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
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Peter Travers
Peckinpah rubbed our noses in the bloodlust. Lurie invites objectivity. He gets strong, complex performances from actors who won't be painted into corners.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 15, 2011
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- Peter Travers
A brilliant piece of nasty business that races on a B-movie track until it switches to the dizzying fuel of undiluted creativity. Damn, it's good. You can get buzzed just from the fumes coming off this wild thing.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 15, 2011
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- Peter Travers
The film is most riveting in its early scenes, when Soderbergh's digital cameras locate germs everywhere – don't touch those peanuts!- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 8, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Warrior aspires to myth. It's Cain and Abel battling it out in the face of a decidedly ungodly father before humanity goes down for the count. Strong stuff.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 8, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Chastain (a nifty match-up with Mirren) is a live wire, and her scenes with Csokas and Worthington have a spark the later scenes lack. No matter. The Debt holds you in its grip.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 31, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Farmiga expertly guides a large and gifted ensemble cast and proves as fearless a director as she is an actress. She lights up Higher Ground and makes it funny, touching and vital.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 25, 2011
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- Peter Travers
With Del Toro's name in the credits, standard chills aren't enough. We want imagination to run riot.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 25, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Our Idiot Brother comes off as a blueprint for a smart script no one really made. Now that's what I call dumb.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 25, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Amigo is combustible filmmaking, something that stays with you long after the final credits. In an entertainment universe of escapism and short attention spans, Amigo is a rousing antidote and a cause for celebration.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 18, 2011
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- Peter Travers
This tear-jerking twaddle, adapted by David Nicholls from his 2009 bestseller, is nearly as bad as Anne Hathaway's British accent, which is heading for infamy.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 18, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Menace and mirth can cancel each other out. But the combo clicked in 1985's Fright Night (banish the 1988 sequel), and it clicks again in this frisky 3D remake.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 18, 2011
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- Peter Travers
The cheap thrills wear off way fast, and we're left with atrocious acting, feeble writing and clueless directing (from first-timer Steven Quale). The horror! The horror!- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 11, 2011
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- Peter Travers
The movie plays like an evangelical prayer meeting, though I'd hold the hallelujahs. The characters we came to admire as vulnerable misfits hit the stage like visiting royalty and with a nonstop perkiness that makes the Von Trapps look like manic-depressives.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 11, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Fleischer isn't much on details. It's all about the zigzagging rush of the ride. Fair trade.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 11, 2011
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- Peter Travers
A deeply touching human story filled with humor and heartbreak is rare in any movie season, especially summer. That's what makes The Help an exhilarating gift.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 9, 2011
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- Peter Travers
The film swings from melodrama to sermonizing, both blunting the human drama that needs to come to the fore.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 4, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Here's a movie that starts in your face and, amazingly, keeps coming at you. That's a good thing.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 4, 2011
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- Peter Travers
No matter Bateman and Reynolds make The Change-Up seem a lot better than it is. Each earns a star in my review. The movie would be literally nothing without them.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 4, 2011
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- Peter Travers
The movie rises and, at times, even soars. This is all - and I do mean all - thanks to what human actors in league with computer technology can now achieve to bring the apes to life. No more guys squeezed into monkey suits and talking in posh accents. Performance-capture makes all the difference.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 4, 2011
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- Peter Travers
This is a breakthrough star performance from a terrific actor getting a chance to let it rip.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jul 28, 2011
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jul 28, 2011
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- Peter Travers
What makes Crazy Stupid Love a cut above is actors who let pain seep into the laughs. Here's a comedy you really can take to heart.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jul 28, 2011
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- Peter Travers
It looks slick, pricey and starry – Indiana Jones teams up with James Bond for a gunfight with space demons. But even Harrison Ford and Daniel Craig can't save a movie that's all concept, no content.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jul 28, 2011
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jul 21, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Here's the funny thing: Despite all the Captain America rah-rah in costume and indestructible shield, the movie is at its best when the story sticks with skinny Steve.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jul 21, 2011
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jul 21, 2011
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- Peter Travers
What an exhilarating gift to watch Harry and Company go out in a blaze of glory and amazing grace.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jul 13, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Larry Crowne is more than a missed opportunity. It's alarmingly, depressingly out of touch.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jul 7, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Here's a hit-and-miss farce that leaves you wishing it was funnier than it is. Why? Because it wussies out on a sharp premise.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jul 7, 2011
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- Peter Travers
The dialogue is witty and spiked with delicious malice. At least it is when Pierce delivers it.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 30, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Transformers: Dark of the Moon - high on any list of the worst blockbusters ever - is a movie bereft of wit, wonder, imagination, and any genuine reason for being. Watching it makes you die a little inside.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 29, 2011
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 23, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Lasseter is back behind the wheel, and you can feel his love for all things automotive in every frame. No humans blot this anthropomorphic romp. Cars do all the talking.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 23, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Bad Teacher keeps running away from its combustibly nasty premise. Damn shame.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 23, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Page One is a vital, indispensable hell-raiser.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 16, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Hal claims that a Lantern's only enemy is fear itself. The thought of a sequel to this shamelessly soulless Hollywood product scares me plenty.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 16, 2011
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 9, 2011
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 2, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Ayoade, the British comic making a remarkable feature debut with his adaptation of Joe Dunthorne's 2008 novel, blends mirth and malice with deadpan brilliance.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 2, 2011
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- Peter Travers
McGregor goes bone-deep in a performance of shining subtlety. And a never-better Plummer is simply stupendous, refusing any call to sentiment as he shows us Hal's resonant lunge at life. Mills works the same way. Beginners is one from the bruised heart.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 2, 2011
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- Peter Travers
In this cheerfully perverse origin tale of Magneto, Professor X and their mutant team, Vaughn delivers a fireworks display of action, smarts and fun, plus a touch of class from actors who can really act.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 2, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Like its predecessors (Badlands, Days of Heaven, The Thin Red Line and The New World), Tree delivers truths that don't go down easy. No one with a genuine interest in the potential of film would think of missing it.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 26, 2011
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- Peter Travers
How could a 2009 raunchfest that slapped a grin on my face I couldn't unglue degenerate into a cold dish of sloppy seconds?- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 26, 2011
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- Peter Travers
What's fresh about Midnight in Paris is the way he (Allen) identifies with Gil's idealization of the past, of the Paris that represented art and life at their fullest.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 19, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Marshall deserves props for putting the "show" back into the Pirates business. But face it, he's polishing a giant turd.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 19, 2011
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- Peter Travers
As played by the spectacular Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Hesher is the id run rampant.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 12, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Ferrell delivers a performance of implosive intensity that rings true in every detail.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 12, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Kristen Wiig is an indisputable goddess of comedy. And this rowdy fem-friendship movie she stars in and wrote with Annie Mumolo is infused with the Wiig brand of wicked mischief.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 12, 2011
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- Peter Travers
The half-star rating goes to John Krasinski for heroically rising above this vile dung heap of a movie.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 5, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Moralists, beware. Hobo looks like a garish cartoon puked up by a filmmaker overstuffed with cheap thrills and celluloid scuzz. What's not to like?- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 5, 2011
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- Peter Travers
The Beaver, directed by Jodie Foster from a script by fearless first-timer Kyle Killen, is operating on a plane far above multiplex formula. This flawed but heartfelt movie has the power to sneak up and floor you.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 5, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Hemsworth, an Aussie actor with a vocal command to match his heaving brawn, doesn't just play the role, he owns it. I'm expecting both sexes will feel his impact.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 5, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Fast Five will push all your action buttons, and some you haven't thought of. So what if you hate yourself in the morning.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 28, 2011
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 28, 2011
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- Peter Travers
A devastating mystery thriller from Quebec filmmaker Denis Villeneuve that grabs you hard and won't let go.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 21, 2011
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- Peter Travers
A brightly-colored, dizzying pinwheel of 3D animation in which nothing much happens. Sounds like summer is here early.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 21, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Spurlock says he's not selling out, he's buying in. I'm buying into Spurlock. As ever, he makes you laugh till it hurts.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 21, 2011
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- Peter Travers
It's all in the telling. Gruen provided grit and pungent detail. The movie settles for gloss.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 21, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Between a diabolically funny start and a surprise climax, Scream 4 offers nothing more than a series of gory deaths that grow tiresome with repetition. The rating is a hard R, but Craven and Williamson keep it soft at its core. "Scream 1" is still the only keeper.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 15, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Who's the idiot responsible for this fiasco? You can't blame the Tea Party, an organization of 9 million that the film's producers are exploiting to get butts into seats. There's an object lesson in objectivism for you.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 15, 2011
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- Peter Travers
The film pivots on McAvoy's powerfully implosive performance as a man trying to grow beyond his own prejudices. His scenes with Wright, under Redford's nuanced guidance, give this film its timely resonance and its grieving heart.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 15, 2011
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 7, 2011
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 7, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Gordon, who died shortly after the first Arthur, never had to see the luckless 1988 sequel that made his beloved characters seem like strangers. The new Arthur, insipid when it should be infectious, leaves the same deadly impression.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 7, 2011
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- Peter Travers
As Hanna confronts her past, the movie becomes like nothing you've ever seen. I'd call it a knockout.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 7, 2011
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 31, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Working from a tight script by Ben Ripley, Jones creates scary, hairy, high-octane tension. Disbelief? Suspended, until the logic lapses kick in later. It's a small price to pay for a ride that starts at wild and accelerates from there.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 31, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Here's a better than average spook-house movie, mostly because Insidious decides it can haunt an audience without spraying it with blood.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 31, 2011
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- Peter Travers
The performances are uniformly terrific, finding the specific details that create a universal truth.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 25, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Looks aren't everything. Case in point: Sucker Punch, a dazzling visual design that goes tone-deaf every time it opens its dumb mouth or makes claims to profundity.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 25, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Rogen is a nonstop hoot, but it's the byplay between Frost and Pegg that roots the laughs in characters we care about. That's right: characters. No anal probes.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 18, 2011
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- Peter Travers
This is rock-solid entertainment. McConaughey, a cunning mesmerizer in the courtroom, steers this Lincoln into what could be a hell-raising franchise. More, please. Soon.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 18, 2011
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- Peter Travers
It's a wet dream for anyone who's ever dreamed of getting an edge on the information highway. The worst side effect is that you won't believe a word of the damn thing in the morning. Fair exchange.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 18, 2011
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- Peter Travers
This movie wins you over, head and heart, without cheating. It's just about perfect.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 10, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Fukunaga, son of a Japanese father and a Swedish mother, is a filmmaker to watch. He has reanimated a classic for a new generation, letting Jane Eyre resonate with terror and tenderness.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 10, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Even wild man Gary Oldman, as a priest ready to eighty-six the wolfman with silver nail polish, can't liven up this humorless hogwash. And it's just sad to see the legendary Julie Christie stuck playing the grandmother.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 10, 2011
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- Peter Travers
One raucous night, one raunchy party, "American Graffiti filtered through "Dazed and Confused" and the Shermer High films of John Hughes.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 3, 2011
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 3, 2011
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 3, 2011
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- Peter Travers
As Joe blurs the line between reality and the supernatural, his haunting and hypnotic film exerts a hold you don't want to break. It's a beauty.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 28, 2011
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 26, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Patrick Lussier is listed as The Director, though I saw no evidence of anyone in control.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 26, 2011
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- Peter Travers
ignore the pileup of implausibilities and Unknown becomes a diabolically entertaining con game. Does it jerk you around? Yes. Suck it up. The ride's worth it.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 17, 2011
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 11, 2011
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- Peter Travers
It's the perfect Valentine's date night movie, but only with someone you hate.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 11, 2011
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- Peter Travers
What we do see is mom, dad, Braun, Usher, vocal coach Mama Jan Smith and the burgeoning Team Bieber claiming they only want the best for the boy as he goes through a punishing 84-date concert tour. Group hug.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 11, 2011
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- Peter Travers
The movie ultimately reveals itself as a pretender with no balls. Creatively, it's all wet.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 5, 2011
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 5, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Araki constructs the hot-blooded Kaboom as a high-wire act without a safety net. Go with it.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 28, 2011
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 28, 2011
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- Peter Travers
The result is just good enough to pass as an action flick you watch with the forgiving gaze that comes from too many beers and too little sleep.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 28, 2011
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- Peter Travers
The director, 66, brings his passion for precision to every frame of the film, refusing to hype or Hollywoodize the detailed richness of the story.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 20, 2011
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- Peter Travers
What's in this cliché grab bag for moviegoers? Well, Portman and Kutcher are a cute mismatch. She's short to his tall, sassy to his sweet, etc. I dried up here. So does the movie.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 20, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Rosamund Pike is perfection as Barney's true love, and Dustin Hoffman makes magic as Barney's randy dad. It's acting heaven.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 13, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Miles below the Woodman's class. It's possible that a more astringent script could have provided fuel for the actors and A-list director Ron Howard.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 13, 2011
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- Peter Travers
The Green Hornet doesn't suck. But don't expect it to hang together either, what with the clashing tones and melting logic.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 13, 2011
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- Peter Travers
At one point, Black puts out a fire by pissing on it. It's my job as a critic to piss on this dumb excuse for a movie. Consider it done.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 7, 2011
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- Peter Travers
This lame-ass chick-flick sampling of "Crazy Heart" is more like country Kryptonite.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 7, 2011
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- Peter Travers
The real plague is the movie, a sci-fi hodgepodge of bad history and worse special effects.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 7, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Shot hand-held with a poet's eye by Rodrigo Prieto, the film is relentless but as riveting as the world a remarkable actor lets us see through Uxbal's eyes. Bravo, Bardem.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 29, 2010
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- Peter Travers
Just watch the magnificent Manville, in a raw and riveting award-class performance that exposes a grieving heart under siege. Her last scene is quietly devastating. So is this intimate miracle of a movie.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 29, 2010
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- Peter Travers
Ryan Gosling and Michelle Williams give two of the most explosive and emotionally naked performances you will see anywhere. Just know you're in for a workout.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 29, 2010
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 22, 2010
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- Peter Travers
Wells is a wonder with actors - Cooper and Jones earn top honors - and a filmmaker with an instinct for the emotions that bleed between the lines. This haunting movie hits you hard and right where you live.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 21, 2010
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- Peter Travers
As in "Lost in Translation," Coppola keeps an eye out for the broken places. That's when Somewhere is really something.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 21, 2010
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- Peter Travers
What makes True Grit a new classic for the Coens is the way the brothers absorb the unfairly unsung Portis into their DNA, like they did with Cormac McCarthy in "No Country for Old Men." True Grit is packed with action and laughs, plus a touching coda with an older Mattie, but it's the dialogue that really sings. Great filmmaking. Great acting. Great movie. Saddle up.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 21, 2010
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 17, 2010
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- Peter Travers
Nicole Kidman is just astonishing in Rabbit Hole - subtle, fierce, brutally funny, tender when you least expect it, and battered by the feelings that hit her when she forgets to duck.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 17, 2010
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- Peter Travers
Bridges has a fine time playing with himself, so to speak. Add Garrett Hedlund as Flynn's son Sam, the rebel who zaps himself into the server to find his lost dad, and director Joseph Kosinski has a recipe for adventure that should delight gamers. Non-techies are on their own.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 17, 2010
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- Peter Travers
Director Tom McGrath keeps the action spinning and trips lightly over the bummer spectacle of watching a bad boy go good.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 15, 2010
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- Peter Travers
Recipe for nutso fun: Mix Zach Galifianakis with Robert Downey Jr. Apply the same mold John Hughes used for "Planes, Trains and Automobiles." Have Todd Phillips stir with wack-ass abandon. Don't worry about missing ingredients, like plot. Serve to an audience ready to lap it up.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 15, 2010
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 14, 2010
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- Peter Travers
Anne Hathaway and Jake Gyllenhaal are hotties with talent. And they maneuver through the daunting maze of shifting tones and intersecting plots of Love and Other Drugs like the pros they are.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 13, 2010
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 11, 2010
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- Peter Travers
Two men alone create an epic landscape of feeling in one of the very best movies of the year.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 11, 2010
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- Peter Travers
In a year of craptaculars, The Tourist deserves burial at the bottom of the 2010 dung heap. It offers talented people trapped in creative inertia. A microscope and a search party could not discover any trace of chemistry between Johnny Depp and Angelina Jolie.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 10, 2010
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- Peter Travers
I found myself wishing that Taymor would turn off the sound and fury and let The Tempest speak for itself. My wish wasn't granted.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 10, 2010
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- Peter Travers
The Fighter, its heart full to bursting, is an emotional powerhouse that comes close to spilling over.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 10, 2010
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- Peter Travers
Disney's spirited re-telling of Rapunzel in 3D animation turns out to be a dazzler.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 9, 2010
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- Peter Travers
It could have been the 21st-century Showgirls. I wouldn't have missed that for the world. Instead, Burlesque, starring Cher and Christina Aguilera playing drag queen versions of themselves with all the vitality of Madame Tussauds wax dolls, is a bust that lacks the pizzaz and bugfuck nuttiness of Paul Verhoeven's 1995 trash epic.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 9, 2010
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- Peter Travers
Hamilton manifests her vision of what politics can do to individual thinking with subtlety and sophistication. Remember her name. She's a genuine find.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 7, 2010
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- Peter Travers
The result is a potent and provocative movie that will keep you up nights.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 6, 2010
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- Peter Travers
It's one crazy love story, but Carrey and McGregor make it work by making us buy the romance as the real thing. There's something about these Marys that pulls you in.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 6, 2010
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- Peter Travers
Portman's portrait of an artist under siege is unmissable and unforgettable. So is the movie. You won't know what hit you.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 6, 2010
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- Peter Travers
Sally Hawkins is just plain irresistible in this funny, touching and vital salute to women in the work force.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 18, 2010
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- Peter Travers
It's damn hard to enjoy a thriller when you don't, won't, can't believe a word of it.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 18, 2010
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- Peter Travers
A tart, terrific comedy that gives Harrison Ford his best and funniest role in years.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 11, 2010
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- Peter Travers
Like the A.R. Rahman score that drives the movie, the triumphant 127 Hours pays fitting tribute to Aron by being thrillingly alive.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 4, 2010
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- Peter Travers
Spends too much time covering ground well known from the headlines. But the scenes of the couple at home with their children and friends are uniquely fascinating, if not, in Wilson's words, "very 007-ish."- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 4, 2010
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- Peter Travers
The actors and admirably sensitive director Jake Scott (son of Ridley) can't compensate for Ken Hixon's long slog of a script.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 28, 2010
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- Peter Travers
Hornet's Nest is talky but indisputably terrific, and it ends in a dazzling display of courtroom fireworks. Rapace is hot stuff in any language. Oscar, take heed.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 28, 2010
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- Peter Travers
If you're looking for wicked fun this Halloween, Paranormal Activity 2 is the best goosebump game in town.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 22, 2010
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- Peter Travers
Sam Rockwell has yet to find a movie as good as he is (Moon comes closest). He's still looking.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 21, 2010
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 21, 2010
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- Peter Travers
Hunt's flat delivery is mercilessly cruel to Wilde's delicious epigrams. That sound you hear is Oscar spinning madly in his grave.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Winkler's script creaks with melodrama, especially in the scenes with Merrill and his ex-wife, Ruth (Annette Bening), though Bening gives the role spine. Director Winkler fails to modulate the performances.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The problem for Gary Trousdale and Kirk Wise, who also co-directed Beauty and the Beast, is turning a tale of violent love and death into a family film with a happy ending.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The acid comedy of Grant's performance carries the film. It helps also that newcomer Hoult is that rare child actor who mercifully underplays the pathos of his role.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Miller's wake-up call is meant to be ours. Too little and too late? Maybe. But even in this Bourne Zone, Damon and Greengrass haven't shirked their duty to enlighten and entertain.- Rolling Stone
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- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Eddie Murphy is funny again. Sadly, he lacks the guts to follow through on the cathartic self-satire that gives the film its distinction.- Rolling Stone
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- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The film belongs to Jolie. She won an Oscar for 1999's "Girl, Interrupted," but this is by far her best performance.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
No one interested in the power and magic of movies should miss it.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
It's the work of a major talent. Apatow scores by crafting the film equivalent of a stand-up routine that encompasses the joy, pain, anger, loneliness and aching doubt that go into making an audience laugh.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
It's the classic American tale of the family man triumphant, and Howard makes sure that it hits you right in the heart.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Madden directed Paltrow in the play on the London stage, but he does his "Shakespeare in Love" goddess no favors by filling the screen with big close-ups that betray the theatrical origins of the piece and drain the movie of life and urgency. Proof hasn't been filmed at all -- it's been embalmed.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
It's warped and wonderfully effervescent. Ditto the songs by Danny Elfman, who sings the role of Bonejangles, the frontman for a skeleton jazz band at a swinging underworld club. Best of all is the love story.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Fierce, funny and finally devastating, Tanovic's superb film offers a timely look at the roots of civil war and acts of terrorism on both sides that can be exploited by political and media hypocrites alike.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Ferrell makes the damn thing work. Even though he can't get naked or use naughty words, there's a devil of comedy in Ferrell, and he lets it out to play. Director Jon Favreau has the good sense to just stand out of his way.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The fierce and funny film version has been directed by Texan Richard Linklater (Slacker, Dazed and Confused, Before Sunrise) with rare grace and compassion.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Steve Carell, best known as a team player on "The Daily Show," "The Office" and such movies as "Anchorman," earns top-banana status as Andy. He is flat-out hilarious.- Rolling Stone
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- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Just for starters, no movie about the Dutch Resistance during World War II has any right to be this wildly entertaining, not to mention this provocative and potently erotic.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The haunting, heart-piercing Elah isn't perfect. It's something better: essential.- Rolling Stone
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- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Lee offers no reassurance, no uplift, no call for all races to join hands and spout liberal platitudes. What he does offer is a devastating portrait of black America pushed to the limit, with the outcome still to be written. There’s only one way to do the wrong thing about Do the Right Thing: that would be to ignore it.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Jamie Foxx gets so far inside the man and his music that he and Ray Charles seem to breathe as one.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
What links the two films in fun and ferocity is the big game, a ripsnorter that is irresistibly entertaining.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Screenwriter Robert Towne has certainly not challenged his gifts -- the script is loaded with stock cars and stock characters -- but he does deliver what's necessary: a workable setup for exciting NASCAR racing footage shot on sixteen Winston Cup tracks from Daytona to Watkins Glen.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
For those who don't believe that truth trumps fiction for whacked-out depravity, mark this shockingly fierce and funny spellbinder as Exhibit A.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Susan Minot’s resplendent novel of a dying woman…stumbles on its way to the screen.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
When a chick flick goes wrong -- and this one hits a dead end in hell -- it's a wipeout.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Blending humor and heartbreak in a performance that makes a small movie a richly satisfying one, Caine truly is magic.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Shrek 2 may be computer-generated, but its innate heart and glorious sense of mischief make it one of the best and most humane movies of the summer.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
This seriously funny movie, artfully photographed by the great Roger Deakins, is spiritual in nature, barbed in tone, and, oh, yeah, it stings like hell.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Dalton has training in classical theater; he has pedigree, looks, class. But as Bond he is – face it – dull as dirt. Too much spoofing is bad (see Moore), none is deadly (see Dalton).- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Writer-director Roman Coppola is trying to capture a time he's too young to remember, when the French New Wave reinvigorated film art.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Coppola gives Suicides a haunted quality that is undeniably affecting, a feeling intensified by a wonderfully funny and touching Dunst.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
It's a feast of smart, sexy, glorious talk. The Oscar for best foreign film belongs right here.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Brimming with humor and heartbreak, Slumdog Millionaire meets at the border of art and commerce and lets one flow into the other as if that were the natural order of things.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Green has created a work of startling originality that will haunt you for a good, long time.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Director Richard Eyre has struck gold. Twice. Dench and Winslet are a riveting matchup.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Credible? Not really. But Cage and Rockwell play off each other with devilish finesse. And Lohman (White Oleander) is on fire -- she's a comer.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Tom Cruise starring in the fact-based story of a plot to kill Hitler by Nazi Col. Claus von Stauffenberg sounds like Oscar bait. It isn't. And the sooner you accept it, the more fun you'll have at this satisfying B movie.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Primed to keep your pulse racing so your brain will stop thinking, "WTF!" Go with the illogic or you'll miss the fun.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Small jokes are buried under elaborate setups. Sight gags are repeated to the point of exhaustion — a woman’s shoe steps in gum, then toilet paper, then . . . you get the point. Most painful of all, serious actors strain to be funny.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
A top cast, guided by actress Bonnie Hunt in her directing debut, mixes comedy and corn with savvy.- Rolling Stone
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- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Just when you're ready to puke, the old Bill Conti theme ("Gonna Fly Now") kicks in -- are you feeling it? -- Stallone steps in the ring and every day is Christmas. All together now: Rock-ee! Rock-ee!- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Environmentalists are up in arms. "Where did the shit go?" they want to know. The answer is painfully obvious: into the screenplay.- Rolling Stone
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- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Say the word, girl (Lopez), the next time you're offered one of these barrel scrapers: Enough!- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
There's not enough here to sustain a half-hour sitcom, but Reese Witherspoon shoulders the burden with star shine to spare.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
You may have doubts about which side to choose, but there's no doubt about this mind-bender. It'll pin you to your seat.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Kudrow's Michele is a deadpan delight as she joins fellow misfit Romy (a deliciously funny Mira Sorvino).- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The film is a sham, with good actors going for the paycheck and using beards and heavy makeup to hide their shame.- Rolling Stone
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- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
There's no code to decipher. Da Vinci is a dud -- a dreary, droning, dull-witted adaptation of Dan Brown's religioso detective story.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
McNaughton has made a film of clutching terror that's meant to heighten our awareness instead of dulling it. At the end, Henry is still out there among us. And he's no B-movie monster in a hockey mask. He could be the guy next door. This film gives off a dark chill that follows you all the way home.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Plot analysis is useless, since the film's fate rests with MTV comic Shore in his feature debut.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
A shock ending may be the best hope for this film, a convoluted mystery that thinks it's way smarter than it is.- Rolling Stone
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- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Here’s a powerhouse of a documentary that makes you feel mad as hell and unwilling to take it anymore.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
When E.T. debuts on DVD, you can choose between the new version, which better matches E.T.'s words to his lips, and the sweetly clunky, digitally deprived version redolent of penis breath. I don't need to phone home to know which one I'm buying. [2002 re-release]- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
But this is Washington's show, his Scarface, if you will, and his smiling, seductive monster is a thrilling creation that gives Training Day all the bite it needs.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Allen, who stays behind the camera, brings too little wit and too much contrivance to material that quickly dissolves into warmed-over Dostoevski.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
In not knowing who it needs to please, I Want to Believe pleases no one.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
By the fourth clone, played as a babbling simpleton, Keaton has exhausted the gimmick and the audience. I’d trade a dozen Dougs for one Beetlejuice.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The film is technically raw, but the sight of Van Peebles playing his father at a defining moment in movie history exerts a potent fascination.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Chockablock with things we're not supposed to notice: that Roberts is wasted; that she and Cusack have no characters to play, so it's virtually impossible to understand why she loves him or vice versa; that the script provides comedy without bite and romance without resonance.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Levinson wants nothing less than to capture the hope and despair of the American dream through the saga of one family — his family. It’s a grand ambition. But the film, though exquisitely crafted, lacks the political, spiritual and sociological depth to realize it. What Avalon does offer are rich period details, abundant scenes of humor and heartbreak and outstanding performances.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Like the best filmmakers at Sundance 2001, Nolan leaps into the wild blue and dares us to leap with him. Go for it.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
It's the Bay touch you feel in the way actors register as body count, characters go undeveloped, and sensation trumps feeling. A nightmare, indeed.- Rolling Stone
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- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Guy flicks can be just as galling as the chick variety. Here's Exhibit A in how to lose an audience in ten minutes.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Director Andrew Currie is better at laughs than scares, but he can’t sustain either as Fido runs out of steam in the final stretch. Till then, it’s fiendish fun.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Araki gives his hypnotic film a raw intensity heightened by a surreal landscape and a jagged score from the likes of Braindead Sound Machine, KMFDM and Coil.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
You leave WALL-E with a feeling of the rarest kind: that you've just enjoyed a close encounter with an enduring classic.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Cyrus, the summer's best, most original and crazily inventive comedy, is potently funny and painfully real.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
It's a one-joke premise that ultimately wears thin, but Krueger works some playful variations on a theme.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Part of the miracle of Robert Altman's triumphantly fierce, funny, moving and innovative Short Cuts is that you can't get this movie out of your head. You keep playing it back to savor its formula-smashing audacity, its peerless performances and its cleareyed view of blasted lives.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
This is a Ferrell you've never seen before, nailing a role that calls for breakneck humor in the final race against the clock and touching gravity in the love scenes with Gyllenhaal.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
When the script, by Zwick, Marshall Herskovitz and John Logan, doesn't sabotage the images, and the great cinematographer John Toll turns action into poetry, The Last Samurai emerges as a haunting silent movie.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
At its best, De-Lovely evokes a time, a place and a sound with stylish wit and sophistication.- Rolling Stone
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- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The best hip-hop film of all, taking on obvious targets (misogynist lyrics) and sacred cows (political rap) alike.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
This unnervingly funny and quietly devastating film -- director Todd Field's first since his smash 2001 debut with "In the Bedroom" -- pulls you in like a magnetic-force field.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Aussie singer Natalie Imbruglia gets to play the babe, nothing more, but she does that brightly. The rest of the movie is a dim bulb.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
If you're gay and/or eight years old, HSM3 is the movie event of the year.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Nil By Mouth is a shockingly intimate portrait of entrapment that may leave you wincing. It’s Oldman’s Raging Bull.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Inspired funny business that allows Martin to hilariously torpedo Hollywood's corrupt heart.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The film, which is literary to a fault, includes an earthquake, but if the earth moves at all, thank Hayek, who gives the tale a smoldering life that finally lifts it from the page.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Down in the Valley is a wild thing that sticks with you long after it's over. You know, a real movie.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
They turn what could have been an acting stunt into an intimate and compelling study of bruised emotions.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Ang Lee, a world-class director working at the top of his elegant form, has done something thrilling. For all the leaping action, it's the film's spirit that soars.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Here's a true S&M date movie. Only sadistic men and masochistic women could love it.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Whatever Works feels like something out of time and, worse, out of step. Hell, Allen wrote the script back in the 1970s for Zero Mostel.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Hungarian director Istvan Szabo (Sunshine) overplays his hand and traps Bening in a role that's all emoting, no emotion.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Off the shelf after two years to capitalize on the popularity of Vin Diesel, Seth Green and Barry Pepper. It should have stayed there.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Witherspoon -- though miles from the keen satire of "Election" -- stays one sharp cookie even as her film crumbles.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
It's the spirit that Biggie Smalls, born Christopher Wallace, put into inventing himself and his music that ignites Notorious, a biopic that sees the flaws in the man but can't help accentuating the positive.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The infuriating cop–out ending reduces the premise to mush. I wanted to scream. Here goes: Arghh!- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Director Fernando Meirelles and screenwriter Jeffrey Caine put a human face on John le Carre's novel of sex, lies and dirty politics in modern Africa. Prepare for a thrilling ride.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Too crude for the kids and not crude enough for connoisseurs of the "Something About Mary" school of hair jism and balls caught in zippers, Osmosis Jones seems doomed to fall between the cracks.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Robbins’s debut as a director is exceptionally accomplished. He shrewdly balances his sense of purpose with a flair for mischief.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The Hangover ain't art, but Phillips has shaped the hardcore hilarity into the summer party movie of all our twisted dreams.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
That the performances are uniformly outstanding is a tribute to Rob Reiner, who directs with masterly assurance, fusing suspense and character to create a movie that literally vibrates with energy.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
So why oh why is The Expendables such a limp-dick bust? Because Stallone forgets to include non-spazzy direction, a coherent plot, dialogue that actors can speak without cringing, stunts that don't fizzle, blood that isn't digital and an animating spirit that might convince us to give a damn.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Wait till you get a load of this babe from hell in scenes that are sure to put the gorgeously lurid Romeo Is Bleeding on the Moral Majority’s shit list. The rest of us – those who believe it’s children and not adults who need protection from movie mayhem – will be too busy relishing the riveting fireworks display from Olin and Oldman in this scorcher of a thriller. Director Peter Medak (The Krays, The Ruling Class) keeps the action stylish, sexy and fiendishly funny. The film rarely makes a lick of sense, but it’s compulsively watchable.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Phantom, still running on Broadway after sixteen years, is a rapturous spectacle. And the movie, directed full throttle by Joel Schumacher, goes the show one better.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
Sonnenfeld deftly orchestrates the intricate two-part harmony, and Smith and Jones -- a powerhouse comic pair -- make it all look easy.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The movie is marred by overkill, especially in the brutal and bloated allegorical ending, which feels lifted, clumsily, from The Godfather. State of Grace is most powerful and gripping when it stays true to the emotions of its characters.- Rolling Stone
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- Peter Travers
The movie left me with the feeling of being trapped with a person of privilege who won't stop with the whine whine whine.- Rolling Stone
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