Owen Gleiberman
Select another critic »For 3,920 reviews, this critic has graded:
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62% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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36% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 0.5 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Owen Gleiberman's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 65 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | The Invite | |
| Lowest review score: | The Men Who Stare at Goats | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 2,323 out of 3920
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Mixed: 1,186 out of 3920
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Negative: 411 out of 3920
3920
movie
reviews
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- Owen Gleiberman
When we finally do see what happened, it's a genuine shock, a nightmare vision of a hedonist who forged his own hell.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
A feel-good movie that never stops feeling good. The film is based on a true story (it was adapted from a nonfiction best-seller by Michael Lewis), but you never feel that Hancock has honestly captured what's true about it.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Dishes up some very corny jokes, but the images have a brighter-than-life vivacity.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Are there surprises? A couple of big money ones, notably the ludicrous would-be jaw-dropper of a finale.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Flushed Away lacks the action-contraption dottiness of a Wallace and Gromit adventure, but it hits its own sweet spot of demented delight.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The producers of Nowhere to Run simply toss out the mousetrap. They make the dismal mistake of turning Van Damme into a softy, a sensitive lunk who puts up his dukes only because he wants to help his new family. The former kickboxer would do well to remember that the most heartfelt performance he was put on this earth to give revolves around the tender sound of snapping limbs.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
And so even if you're held (as I was) by the acting, you may find yourself fighting the film's design. It reflects a certain lack of faith in your audience to take a performance as authentic as De Niro's and reduce it to the level of a glorified reach-out-and-touch-someone commercial.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
There's enough foreboding in America right now to make sitting through a movie such as The Road seem like one more heavy burden that, frankly, no one needs.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Pacino shows you what is only subliminally in the text: that Shylock's heart of stone is really a wall of wounded pride.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The movie actually makes you long for the rockin’ entertainment value of a good catechism session.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
There are many things wrong with Novocaine, but the film's most gnawing pain is its clodhopper farfetchedness.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Did Scott, too, get hooked by the 1998 Spanish film ''Open Your Eyes?'' Intentionally or not, he has made ''Overcast Vanilla Sky.''- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The best thing in The Count of Monte Cristo is Guy Pearce's snot-nosed hauteur. He gives this scoundrel some wounded edges, and frills as well.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Blades of Glory has funny moves even when its characters can barely move, but the film seldom gets past its one basic laugh: that a real man figure-skating is a contradiction in terms.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
If Microsoft and Nike ever merged into one corporate megalith (MicroNike?) and commissioned Leni Riefenstahl to direct its visionary new Super Bowl commercial, the result might look something like Godfrey Reggio's Naqoyqatsi.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Far and Away looks like an epic, but it lacks flavor and texture. It's so predigested there's nothing left to chew on.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
A deft, funny, shrewdly unsettling tribute to such slasher-exploitation thrillers as "Terror Train," "New Year's Evil," and Craven's own "A Nightmare on Elm Street."- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Stuart Gordon, the mostly under-the-radar director of "Re-Animator," pops back into view with this amusing trifle -- a piece of scuzzy tabloid noir.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
There's a glimmer of what the film might have been, though, in the performance of Mike Myers, who plays Studio co-owner Steve Rubell, with his sweaty thinning hair and look-at-me-I-got-class Lacoste shirts, as a vengeful gargoyle presiding over a kingdom of beauty he can rule but never join.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The triumph of ''Spring, Summer'' is that even those of us who don't happen to be Buddhists can catch a glimpse of ourselves in the spinning wheel of hope, destruction, suffering, and bliss.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
It's hard to deny that Gallo has caught the freedom and melancholy, the intoxicating aimlessness, the lonely twilight beauty of a solo road trip in a way that no previous filmmaker quite has.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Imagine two movies...The first is a moody thriller about two brothers who pull off a bank job, take a family hostage, and head for Mexico. The second is a garish horror freak-out. The deranged hook of From Dusk Till Dawn is that it starts out as the first movie and turns, on a dime, into the second.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
If An Affair to Remember worked for you, Love Affair may do the same. It resurrects the earlier film’s sodden masochism with meticulous fidelity, right down to the awful final scene, which always felt — and still feels — as if another 20 minutes of movie were yet to come. Then again, what moved viewers in the ’50s seems almost luridly manipulative and unconvincing now.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
To an astonishing degree, O gets the tragic Shakespeare mood, that somber stentorian passion born of hidden slivers of ambition and betrayal.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The richest and most satisfying romantic movie of the year. It's really about two great loves at once -- the love of life and of art -- and the way that Shakespeare, like no writer before him, transformed the one into the other.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Norah Jones, making her big-screen debut as a wistful wanderer, is a beautiful blank, and the fragments barely add up to a movie.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The movie is merciless sending up "Juno's" self-satisfied hipster gobbledygook, and it's quite funny to see Hannah Montana still promoting her tie-in products as she lies crushed and dying under a meteor.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Paced a bit too glacially for my taste, yet it's worth sitting through for its trick ending, a twist of events as ominous as the landscape.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Lost Highway has scattered moments of Lynch's poetry, but the film's ultimate shock is that it isn't shocking at all.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Scorsese, I think, is so invested in making The Aviator upbeat and rousing that the movie never quite reveals, the way that "Kinsey" or "Ray" or "A Beautiful Mind" or even a good E! True Hollywood Story do, how its hero's vision and his grand torments could be flip sides of the same temperament.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Might have been richer, tougher, more honestly liberal if it had revealed a few more shades of gray among the men.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Every actor registers...In a film of minor ambition, they're all worthy company.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The Truth About Cats & Dogs is very funny around the edges... but as the characters begin to hang out together, forming a platonic menage a trois, the mistaken-identity ruse never escalates into true screwball lunacy.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Lorenzo’s Oil is at once harrowing and riveting. In the age of AIDS, it has telling observations to make about how the institutionalized complacency of the medical establishment actually works. As remarkable a job as Miller and the actors have done, though, the film begins to wear you down. At 2 hours and 15 minutes, it’s far too long, and (more crucially) it has a flat, repetitive structure.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Vacancy is a schlock surprise: a no-frills motel-hell slasher film -- with a bit of soul.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The journey, however, is a hollow one, since Quaid and Stone, for all their efforts, never really do seem married. Perhaps that's because Stone, with her dry-ice charisma, does everything that an actress should except connect to whomever she happens to be facing on screen.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
If you were looking for an actress to play a tempestuous, schizophrenic movie-slash-rock star, you might go for Courtney Love or Angelina Jolie, or maybe even Jennifer Connelly. But Rachael Leigh Cook?- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Depression is a fair subject for a movie, but this much moroseness shouldn't come to this little.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
In this brilliantly sustained climax, Coppola unveils a vision of corruption that embraces the entire world, but he's also reveling in sheer theatrical magic in a way that only a master can.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Is it, you know, fun? At times. Yet there's a rote quality to the way this half-dumb, half-sly movie resolves itself into an intentional debauch, a pileup of villainy and heavy metal. The only California dream it leaves you with is one of wretched excess.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Kutcher is the wrong actor to anchor a psychological freak-out.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Narrow Margin, despite a sturdy turn by Gene Hackman as a cynical assistant DA, is a thinly scripted procession of train-movie clichés.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The movie is an unblinking look at the hidden (or perhaps not so hidden) pathology of American sports mania.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The Upside of Anger is overly therapized, yet Costner and Allen show you what it means not just to play a role but to inhabit it.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Titan A.E. is ''Star Wars'' pulped and mashed into flavorless kiddie corn.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
There's precious little in Luc Besson's solemnly inflated, battle-weary historical epic.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Leaves you shaken and ecstatic at the same time, transported by the vision of a major film artist.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
In the history of bad ideas, George Romero’s decision to produce a color remake of his disturbingly frenzied 1968 zombiefest Night of the Living Dead has to rank right up there with New Coke.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Linklater has hardly been a slacker this year. I'll take the tricky confrontational babble of Tape over some of the gauzier soliloquies in ''Waking Life,'' but either way, he's a filmmaker in love with the music of talk, and let's bless him for that.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Heartbreaker is like a caper comedy meets "The Bodyguard" - it's winsome and accomplished fluff.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Despite some splendid snowcapped vistas and one rather frightening grizzly-bear attack, White Fang, a loose adaptation of Jack London’s classic novel is dramatically inert. Nothing in the picture really takes hold — certainly not the relationship between young Jack (Ethan Hawke) and White Fang, who seem like near-strangers even at the final clinch.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
It's a hilarious, and unexpectedly moving, documentary about the greatest metal band you've probably never heard of.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Isn't it time Steve Zahn grew up? Ever since the '90s, this walking quirk of an actor has pushed his dazed solipsistic zaniness (he's like Michael J. Fox’s hillbilly cousin), but he's 41 now, and it no longer looks cute on him.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
One of those raucous, hyperactive kiddie flicks that knocks you upside the head from its opening frame.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The beauty of Swingers lies in the irony of its title: Despite their lounge-lizard posing, these guys will never really live up to their Rat Pack dreams.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Both actresses are quite fine. The role of Odessa is somewhat underwritten, but Goldberg, playing her as a modest, God-fearing woman, acts with a deep-buried determination. If she’d been allowed to show some of her humor, the character might have soared. Spacek gives a beautifully modulated performance.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
I wish I could say that Wattstax was an ecstatic soul celebration, but most of the performances, while enjoyable, fall short of memorable.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
A self-righteous mishmash that can't decide whether to be a tribute to the fanatical leftist passion that thrives in college towns, an indictment of that very same fanaticism, or a ghoulishly didactic snuff-video thriller.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Displays no ambition to be anything more than a synthetic sense-jolt conveyor of the week.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
In its wildly overwrought, burrito-Western way, is about as close to a home movie as you're likely to see in a megaplex.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
She Hate Me manages to be at once racist, homophobic, utterly fake, and unbearably tedious. This time, it's Spike Lee who's doing the bamboozling.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
As a big-screen comedy, Coneheads isn’t all that funny either, yet it’s blithe and inventive and surprisingly light on its feet.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Lawrence makes you believe in the character you're watching. He does an amazing little piece of acting.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
A spectacularly turbulent portrait of the chaos and bloodshed that have come to define Haiti.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Its pulpy violent excess will tip over...into slightly more excessive excess. That's its silly, scuzzball joy.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
White Hunter, Black Heart emerges as little more than a plodding shadow of the great film it could have been. An actor making a stretch is one thing. As Huston, Eastwood is so out of his depth he seems to have lost his entertainer’s instinct, not to mention his modesty.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
By the end, you may marvel at the film's worldly-wise wink of maturity. You may also think, Is that all?- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
A movie that re-creates its object of satire with such pitch-perfect flair that it all but erases the line between derision and love.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Hudson's sunny, ringlet-tossing appeal fits snugly into the film's happy-homemaker ideology: She makes caring for three kids she barely knows look downright glamorous.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
What in the Buddha's name is going on in I Heart Huckabees? Russell has come up with a grab bag of ideas that don't stick with you because they don't stick together.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Mostly a mess: toothless when it should be nasty, not so much madcap as merely frantic.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
At once spectacular and inert -- a mosaic impersonating a movie; an empty-shell epic.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
This trio is like a looser, funnier version of the family of wrecks in Woody Allen's ''Interiors.''- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
A rapturous and enlightening look at the history of the environmental movement in America.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
In the film's rather humdrum 3-D, the place doesn't dazzle — it droops.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
It appears to have been modeled on the worst revenge-of-the-nerds clichés the filmmakers could dredge up.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Grindhouse, like "Ed Wood" and "Boogie Nights," celebrates how certain low-grade entertainment, viewed in hindsight, looks different now than it did then, since we can see the ''innocence'' of its creation -- the handmade quality of it -- in a world not yet ruled by corporate technology.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Soderbergh, in essence, has come up with a plodding and far less psychologically arresting version of ''Ghost.''- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
One of those tepid, genteel biopics that's far too busy ennobling its hero to bother giving him any recklessly interesting personality traits.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
What’s magical about Kane — the sheer transformative thrill of invention — is there in every shot, every performance, every narrative surge.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
You still feel that every delirious allusion, every snidely on-the-mark observational quip, is tickling a different part of your cerebral cortex. Yet the movie lacks the manic highs of the show’s best episodes; it’s a bit too rote and becalmed.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Frequently silly, yet eminently more watchable than such leaden Schwarzenegger efforts as ''Eraser.''- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The film is more than a little in love with the corruption it finds under the floorboards -- and that, of course, is perfectly dandy. I wouldn't trust a film noir that wasn't enthralled by decadence.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
It's a beautiful contraption of a movie, a gothic backwoods fable that uses its naive yet murderous hero to walk a fine line between sentimentality and dread.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
This digitized update, with Jason Lee as a huskier, more generic Underdog, mostly drops the doggerel, but the endearing airborne-beagle effects help to offset the formula twists.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Here's what I can say for sure about the humanoid attackers in the new version of The Crazies: They're not very interesting.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
There's always something to look at (an octopus holding his eyeballs aloft, the petulant Jane assaulted by pixie dust), but the story is weak tea.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Tom Hanks, Bill Paxton, and Kevin Bacon try to get inside the skins of these space-age pilot jocks, but the roles, as written, don't give them enough to work with.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The latest slacker manifesto, Clerks lacks the grunge artistry of either "Stranger Than Paradise" or "Slacker," but it's a fast, likable 90 minutes at the movies.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The plot, which spins around Allegra's lovers having just been an item, is awkward bedroom farce, but the tone is Woody Allen-meets-"The L Word," with a patina of literary cuteness that now seems like the sound of a vanished Manhattan.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
For Woody, it's looking more and more like the end of his days of whine and neurosis.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The final shot, of the three characters now united, may be the quietest affirmation of life I've ever seen in a movie, and one of the truest.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The makers of The Brady Bunch Movie have too much affection for the show simply to skewer it with satire. What they’ve done is closer to alchemy: turned this cheese into comic gold.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Instead of rooting for Pullman and Fonda, we end up praying that the crocodile is hungry enough to put them out of their misery.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
This is a high octane ride that starts to leak gas before it even gets going.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
An extended framing device set in the present day, with Kathy Bates as a put-upon housewife who becomes the fierce, confident, new-and-improved ”Tawanda,” is the sort of ghastly idea that gives feminism a bad name. The movie left me wishing its sterling cast — including a radiant Jessica Tandy — had been better served.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
In this year's lump of coal, Matthew Broderick is the control freak who lives for toasty yuletide cheer, and Danny DeVito is the vulgar pest who wants his holiday lights seen from space. The dueling-neighbor crankfest is blah.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The hokey, laborious Thunderheart would be little more than a leftover 1970s conspiracy thriller were it not for the novelty of its setting: a modern Indian reservation — which, as the movie reveals, is by now a fancy word for slum.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Graham is charming, but Miss Conception is a cloddish biological-clock bedroom farce.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
In spirit, Open Water reduces us to children peering through our fingers, waiting for the horrid deliverance we're not quite sure we want to see.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
There is a method to its madness, since the madness here is really Cobain's. Last Days mythologizes his suicide as a haunting act of fulfillment: the consummation of a life that had already ceased to be.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The War Within plays effectively off our voyeurism, yet it has such a cloistered, American-eyed view of the nightmare of terrorism that I kept searching for the profound explanation beneath its piecemeal ones.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Watching Bounce, you look at him (Affleck) and believe how much he's got at stake, and you look at Paltrow and know why.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Wahlberg, with shaggy hair and a pumped bod he wears more convincingly than any actor, plays Vince as a guy who truly doesn't expect to win. That makes his rib-bruising triumph all the more believable and touching.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
It just makes you want to flip on the tube to see the real (fake) thing.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
What it isn't is a believable relationship. Yet that may scarcely matter to LaBute, a gifted and corrosive wordsmith who appears intent, by now, on shoving all romantic couplings into the meat grinder of his misanthropic design.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The definition of aiming low is when the John Hughes film you're ripping off is ''Weird Science."- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
I call Piranha 3D ''exploitation,'' rather than a quality scare movie, because it serves up well-timed gross-outs instead of genuine suspense and because the movie has no pretense of providing character, plot, acting, or dialogue that's anything more than boilerplate.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
It ends up subverting its own subversion, arriving at a place that can only be called conventional.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Has moments of biting tenderness, yet the movie made me wish that Sheridan had let in more of America.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
A tricky-bordering-on-gimmicky film noir with a glaze of soft-core kink.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The movie flirts with a darker Carrey, but, ironically, most of it gives us a safer Carrey, an anarchist caught in routines too patterned to let him break loose.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The film is like East of Eden replayed as a hyperbolic rock fever dream. There are a few sour, juvenile moments, but this is the rare pop movie that works the way a great rock & roll song does: It tells a simple, almost elemental tale and uses the music to set it aflame.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Instead of a full-bodied comic portrait of the coming-out-party set, Metropolitan offers a thin, cartoon version. Then it uses that cartoonishness to make everyone on-screen seem irresistibly cute.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
A send-up of rap personality in which no one actually has a personality. The joke, alas, is on the movie.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The new movie, for all its huffing and puffing, explores very little, even if some of it is sexy in a Howard Stern-meets-"9 1?2Weeks" way.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
You know you're in the hands of a born filmmaker when he floods a scene with danger and excitement and, at the same time, tempers it with something more delicate -- a languor of the everyday.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The result isn't liberated from the stage; it's trapped, with waxworks literalness, onscreen.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The story, at heart, is earnest and humorless teen romantic glop, but its feelings aren't fake, and the movie is compulsively watchable; it has a passionflower intensity.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Shrewd, tough, and lively -- a junior-league "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest."- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
True Lies is so eager to give you a giddy good time that you're more than happy to let it work you over. It's a likably disposable pop cocktail.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
As a novel, Lord of the Flies never was much more than a Brat Pack Heart of Darkness. It’s doubtful a screen version could be any better than this one.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
It's "Bewitched" meets "Fatal Attraction," with one funny bedroom scene, but it was a miscalculation to make Thurman the antagonist.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
A preposterous erotic thriller from the Basic Instinct fingernails-ripped-my-flesh school, Body of Evidence is shamelessly — and, on occasion, amusingly — unadulterated trash.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
This is the sort of cloddish thriller in which characters keep putting themselves in dangerous situations because…the movie requires them to be in dangerous situations. The one true surprise has nothing at all to do with the plot: It’s Kevin Spacey’s hair. Dyed a glittering blond, it sets off his smirky, come-hither mug with maximum perversity.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The movie could have used a brain transplant. It doesn't explore injustice -- it just exploits it.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Friendly yet toothless, College musters little energy even as anarchic-party-movie nostalgia.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Each scene is staged methodically, overdeliberately, as if it concealed some payoff zinger. But the zingers don't arrive. All we see is a reasonably clever Elmore Leonard caper that needed to be treated as fast, trashy fun.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
His (Townsend) staging has a tumult, a multi-POV immediacy that brings to mind Paul Greengrass' "Bloody Sunday."- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The fun of Role Models is that it's a high-concept movie executed with speed and finesse and the kind of brusquely tossed-off obscene banter that can get you laughing before you know what hit you.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Good has a stagy fustiness, but it's worth seeing for Mortensen, who makes this study of a "good German" look creepily contemporary.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
A lot of good actors have gone to work for the Coens and ended up looking like puppets, but Hanks is too clever for that. He knows that he's playing a concoction rather than a human being.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
This is one of those films in which the Act of Driving becomes a 10-minute statement of high emptiness; Dumont even manages to make sex in the desert boring.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
It's hard to buy this relationship even for a moment. Adam is sweet, meticulous, and, at times, sort of clever, but it's also a not-quite-surprising-enough heartwarming trifle.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
It's a movie of profoundly convoluted pop pleasures. Between dazzling suspense sequences, it invites the audience to work for a good time.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
As it moves from the drizzly to the overly stormy, Rain freights a young girl's self-destructive eagerness to lose her virginity with so much danger and even horror that it's as if the events were trying to make up for the film's previous lack of drama.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The Crossing Guard is a work of talent and, on occasion, raw passion, but it's also a willed exercise in purgative alienation (imagine "Death Wish" remade by Michelangelo Antonioni).- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Starts out as mind-bending futuristic satire and then turns relentless -- it becomes a violent, postpunk version of an Indiana Jones cliff-hanger.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The movie is altogether too infatuated with its ramshackle spirit. Most of the gags take after the characters -- they just sit there.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Latifah coasts on grit and verve, and Holmes has a goggle-eyed sweetness, but it's Keaton who rules.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The fun of 21 is the way that this sharp, hyperaware star in the making, his face as readable as a mood ring, pours us into an adrenalized cocktail of fear, desire, and mental buzz.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
A big, fat, juicy spitball lobbed, with mostly dead-on aim, at the teen-smarm clichés that have accumulated like so much earwax over the last three years.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The Cockettes weren't talented, exactly, yet the bedazzled flakiness of their passion takes you closer than just about any movie has to what was once really meant by the term ''free-spirited.''- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
More potent than anything in Snakes on a Plane is the fantasy offscreen: that if enough people talk up their desire to see this film and, at the same time, take an overt delight in what an unabashed piece of junk it is, they will fuse with the hype, with the movie's mystique. They will not just watch Snakes on a Plane; they will own it.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The movie zips around without any true forward momentum. The stars carry you along, though.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Daredevil is the sort of half-assed, visually lackadaisical potboiler that makes you rue the day that comic-book franchises ever took over Hollywood.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Randall Miller (Bottle Shock), appears to be trying to cross a bad Elmore Leonard thriller with a bad indie-festival family-angst comedy. He gives us the worst of both worlds.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
A fable of money as the root of jealousy, discord, violence, but the film's slippery fascination as sociological exposé is the flip side of its thinness as drama.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Wallace, unfortunately, writes lazy, anachronistic dialogue, and the picture is abysmally shot (by Peter Suschitzky), with a prosaic, low-budget look that never allows you to experience the enraptured majesty of a fairy-tale historical setting.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Kids may be appropriately terrified, but to this overgrown Potter fan, Voldemort, the Darth Vader of the black arts, was a heck of a lot scarier when you couldn't see him.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
You could wander into this poetic documentary willing to be sympathetic toward its subject -- men who have sex with horses -- and still find Zoo cryptic and borderline bogus.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
There's a slightness to Postcards From the Edge, and a little too much satirical self-help jargon (the story is all about how Suzanne learns to like herself). But the movie captures — and celebrates — how easy it is to turn your problems into show biz.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
With its smooth skinned cast and demonized adults, doesn't feel very authentic.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
It's a dismal mess...What's most grating about Hackers, however, is the guileless way the movie buys in to the computer-kid-as-elite-rebel mystique currently being peddled by magazines like Wired.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
In The Dreamers, Bertolucci wants to take us back to a more revolutionary time, but mostly he ends up recalling the faded revolution of his own glory days.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Displays a promise it doesn't, in the end, live up to. See it for Swinton's embodiment of unadulterated maternal will.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Pucci proves to be one of the most charismatic male ingenues since Johnny Depp.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
That Thing You Do! is neither overly sentimental nor overly cynical. It looks at the invention of our pop-rock mythology, and the bands that fed it until they were consumed by it, just as you'd expect Tom Hanks to: with open eyes (and a raised eyebrow).- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Evokes the intimacies of teenage girls with unusual delicacy, and Perabo's performance is a geyser of emotion.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
What hooks you from the start is Dakota Fanning's unfussy passion as Fern.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The director has dressed up a classic tale in mesmerizing visual overkill without coming close to its dark heart. [13 Nov 1992, p. 56]- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Schwarzenegger’s willingness to flirt with femininity, to become truly radiant, is the most engaging aspect of Junior. Unfortunately, the script doesn’t portray his transformation to starry-eyed pregnant bliss with much comic ingenuity.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Being Human doesn't seem to be about anything: Its five astonishingly limp parables might have been spun by a depressed Aesop who forgot to take his Prozac.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
More than ever, Johnny Knoxville and his boys belong to a very elite club of idiocy. They martyr themselves for our diversion, driven at every moment to ask: Are you not entertained?- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
So obsessed with wowing you, in every corner of every frame, that as a movie it doesn't quite breathe.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
It reveals Bukowski to be a far grander artist than his bum's armor would suggest.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The War Tapes captures how the war in Iraq, for all its terrible carnage and death, is in a way too random in its destruction to even be called ''combat.''- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The savviest and most exciting Bond adventure in years, and that's because there's actually something at stake in it.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The film completely misses what should have been its real target -- the filming of Game of Death, a martial-arts campfest worthy of Edward D. Wood Jr.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Had the killer droid been conceived as a charismatic demon, Hardware might have delivered some B-movie kicks. As it is, there’s nothing particularly scary or awesome about this low-tech walking junk pile. It’s as if someone had remade Alien with the monster played by a rusty erector set.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
In the world according to Eurotrip, the Europeans may be a twisted, outdated, ridiculous lot, but what defines them is that unlike the Americans, they've never quite evolved to irony: They treat even the scuzziest habits with dire sincerity.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The film treats its audience like fidgety junior-high schoolers, piling on the sub-Koyaanisqatsi cityscapes and cheesy episodes with Marlee Matlin as a lonely photographer, plus bouncy cartoons of human cells who look as if they'd be happier chasing stains in bathroom-cleanser commercials.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The new film, which unfolds in real time over the course of 80 minutes, is a deeper, darker, altogether more memorable experience. It doesn't extend the characters so much as fulfill them.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
In the scurrilously enjoyable documentary Porn Star: The Legend of Ron Jeremy, we get to know the man whom Al Goldstein dubbed ''the hedgehog of porn."- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
It's a shrill, stupid, brickbat-blatant piece of hackwork that practically sweats to be ''commercial.''- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Romeo & Juliet is a series of spectacular production designs posing as a motion picture.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
What defines the slacker-geek twentysomething men and women who wander through Joe Swanberg's too-hip-to-be-romantic comedy Hannah Takes the Stairsis that they treat their libidos as minor accessories -- only to stammer through every casual conversation as if they were on a first Internet date.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
A classy romantic cocktail distinguished by its tart yet breezy bite.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
It's an energetic stunt of a movie, and it wants to make us sweat like it's 1974.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
It would all be worth getting mad over were the film not so plodding or so obvious in its tactics.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Firth plays him as a man of his time who is also mournfully ahead of his time. He's addicted to his own broken heart. A Single Man may break yours as well.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Kevin Kline is sweetly befuddled as a good man caught between worlds, and Sigourney Weaver, as a hard, sexy adulteress, makes her wit sting.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Jim Carrey entertains himself mightily in Liar Liar, and his enthusiasm is infectious.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
If there’s any shock value left to seeing a couple of matinee idols dressed up in women’s clothing, the drag-queen comedy To Wong Foo, Thanks For Everything, Julie Newmar gets it out of the way fast.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
There have been far shoddier sequels, but City Slickers II remains a good example of why more is sometimes less.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
You can see what the film was going for, but the jokes just sit there; you chuckle a few times, mostly out of lame hope, but you never bust a gut, never really get what you came for.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Sweet Land is a movie of extraordinary tenderness, in which Reaser and Guinee, using a language of looks, make you happy to think about what love once might have been.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Inland Empire is so locked up in David Lynch's brain that it never burrows its way into ours.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Ralph Bakshi's first feature in nearly a decade would like to be a down-and-dirty "Who Framed Roger Rabbit," but Bakshi isn't up to the task.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Duke is out to blend the commercial, gut-wrenching pleasures of an inner- city shoot-’em-up with the complex moral rage that marked such black-cinema touchstones as Sweet Sweetback’s Badasssss Song (1971).- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
One of the most important movies of my life. It’s one of the two films, the other being Robert Altman’s Nashville, that made me want to be a critic. And that’s because Carrie did more than thrill, frighten, and captivate me; it sent a volt charge through my system that rewired my imagination, showing me everything that movies could be.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The relentless flow of manufactured scandal and over-the-top lies in Our New President, all packaged with “authentic” video footage and flash-cut techniques, is sometimes funny, and sometimes depressing.... But mostly it’s scary.- Variety
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The first thing to say about The Bucket List is that Rob Reiner is the rare director who can take all the wonder out of one of the seven wonders of the world.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The rare commercial comedy that leaves you entranced by what can happen only in the movies.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
It's so shameless, so psychotically nervous about keeping you ''thrilled,'' that the phrase over the top won't do it justice. It's like a drug designed for people who've done every drug and now want to be jet-propelled into numbness.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
A horror film that consists of virtually nothing but don't-go-in-the-attic suspense scenes strung together with a reasonable degree of brooding mood and a minimum of logic.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
At this point, there's something almost masochistic about the way animators in Japan use cheesy ''Westernized'' heroes to fuel their fantasies.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
This is a B movie rooted in gut-level stirrings of power and retaliation.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Plays like an unusually ritzy festival circuit audition film, though McQuarrie, it must be said, aces the audition.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
There’s a better, tighter, more emotionally focused movie hidden somewhere in the sprawl of “I Love You, Daddy.” It’s a movie that’s just as rude, funny, and observant as this one but that doesn’t tie itself in knots trying to “say” something.- Variety
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- Owen Gleiberman
Godzilla is still the most awesome of tacky movie monsters — a Jurassic knockoff of King Kong whose ritual stomping of Tokyo never quite lets you forget that you’re watching a man in a lizard suit trash a very elaborate toy train set.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The plot makes almost no sense, and Eastwood directs in his usual toneless fashion. But in this case, the fact that you can’t always tell the intentional comedy from the unintentional isn’t necessarily a drawback.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Of course, the hollow drama of The Lover might not matter so much if these two actually did something interesting in bed. As it is, they barely get out of the missionary position. With far more explicit (and inventive) erotic films available at almost any video store, one has to wonder: How much point is there to portraying sexual passion as serious and ”adult” if you only end up taking all the fun out of it?- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
When You're Strange, a documentary history of the Doors directed by Tom DiCillo, is for people like me who can stumble onto the scrappiest Doors video on VH1 at 3 a.m. and sit there, mesmerized.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
It's a quiet dream of a movie, a vision of loneliness giving way to love, then to loneliness again; it's like "Vertigo" remade in a sedately haunted style of Japanese lyricism.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
This moving film explores the trauma of a Holocaust survivor with rare complexity.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Nothing more than a modest, streamlined ''making of...'' diary about a movie that never got made -- it's ''Project Greenlight'' with bigger stars and bigger disasters.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Knightley's Elizabeth becomes a pirate captain this time. You know a franchise has run its course when it has a buccaneer heroine who looks as if she'd hate to get her face smudged.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
If The Matrix Reloaded is a trip through high-toned mediocrity, not nearly as suggestive or cohesive as ''The Matrix,'' it's one of the most wizardly mediocre movies I've seen in quite some time.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
It's like "Schindler's List" crossed with "The Sound of Music," and Roger Spottiswoode directs it in a stiff, lifeless, utterly dated style of international squareness.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Describing Woodstock as a concert movie is a little like calling Notre Dame a house of worship. In its scope and grandeur, its feel for the paradoxical nature of an event in which half a million middle-class bohemians created their own scruffy, surging community — a metropolis of mud — Woodstock remains the one true rock-concert spectacle, a counterculture Triumph of the Will. [1994]- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
It's the die-hard camaraderie that undergirded this squad and lifted it to the top.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Up in the Air is light and dark, hilarious and tragic, romantic and real. It's everything that Hollywood has forgotten how to do; we're blessed that Jason Reitman has remembered- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Bad Lieutenant doesn't go where you expect, but it has a stubborn, trippy logic.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Saw is a gristle-cut B psycho thriller that would like to tap the sickest corners of your imagination. It has a few moments of nightmare creepiness, but it's also derivative and messy and too nonsensical for its own good.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
It's a veritable Greek chorus of wry therapeutic chatter, the touchy-feely pensées skittering over the stock dualities of adultery and fidelity, lust and devotion, narcissism and intimacy, blah, blah, blah.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Moncrieff pushes a view of women as victims that might create its own pornography of masochism if it didn't touch so many authentic shattered nerve endings.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The movie has a hushed sensual resonance, but it turns faith into an endurance test.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
If Untamed Heart is often too precious for words, there’s one thing in it that feels miraculously fresh: the performance of Marisa Tomei, who follows up her rollicking caricature of a streetwise Italian dish in My Cousin Vinny by proving that she’s a major actress.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Beatty and his team of collaborators have heightened the vibrantly tawdry urban night world of Chester Gould’s classic comic strip.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The 3-D visuals envelop you, majestically, and that effect fuses with the band's surround-sound rapture to create a full-scale sensory high. U2 3D makes you feel stoned on movies.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
A Jekyll-and-Hyde teen comedy that sounds like a Pauly Shore reject, but Qualls moves his marionette body around with a true clown's effervescence, and he does rubber-faced parodies of youth cool that are just what youth cool deserves.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
There are two sparks of light amid the trifling dialogue and bad faux-'80s love-on-the-beach montages in Havana Nights, and they are the film's costars.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
To turn fondly remembered TV trash into a movie that knows it's cruddy -- and that isn't, therefore, quite as cruddy as it might have been -- takes a perverse pinch of talent, if not style.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The movie, for all its half-baked visual marvels, remains remarkably faithful to Lewis' story, and the innocence of his passion begins to shine through. It's there, most spectacularly, in Aslan, the lion-king messiah.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The Hidden Blade is tranquil, touching, and, in its climactic sword fight, excitingly real.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
A scrupulous and honorable film. Yet it never comes close to being a revelatory one; it sentimentalizes more than it haunts.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The movie, with the exception of that lone squirmy surgery scene, is "Hostel" without sadism, thrills, or funky severed-limb F/X. It quickly turns into a very dull escape thriller.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Lee, I'm afraid, hasn't a clue. He has made half a movie, a phone-sex comedy in which the heroine has no real existence apart from the phone.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Too fragmented to be much more than a flip of the finger to history; the movie, with its mostly mute characters, is too content to plod.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
There's an unconvincing last-act twist, but this is the movie "Little Children" wanted to be.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
Step Up 3D isn't, in dramatic terms, a very good movie, but it's the first film in a while to use 3-D as more than a marketing ploy; it points toward an original way of making a musical.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Owen Gleiberman
The story has more holes than the bodies do, but the shocks are efficient, and Party of Five's Jennifer Love Hewitt knows how to scream with soul.- Entertainment Weekly
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