an audience, and there are few, if any, surprises along the way. But the women are wonderful and reason enough to see the picture.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It's a respectable B- movie -- airy, inconsequential and a little too cute at times, but fairly entertaining all the same.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Franco Zeffirelli's Hamlet, a senselessly adapted, ill-conceived, poorly acted mess of a film that's guaranteed to frustrate anyone who loves the play and to put everybody else to sleep. [18 Jan 1991]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The laughs do come, but not as readily, not as heartily and not as joyfully as you might expect.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
This film isn't boring - it's not scintillating or spellbinding, either, just pleasantly honest and moderately interesting throughout.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Attempts to convey emotional dislocation and passion at the same time. All we get is distance.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A moody picture that's filled from start to finish with camera tricks, unexpected angles and innovative flourishes.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
This is a shrewd and effective film from a director who understands how to create and sustain a mood.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Has a slow build and a strong payoff, but George Clooney is the element that holds it together.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
An amazing film amazingly tasteless, tin-eared and awkward, but amazing all the same. Anyone with a predilection for bad movies might want to see it, if only in an inspecting-the-wreckage spirit, since because movies this misguided come but once or twice a year.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The thinking is shallow. The emotions are tepid. But the creativity is dazzling. If that sounds like a slam, consider that most Hollywood screenplays are predictable, rote and functional -- and those are the good ones, folks.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Ultimately, this is not one of the Dardennes' masterpieces. They've made a few of those, but the effect of Lorna's Silence is more modest. It leaves the audience with neither a sense of uplift nor devastation, but, rather, with something more akin to intellectual appreciation.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Almost everything that made "The Bourne Identity" refreshing -- the wit, the irony, the suspense, the novelty of its premise -- is gone in The Bourne Supremacy, and what's left is the spectacle of Matt Damon, with perfect posture and senses primed like a cat, making his way through a routine action thriller.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The Chamber has nowhere to go and it goes there slowly, flirting in all directions.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Never takes off, but it never collapses. At times, it becomes frustrating -- for example, about 30 minutes are spent pursuing a lead that goes nowhere.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The picture is a comedy. It's a drama. It's a romance. And it's a vampire movie -- it's definitely a vampire movie....But what it is most of all is a mess. A flat-out, flailing-in-all-directions mess. [26 Sept 1992, p.C3]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Call it a victory of conviction over substance, but when Argento is onscreen, you look at her - not because she's good, but because she's there in a way nobody else is.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Has an air of detachment and sadness, enhanced by the movie's being set a full quarter century ago.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Structured like a 17th century comedy of manners, the picture is a social critique of the idle rich that's part comic and part tragic, that's light and airy and yet haunted with meaning. [08 Feb 2004]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Succeeds in making the case that the hatred that seemed dead and buried 60 years ago is alive and growing and beginning to present itself once again as a threat to humane civilization.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Promised to be the season's thoughtful action picture, turns out to have few thoughts and no thrills.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Director Stephan Elliott too easily buys into the drag queens' conception of themselves as valiant pursuers of illusion, without ever questioning the value of the illusion being pursued.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The Man Without a Face saves itself from sugary sweetness by presenting the friendship of McLeod and Chuck against a harsh small-town background. The screenplay takes off in some strong directions, while Gibson, in his first film as a director, keeps it honest all the way. [25 Aug 1993, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Not about the justice or injustice of the legal system. Rather it's about the tragedy of Sam's predicament.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Husbands and Wives ultimately reveals itself as an extremely bitter film, with the kind of sour conviction that tries to pass itself off as wisdom. Allen knows how people talk and how they evade really talking. But his jaundiced vision -- as though he just found out that a marriage can't always be like the first month of dating when you're 17, and now he can't believe how crummy it all is -- just makes him seem naive. In the end his perception yields no insight. Old men like young women. Really? [18 Sept 1992, p.C1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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