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
The result is a film of sadness and power, the first great 21st century movie about a 21st century subject.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Without peril, The Phantom can only get by on dazzle, and there's not quite enough of that to hold interest -- unless you're 8 years old and seeing dazzle for the first time.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
To call this effort misguided would be kind. The job this "prequel" does on the original Dumb and Dumber is the movie equivalent of surgery that removes all the vital organs and then gives the patient a prosthetic third arm. What's needed isn't there, and what's here we don't need.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Toback has found a documentary subject as tragic and ridiculous, as bizarre and driven, as the heroes of his other films.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A rare film about the class and educational divide that can happen even within families.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It's just horsing around that comes to nothing. No, it's worse. It's horsing around designed to disguise nothing as something.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Lawrence's take on pop music success is exactly right, satiric without being absurdist, and therefore a prize worth the effort.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Wild Orchid is a funny movie, an unintentional scream that sets itself up as a journey into the land of eroticism. [28 Apr 1990, p.C3]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The picture is also the story of one character in particular, Bobby, and when it comes to Bobby, A Home at the End of the World is sappy and bogus.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A hit- and-miss affair, consistently amusing but not as outrageous or funny as Cho may have intended or as imaginative as one might have hoped.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Despite the title, Ismailos' documentary is not a study of what constitutes great direction. Rather it's a nicely arranged film in which a variety of filmmakers Ismailos likes discuss their inspirations and influences.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The acting is fine. The ensemble is strong. The story moves along. Yet a coating of sleaze clings to the film, like bread dipped in batter.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A hit-and-miss affair, or, to be more precise, a miss (story one), hit (story two) and break even (story three) affair.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It would really help to get into the right frame of mind before seeing The Time Traveler's Wife, because viewed from some angles - maybe most angles - the movie is ridiculous.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
If you want to know years in advance what old-age nostalgia is going to look like for Baby Boomers, look no further than Pirate Radio, in which the sun always shines, the music is great and the sex is available, guilt-free and glorious.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
North is director Rob Reiner's first flat-out failure, a sincerely wrought, energetically made picture that all the same crashes on takeoff. It's strange and oddly distasteful, at its best managing to be bad in some original and unexpected ways.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The problem with Popcorn is that it's just as ridiculous as the horror movies it satirizes. [02 Feb 1991, p.C3]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
When it's good, it's good, and when it fails, it's still clear what Levine was trying to do.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A disappointment, but it's not a disaster, and that's at least something.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
As for Fraser, his clumsy humanity is endearing, but by now, assuming he has invested wisely, he should have enough money saved so as to not have to waste his talent anymore.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
There's no point complaining that Honey is a tired reworking of an old formula, because it's intended for a young audience that doesn't know the formula.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Much of the movie has a structureless, documentary feeling to it, which is good and should have been pushed further.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Despite some feints in a soulful direction, the picture has none of the interior quality of a multifaceted war film like Terrence Malick's "The Thin Red Line." Woo is all about elegant surfaces, not inner conflicts.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The premise might sound gimmicky, but it's realized honestly and specifically. [27 Sept 1991, p.D6]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
More thoughtful and pleasing to the eye than any blockbuster in recent memory, but its epic length comes without an epic reward. It's a slow ride to the same old place, nonstop action, accelerating in scale, culminating in the smirking promise of a sequel.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
This is a monster movie -- 92 minutes, lots of action, lots of green legs stomping, get in, get out.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Witless banter might have won Ginger Rogers for Fred Astaire, but Thompson is too smart for that.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The bad outweighs the good and the cringes outnumber the laughs in Brüno, a disappointment from Sacha Baron Cohen, whose "Borat" was one of the funniest movies of the decade.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The result is something rare, especially considering how fine the novel is, a film that's fuller and deeper than the book.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Mindhunters is as effective as a movie can be and yet still be 100 percent forgettable.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Great trash, one of those mediocre movies that in its own crass way is more enjoyable than most things that get nominated for Oscars.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
An oddly structured tale about Francisco Goya and the Spain that he lived and worked in.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Even apart from the fact that it's not nearly funny enough, Bruce Almighty is a peculiar film.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A film that might have seemed faintly academic six months ago becomes an anxious expression of its historical moment.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Aside from a few moments involving Dudikoff, American Ninja 4 is a formula action picture without appeal, and its contradictions and illogical turns of plot don't help matters. [09 Mar 1991, p.C3]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A brilliant and irresistible counterfactual overview of American history.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It takes an extraordinary film on the order of Joyeux Noel to make it all suddenly vital, immediate and human.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Far superior to its companion piece, "Flags of Our Fathers," released earlier this year, "Letters" is a grim and humane film that has to be counted among the director's better efforts.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
No longer fresh -- though that's to be expected in a sequel -- it contains none of the virtues that made the first one anarchic and original.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Polanski directs the film without a wasting a moment. The occasional humor does nothing to relieve tension but, as in a Hitchcock picture, has a way of increasing it.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Cmera work can't do anything about the barrenness of the screenplay, nor the sense of fundamental insincerity at the core of the film. [03 Sep 1993]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A big leap forward for Penn as a director and deserves to be one of the most talked about films of the season.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Perry isn't the only thing wrong with Serving Sara, but he's the thing that takes a pleasantly mediocre movie and turns it into an unpleasantly mediocre one.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
For most of its 110 minutes, City Hal is a strong, hard-boiled drama that gives an insider's look at the wheelings and dealings in and around the mayor's office.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
There's a dignity about it, and it's only later that we come to realize that this dignity is misplaced, born of a fatal reserve and a lack of complete investment.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The film's special effects are astonishing, but the most notable and unexpected thing is its tone.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
An extremely funny movie, and this is coming from someone who barely cracked a smile during ``Friday,'' the first installment of this franchise.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
De Palma plays both sides against the middle, and eventually the thing collapses. Instead of simply pursuing what seems to be his vision of the story, about a flawed but decent man getting martyred to a corrupt system, he tries not to offend and ends up making empty and confusing gestures. When at the end of this remarkably cynical movie, Morgan Freeman, as a principled trial judge, stands up and makes a speech about decency -- ''Decency is what your grandmother taught you'' -- it's hard not to laugh out loud. [21 Dec 1990, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Indeed, without Hudson's magic, without that extra feeling that comes from seeing the launch of something extraordinary, Dreamgirls might have been a break-even affair. The film has strong roles, good actors and a compelling story that takes place over the course of 10 or 15 years. But it has, with only a couple of exceptions, a pedestrian score that sounds like generic show-music schlock and lyrics that are not distinctive.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Eye-catching and entertaining but less inspired than the original.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Cocktail is unbelievable - a picture that sets itself up as a gritty, authentic character study but is laughable, false and stupid in all its details. The only connection to reality here is that there are actually such things as bartenders. [29 Jul 1988, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A pleasant enough "Crimes of the Heart" rip-off about three young women bumbling, stumbling and fumbling through life, looking for answers, smiling through tears, blah, blah, blah. [21 Oct 1988]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Despite a few shortcuts and some small but nagging inconsistencies -- not to mention weak performances in a couple of key roles -- Just Cause delivers.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Its story is paint-by- numbers...But it's funny, and funny covers a lot of sins.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
In King Arthur, everything goes wrong. The film combines the plodding sincerity of a Ph.D. dissertation with the brains of a high-concept Jerry Bruckheimer- produced blockbuster (which it is), and no one benefits.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Surprisingly, the results are embarrassing. As puppetry, Team America is stilted. As satire, it's gutless and lazy. And as comedy, it barely delivers laughs.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A study of middle-class, middle-aged disappointment in its varying forms, a sober look at different life choices.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Uninvolving. Even the sex is boring. Are these scenes supposed to be wildly erotic? If they are, they don't work. [20 Mar 1992, Daily Notebook, p.D1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It blends an intriguing concept with a suspenseful plot, and the result is a gripping 103 minutes at the movies.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A thriller that presses all the buttons: parental love, childhood terror, fear of Vince Vaughn.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It's a bomb - not the usual bomb, but a time bomb, despite a 20-minute stretch at the beginning that goes along nicely. [17 May 1991]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It feels both big and little, concentrating as it does on the small movements in people's lives and the huge tides of history.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The movie's excruciating length is without dramatic or thematic justification.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The picture looks like it cost about 3 cents to make, but it packs a nice punch, with tense moments, unexpected turns and a hot performance by Joanne Whalley-Kilmer. [30 Oct 1989, p.F3]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A movie for adults, of a kind that usually isn't made in America,- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Not only not funny, it's unfunny. It kills humor. Sit in a room by yourself, look at a blank screen for 90 minutes, and you'll have more of a chance of laughing at your own thoughts than you will at this movie.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Austin Powers sounded like a silly idea, but it turns out to be one of the best comedies of the year.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Just awful. But uniquely awful -- awful in a way that might just attract a cult audience. [3 Sept 1993]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
With Lake at the center, something that could have been innocuous becomes painful, and a sure shot at mediocrity is transformed into one of the worst films of the year.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Metro, the new Eddie Murphy cop picture made in San Francisco that opens today, goes beyond cliched: It's shameless. The relationships, plot turns -- even the action sequences -- are trite and uninspired. Murphy is fresh, as usual, but "Metro" is not.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Like her (Cholodenko) other movies, this one has vivid characters and strong performances and flows like a slice of life set in an appealing, interesting world. But this one also has a good story and, if you're paying attention, a distinct point of view.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Reveals one mystery, only to reveal another that it can't quite penetrate.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The best American movie about women so far this year, and probably the best that will be made this year.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It's silly, witty and good-natured, not scary so much as icky, and not horrifying or horrible but consistently amusing.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Klapisch's masterstroke was to place at the center of a movie a man, forced by circumstances, to stop and simply observe.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
This is one of Kubrick's best, not gimmicky or arch, not somnambulant or mannered, just finely detailed, measured, richly photographed and, at every step of the way, entertaining and interesting.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
If his two previous films suggested a director dipping a few toes in dark waters, Un Prophete marks the moment when Audiard took the plunge.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It's one of the best documentaries ever made about show business, about what it really consists of and what it demands.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The Dying Gaul has the best kind of story in that it unfolds as a series of surprises, and yet every step, twist and turn seems inevitable in retrospect.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Jarmusch's presence as a director is always felt, from moment to moment, in ways that are small but never random. Even establishing shots -- exteriors of buildings -- suggest his sardonic, quietly despairing vision. With Mystery Train, Jarmusch comes of age. [21 Dec 1989, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
If you like this sort of movie - and actually, cards on the table, I like this kind of movie - you will not be sorry you saw it. But you will not come away from the experience feeling that you've seen Victoria, young or otherwise.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Best of all, the filmmakers know when to pull the plug. Date Night clocks in at 88 minutes and would not have been as funny at 89.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A wistful romance with metaphysical overtones, the movie is warm and charming. [10 Jul 1992, p.D1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It's an exuberant, well- crafted film that gets the audience involved on a gut level even before the opening credits are over.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A brutal movie, brutal in all the right ways -- brutally stark, brutally funny, brutally brutal. [30 Oct 1992]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Wild Reeds is a sober, heartfelt piece of work, sensitively directed and lovingly photographed -- though slightly dull, if we're going to be perfectly honest.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Has many grotesque sex scenes, interspersed with sights of Chong rambling in a dissociated way as she sits in her squalid apartment.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The actors perform as though this were a first-class effort, and at times almost make you believe it. Matthew Modine is boyish and explosive, and Melanie Griffith further establishes herself as an interesting and original actress. Her line readings are odd, yet strangely right. [28 Sept 1990, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The film's freedom and control, its inspiration and focus, announce it as the work of a confident and mature artist.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The movie is reasonably entertaining, though it helps to be 6 years old.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Pet Sematary Two' follows the usual horror movie pattern: The first half is a pleasure, because you know what has to happen and you can't wait. And the second half is a bore, because you know what still has to happen and you can't wait for it to end. [01 Sept 1992, p.E3]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Kingpin has nastiness going for it. There are prosthesis jokes, bad-teeth jokes, ugly-women jokes, sight gags involving vomiting, etc.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A merry, wistful, tear-and-a-smile romp about the Holocaust, of all things.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
All the movie's narrative gymnastics can't disguise the fact that it's inauthentic at its core and that its story just isn't worth telling.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Anderson almost brings off a picture worthy of his grandiose ambition.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Strives for an airy, merry amorality, but it never quite achieves liftoff, though at times it comes close.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Most of the bits and performances have a hard time making the transition from stage to screen.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It's shockingly funny - you don't sit there deciding to laugh. Your own laughter catches you by surprise. [14 Apr 1989]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Somewhere in the translation from stage to screen, The History Boys has become an intelligent misfire. What's left is a literate but listless film.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Bogdanovich films Noises Off in long, unbroken takes. Though for the most part he doesn't give us the whole stage but moves in to follow the action more closely, the camera moves as one's eyes might, while following the play. Bogdanovich does what he has to -- he gets out of the way of Frayn's original farce. And the result of his thankless toil is a movie that doesn't quite feel like a movie, and that's not quite as good as the play, but that's pretty good anyway. [20 March 1992, p.D5]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Harmon proves that he can act stupid, and that's not enough to make the movie funny… You're supposed to like Freddy (Harmon), and you're supposed to like his brainless students… But you hate everybody. [24 July 1987]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
If we're going to be honest, we need to look inside and ask ourselves: Do we really want to see a listless movie about a woman whose dream is to move into a double-wide trailer?- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Often the picture drags, getting caught in its own goodness and going for a generalized sense of wonder, till you kind of wish you could apply the spurs. [17 Sep 1993, p.C3]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A sour story with a repellent lead character, deadly comic schtick and tin-eared direction to produce 90 minutes of sheer, plodding mirthlessness.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Disclosure is a frankly adult picture. The seduction scene is protracted and genuinely sexy -- though what this woman sees in Douglas is a mystery. The talk in Disclosure is also frank -- and unusually explicit. People talk about sex in this picture as they would in life.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It's the complexity of Lurie's moral universe that makes it linger in the mind.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Ultimately, Fortress is a formula picture, an action film that has to resolve itself in a conventional way. Still, until its last five minutes or so, when it takes a slightly silly turn, Fortress is nicely realized and holds your attention. [4 Sept 1993, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The movie itself is just a routine showcase, modest in its aspiration and effective within its limits, entertaining in the moment but, in the end, faintly silly. On the plus side, it's only 86 minutes long.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A frustrating movie, a work of immaturity from a director who should be past the empty gestures and self-protective distance of his early work.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Entertaining and pleasing for children and parents, and not in the schizophrenic way of most kid's movies, which toss naughty in-jokes over the kiddies' heads.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
An entertaining film for kids and young teens. It's also a product of the era in which we're living, and weird times make for weird movies.- 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
A movie like this depends on clever bits and incidents, but there's little invention here to disguise the film's formulaic nature.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The movie suffers from two fatal ailments -- a dearth of vitality and a story that's shapeless and uninflected.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
But for director David Cronenberg and the commitment of his actors, A History of Violence might have been a cartoony action film. Its origins are in a cartoon, of sorts -- specifically, in a graphic novel, by John Wagner and Vince Locke.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A wonderful movie, sincere and inspired, with four terrific performances and a story that doesn't let up. The picture has the gentle, nourishing quality of a fairy tale that you want to believe, and the unsoftened impact of gut-level entertainment. [13 July 1990, Daily Datebook, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The film's tone is extraordinarily flexible, holding within the same reality elements of the absurd, the ridiculous and the comic while sustaining a sense of tension and dread throughout. This is, of course, one of the classic Pacino roles - he's so appealing - but don't overlook the late John Cazale as his accomplice, who gives us a character who's stupid and scared, troubled and dangerous, and disturbingly inscrutable.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Even as it stands, Fish Tank is a valuable movie, though it aspires to a social insight it doesn't attain and a psychological penetration it won't maintain.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It's all pleasant but fairly unimportant, and then -- POW -- comes the great scene, almost out of nowhere.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The movie's most inexcusable failing is that, despite all the flashbacks, we never get a sense of what this relationship was like when it worked.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The Daytrippers is low-budget perfection, a comedy without a false note and without a flat joke.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Anyone who has ever felt morally right and completely in the minority will have a point of entry into this movie.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Waitress deserves an essay, not just a review. There are perfect moments that stand out, and the reasons for their perfection are interesting.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The movie is never much more than fluff. But, like director Donald Petrie's previous film, "Grumpy Old Men," it has an honest core that enables it to keep its balance. [29 Apr 1994]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
As in a good European film, shots are allowed to breathe. The focus is on character and human emotion. At the same time, the movie shows an American concern for pace and story development. The result is the best of both worlds.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A stupid movie -- but a deliriously stupid movie, which gives it a certain grandeur.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Although I, Robot provokes thought, it doesn't exactly deliver thought, despite the occasional Cartesian reference to "ghosts in the machine."- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It will bring joy in a way certainly not intended, as one of the most gloriously and unwittingly silly films ever devised by a major American filmmaker.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Ryan's comic timing continues to delight, while Kline is touchingly heartfelt as a man doing what is evidently all too easy to do -- fall in love with Meg Ryan.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The films never lose sight of Mesrine the man, a fascinating character in that he's brutal yet extremely intelligent, has a skewed but discernible conscience, and, under the right circumstances, can be warm and generous.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The drama surrounding the romance gets a little too precious -- though I loved it 15 years ago; maybe I'm getting cynical -- but everything else is excellent, including Jack Nicholson, who is subtle and sly in a small, key role. [18 Jan 2004]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Qualifies as a mild success. It's an easy picture to like, even if it's not exactly satisfying.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The first half of White Palace is done so well that it's tempting to overlook the fact that once the picture gets its two lovers together, it has nowhere to go -- and it goes nowhere for the last 50 minutes. [19 Oct 1990, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Nothing but a showcase for the inherent comedic gifts of Cameron Diaz. The problem is she doesn't have any.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Those willing to meet (Untitled) even part way will discover a comedy of intelligence and wit, with some strong performances.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
What we have in this film is a whole lot of nothing, and the little that's there is irritating.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Another inert, soul-dead action drama that turns actors into zombies...It's garbage.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Lucas Black, who looks as much like a high school kid as George Bernard Shaw, speaks in a thick Southern accent that hasn't been heard on any leading man since the second act of "Our American Cousin."- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Jennifer Aniston...doesn't have much screen time, but in playing this slightly insecure, affable young woman, she does her best film acting to date.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
What's interesting about revisiting the film today is that the elements that engaged people most at the time - the thriller plot and the glimpse into Soviet life - maintain hardly any fascination. But the love story - what might have been regarded at the time as the obligatory "romantic interest" - stands out as something of lasting appeal. [26 Mar 2017, p.Q41]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
This is the world through the idiosyncratic eye of Cassavetes, which is both all-forgiving and inexhaustibly, passionately nosy. [28 Jun 1991, p.F8]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Before it degenerates into a complete mess, it's an entertaining mess, and something about its willingness to please maintains the audience's goodwill throughout.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
An admirable film, not a great one -- yet. It drags a bit.[Restored version]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Buscemi eschews the conventional and ends "Trees Lounge" on a stranger, more tantalizing note.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
An outstanding effort that maintains the integrity and purpose that distinguished "The Fellowship of the Ring."- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The funniest film to come along since "South Park," and one that succeeds in a more difficult and satisfying way.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The true soul of the New York mob is portrayed in Donnie Brasco, a first-class Mafia thriller that is also in its way a love story -- perhaps director Mike Newell's best.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It's mostly entertaining, and has some strong moments, but it lacks the special magic that a musical needs, that sense of its inhabiting a parallel universe where any wonderful thing can happen at any moment, including music suddenly arising from nowhere. [10 Apr 1992]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The moments of action are interspersed with lengthy plot developments that are hard to follow.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Had a chance to be not just OK, not just fluff, but something special, and it's a shame that the people making it either didn't realize it or didn't have the guts to take this movie where it wanted to go.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Does a beautiful job of capturing that mood -- the exuberance and wistfulness of one man's last year of youthful irresponsibility before joining the rat race.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Within limits, this is an excellent documentary. Even fans who think they've seen everything will see things here they haven't seen.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Re-creates that chilling sense that comes when, in the middle of a pleasant conversation, one realizes the other person is off his rocker.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
As a cop movie it's entertaining enough, but as a social commentary it comes up short, becoming self-conscious and preachy. [27 Apr 1990, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Delpy and Scott are able to put it over. She's French and deep and mysterious. He's a fresh-faced American, an open book. Liking them makes it possible to (kinda) like this otherwise routine horror movie.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Saint John of Las Vegas was a bad script that somehow got made into a bad movie with good people in it.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The Dark Half is another retelling of the Jekyll and Hyde story, but King and Romero fail to work out the premise of the story. [23 Apr 1993, p.C3]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Behind Enemy Lines has a wretched script and a director (first-timer John Moore) who either has no taste or doesn't know what he's doing.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Written by William Gibson, who adapted his own short story, and directed by New York artist Robert Longo in his feature debut, Johnny Mnemonic is inescapably a very cool movie. Running at a fevered pace, with laser and light explosions, it introduces a fantastic yet plausible vision of a computer-dominated age.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Has genuine life in it. It's an energetic comedy that consistently looks for and finds unexpected ways to be funny. [31 Mar 1995, p.C8]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Though the movie is riddled with memorable scenes of violence, its pace is slow -- too slow. It has an epic sprawl, but it's not an epic. It's more like a bloated fairy tale. [7 Aug 1992]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The result is a film of passion and ambition, but one whose success is intermittent at best.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Even those who despised the original novel should not have trouble stomaching Bridges, while the novel's fans will find the film -- despite some additions -- generally true to what they perceive to be the book's spirit.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
With Hard Candy, the innocent are tortured along with the guilty -- the innocent, in this case, being the audience.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Not as simple as it looks, though its appeal is simple: Robert Redford goes to prison, and James Gandolfini ("The Sopranos") is the warden. That's a movie worth seeing right there.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
As painstaking as a documentary but without the satisfaction of a documentary or the impact of a drama.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
In the end, the best thing about The Dragon is that it will make people want to go out and rent ''Enter the Dragon.'' [7 May 1993, p.C1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
While the plot is worthless and the battle scenes cheap-looking and unengrossing, Wing Commander has clearly defined characters and relationships. In other words, the film's young actors have nothing interesting to say, but they say it well.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Sonatine eliminates the one virtue American action films can legitimately claim -- vitality -- and replaces it with fake- existential claptrap wrapped in an inept narrative.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
If this action extravaganza represents the future of movies, it's going to be a sad, dead and awful future.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
About one idea short of being an excellent teenage romance. As it stands it's a pleasing but routine effort.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The film remains, clearly by design, a cold piece, mechanistic and only intermittently involving.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Part of the appeal is that it's so bad it's good: The story is ridiculous. At other times, it's just plain good: There are ski and snowboarding scenes, plenty of them, that are beautifully filmed and exhilarating to behold.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
If the film has any value at all it's as an example to illustrate the point that even a mediocre horror movie requires a certain amount of inspiration. At least a sense of fun, a little life and enthusiasm. Dr. Giggles is put together strictly by the numbers. It aims low -- at the floor -- and misses. [24 Oct 1992, p.C3]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
By the way, The Tillman Story has an R rating because of language. Think about that one, too: Lies are rated G and can be heard around the clock on television, but try saying the truth with the proper force and you end up with a restricted audience.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Takes the financially successful formula of "Legally Blonde," the Reese Witherspoon hit from two years ago, and does something unexpected. It fiddles with it, changes it and actually fixes it.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A successful work of art. To see this movie is to feel that you've lived it.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
In The Five Obstructions, we meet the Danish filmmaker for an extended period, and he's exactly what a fan might hope and expect him to be like: impish, insightful, unpredictable, mildly sadistic and rigorously honest.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
His (George Clooney) rugged good looks spell movie star, but his body language spells Don Knotts, without the wit.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
City Slickers is a funny and affecting comedy, with wonderful jokes and a script flashing intelligence in every direction. [7 June 1991, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
One of his better efforts, not up there in the Vertigo-North by Northwest-Psycho stratosphere, but a cut above his competent thrillers such as Foreign Correspondent, Saboteur and Lifeboat. [19 Dec 2004]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Hard, ugly and nasty yet a stylistically vigorous and often insightful piece of work.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Along the way, Looking for Eric emerges as a portrait of a world and a way of life. You will probably not want to live in Manchester after seeing this film, but you'll like and respect the people.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The movie benefits from the frankness that filmmakers were allowed in these pre-censorship days. Dvorak, in her best showcase, is sympathetic as a woman bent on self-destruction, because we appreciate that she has desires she can’t contain.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
They take on special powers that the filmmakers are incapable of making interesting, partly because the characters are ciphers, and partly because the story is listless and uninventive.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Best of all is Winona Ryder, who gets to play a brilliant teenager, as she did in ''Heathers.'' It's almost automatically comical to hear such a clear, emphatic and intelligent voice coming out of a kid. But Ryder also works that oddness for dramatic advantage, creating with Dinky the sense of a great spirit temporarily stuck in a child's body. [12 Oct 1990, p.E3]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Elizabeth works in a number of ways. It's a feminist film. It's also a kind of spy thriller and a superior historical drama.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
In Mission: Impossible III, we find out whether it's still possible to look at Tom Cruise and not see a weirdo. The answer is yes, but a complicated yes, because it takes time.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Spielberg's sledgehammer way with emotional moments, never more obvious than here, kills some of the pleasure for adults and robs the movie of the ultimate laurel -- classic status. [2002 re-release]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Child actors usually seem either vacuous or snotty, but 8-year-old Max Pomeranc qualifies as a find. As Josh he comes across as a genuinely nice kid, and his intelligent, watchful eyes make him a believable chess talent. In fact, Pomer anc is a highly-ranked chess player who has competed in the national finals. [11 Aug 1993, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Occasionally brilliant, profiting from Fellini's distinct and unmistakable way of looking and seeing. But it goes in circles and wears out its welcome, except for the most hard-core enthusiasts.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Black Sheep is a little comedy that succeeds in its modest aim to provide 87 minutes of harmless diversion. If you have nothing to do -- and I mean absolutely nothing -- Black Sheep, which opens today, is a must-see.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The beauty of The Joneses is that the salesmen are as much the victims as the people they're deceiving.- 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
It takes a winning recipe and adds some distinctly Hollywood flavors...The result is a botched job.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
An attempt at an epic. Sayles assembles a big cast and creates a mosaic of interweaving characters and story lines. But the stories are bland, the connections are incidental and the dramatic payoff is nonexistent.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
I like it for the thing it is, a reasonably solid B movie, and I like it as one in the continuum of bizarre Ford vehicles that combine high-stakes action with household horror.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Weekend at Bernie's II has the tell- tale signs of a bad film directed by its screenwriter. There's lots of goofy shtick, and the actors seem to have been directed to act silly. Instead of playing for truth, they mug and overdo it, particularly McCarthy, and the result is deadly. [10 July 1993, p.C3]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
An odd hybrid but a successful one. It marries the lyricism and heavy atmosphere of a European art film with the soaring spirit of a Hollywood love story.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A cautionary tale as well as an expose on the power of the American fast-food industry. That the documentary comes across as more than a sermon has a lot to do with Spurlock's personality, which is outgoing and instantly engaging.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Freeway is rude in the way the truth is rude -- only funnier. The movie seduces with its humor, all the while presenting a realized vision of a harsh, absurd world.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Though the film seems less like a theatrical release and more like something that might play on an obscure PBS station at 2 p.m. on a Sunday afternoon, it's reasonably interesting as a personality study.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A 98-minute elucidation of a point that's accepted within three minutes.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
This is a half-hearted, derivative action film with not a single honest artistic impulse behind it.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Some of the dialogue in Made was improvised, and the comic invention at work here -- Vaughn's and Favreau's -- make Made into a rough gem.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The best thing about Strangers With Candy is its relentlessness. It doesn't back off on its absurd humor, doesn't try to make sense and doesn't soft-pedal the characters.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Anybody who talks about True Romance has to start with the writing. It's dazzling. In scene after scene, Tarantino surprises the audience even while coming up with dialogue that rings much more true than anything you could have anticipated. [10 Sept 1993]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
A charmer, a movie whose embrace of cinema is so passionate it could be mistaken for an embrace of life.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Alien 3 is pretentious and gimmicky by turns, resorting at times to silly B-movie tricks that undercut its seriousness and moments that can be anticipated from a mile off. [22 May 1992, P.D1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
As the corpses pile up and the cocoons hatch, the spiders become more brazen and finally start invading houses. The last 45 minutes of Arachnophobia is a blast, with attack-of-the-killer-spider scenes coming nonstop. This is not great art, but it's a good time, and the climax is terrific. [18 July 1990, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Stylized and visually arresting, with intense sex scenes that earned the film an NC-17 rating, Ang Lee's Lust, Caution is an immersion into another time, place and mentality.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Tells the story of Leo Tolstoy's last year from a refreshing new perspective.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
This is one of the wisest, slickest and most unorthodox feminist films one could ever hope to see.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Trust never lives up to its snappy opening. Everything is tongue-in-cheek here - yet it's never remotely clear what the point is or what's getting satirized. [16 Aug 1991]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Search for some independent inspiration, and you'll be looking for a long time.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
As a drama - an epic drama, no less, clocking in at 137 minutes - its fascination is diffused, and the movie becomes something of a long slog.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Shanley tries to make something courageous and symbolic out of the notion of jumping into a volcano, but his philosophizing is sentimental, heavy-handed and forced. The idea of doing something reckless and adventurous even becomes a bit depressing when it dawns on you that Shanley may have been taking his own advice with this movie, for less than glorious results. [9 Mar 1990, p.E3]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Aims to do nothing but please, and it accomplishes its modest aim with charm and intelligence.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The Shadow is more than just the product of the trend to make high- tech features out of '30s superheroes. It's adventurous film-making, genuinely enthusiastic and genuinely inspired. [01 Jul 1994, p.C1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
This is the movie for anyone who has ever sat around with friends and thought, "Someone should make a movie about this," a film that captures the tenderness and quick humor of hanging out. It's not an easy task. We may find our own friends delightful, but watching other people's friends is a dreary prospect.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It's off in many directions - false in its details, false in its relationships, false in its emotions - but probably the first and worst thing that needs to be said about it is that it's also overlong and dull.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
In the moment, it's intermittently transcendent, heartrending and beautiful ... and busy, repetitious and boring.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The temptation to be emphatic about Synecdoche, New York is overwhelming but should be resisted, because the movie really is a mixed bag. A particularly odd mix.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
The picture doesn't come close to approaching the near-classic quality of the earlier film.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It's astonishing what little impact even the most imaginatively choreographed and well-filmed aerial escapades can have when they're presented as neither an expression of a character's personality, nor in the context of a compelling mission.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It's a rare, beautifully made movie that offers you another world. [23 June 1989, Daily Datebook, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
It's a plodding, episodic film, reverent and sanctimonious, and its pro-Southern viewpoint -- a time-honored Hollywood tendency -- makes "Gone With the Wind" look like a Northern polemic.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
Knowing nothing about "X-Files" is no impediment to appreciating this for the well-acted, adult piece of work that it is.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
For all the movie's coarse grandeur -- for all the blood in its battle scenes and the grim historical accuracy of its depiction of antediluvian medical procedures -- the story of Master and Commander feels like something intended not for adults but for children.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Mick LaSalle
What a shrewd achievement for writer-director Henry Selick ("The Nightmare Before Christmas"), to have made a movie that everyone will acclaim as beautiful, when perhaps the most beautiful thing about it is the sheer ugliness of it all.- San Francisco Chronicle
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