Mike Scott
Select another critic »For 1,030 reviews, this critic has graded:
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44% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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54% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 3.3 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Mike Scott's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 62 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Manchester by the Sea | |
| Lowest review score: | That's My Boy | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 464 out of 1030
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Mixed: 503 out of 1030
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Negative: 63 out of 1030
1030
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Mike Scott
Berger's film is still far more magical than it is macabre. And so although a black-and-white, foreign-film adaptation of a very familiar tale might, indeed, be a hard sell, audiences who buy into it are in for an undeniably rewarding movie-going experience. In a word: ¡Ole!- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted May 3, 2013
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- Mike Scott
In other words, Iron Man 3 -- once more delivering a satisfying combination of humor, action and dazzling set pieces -- provides everything fans of the franchise expect.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted May 3, 2013
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- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Apr 26, 2013
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- Mike Scott
Watching Mud unfold, one suspects that the Arkansas-reared Nichols remembers exactly what it was like to be a boy of the Southern wilds.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Apr 26, 2013
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- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Apr 26, 2013
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- Mike Scott
There's not much meat to the story. So while the picture on the menu suggests filet mignon, we really get mostly fish-and-chips stuff.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Apr 19, 2013
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- Mike Scott
What Leonie is missing, however -- in its script, in its performances, really in everything about it -- is any hint of sparkle, any sort of compelling hook on which to hang its hat.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Apr 19, 2013
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- Mike Scott
Granted, "intelligent" might be too generous a word to describe Oblivion, which flirts with big questions, but never answers them. What's left is a story that doesn't quite go where no man has gone before.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Apr 19, 2013
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- Mike Scott
Dawson, who to this point has largely built her career playing supporting characters, seizes the opportunity to stand center-stage, all but taking over the film.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Apr 12, 2013
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- Mike Scott
It's not a perfect film. There's still room for Cianfrance to grow as a storyteller. But it is entirely rewarding -- and I, for one, can't wait to see where he takes us next.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Apr 12, 2013
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- Mike Scott
Aesthetically, Helgeland's film -- while highly polished -- is straight-forward stuff, hewing so closely to the prescribed genre conventions as to border on unimaginative.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Apr 12, 2013
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- Mike Scott
You'd think that a movie about such a dynamic moment and such a vibrant ad campaign would be more dynamic and vibrant.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Apr 5, 2013
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- Mike Scott
Because while it can boast of some truly extraordinary special effects -- stomach-churning, face-hacking, arm-slicing visual effects, the kind that are sure to titillate the gleefully twisted -- this Evil Dead is far more gruesome than awesome.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Apr 5, 2013
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- Mike Scott
Feels startlingly real and inherently relevant, a shining, sterling example of cinema at its most powerful and urgent.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Mar 29, 2013
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- Mike Scott
If you currently own a G.I. Joe toy or if you've dressed like a ninja at least twice since Halloween, you're going to find a lot to "hooah" about in "G.I. Joe: Retaliation."- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Mar 29, 2013
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- Mike Scott
Niccol and Meyer -- who co-produces this, her first post-"Twilight" film -- choose to trade away any shred of the ripe social subtext that has made other body-snatcher films so rich. In its place: the kind of supernatural, star-crossed romance that generates so much swooning from Team "Twilight."- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Mar 29, 2013
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- Mike Scott
The Croods does a lot of things well -- even if it does none of them extraordinarily. The end result is a solidly middle-of-the-road bit of animation -- but the kind that is easily forgotten as soon as something more evolved, and original, comes along.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Mar 22, 2013
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- Mike Scott
One gets the feeling that Thompson left a lot on the table with The Jeffrey Dahmer Files, that it could have been something more, something bigger, something elaborate. And that may be true. But the film that Thompson did choose to make - one that is both simple but effective -- is fascinating in its own right.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Mar 15, 2013
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- Mike Scott
What we end up with is an arm's-length film that feels more haunted than haunting -- and one that audiences will want to forget rather than remember.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Mar 15, 2013
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- Mike Scott
For 91 minutes of its briskly paced 94-minute running time, the film works as a tightly wound bit of pins-and-needles storytelling. Then, Anderson lets it all unravel in a three-minute stretch of cheap writing that not only betrays the characters he worked so hard to develop, but that also thumbs its nose at any audience members with a brain.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Mar 15, 2013
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- Mike Scott
There's no sense of pacing here, as would be the case in a single feature-length narrative in which a wise filmmaker would vary the intensity level. Instead, what we get is a ceaseless visual and emotional assault. That makes for an exhausting movie-going experience. This is by no means a feel-good film. This is a feel-bad film -- and at times a feel-icky film.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Mar 8, 2013
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- Mike Scott
As it is, it's little more than an artful rehash -- which means that anyone who wants closure to the story, or to see justice truly served, will have to wait a little longer.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Mar 8, 2013
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- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Mar 8, 2013
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- Mike Scott
Is all of that to say that Oz the Great and Powerful comes even close to matching the timeless, iconic stature of 1939's "The Wizard of Oz"? No, of course not. That's not just a once-in-a-lifetime cultural phenomenon, but a once-in-many-liftimes one.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Mar 8, 2013
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- Mike Scott
Ends up being foreign but familiar, artful and honest, as well as beautiful and believable.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Mar 1, 2013
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- Mike Scott
Unfortunately, Franklin isn't quite as successful at capturing the depth of the traditions for which Anaya's source material is so well known.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Feb 22, 2013
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- Mike Scott
This is the sort of movie that Charles Bronson would have made back in the day, and indeed a shot of Johnson standing in a sporting goods store, contemplating a wall of shotguns as he gets ready to get busy, could have come from any "Death Wish."- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Feb 22, 2013
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- Mike Scott
Amour is a far cry from the warm-and-fuzzy version of love that most people are probably looking for on Valentine's Day. This movie is more of a slap than a hug. But reality hurts sometimes - just like love does.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Feb 16, 2013
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- Mike Scott
Beautiful Creatures is still an unabashed imitator, hewing closely to the "Twilight" blueprint. Some might go so far as to call it a blatant ripoff, as the differences between the two are cosmetic at best.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Feb 14, 2013
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- Mike Scott
It's done with affection, so it's hard to begrudge Hill for indulging in a postcard cliché or two. After all, it - like Hill's movie as a whole - certainly beats a bullet to the head.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Feb 8, 2013
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- Mike Scott
The result is exactly what you would expect from a concept whose odometer has been running for so long: uneven laughs, sparked largely by spurts of shock comedy but marred by a general sense of familiarity.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Feb 8, 2013
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- Mike Scott
More seriously -- and substantively -- "A Late Quartet" was a quiet but thoughtful meditation on the power, and the necessary pain, of human connections. By comparison, Quartet is a flimsy bit of cinematic puffery that takes every obvious path on its way to its even more obvious "seize-the-day" message.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Feb 1, 2013
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- Mike Scott
For appreciators of fine acting, it's a film well worth seeing, as well as one worth toasting - if only with ginger ale.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Feb 1, 2013
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- Mike Scott
Stand Up Guys becomes something not only enjoyable but memorable and emotionally layered at the same time.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Feb 1, 2013
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- Mike Scott
It's an uneven but fairly enjoyable ride, one that benefits from Statham's cool, capable presence.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jan 25, 2013
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- Mike Scott
Rust and Bone is somber and gritty if nothing else, a movie that takes itself very, very seriously, even as it struggles at times to find its focus.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jan 18, 2013
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- Mike Scott
Thank goodness for Rainey. Even when the story feels false, he never does, operating with an open-faced sense of easy honesty that is missing from much of the rest of the film.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jan 18, 2013
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- Mike Scott
It's a good, old-fashioned sit-around-the-campfire ghost story, one that delivers on its sole reason for existence: to raise the hairs on the back of your arms.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jan 18, 2013
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- Mike Scott
Not only did Hughes shoot a handful of prominent scene-setting exteriors in the Big Apple itself, but he does an exceptional job of camouflaging his New Orleans scenes.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jan 18, 2013
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- Mike Scott
No, Funeral Kings isn't quite dead on arrival -- but it's not too far from needing life support.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jan 11, 2013
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- Mike Scott
There's no "place" in this place, no clear destination -- and no real payoff in a film that stands a cinematic curiosity but little more.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jan 11, 2013
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- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jan 11, 2013
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- Mike Scott
The U.S. government did torture prisoners of war in the name of its so-called war on terror and, by extension, in the name of all Americans. What Bigelow and Boal seem to be arguing is that such actions take a deep cosmic toll on the people responsible -- whether directly, in the case of Chastain's character, or indirectly, in the case of you and me.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jan 11, 2013
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- Mike Scott
This is an affecting and emotional drama about the strength of the human spirit.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jan 4, 2013
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- Mike Scott
The ultimate goal of a film like this, of course, is to change minds. As compelling a case as it builds, Promised Land isn't quite persuasive enough to be able to promise to do that.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jan 4, 2013
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- Mike Scott
It's that zippy dialog more than anything that moves "Django" along and that coaxes such fantastic performances from its actors.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Dec 26, 2012
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- Mike Scott
What we're left with is a love-it-or-hate-it film. Those determined to resist its deep-seated romanticism - or its operatic approach - will probably emerge from the theater as miserable as the film's characters. But those who are willing to give into it, and who want to take a grand cinematic voyage, stand to be greatly rewarded.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Dec 25, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Yes, Apatow's film has its peaks and valleys -- just the way life does -- but it stands alone nicely on its own, a satisfying comedic riff on life and all of its absurdities.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Dec 20, 2012
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- Mike Scott
The fight sequences are briskly choreographed at least, gruesome though they are -- and, to be honest, that goes a long way in a film such as this. In fact they may be the only reason to see it, other than the chance to see Van Damme in full Col. Kurtz mode, all face-painted and droopy-eyed and bat-poop crazy.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Dec 14, 2012
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- Mike Scott
The sort of movie you should go see with someone you love. You should also hold their hand during the movie. And be thankful that that hand is there.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Dec 14, 2012
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- Mike Scott
An Unexpected Journey also proves that it is, indeed, possible to get too much of a good thing.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Dec 13, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Hitchcock purists will certainly take issue with some details, but Gervasi's film shouldn't be taken as an ironclad factual film docudrama. Rather, it is fact-inspired fiction -- a film based on real events but one that isn't shy about taking creative liberties. As long as viewers keep that in mind, Gervasi's stands to be a nice bit of murderous fun.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Dec 7, 2012
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- Mike Scott
One only wishes that Ewing and Grady had chosen to dig deeper as they explored it.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Nov 30, 2012
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- Mike Scott
The House I Live In is not a comfortable film to consider in any respect, but without discomfort it's hard to feel anger - and without anger, it's hard to imagine that anything will ever be done about it.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Nov 30, 2012
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- Mike Scott
That storytelling, however, is uneven, ranging from something approaching tedium to moments that are downright wonderful (such as the sweetest of scenes, involving two young lovers -- played by and Alicia Vikander and Domhnall Gleeson -- and a stack of children's blocks).- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Nov 30, 2012
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- Mike Scott
His (Andrew Dominik) film delivers when it matters, especially with its crystallizing final lines. Not only do they wrap a bow on what ends up being a treatise on the uglier side of capitalism, but they stand among the most memorable closing lines in recent Hollywood history.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Nov 30, 2012
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- Mike Scott
It's a grand, colorful adventure, an escapist romp draped in tinsel. And, who knows -- if you're all good little boys and girls this year, perhaps it will also be the first installment in a new DreamWorks holiday tradition.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Nov 21, 2012
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- Mike Scott
The result is a movie built upon big ideas -- and timely ones, too, delivering a message of understanding in this frustrating age of great intolerance -- but also a great story and, thanks to Lee, a wonderfully satisfying cinematic journey.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Nov 21, 2012
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- Mike Scott
The result is an intelligent and well-crafted film that works to inspire audiences by finding the humor amid the prevailing bittersweetness of life, and that celebrates the strength of the human spirit with a dose of unbridled and entirely embraceable optimism.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Nov 21, 2012
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- Mike Scott
But artistically interesting only takes a film so far. What it needs are laughs- - or at least a compelling narrative. It's got neither -- with the result being a film that arrives as dead as a certain parrot from a certain skit. One of the funny ones.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Nov 16, 2012
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- Mike Scott
The result is a human drama that quietly argues that the gift of life isn't one to be taken lightly.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Nov 16, 2012
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- Mike Scott
What plays out is something like CSPAN 1865. That is, it's dense, talky stuff at times -- particularly at its start, as the film takes a good 15 minutes to gain traction -- but also highly rewarding and instructive.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Nov 16, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Part 2 really is a continuation of "Part 1," both from a story standpoint and from an artistic standpoint.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Nov 15, 2012
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- Mike Scott
An enjoyable diversion, a lightweight bit of philosophizing that blends humor with the bittersweet. It won't likely stick in your memory for too terribly long.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Nov 9, 2012
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- Mike Scott
The sky is far from falling on the Bond franchise. In fact, it is as good as it has ever been. What's more, Craig is reportedly on board for at least two more outings, so Q had better get to work on those bifocals because 007 is no where near ready for retirement.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Nov 9, 2012
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- Mike Scott
In fact, "restraint" is the word that best characterizes DuVernay's film. This isn't a movie filled with overt action or outbursts of melodrama.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Nov 2, 2012
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- Mike Scott
This is the kind of film that feels like a dream - but not in the good way. Rather, it resembles a dream in that it is made up of disjointed, loosely connected bits of surrealist craziness - ideas that might have seemed interesting in the twilight hours but that don't come close to standing up to the light of day.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Nov 2, 2012
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- Mike Scott
John C. Reilly provides the voice of Ralph, and he's every bit as good as you'd expect in the role. It's Sarah Silverman, however, as his unlikely sidekick, and rescue subject, whose considerable charm threatens to steal the show.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Nov 2, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Lillard's film ends up being more unsatisfying than anything else. His "Fat Kid" might rule the world, but it doesn't quite rule the screen.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Oct 19, 2012
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- Mike Scott
All music docs are not created equal. Yes, some are formulaic. But some are beautiful, some are singular, some are marvels of storytelling. And some, like Searching for Sugar Man, are all three.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Oct 19, 2012
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- Mike Scott
The resulting film, despite its occasional outbursts of action and tension, is less an action film than a psychological thriller, although even there it fumbles the ball.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Oct 19, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Few people will be surprised by how it all unfolds or by how it all ends. This is a movie about lightweight entertainment and heavyweight fighters, not a movie about surprises.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Oct 12, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Pros and cons aside, Sinister has the benefit of arriving in the thick of Halloween season, right when movie-goers are most hungry for a few scares. And they'll get them from Derrickson's film, too.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Oct 12, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Some of those detours are fun ideas - like Marty's O. Henry-esque tale of the Amish psychopath. Mostly, though, they feel out of place, like so much filler that distracts from the half-developed main story. Call me crazy, but I need more from my movie.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Oct 12, 2012
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- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Oct 12, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Filmmaking is a product of the heart and the head, at least when it's at its best.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Oct 5, 2012
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- Mike Scott
The resulting slowdown, as well as a significant narrative shift, gives Looper a slightly sprawling and ungrounded feel at times, almost as if the first and second halves are two separate movies.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Sep 28, 2012
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- Mike Scott
The result is an artist profile that doesn't feel like the standard, stuffy artist profile. Instead, Beauty is Embarrassing is an entertaining whimsy that, like White, never takes itself too seriously, doesn't overstay its welcome and never, ever underestimates the value of a chuckle.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Sep 28, 2012
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- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Sep 28, 2012
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- Mike Scott
The music, of course, is the engine that makes the whole exercise go, tapping into a genre-spanning collection of tunes, but every bit as important to the film's success is its unexpected humor, which flirts with raunchy but stops juuuust short of crossing any lines that would have earned it an R rating.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Sep 28, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Ends up being the kind of movie we don't see a whole lot anymore: an emotionally grounded and quietly meaningful crowd-pleaser that functions as a lovely antidote to the recently ended summer blockbuster season.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Sep 21, 2012
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- Mike Scott
What Anderson's talky and willfully opaque film doesn't have, however, is an unfailingly compelling story to tell.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Sep 21, 2012
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- Mike Scott
In other words, For a Good Time is not a good time. For that, you'll have to dust off your Nintendo and reacquaint yourself with "The Legend of Zelda" -- and hope that one of these days somebody can give "Bridesmaids" some real competition.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Sep 14, 2012
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- Mike Scott
There's a good reason why the true-crime film The Imposter is a documentary: If someone tried to pass off this bizarre Texas tale as fiction, nobody would believe it.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Sep 7, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Sleepwalk With Me is a decent film -- even if its not one that lingers.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Sep 7, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Alas, in Cronenberg's hands, it just comes across as cold and lifeless and exhausting.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Sep 7, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Celeste and Jesse Forever isn't a movie many people will outright hate, but if this is the most original romantic comedy that Hollywood can muster, forever can't come soon enough.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 31, 2012
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- Mike Scott
At some point, Lee as a storyteller must step in to move things along, to dig the rudder deep into the narrative waters and steer this ship. The destination is almost irrelevant - just steer it somewhere.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 31, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Suffers through the occasional lull, but those would be much easier to forgive if they didn't also generate frequent false moments that threaten to take viewers out of the movie.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 29, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Open-ended and decidedly un-Hollywood, it is faintly dissatisfying, especially coming on the heels of such as engaging and crisply presented story. But it offers movie-goers a wonderful opportunity to roll it all around in their heads and discuss it, even debate it, as they drive back to that cozy little cult compound they call home.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 24, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Is Premium Rush a two-wheeled "French Connection"? No, not by a long shot. (Although it does include a racing-beneath-the-el-train homage.) But when it comes to lightweight, synapse-free action fare, Premium Rush delivers.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 24, 2012
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- Mike Scott
An unflinchingly ugly -- but downright mesmerizing -- tale that plumbs the depths of human immorality and, along the way, offers a dash of subtle commentary on just how far we, as a 312 million-member nuclear family, might have lost our way.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 24, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Hit and Run achieves its chief goal: to put the pedal to the metal for some good, goofy fun, squealing the tires as often as possible along the way.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 22, 2012
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- Mike Scott
In ParaNorman, Butler, Fell and company have crafted a refreshingly enjoyable bit of family entertainment. In the process, they've also made the best animated film to hit theaters so far this year.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 17, 2012
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- Mike Scott
This is a movie that confuses teary with sweet. Mopey with sad. Discomfort with humor. And, worst of all, it confuses weird with odd.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 15, 2012
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- Mike Scott
A solidly entertaining and largely engaging film that, even with its faults, functions as a singular -- albeit melancholy -- tribute to a tragic American icon.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 10, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Has potential to be fun and meaningful, but it's not exactly a novel idea. In fact, it feels like a literary-minded "Lars and the Real Girl," the 2007 dramatic comedy that starred Ryan Gosling as a man who falls in love with a sex doll, and which coasted along on its charm and smarts.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 10, 2012
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- Mike Scott
No, it's not a perfect movie, given how dangerously close it comes to running out of quality third-act punchlines before you're liable to have run out of Sno-caps and Raisinettes. Also, some of the biggest names in the supporting cast -- John Lithgow and Dan Aykroyd, specifically -- are all but wasted.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 10, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Gilroy -- who earned writing credits on all four "Bourne" films -- doesn't miss when it comes to the most important task at hand: He takes a well-worn concept and makes it feel new, and without sacrificing its sense of familiarity.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 10, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Billed as a dramatic comedy, and it lives up to that billing, even if it tends more toward chuckles than guffaws. In other words, one thing it's not is "It's Complicated," Streep's previous -- and often riotous -- relationship dramedy.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 8, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Director David Bowers' story is straightforwardly -- almost unimaginatively -- approached. But, armed with a talented cast and Kinney's chuckle-generating source material, it functions nicely as a sort of big-screen "Wonder Years" for Millennials.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 3, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Seizing the role, and the screen, Gelber actually makes us care what happens to his surly, thoroughly unlikable character.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 3, 2012
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- Mike Scott
There's a lot of eye candy in what ends up being a slick, breathless and at-times enjoyable sci-fi update. Unfortunately, it's what Wiseman forgets to do that makes the biggest difference in his film -- and which keeps it from becoming much more than a glossy missed opportunity.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 2, 2012
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- Mike Scott
What the Duplasses end up with is a film that is amusing at times, a touch repetitive at others, but one that never quite shakes the feeling that it is something of an unfinished thought. And perhaps something they've also grown beyond.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jul 28, 2012
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- Mike Scott
That's not to say the sobering Take This Waltz is nearly as emotionally agonizing as "Blue Valentine." Still, it's every bit as truthful in its examination of the evolution, and subsequent devolution, of love.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jul 20, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Doesn't rise as much as it flounders and frustrates, in what would appear to be a case of a filmmaker prioritizing ego over efficiency, and engaging in generally muddled storytelling.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jul 18, 2012
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- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jul 13, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Beasts of the Southern Wild is not only a wonderful story -- a portrait of intestinal fortitude in the face of enormous change -- but it's our story, forged in our own shared recent history and dripping with flood, sweat and tears.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jul 6, 2012
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- Mike Scott
While you're watching it, it is cozy and enjoyable, the same way a sleeping cat in your lap is cozy and enjoyable.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jul 6, 2012
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- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jul 6, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Stone is generally given to deep thinking -- eternal fates are on the line. Not only does that lend the riveting and intense Savages a certain gravity, but it's also what separates his film from, say, your favorite Guy Ritchie movie. Here, we find an appealing depth amid the appalling violence.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jul 6, 2012
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- Mike Scott
The problem is that the film must re-establish a great deal of mythology, much of which is already familiar to most moviegoers. Unfortunately, Webb's film never quite makes usshake the feeling that we've done all this before.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jul 2, 2012
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- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jun 29, 2012
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- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jun 29, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Still, as Death of a Superhero plays out, it's hard not to shake the feeling that this is ground we've trodden before.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jun 22, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Like the character at its center, Wein's film suffers from a certain sense of inertia, which is where Gerwig comes in.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jun 22, 2012
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- Mike Scott
A thoroughly endearing journey, and one of the most enjoyable and touching movies to land in theaters so far this year.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jun 22, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Even if something feels crazy -- whether it's falling in with a self-taught time-traveler, or buying into a charming but faintly flawed movie premise -- if you listen to your gut, wonderful things can happen.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jun 22, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Perhaps the best thing about Seeking a Friend is that it never ceases to surprise, as Scafaria's script consistently defies Hollywood convention in the most congenial ways.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jun 22, 2012
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- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jun 22, 2012
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- Mike Scott
The joy of Hysteria, like the joy of certain other things, isn't necessarily rooted in the element of surprise. Rather, it's in the pleasure of the path taken to get to that crescendo.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jun 15, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Nobody has an excuse for being surprised by how low Sandler and company stoop in That's My Boy.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jun 15, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Unfortunately, like the Poison song says -- and, in many ways, like the decade itself -- it ain't nothin' but a good time.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jun 15, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Some summer movies are big, woofing mastiffs. (Think "Battleship.") Others are naughty, nipping lapdogs. ("The Dictator.") Here, what we get is a calm, quiet basset hound. And, for the most part, it's a good dog.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jun 1, 2012
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- Mike Scott
What we're left with is a thoroughly mediocre, shrug-generating disappointment -- and one that certainly doesn't feel like it should have cost more than a third of a billion dollars to make and market.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted May 25, 2012
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- Mike Scott
With beautiful, artful images serving to break up the monotony of the film's wealth of talking heads, Surviving Progress is at times as visually striking as it is persuasive.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted May 25, 2012
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- Mike Scott
When a film's clichés are so obvious that its cast points them out for you, you've got to wonder how hard it's really trying.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted May 25, 2012
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- Mike Scott
The good news: This is Goldthwait the writer-director, not Goldthwait the actor -- so there's no schticky voice to endure. But his exceedingly black comedy does speak loudly -- and it turns out he's actually got something worthwhile to say.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted May 18, 2012
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- Mike Scott
An uplifting and colorful crowd-pleaser, it's built on a wealth of cinematic contrivances -- all designed to make sure things, indeed, turn out all right in the end -- but the result is just too good-natured to begrudge.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted May 18, 2012
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- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted May 18, 2012
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- Mike Scott
They're fascinating characters, to be sure, with back stories ripe for development. But Whedon doesn't commit here, and the results are shrug-worthy.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted May 4, 2012
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- Mike Scott
What you won't find amid the clashing cutlasses and flashing foils, however, is anything resembling a rapier wit.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Apr 27, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Perhaps the best thing about The Five-Year Engagement is that it signals a touch of maturity creeping into the House of Apatow.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Apr 27, 2012
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- Mike Scott
It's not only shameless, it detracts from what this movie could have been, and still is when the self-promoting Harvey shuts up.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Apr 20, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Chimpanzee is so skillfully crafted, and the big-hearted outcome so endearing and entertaining, that any narrative liberties taken to aid in the telling of this prehensile tale are not only forgivable but welcome.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Apr 20, 2012
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- Mike Scott
As with its gooey, smoochy predecessors, The Lucky One is, beneath it all, a fairy-tale romance, just one with modern trappings.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Apr 20, 2012
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- Mike Scott
It's called Chico & Rita, but their film could just as easily have been titled "Chico & Cuba." In both cases, it's a film are about a long-lost love, and in both cases it is steeped in such a pitch-perfect sense of place -- and affection -- that you can almost smell the cigar smoke as it unfolds.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Apr 14, 2012
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- Mike Scott
This is a movie to be experienced on a more visceral level. As long as you don't expect anything more, you won't be disappointed.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Apr 14, 2012
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- Mike Scott
This is nothing if not an important film. It is important for the bullied to see, if for no other reason than to realize they aren't alone, and it is important for the bullies to see as well as for the parents of both groups so everyone can understand just how devastating the problem is.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Apr 14, 2012
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- Mike Scott
The surrealist and decidedly bizarre humor of Tim Heidecker and Eric Wareheim is, to put it mildly, an acquired taste -- and there's no guarantee you'll ever actually acquire it.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Apr 6, 2012
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- Mike Scott
In the half-baked American Reunion, though, they might have accomplished what no previous chapter has: They might have just killed it.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Apr 6, 2012
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- Mike Scott
As well-shot and well-acted as it is, one can't help feeling there's a good movie in there somewhere. Unfortunately, it's buried beneath such an avalanche of extraneousness and artistic posing.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Mar 30, 2012
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- Mike Scott
At worst, though, the film's faintly sleazy bait-and-switch tactic robs the film of its biggest asset -- its sense of fun.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Mar 30, 2012
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- Mike Scott
There's a germ of a good story there, and Intruders isn't without the occasional tense moment. But unfortunately Hollowface is as undeveloped as the other characters in Intruders, which is the film's biggest flaw of all.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Mar 30, 2012
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- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Mar 30, 2012
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- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Mar 23, 2012
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- Mike Scott
With a scattered, meandering script, a stable of throwaway characters and an almost laughably drawn-out ending, it's all amounts to standard movie-of-the-week fare dressed up in Sunday-go-to-meeting clothes.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Mar 23, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Katniss is gritty, she's flinty, she's intimidating -- and she doesn't have to compromise one iota of her femininity for it. And Ross' movie tells her story wonderfully.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Mar 23, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Oddly, though, Everyday Sunshine ends up being a mostly optimistic tale. That's because, despite it all, Fishbone is still gigging.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Mar 21, 2012
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- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Mar 16, 2012
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- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Mar 16, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Without a doubt, stupid, but it's willfully stupid, built in the comic style of "The Hangover" and "Due Date." Better yet, it also is genuinely funny, which is the point.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Mar 16, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Writer-director Markus Schleinzer's exceedingly dark drama -- guaranteed to make audiences squirm in their seats -- is emotionally unsettling.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Mar 9, 2012
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- Mike Scott
While Pariah starts out as a film with moments of predictability, it evolves into a smart, compelling -- and optimistic -- portrait of heartbreak and hope.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Mar 9, 2012
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- Mike Scott
There are plenty of entertaining moments to latch onto beneath the sci-fi tropes -- and maybe even a few that will inspire a new generation of storytellers.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Mar 9, 2012
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- Mike Scott
While Pina will undoubtedly be well-received by modern-dance devotees, it does little to take advantage of the enormous opportunity to open the door for newcomers.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Mar 2, 2012
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- Mike Scott
It's the little moments in Farhadi's film that are its most important, speaking every bit as loudly as its big, narrative-driving moments.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Mar 2, 2012
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- Mike Scott
That's some admirably mature stuff for a kid's flick in this day of rampant pandering, but it also helps rob the film of a certain breathless, edge-of-your-seat appeal. In other words, there are lulls here.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Feb 17, 2012
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- Mike Scott
This is not a feel-good movie. This is the frigid, hard-to-embrace cinematic opposite of a feel-good movie, in fact -- all wrapped in one long, dark metaphor for depression.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Feb 17, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Along the way, a raft of experts are featured -- including Times-Picayune outdoor editor Bob Marshall -- speaking bluntly about the cozy relationship between politicians and the oil industry.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Feb 14, 2012
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- Mike Scott
It's sadly and tenderly honest -- and so are Hansard and Irglova, as they generously and matter-of-factly open up to the camera.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Feb 13, 2012
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- Mike Scott
That's not to say it's a bad film, necessarily. It's just not as good as it could have -- and should have -- been.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Feb 10, 2012
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- Mike Scott
A gritty spy thriller directed by relative newcomer Daniel Espinosa, and a film that -- despite the occasional misstep -- ends up being a taut, suspense-filled ride.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Feb 10, 2012
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- Mike Scott
It's easy to be interested in the characters' lives -- as tragic as they are -- but it's not nearly as easy to become emotionally invested in them.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Feb 3, 2012
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- Mike Scott
What Kwapis does do, however, is nicely handle the film's whale of an emotional payoff.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Feb 3, 2012
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- Mike Scott
I guess I can't call the movie sexist as it was largely produced, directed and written by women. So I'll settle for calling it dull, corny and amateurish instead.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jan 28, 2012
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- Mike Scott
A Dangerous Method still feels as if it's based on a rather pedestrian narrative --and so, in the final analysis, Cronenberg's film bores.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jan 27, 2012
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- Mike Scott
As ridiculous as it is, Man on a Ledge isn't a movie that requires suspension of disbelief. It requires the absolute absence of it.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jan 27, 2012
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- Mike Scott
There isn't a whole lot of nuance in writer-director Rachid Bouchareb's unapologetically political movie. As such, it doesn't take much brainpower for a viewer to stay a step or two ahead of his plot the entire way.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jan 20, 2012
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- Mike Scott
All along, though, I was struck by an even stronger feeling, that I was sitting in on somebody else's therapy session. That's not a comfortable feeling -- and that makes Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close considerably less rewarding than it should be.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jan 20, 2012
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- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jan 20, 2012
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- Mike Scott
Among them, Polanski's four-person cast boasts four Oscars and eight more nominations, so these are big-league actors who are capable of carrying a film such as this through its occasional miscalculations.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jan 14, 2012
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- Mike Scott
What we're left with is a movie that is about as nourishing as the Junior Mints and nachos available at the theater snack bar. But, then, many a Friday night dinner has been made of far less.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jan 13, 2012
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- Mike Scott
All of the pieces fall into place by the third act -- or most of them, anyway. But Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy is such a cold, unemotional film that getting there is a chore, muting the payoff.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jan 7, 2012
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- Mike Scott
What most saw as entirely charming behavior others saw as a nuisance. After all, a playful whale has a way of unwittingly damaging rudders and outriggers and outboard motors and such. Worse, wildlife officials saw Luna's behavior as potentially dangerous, for the people he encountered -- and for the whale himself.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jan 5, 2012
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- Mike Scott
With Knuckle, Palmer offers a thorough -- and extraordinarily compelling -- portrait of the Travellers.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jan 5, 2012
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- Mike Scott
An entirely fitting Christmas Day release -- filled as it is with magic and talk of miracles -- and easily one of the best films of 2011.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Dec 23, 2011
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- Mike Scott
Being a fan of the character is not a prerequisite for enjoying the film.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Dec 20, 2011
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- Mike Scott
If there's a complaint, it's that it flirts with rambling once the main case is solved -- nearly 20 minutes before the movie ends. But Fincher uses that remaining time to expand on Lisbeth's character, which is hard to hold against him.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Dec 20, 2011
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- Mike Scott
In reality, in this age of cookie-cutter entertainment, the movie's success probably is because of Cody's unconventional script. This isn't a silly, disposable, rom-com -- and thank goodness for that.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Dec 16, 2011
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- Mike Scott
Ritchie is simply trying to buy a good movie here -- and forgetting that a little brainpower is also required to complete the job.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Dec 16, 2011
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- Mike Scott
There's plenty of melodrama, plenty of whispered intensity, plenty of dramatic pauses in his story. There also are a few bizarro -- and, in some cases, unnecessary -- detours. But when it's all said and done, there's no real call for any emotional investment on the part of his audience.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Dec 9, 2011
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- Mike Scott
His a wonderful, touching story, one that made me want to scoop up every kid I know who has a scrap of creative talent, and have them watch the film. Because Elmo's story is sweet -- but Clash's is nothing short of inspiring.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Dec 1, 2011
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- Mike Scott
Built as it is around horrifying moments of intimate violence, the stark British drama Tyrannosaur can be a hard movie to watch. At the same time, though, it's hard to stop watching once it gets going.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Dec 1, 2011
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- Mike Scott
This is a world where training wheels are called "stabilizers" and where children leave something called "mince pies" for Santa. (Um. Ew?) As a result, the occasional line will fly over your little ones' heads. But you can also expect for them to be charmed by it all.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Nov 23, 2011
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- Mike Scott
This kind of cinematic delight is a rarity, a warm and masterfully crafted reminder of why we love to go to the movies in the first place.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Nov 23, 2011
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- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Nov 23, 2011
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- Mike Scott
Sprinkled throughout, there is also a handful of wonderfully amusing song-and-dance numbers, written by Bret McKenzie.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Nov 23, 2011
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- Mike Scott
Bill Condon returns fans' love and gives them exactly what they have shown they want. That is: uneven storytelling, maudlin dialog and decidedly one-note performances, even from the big names in the cast.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Nov 18, 2011
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- Mike Scott
Normally a reliable screenwriter, Sayles probably gives his audience too much credit with regard to its knowledge of what is one of the lesser-known chapters in America's military history. As a result, even with its modern parallels, Amigo makes for dense, slow-going viewing.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Nov 11, 2011
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- Mike Scott
The quietly moving drama Martha Marcy May Marlene must be thought of as an "arrival" film. That is, for all that it has going for it (and, it must be said, against it), if it is remembered for anything it will be for introducing a 22-year-old newcomer named Elizabeth Olsen.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Nov 11, 2011
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- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Nov 11, 2011
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- Mike Scott
So while J. Edgar ends up feeling like a mostly complete portrait of the man, and as fascinating a story as it is, it still falls just short of being something entirely memorable.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Nov 11, 2011
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- Mike Scott
All in all, Nichols ends up with a richly drawn, and at times disturbing, portrait of one man's descent into madness.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Nov 6, 2011
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- Mike Scott
It keeps things light and entertaining. And for $8 admission, that's never a bad investment.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Nov 4, 2011
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- Mike Scott
Intermittently interesting, but well-intentioned, it almost makes up for "The Tourist."- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Oct 28, 2011
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- Mike Scott
Anonymous starts admirably quickly, but Emmerich repeatedly forgets to look over his shoulder to see if his audience is keeping track of which stringy-haired Calvin Klein model is which.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Oct 28, 2011
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- Mike Scott
Ends up being a reasonably gripping story of political intrigue, international corruption and one woman's determined fight for justice.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Oct 21, 2011
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- Mike Scott
It also is a film that does the impossible: It lubes its audiences' mental gears and sets them to spinning without insulting anyone and without issuing threats of eternal damnation. Subtlety, thy name is Vera. Can I get an "amen"?- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Oct 14, 2011
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- Mike Scott
Yes, it is derivative, but in a year in which films from the 1980s are getting needless remakes seemingly every other week, this one stands out as a rare one that works. That's a good "Thing."- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Oct 14, 2011
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- Mike Scott
Plotwise, though, Brewer's Footloose is anything but loose. In fact, it's rigidly loyal to the original, to the point of slavishness.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Oct 14, 2011
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- Mike Scott
As clearly calculated and self-consciously cutesy as it is, it's also tender and meaningful stuff -- and far more watchable than other recent attempts to capture the existential angst of adolescence. ("The Art of Getting By.")- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Oct 7, 2011
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- Mike Scott
When making a film for 10-year-old boys, it doesn't have to be good, necessarily -- just good enough. And that's exactly what Real Steel is: good enough.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Oct 7, 2011
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- Mike Scott
Both taut and satisfyingly relevant, it presents a portrait of a compromised elections system -- one that should give the left wing, the right wing and the fringe-dwelling nutjobs something they can all agree on. Namely: We're in deep doo-doo.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Oct 7, 2011
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- Mike Scott
It's fun, and it's funny, and -- the best part -- it comes carrying a "yeehaw"-inducing sense of a treasure found.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Sep 30, 2011
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- Mike Scott
Along the way, Shut Up, Little Man boasts nice technical elements. And it is, admittedly, amusing to a degree. Peter and Raymond certainly know how to turn a phrase. But things begin to wear thin about halfway through.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Sep 23, 2011
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- Mike Scott
It's not a perfect film, mind you. It's too long by a quarter, and actor-turned-director Charles Martin Smith ("The Untouchables") lets any sense of real structure slip away in the film's crowded third act.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Sep 23, 2011
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- Mike Scott
Pitt and Hill are fantastic individually, and hilarious when together -- and on a surprisingly engaging script by Aaron Sorkin ("Social Network") and Steve Zaillian ("Schindler's List").- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Sep 23, 2011
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- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Sep 16, 2011
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- Mike Scott
As it turns out, though, the most troubling part of the film for me wasn't the rape scene, or the siege scene or the Southern stereotypes. Rather, it was the audience's reaction to Marsden's chilling spasms of bloody violence as he defends his home. Rather than breaking out in hives, many in the audience broke out in laughter.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Sep 16, 2011
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- Mike Scott
With its emphasis on relationships and character, Drive can best be described as a thinking man's action film -- or at least, it could if it didn't ultimately feel so oddly slight. As it is, for all of its positives, it functions mostly as a guilty pleasure rather than as a movie that resonates the way, say, "Blue Valentine" does.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Sep 16, 2011
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- Mike Scott
An Ireland-set charmer oozing with a satisfying intelligence and driven by the considerable charisma of Brendan Gleeson ("Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows").- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Sep 2, 2011
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- Mike Scott
There are some nice surprises in store, as well, but the longer Madden's story goes on, the more manufactured things tend to feel.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 31, 2011
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- Mike Scott
Leisurely paced and plot-challenged, it's too unique and kindhearted to be outright disliked, but it's not the kind of film you can get too close to, either.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 26, 2011
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- Mike Scott
A message movie that struggles mightily to make an impact but never comes close to capturing the gritty realism on which any blues singer builds his career.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 26, 2011
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- Mike Scott
One major reason it succeeds is because of 11-year-old actress Bailee Madison, who brings a wonderful believability to her role as the girl at the center of the film.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 26, 2011
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- Mike Scott
A movie with undeniable melancholy underpinnings, but Bertuccelli wisely avoids overdoing the drama to nurse cheap tears from her audience.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 19, 2011
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- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 19, 2011
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- Mike Scott
Rather than a moving story of sisterly love, we get little more than a grandly appointed disappointment.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 19, 2011
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- Mike Scott
A movie that wants to be a crowd-pleasing romantic comedy at times and a weighty drama at others. It ends up being an imperfect blend of both.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 19, 2011
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- Mike Scott
While this nouveau Fright Night does a reasonable job of maintaining the fun spirit of the original film, between the blood splatters and vamp stakings, it never builds on what the original had to offer -- and thus never quite makes a convincing case for its own existence.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 19, 2011
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- Mike Scott
It continuously feels less like straight-up reportage and more like a fan film, one built on equal parts idol worship and wishful thinking.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 12, 2011
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- Mike Scott
It's easy to forget that you're watching a sci-fi film at all. That's because it's just a shade or two from not even being a sci-fi film.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 12, 2011
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- Mike Scott
The actors never stray too far from their comfort zones, resulting in a sporadically funny but mostly bland crime comedy that only occasionally feels fresher or more memorable than that cold pizza you scarfed for breakfast Monday morning.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 12, 2011
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- Mike Scott
The Help isn't intended to be so much a movie about the ugliness of the era than an optimistic tale of what can spring from that kind of ugliness, about the ability of people to love one another even when they're surrounded by hatred. And on that level, The Help succeeds wonderfully, a warm and sweet song of hope.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 9, 2011
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- Mike Scott
It's his film's metamorphosis into something else -- something every bit as dark, and every bit as intriguing -- that will keep viewers planted in their seats, and, at times, perched on the edges of them.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 5, 2011
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- Mike Scott
You want a change-up? Here's a change-up: How about if Hollywood stops spoon-feeding us this uninspired pablum and comes up with a fresh idea or two?- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Aug 5, 2011
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- Mike Scott
Clever story? Pass. Originality? Nah. A smidgen of real humor to keep parents entertained along with the kiddies? Smurf you.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jul 29, 2011
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- Mike Scott
The engine that really makes Crazy Stupid Love go is the same one that has made Ficarra and Requa's films to this point so appealing: While they thrust their characters into outrageous situations, they always keep things grounded in real, relatable emotion.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jul 29, 2011
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- Mike Scott
A film that is neither great nor horrible. Favreau does enough things right in Cowboys & Aliens to churn out a mostly enjoyable bit of mindless summertime action, just not enough to come close to rivaling his 2008 crowd-pleaser "Iron Man."- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jul 29, 2011
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- Mike Scott
The result isn't just the best new romantic comedy released so far this year, but one of the best comedies, period.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jul 22, 2011
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- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jul 15, 2011
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- Mike Scott
A story of hope amid the ruins -- one that everybody can appreciate, no matter their politics.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jul 15, 2011
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- Mike Scott
Best of all, Disney seems to understand the limits of a preschooler's attention span.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jul 15, 2011
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- Mike Scott
A dazzling, stirring capper to a once-in-a-generation movie franchise.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jul 14, 2011
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- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jul 8, 2011
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- Mike Scott
Seeing Brannaman work in the warm, sun-dappled documentary Buck makes it clear why he was such a perfect fit for Redford's film: Few people can handle horses the way Brannaman does.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jul 8, 2011
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- Mike Scott
Gets considerable gas from the fact that Bateman, Sudeikis and Day so convincingly play three idiotic pals. The real fun, though, is in the fantastic supporting cast.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jul 8, 2011
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- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jul 1, 2011
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- Mike Scott
The Beaver also has a tendency to slip around as it finds its footing. But then the powerful third act comes and Foster, with Gibson's help, hits it home.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jun 24, 2011
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- Mike Scott
For the first time in its 25-year existence, Pixar has created an utterly ordinary film.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jun 24, 2011
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- Mike Scott
The fact that there are so many good comic bits here allowed Kasdan to assemble a great comic cast.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jun 24, 2011
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- Mike Scott
These women deserve to have their voices heard, and this film finally lets them have their say.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jun 17, 2011
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- Mike Scott
Right off the bat, things start falling apart for Wiesen's film. While Highmore is more than capable of playing smart and tender, he has yet to figure out how to believably portray so much as a shred of the danger or rebelliousness required for this role.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jun 17, 2011
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- Mike Scott
This film is undoubtedly a piece of art, as much so as a Picasso painting, one that invites viewers to immerse themselves, scratch their heads and consider it.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jun 17, 2011
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- Mike Scott
So what we have is a movie that will make at least two important groups happy. New Orleans boosters can cheer Green Lantern for its local roots and for the possibility that the inevitable future installments could return to town. And the purists can cheer, knowing that Campbell and crew have done Green Lantern justice.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jun 17, 2011
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- Mike Scott
McGlynn's film clocks in at just a shade under two hours, which normally would be a little long for a documentary. In this case, the length not only is warranted but welcomed.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jun 10, 2011
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- Mike Scott
A lovely jaunt that ends up becoming one of Allen's most enjoyable films, start-to-finish, in years.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jun 10, 2011
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- Mike Scott
A movie that offers exactly the kind of bittersweet drama you'd expect from something called White Irish Drinkers.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted Jun 3, 2011
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- Mike Scott
The world is a whole lot more complex than Shadyac seems to realize. If all we need is love, wouldn't we all still be wearing tie-dyed shirts and headbands?- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted May 27, 2011
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- Mike Scott
Their story, as told by Pooley, also is a touching and quietly meaningful one, built around themes of tolerance, self-acceptance and unconditional love.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted May 27, 2011
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- Mike Scott
Spurlock banks on his charm and likability -- and it's that charm and likability that make The Greatest Movie Ever Sold so much fun to watch.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted May 20, 2011
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- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted May 20, 2011
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- Mike Scott
What it lacks in style, however, it more than makes up for in substance, as Shearer -- as smart as he is funny -- has assembled a vital and admirably accessible post-mortem on Hurricane Katrina.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted May 17, 2011
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- Mike Scott
A cast of American actors -- including Matthew Modine, Whoopi Goldberg and Wallace Shawn -- were hired to provide recognizable voices for the English version of the film. They fulfill that requirement, too: Their voices are, indeed, recognizable -- though little more.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted May 13, 2011
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- Mike Scott
The movie is quietly affecting, as Rush offers a moving and rewarding yarn about the need to move on in the face of personal tragedy, and about the strength of human connections.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted May 13, 2011
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- Mike Scott
It's a fun one to talk about -- if only for the opportunity to shake your head in amused disbelief at what you just saw.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted May 13, 2011
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- Mike Scott
So what is Bridesmaids? A boozy wedding comedy? A touching character story? A paean to friendship? At turns, it's each -- making it a wedding movie with a commitment problem and giving Feig's scattered film a rudderless quality between the laugh lines.- New Orleans Times-Picayune
- Posted May 13, 2011
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