Peter Travers
Select another critic »For 3,974 reviews, this critic has graded:
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60% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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38% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 0.2 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Peter Travers' Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 66 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Manchester by the Sea | |
| Lowest review score: | Lost Souls | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 2,616 out of 3974
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Mixed: 754 out of 3974
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Negative: 604 out of 3974
3974
movie
reviews
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- By Critic Score
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- Peter Travers
It's Bettany's portrait of the monster as a young man that rivets attention. So remember the name, or don't. Just watch Bettany strut his stuff. You'll know a star when you see one.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Nothing the skunk does can begin to match the stench of this movie.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
To those who see no purpose to this film, I say the purpose is learning not to turn a blind eye. The unique and unforgettable Elephant keeps its eyes wide open.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
To Die For, sparked by a volcanically sexy and richly comic performance by Kidman that deserves to make her an Oscar favorite, is prime social satire and outrageous fun.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
In crafting a fierce, fragmented, downbeat film about a character who makes the wrong decision as a man by being right as a cop, Penn flies in the face of what sells in Hollywood. Godspeed.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
If you haven't already sold your soul to rock & roll, Almost Famous should seal the deal.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
From the Eastern flavor of the opening theme, hauntingly sung by Nancy Sinatra, to the Japanese setting, the fifth film is the Bond series just gets better and cooler with age. The tasty script by Roald Dahl junks most of the Fleming novel, spinning its own witty Cold War fantasy.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Any doubts about three Chinese actresses speaking English with Japanese accents vanish in the face of their deeply felt performances and the world Marshall conjures with magical finesse.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Luhrmann is a director with the style and snap to have these tired routines on their feet and kicking like a line of Rockettes.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Good-natured fun when it isn't stale, which is most of the time, this talky comedy set in a Chicago barber shop is a sitcom pilot disguised as a movie.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Stick your neck out for this Swedish horror show. It's a winner, full of mirth and malice, plus a young romance you'll never see on the Disney Channel.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The line between making guerrilla art and selling out has never blurred more provocatively.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
This comedy is packed with p---- jokes, the cruder the better.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
He lacks Scorsese's raw inventiveness, but there's no denying De Niro's skill in keeping this pungent street epic brimming over with action and laughs without sacrificing intimacy. He is a supreme director of actors.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Call it "Apocalypto" for pussies -- a PG-13 rating, puh-leese! -- or prehistory for peabrains. Just don’t call it friendo. 10,000 B.C. will take your money, rob your time and hit your brain like a shot of Novacaine.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The main problem with this treatise on racial politics undercover as an exercise in suspense is that the director, Neil LaBute, didn't write the script.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Not to be catty about it, but the stench of the litter pan is all over this big-screen $90 million disaster-in-waiting.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
A rowdy blast because the spiky young cast treats the played-out script like virgin territory. That's acting!- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The movie belongs to Moretz, whose sensational performance will be talked about for years. Her scenes with Cage, who wears a Batsuit and uses a voice borrowed from Adam West, are a hoot.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Old master Eric Rohmer, 82, uses new tricks in the form of painted backdrops inserted digitally to create a virtual reality. Rohmer goes Lucas - who could have guessed?- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Take this walk for the appetizing scenery, which includes Reeves and Sanchez-Gijon. The rest deserves squashing.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
What holds us are the actors, including Terrence Howard as a cop who grew up with the brothers.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
A slipshod sequel that looks tossed together over a weekend by people who couldn't care less.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Whatever juice is left in the "Cop" franchise or in the once unstoppable career of Eddie Murphy peters out ignominiously in this poor excuse for a sequel.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Gets the action job done and you better believe that Bruce is still the man.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Limp exercise in erotica...Rourke appears comatose, and Otis, though lovely in or out of her skimpy wardrobe, wears the pained expression of a woman who has accidentally stepped into something squishy and rank.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The kind of movie that TV stars do when they're on hiatus and trying to squeeze one in.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
It doesn't help that Damon and Cruz fail to generate sparks or that the second half of the film, in which John and Lacey face hell in a Mexican prison, feels bluntly edited to fit a two-hour running time.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The talented Mr. Minghella has made an imperfect movie but not an impersonal one. His morality tale means to get under the skin, and does.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Bigelow's artful handling of the magic & menace of the night is hauntingly apparent.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Broken Flowers may be too low-key for laugh junkies, but Jarmusch fills his sharply observed comedy with wonderful mischief. The mix of humor and heartbreak brings out the best in Murray.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Nunez finds a striking lyricism in simple lives that inspires an uncommonly fine cast and ranks him as a world-class filmmaker.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Some movies are too good to miss. Judy Berlin is one of them...It works like magic.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The heart of the movie is really in Jasira's moments with her father, a mass of contradictions that Macdissi plays with comic ferocity and genuine feeling.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
This crap is supposed to be the chick flick antidote to Super Bowl fever. Ha!- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
At moments, especially in the conflicted intimacy between Marcia Gay Harden and Daniel Stern as Bliss' parents, Barrymore shows real directing chops. But in Whip It she's painting inside the box.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Instead of a scalding brew of mirth and malice, served black, Donner settles up a tepid latte, decaf.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Starting with the outrageous and building from there, he ignites a slight love-on-the-run novel, creating a bonfire of a movie that confirms his reputation as the most exciting and innovative filmmaker of his generation.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
"GoodFellas" Oscar winner Pesci, who hasn't appeared onscreen in a major role since 1998's "Lethal Weapon 4," is a dynamo of conflicting emotions. And Mirren, bawdy in ways that erase all memory of her award-winning role as Elizabeth II in "The Queen," is magnificent.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Michael Moore might want to look into this before more animal docs steal his thunder.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
A feast of a film done on a low budget with a menu featuring top-grade acting, writing and direction.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
It sounds sappy, and sometimes it is, but director Koepp and co-writer John Kamps stay alert to the humor and pathos of Bertram's isolation.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Director Burr Steers, of the terrific "Igby Goes Down," is stuck polishing clichès.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Throughout his life, Brown refused to give in to public convention or his own despair; he wouldn't play the victim. Brown labored to express all of his feelings, not just the acceptable ones. Day Lewis works the same way. My Left Foot, a keen match of actor and subject, stands as an eloquent tribute to the talents of both.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
No trite, tear-jerking cliché goes undrooled in the script by director Kirk Jones.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The film, sometimes talky and overemphatic, is also literate, erotic, brutally funny and touched by brilliance in its quartet of live-wire performances.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The humor is slight, but the actors make the blarney go down easy.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
At its best, The Russia House offers a rare and enthralling spectacle: the resurrection of buried hopes.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Dull title for a juicy, fact-based caper movie that's full of surprises I have no intention of spoiling.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Pulls you in, challenges your prejudices, rocks your world and leaves you laughing in the face of an abyss. It's alive, all right. It's also an uncompromising American classic.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The three actors could not be better. Huge feelings are packed into this small, fragile movie. It's something special.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Despite a hint that Peter (Jeremy Sumpter) and Wendy (Rachel Hurd-Wood) might get it on, there's nothing to crow about.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
You'll hoot and holler as it strips down its targets and sticks it to them, hardcore. Baron Cohen is the pure, untamed id of movie comedy.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
It's probably the movie event of the summer if you're an eight-year-old girl who doesn't get out much.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Director Brian De Palma’s $45 million film version of the book is superficial, shopworn and cartoonish. On film, Bonfire achieves a consistency of ineptitude rare even in this era of over-inflated cinematic air bags.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
A fiercely poetic study of violence. Stunningly shot in black-and-white. [14 Dec 1989, p.23]- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
You won't know what hit you after watching Tyson. This power punch to the gut is one of the best movies of any kind this year.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
There's a difference between exposing misogyny and crassly exploiting it.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Mamet's incendiary writing and the potent performances are teasingly ambiguous. Though he exposes the widening gulf between the sexes, Mamet leaves the audience to find ways to explain it. That's what makes Oleanna such a powerhouse; it's a brilliant dare.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Even with sex, drugs, hip-hop and a murder, these four stories are dull, dull, dull, dull.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Miyazaki is the Pied Piper -- see Spirited Away and you'll follow him anywhere.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Writer-director Richard Shepard gives Brosnan his meatiest role ever, and he digs in with relish.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
There are delicious bits aplenty in Spider-Man 3 for those who care to notice.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Backbeat catches the Beatles in the act of discovering themselves. It’s a thrilling spectacle that rocks the house and a lot of lazy misconceptions about how legends are made.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Whether audiences are pleased or vexed, very vexed, by A.I., any movie buff worth his salt will want to sift through this fascinating wreck of a movie.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Penn, in tandem with the superb cinematographer Eric Gautier (The Motorcycle Diaries), captures the majesty and terror of the wilderness in ways that make you catch your breath.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Given the assault of devilishly clever plot twists that buzz-bomb your brain like a two-hour binge of quad-shot lattes, Duplicity goes down as too smart for its own good.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
What doesn't spark is the love story. Morton still seems soggy from her "Minority Report" role as a drenched pre-cog. Who wants romance in a future where glum is the word?- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Offers something magical in the haunting and hypnotic performance of Sarah Polley...(the film) cuts deep.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Though the material isn't up to Mr. Show's high standards, some great laughs abound.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Think "Sex and the City" with men, only in Italian and with lots more hollering and hand gestures.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Despite melodramatic lapses -- the gripping action recalls Walter Hill's 1981 "Southern Comfort" -- this is Schumacher's most ambitions film since "Falling Down" in 1993, and it plays to his strengths with young actors.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The flaws don't cripple what is a fiercely funny, exciting and provocative detective story about the crimes of corporate culture — crimes that transcend race and geography.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Minahan wants us to see ourselves in the dark mirror of this outrageously funny satire. He's built the laughs wisely so they stick in our throats.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
It's shocking, considering the talent involved, the The Perfect Storm looks and feels fake.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
A tornado of laughs based on the black experience as lived by these four insightful jokers, instead of as filtered through the Hollywood formula.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
This one belongs with the leaders of the scare pack. Isn't it time that we give Romero his due? It's hardly an accident that Stephen King, Quentin Tarantino, Guillermo del Toro, Simon Pegg and Wes Craven recognize Romero as a master. He is.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Until the last half-hour, when Lucas actually does establish a emotional connection between the landmark he created in 1977 and the prequel investment portfolio he laid out in 1999, the movie is one spectacularly designed letdown after another.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Branagh's take on the play comes right up to the edge of disaster but stubbornly refuses to leap in.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Best of all, Jason Mewes is out of rehab to play Jay and spar with Smith as Silent Bob, his dope-dealing partner.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The team of producer Ismail Merchant, director James Ivory and writer Ruth Prawer Jhabvala drops the ball with this droopy, snail-paced prigs-in-wigs movie.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
This sweetheart of a comedy boasts a hilarious and heartfelt performance by Keri Russell.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Jackson’s visionary triumph, heightened by the blazing performances of Lynskey and Winslet and by Alun Bollinger’s whirling camera, is in capturing the delirium as the girls whip themselves into an erotic frenzy with Mario Lanza records, semi-naked dances in the woods and revenge fantasies.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Schindler's List, despite blatant compromises, is a rending historical document. But the film's near-certain victory is based less on merit than on the marketing of its ambitious intentions. The academy doesn't judge movies, it weighs them by subject matter. On that basis, Spielberg's epic tips the scales.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The movie brims over with action -- check out Alex's run through traffic on the Paris beltway -- but Canet scores a triumph by plumbing the violence of the mind.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
It's a little early for self-parody in the career of Vin Diesel. But he's a calamitous cliché in A Man Apart.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Craig gives us James Bond in the fascinating act of inventing himself. This you do not want to miss.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Watching John Travolta ease into a role is always a pleasure, but this film version of Nelson DeMille's 1992 best-selling mystery novel is a lurid mess.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Eastwood's direction here is a thing of beauty, blending the ferocity of the classic films of Akira Kurosawa (Seven Samurai) with the delicacy and unblinking gaze of Yasujiro Ozu (Tokyo Story).- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
This hilarious and humane film nails its subject -- not just the unshaved armpits and the lack of underwear -- and marks Moodysson as a talent to watch.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Offensive on multiple levels -- if only the plot had any levels at all -- Black Snake Moan leaves no "Tobacco Road" cliche unsmoked. Ricci gives it her all, and then some, but even her body and Jackson's blues can't heal a movie that rockets plum off its nut.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Before it goes off the rails into strained sermonizing, this sorta-sequel to 2008’s delightful "Forgetting Sarah Marshall" gets in big laughs.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Forget "Hero" -- that cult hit was just Zhang Yimou's warm-up for this martial-arts fireball that throws in a lyrical love story, head-spinning fights and dazzling surprises.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The worst thing I can say about this savage, sexy and ferociously funny screen translation of three stories from Frank Miller's Sin City series of graphic novels is that it's too much of a good thing.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Duncan zips through five decades and dozens of characters without reducing the participants to cliches or slogans. A remarkable cast helps him to keep focused on the core of the piece.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The bloodsuckers in this thriller may not have much bite, but here's a movie that can -- it's guaranteed -- drain the life out of an audience in minutes.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Towne doesn't weave all the elements as deftly as before, and his political observations seem secondhand.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Ferrell is effortlessly uproarious. And watching hardass Wahlberg, in his first starring shot at farce, shake his sillies out is not to be missed.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
If you can buy the pillow-lipped Angelina Jolie as a psychic FBI agent in Montreal to hunt a serial killer, then you can swallow the other implausibilities in this retread thriller.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
There is nothing new in Robert Greenwald's sobering doc.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Craig Lucas’s prince of a play has been turned into a toad of a movie.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Even when the acting is hammy, notably Wilford Brimley’s turn as Chance’s Cajun uncle, Woo stages every fight with hypnotic grace.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Bosworth is a star in the making, but even she can't outshine the surfing footage, which is flat-out spectacular.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Stupendously exciting and emotionally engulfing... With probing intelligence and passionate feeling, Cameron has raised the adventure film very close to the level of art.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Lavishly produced swashbuckler that should have been far more entertaining.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Ribisi and Macht are sleaze incarnate. James Caan, as a conniving lawyer, and Rade Sherbedgia, as a Russian crime boss, are even more cootified. Best of all is Wilson, digging into his juiciest role in years and putting a human face on this mesmerizing morality tale, a journey into the toxic heart of the American dream.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
By spinning something fresh out of something familiar, Reality Bites scores the first comedy knockout of the new year. It also brings out the vibrant best in Winona Ryder and Ethan Hawke as friends who resist being lovers, makes a star of Janeane Garofalo as their tart-tongued buddy and puts Ben Stiller on the map as a director.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
A ruthlessly clever musical, a punchy political parody and the hottest look ever at naked puppets -- the first film, porn included, in which a woody is actually made of wood.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
You know a sequel isn't working when, ten minutes into the movie, a voice inside your head starts screaming, "Please make it stop!"- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Cage and Baruchel work hard to stay accessible, but the computer-generated effects come on like heavy artillery blowing away any hint of flesh and blood. The Sorcerer's Apprentice should be rated U for Untouched by Human Hands.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
What Button shows is that Ben is ultimately not the hero of his own life or his own movie. He gets inside our head, that's for sure, but, frustratingly, we never get inside his.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Close gets laughs, as does Bette Midler as a Jewish rebel. But the sting is gone.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The boat nearly sinks from character overload, and Curtis brakes when you most want him to gun it. But there’s no denying the comic energy of the cast.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
This bracing, original comedy may be mostly smoke and air, but it's not insubstantial. Mystery Train insinuates itself into the memory and lingers on.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Rob Cohen, who last directed "The Skulls" --ouch! -- can consider this one another career-killing skid mark.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Does he (Hartley) succeed? Not with a movie this plodding, peevish and gimmicky. Is it fun to watch him try? Me, I'll take failed ambition over hack efficiency any day.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The actors could not be better. Sarsgaard, Scott and the luminous Clarkson negotiate the film's razor-sharp laughs and bone-deep tragedy with resonant skill. Lucas' powerfully haunting film gets under your skin.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Bruckheimer and director Tony Scott have wisely set their course by Will Smith, who is sensational in a dramatic role that leans on him to carry a movie without the help of aliens or Big Willie-style jokes for every occasion.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
But the bad boys achieve something a budget can't buy: an easy, natural rapport that makes you root for them. For comedy and thrills, Lawrence and Smith are a dream team.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
All cast members seem willing to make total fools of themselves for our delectation. A fine but futile gesture. The bad news is that even with such yeoman efforts, it's still impossible to drag one tired joke around for nearly two hours. Like Bernie, the movie ends up dead on its feet.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
This is the kind of movie that they show on planes -- white noise that lulls you to sleep.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The real action in Silver City happens on the fringes, where the mischief is. Daryl Hannah is spice incarnate as Dickie's sexy screw-up sister. Billy Zane plays a lobbyist with insinuating soullessness. And Dreyfuss feasts on the snappiest lines.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Fresh comic thinking spices up this smart cookie of a satire from director-writer Paul Weitz (About a Boy). He makes it sexually provocative and subversively hilarious.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
This afternoon-TV special trying to pass as a real movie earns an extra half star solely for Samuel L. Jackson, who brings his usual fire to the role.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Indefensible on a moral level, Rob Zombie's perversely watchable follow-up to his much-reviled cult hit "House of 1000 Corpses" is loaded with filmmaking energy.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Niccol is too good a screenwriter (The Truman Show, Gattaca) not to know that Hollywood cliches are hell on a film's political bite. They muzzle it.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Younger knows it's fun to watch Rafi and David cross lines of age, culture and religion. He also knows it's painful. That's what makes his movie hilarious and heartfelt.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Not your typical biopic. But it is one of the best times you'll have at the movies this year.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The film can't hide its stage origins, and in cutting almost an hour on the journey from stage to screen some resonance is lost. But Bennett's dialogue sparkles and skewers with killer wit. Dig in.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Before it runs off course into excess, this brilliantly acted film version of the 1999 novel by Andre Dubus III moves with a stabbing urgency.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The actors, especially Grace, fight hard against a schizoid script (the kids are rubes one sec, hipsters the next) and cotton-candy direction from Robert Luketic (Legally Blonde). It's a losing battle.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
A script by Peter Gaulke and Gerry Swallow that is minus a shred of Farrelly wit.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
In the end, Shelley and the audience are cheated of a tale truly told. De Niro, on the brink of giving a landmark performance, settles for being a gross special effect. And the promise Branagh once showed as a filmmaker, like the hope of revitalizing Frankenstein, is dead again.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Other films this year will have to sweat bullets to match the explosive power and subversive wit of David Cronenberg's A History of Violence. It slams you like a body punch and then starts messing with your head.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
This oddball mix of "The Cotton Club" and "Six Feet Under" is a big, beautiful mess. But it offers the not-uninstructive spectacle of talented people stumbling over large and unwieldy ambitions.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Spectacular in every sense of the word, even if you don' t know an Orc from a Uruk-Hai.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Edward Scissorhands isn't perfect. It's something better: pure magic.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The cast got to spend a month shooting on Bora Bora. So that explains why they're in the movie. Why you'd spend good money for a ticket to watch them have all the fun and not have any fun yourself passes understanding.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
As Van Peebles turns the western into an equal-opportunity genre, his voice occasionally fades in the din. But be assured: It’s a voice spoiling to be heard.- Rolling Stone
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- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Detractors will see the usual parade of repressed feelings in a Masterpiece Theatre setting. Those who look closer will find one of the best films of the year.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
[Keaton] delivers a chilling performance, imbuing what could have been a one-note nut case with unexpected reserves of feeling. The acting and direction don’t fill in all the credibility gaps, but they do make for classy, crackling suspense.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The film is for horny pups of all ages who relish the memory of reading stroke books under the covers with a flashlight. Verhoeven has spent $49 million to reproduce that dirty little thrill on the big screen.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
To call the animation crude would be high praise. But they succeed enough of the time to make a perversely entertaining movie.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Just one talking head, that's all. But the head in this mesmerizing documentary belongs to Traudl Junge.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
If you ever admired Julia Stiles, Selma Blair and Jason Lee -- and who didn't? -- don't watch them crush their careers in this laugh-free romantic comedy.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Michael Gerbosi's script might have reduced Crane to a clueless cliche were it not for the bruised humanity that Greg Kinnear brings to the role. Kinnear is dynamite.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Kramer takes on a hot, unwieldy topic in Crossing Over -- the dream that immigrants have of U.S. citizenship and the nightmare of achieving it, especially with shortcuts. I'm sure Kramer will be picked to pieces for trying something while Hollywood crap climbs the box office ladder. There are all kinds of nightmares.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Meryl Streep -- at her brilliant, beguiling best -- is the spice that does the trick for the yummy Julie & Julia.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Director and co-writer James Mangold (Girl, Interrupted) is supplying comfort food for bruised romantics.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Adapting Robert O'Connor's novel, director Gregor Jordan slaps us with keen wit and purpose.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
I'd rather be buried in a mound of Floridian chad than watch director Donald Petrie force Bullock to jump through another desperately unfunny comic hoop.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Lacks the cumulative impact of "Boyz," since Singleton allows repetition and sermonizing to dull his theme about the infantilization of black males. But Baby Boy leaves you shaken.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Writer-director Michael Patrick King, the creative force behind the show's later seasons, can't disguise the fact that the movie is basically five TV episodes strung together (only three hit the mark). But his script is more honest about aging than anything in "Indy 4."- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Zane, a good actor in the right circumstances (Orlando, Dead Calm), is trapped by screenwriter Jeffrey Boam (Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade) and Australian director Simon Wincer (Free Willy), who don’t give him anything to act.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
What is surprising -- remarkable even -- is that Beloved arrives onscreen with a minimum of dull virtue, gagging uplift and slick Hollywood gloss.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
How many movies these days leave you wanting more? The funny and heartfelt Home is a small treasure.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
With Brando around, The Freshman has a snappy madness that’s hard to resist.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
What good is a wallow in sicko sadism if you take all the fun out of it?- Rolling Stone
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- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Polanski, working from a fluid script by Dorfman and Rafael Yglesias ("Fearless"), gives the story its due. He creates an atmosphere of claustrophobic tension to rival his "Knife in the Water" and "Repulsion".- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Del Toro is the movie's force field. This is a performance you will not forget.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Scott Pilgrim is a breathless rush of a movie that jumps off the screen, spins your head around and then stealthily works its way into your heart.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The love story, beautifully acted by Richard Gere and Jodie Foster, makes for a ravishing romance. And British-born Jon Amiel (Queen of Hearts, TV’s Singing Detective) directs with admirable restraint.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The film's secrets unfold slowly, allowing Phoenix and Paltrow -- a luminous fusion of grace and grit -- to build a relationship in full. The script, by Gray and Richard Menello, is inspired by Dostoevsky's "White Nights."- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Smart, witty and alert to the buried resentments that poke through the shiny surface of affluence, Holofcener's film recognizes that money is the new sex.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Bury the nostalgia. Like the rap twist Kayne West puts into the film's classic theme, this movie is best when it stirs it up.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Lane is a force of nature. Her slow-burning, fiercely erotic performance charges the movie.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Hartley's debut deserves heralding; he combines a rigorous social conscience with the exuberance of fresh comic thinking.- Rolling Stone
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- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
If you stay and watch the endless end credits, there's a short scene that hints a sequel is coming. That's what I call real pain.- Rolling Stone
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- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
It's the scenes of the boys on horseback, riding this moonbeam of a movie to a fairy-tale ending, that provide the essential ingredient: a sense of wonder.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The film goes beyond historical anecdotes. Besides fresh and funny insights from the likes of Norman Mailer and John Waters, it shows how little censorship politics have changed from Nixon to Bush.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Though shot for maximum moodiness by the gifted Peter Deming ("Mulholland Drive"), the movie straps you in for a head trip that promises hallucinatory wonders but delivers the same old Hollywood formula with sugar on top.- Rolling Stone
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- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Shelton obviously wants to distill something innocent and romantic from a relationship the world saw as sleazy. A noble mission. But he's left out a few essentials — like the facts.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
You'll notice that the actors are way overqualified for this nonsense. But the kick they get out of one another is what pulls you in. Traeger's script does more than strain credulity, it administers multiple fractures.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The uniformly fine performances are a tribute to Washington, who plays the shrink with his customary command.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The jokes? "Chicks are for fags," says Lloyd. The film is subtitled When Harry Met Lloyd. Believe me, you don't want to be there.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Murphy, teaming again with his "Norbit" director Brian Robbins, is assuming we'll all line up for lazyass toilet jokes and pay for the privilege. Prove him wrong, people, please.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The result is commendably non-West-centric, but no less sentimentally conceived.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Crowe -- fierce, funny and every inch the hero -- gives a blazing star performance.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Hess and his terrific cast -- Heder is geek perfection -- make their own kind of deadpan hilarity. You'll laugh till it hurts. Sweet.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
What's lacking is emotional weight. It's sad to watch a talented cast, including Bill Nunn as Henry's physical therapist and Donald Moffat, Rebecca Miller and Kirby Mitchell as co-workers, selling bromides.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Lee is a true master, and his potently erotic and suspenseful Lust, Caution casts a spell you won't want to break.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
All the acting is exemplary. Brody, new to Wes' World, is revelatory as Peter.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Lumet has a reputation for speed, and when a film doesn’t engage him, as in Family Business, the result seems rushed, sloppy. But in Q&A, with all the actors perfectly cast and on his wavelength, he works wonders. Nolte is electrifying.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Bale even cedes the juiciest part to Aussie newcomer Sam Worthington, who is star material as a machine with a conscience. T4 is a mixed bag, but it's not f***ing amateur.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
"WALL-E" had more charm, more soul, more everything. But there's enough merry mischief here to satisfy, even if you’re way past puberty.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Luna and García Bernal display the kind of chemistry that makes you overlook the clichés in the script by first-time director Carlos Cuarón. Sometimes good-natured fun is enough.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
It’s one of the blackest comedies to hit the screen since Dr. Strangelove. Spurlock proves himself a supersize talent; he makes you choke on every laugh.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
A mesmerizing look at an asthmatic, rich-boy medical student in the act of discovering his insurgent spirit.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The exquisitely wrought tale of four British women of different backgrounds who rent a villa in Portofino, Italy, is delivered with a witty feminist twist by director Mike Newell (Dance With a Stranger) and an outstanding cast.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
What we're watching, however charming, is a fancifully costumed theater piece that cuts off the oxygen needed to make a play breathe onscreen.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Setting it against the backdrop of a wanton city under siege, Schroeder crafts a film of whiplash urgency.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Can no one save the talented Sandler from himself? I hate this movie. Click. I hate this movie. Click. I hate this movie. Click.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Certainly blunt, and since Anderson and Bach are veterans of the porn trade, there is no skimping on the sex.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The Siege is not a documentary but a glossy Hollywood entertainment that is prey to all the exaggerations, simplifications and acting histrionics that come with the genre.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
There's no denying the kick of Pitt's memorably offbeat performance and writer-director Tom DiCillo's stylish debut.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
It's a haunting, hypnotic film that exerts an escalating grip on the heart and the conscience.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
An uneven movie that nonetheless bristles with stinging wit and exerts a perverse fascination.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Mitchell gives this post-punk, neo-glam rock extravaganza everything in his loaded arsenal of talents. He gets the sound right, the look right, the fun right and - this is crucial - the pain right.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
An adventure in pure imagination that plays to the smart kid in all of us.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Stay for the outtakes – they’re improv delights, suggesting the movie that might have been if they had just left it all to Carell and Fey.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
If there were an ounce of taste left in Hollywood, the magnificent Vera Farmiga would be a front-runner for the Best Actress Oscar.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
In one scene, raw sewage is dumped on Joe. See Joe Dirt and you'll know how that feels.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Leave it to Hilary Swank. Even when her film's pace lags behind its cliches, she sparks this true story, about a California teacher who sparks her students, with the passion the subject demands.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Is the movie any good? At the dawn of the twenty-first century, when art is defined by commerce, this question is beside the point.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
There was a time when guys would grab a six-pack and watch this kind of flick at a drive-in. I mean that as a compliment.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
I'd watch the vibrant Rachel McAdams and Eric Bana in anything, but The Time Traveler's Wife is pushing it.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
First-time director and screenwriter Hue Rhodes shows no discernible talent for dialogue, humor and, especially, pacing.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The funny and heartbreaking Off the Map, directed with a poet's eye and a keen ear for nuance by Campbell Scott, resonates with something rare in today's movies: simplicity.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The scenery is glorious; you can almost feel the sunshine and smell the wine. But Crowe and Scott are bulls in Mayle's china shop. Like an assertive Burgundy served with a delicate fish, they're a classic wrong pairing.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
If Ridley Scott's Alien (1979) had more surprises and James Cameron's Aliens (1986) more thrills, David Fincher's austere, low-tech, darkly funny Alien 3 has more sharply observed characters.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
It's too bad Martin already made “What's the Worst That Could Happen?” The title really fits this one.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
What makes Ratatouille such a hilarious and heartfelt wonder is the way Bird contrives to let it sneak up on you.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
For all its bile and incoherence, In Praise of Love is filled with haunting images and insights. Godard may be a lion in winter, but the lion still roars.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Jeez, did the "surprise" climax have to be this eye-rollingly stupid?- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
While you're remembering new high-impact names, add Arnold. In only her second film, after 2006's "Red Road," she keeps the screen filled to bursting with the beauty and raw terror of life.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Scott and Davis could not be better. You're in for something special.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Potter gets the period details right, but the film itself has long since flown off the rails, miring good intentions in rank soap opera.- Rolling Stone
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