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
Fruitvale Station is a gut punch of a movie. By standing in solidarity with Oscar, it becomes an unstoppable cinematic force.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jul 11, 2013
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- Peter Travers
What pulls us over the rough spots is the mind meld between del Toro the artist and the child inside him. They both want to astonish us. Geeks everywhere, salute.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jul 11, 2013
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- Peter Travers
McCarthy is a force of comic nature. And she and Bullock mix it up like pros. In this dead-battery of a movie, these live-wires miraculously ignite sparks.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jul 8, 2013
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- Peter Travers
The Way Way Back gets it wittily, thrillingly right. It turns the familiar into something bracingly fresh and funny. It makes you laugh, then breaks your heart.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jul 8, 2013
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jul 8, 2013
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- Peter Travers
Here they're just putting "Pirates of the Caribbean" in a saddle and pretending we won't notice.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jul 8, 2013
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 27, 2013
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- Peter Travers
Stamp's award-caliber performance as a closed-off man on the brink of turning into stone is a miracle of subtlety and feeling. This is acting of the highest order. Redgrave partners him superbly, bringing warmth and nurturing humor to a role she refuses to play for easy tears.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 20, 2013
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- Peter Travers
It's all infectious fun, despite the lack of originality. In the art of tickling funny bones, Crystal and Goodman earn straight A's.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 20, 2013
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- Peter Travers
World War Z is still as smart, shifty and scary as a starving zombie ready to chow down on you, baby, you.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 20, 2013
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- Peter Travers
Sometimes it's racism; sometimes bum luck; sometimes it's producer Phil Spector putting Love's voice in another singer's mouth. You watch. You hear the gospel spoken in the voices of these women. And you marvel.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 13, 2013
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 13, 2013
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- Peter Travers
Caught in the slipstream between action and angst, Man of Steel is a bumpy ride for sure. But there's no way to stay blind to its wonders.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 13, 2013
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- Peter Travers
There's no way you won't have a blast. In their directing debuts, Rogen and Goldberg come up aces, mixing hilarity and horror like pros and never letting up on the killer momentum.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 13, 2013
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- Peter Travers
The result is an uncommon intimacy, the kind you find in a Judy Blume novel. Her grit and grace are all over this heartfelt adventure of a movie. She gives it a spirit that soars.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 6, 2013
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- Peter Travers
Whedon, without skimping on the tale’s tragic undercurrents, has crafted an irresistible blend of mirth and malice.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 6, 2013
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- Peter Travers
A flabby farce that might win a pass at the box office because it's just so cute and family friendly. But where's your edge, guys? Where are the laughs that walk a tightrope?- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 6, 2013
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- Peter Travers
DeMonaco shows a sure hand at building tension. Too bad the film devolves into a series of home-invasion clichés. The Purge was almost on to something.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 6, 2013
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- Peter Travers
You leave The East with a hunger to know more and a good idea of where to look. For Marling and Batmanglij that counts as mission accomplished. For audiences, it’s that rare thing these days – a movie that matters.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 30, 2013
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 30, 2013
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- Peter Travers
The young Smith has energy, but not the acting chops. And he's no miracle worker. The burden of carrying this dull, lifeless movie is just too much. And it's hell on an audience. It's not a good sign when you sit there thinking – Make. It. Stop.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 30, 2013
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- Peter Travers
Whatever a modern love story is, Before Midnight takes it to the next level. It's damn near perfect.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 23, 2013
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- Peter Travers
It’s kickass trash that never pretends to be more. Bonus points for that.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 23, 2013
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- Peter Travers
What happened, bitches? Didn't the letdown of The Hangover Part II – basically Part I set in Thailand but minus the laughs – teach you anything? Guess not.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 23, 2013
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- Peter Travers
Baumbach, in his most compassionate film since The Squid and the Whale, catches Frances in the act of inventing herself. It's a glorious sight to see.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 16, 2013
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- Peter Travers
Kudos to Abrams for going bigger without going stupid. His set pieces, from an erupting volcano to the hell unleashed over London and Frisco Bay, are doozies. So's the movie. It's crazy good.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 16, 2013
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- Peter Travers
The result, with its flashing perspectives and stealthy wit, is unique and unforgettable.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 9, 2013
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- Peter Travers
There may be worse movies this summer than The Great Gatsby, but there won't be a more crushing disappointment.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 9, 2013
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- Peter Travers
In between scenes of the muscleheads torturing their victim, Bay indulges his taste for treating women as sluts and grisly brutality as a nifty excuse for a cheap laugh. Pain and Gain is personal all right. You leave these characters with the distinct impression that they're Bay's kind of people.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 2, 2013
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- Peter Travers
Cartwright, find something sadly timeless in a child torn apart in a custody battle that no one wins, least of all the child.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 2, 2013
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- Peter Travers
You don't have to be in vogue to enjoy this stylish ride through Bergdorf's. It's a surprise package to die for. Miele and his virtuoso cinematographer, Justin Bare, show how fashion can be aspiration, a model for dreaming the impossible.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 2, 2013
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- Peter Travers
Badgley, best known for playing "lonely boy" Dan Humphrey on Gossip Girl, is a revelation. He wears his role like a second skin.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 2, 2013
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- Peter Travers
For all the clanking armies of iron knights on display to dazzle the eager kid in each of us, this summer epic rings hollow. There's no one home inside the suit.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 2, 2013
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- Peter Travers
Bahrani is a gifted filmmaker. But he shoots himself in the foot by throwing in a contrived plot device that creates drama at the expense of credibility. Suddenly, we're isolated from a film that had made us believe. It's a breach of trust that comes at too high a price.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 25, 2013
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- Peter Travers
In the hands of Nichols, Mud emerges as a thing of bruised beauty. There's magic in it.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 25, 2013
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- Peter Travers
For all the bells and whistles – an electronic score by M83, a screen-busting Imax presentation and Cruise going full throttle – Oblivion feels arid and antiseptic, untouched by human hands. Bummer.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 18, 2013
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- Peter Travers
Malick keeps pushing Affleck to the corner of the frame, as if he's more interested in the women. I found it difficult to maintain interest in anyone. If there's such a thing as a feather that weighs a ton, it's To the Wonder.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 10, 2013
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- Peter Travers
Bateman, in a rare dramatic role, is just tremendous, finding depths of emotion where they're least expected. Disconnect works they same way. Even when it trips on its ambitions, it hits home.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 10, 2013
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- Peter Travers
Given Helgeland's rep as a screenwriter (including an Oscar for 1997's L.A. Confidential), it rankles that 42 settles for the official story. The private Robinson, who died of a heart attack at 53 in 1972, stays private. We stay on the outside looking in. Let it be.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 10, 2013
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- Peter Travers
There's enough plot to stuff a miniseries, but Redford never loses sight of the human drama. Martyrdom is not conferred, nor is reinvention equated with redemption. Drawing skillfully on a first-rate cast, Redford builds a riveting, resonant political thriller that values the complexity of its characters and the intelligence of its audience.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 4, 2013
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- Peter Travers
Dawson digs deep and nails every nuance, making the dizzying suspense resonate with raw emotion. She is, in a word, electrifying. Even when the wheels come off the too-busy plot, so is the movie.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 4, 2013
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- Peter Travers
Ascher's unique and unforgettable film is a tribute to movie love. I couldn't have liked it more.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 28, 2013
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- Peter Travers
The Host basically comes down to a vote for Team Jared or Team Ian. I voted myself into oblivion about half an hour in. Niccol, who once added mystery and suspense to the sci-fi of 1997's "Gattaca," is no match for the giant marshmallow that is The Host.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 28, 2013
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- Peter Travers
It's a beast of a movie, an emotional roller coaster that threatens to go off the rails, and does. But Cianfrance, working from a scrappy script he wrote with Ben Coccio and Darius Marder, takes you on a hell of a ride.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 28, 2013
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- Peter Travers
Instead of the easy attitudinizing that is the default position for teen comedies, Gimme the Loot fills each frame with raw talent and exuberance.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 21, 2013
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- Peter Travers
You could call it an Aussie "Dreamgirls." I'd call it a blast of joy and music that struts right into your heart.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 21, 2013
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- Peter Travers
I'd see Tina Fey and Paul Rudd in anything, but this is pushing it. Admission is so slight that a breeze could flatten it.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 21, 2013
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- Peter Travers
Magicians have been pulling rabbits out of hats for ages. And yet, with all this talent, no one can make a decent script materialize.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 14, 2013
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- Peter Travers
As Alien, a gun-crazy Florida drug dealer with tats, beaded cornrows and a grill any rapper would envy, Franco is a bug-f--k blast. Too bad the movie itself is rarely as outrageous as he is.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 14, 2013
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- Peter Travers
Exorcist junkies should look elsewhere. Instead of spinning heads and projectile puke, Mungiu offers nuance and provocation. The result is quietly devastating.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 7, 2013
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- Peter Travers
Only near the end, when MacArthur and Hirohito meet in person, do we get fireworks. And that's thanks to Jones, who makes sure this old soldier will never die in our memory. As for this tepid movie, it just fades away.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 7, 2013
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- Peter Travers
There's no Judy Garland songs, no Scarecrow, no Tin Man, no Cowardly Lion. There's also no simplicity, no magic, no truth.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 7, 2013
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- Peter Travers
It's a bloodless, gutless piece of PG-13 fodder, geared to go down easy. That it does. It practically evaporates while you're watching it, lulling when you most want it to levitate.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 28, 2013
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- Peter Travers
Stoker is Park's darkly funny, deliciously depraved riff on Hitchcock's "Shadow of a Doubt."- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 28, 2013
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 21, 2013
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 14, 2013
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- Peter Travers
Ah jeez. I actually wanted this one to be good. Or at least decent. Or at least a reminder of what got us all fired up about the first Die Hard in 1988. But A Good Day To Die Hard, the fifth in a creatively exhausted series, is total crap.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 14, 2013
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 14, 2013
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- Peter Travers
Side Effects is Soderbergh in full, flinty vigor. It's anything but a formula murder mystery.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 6, 2013
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- Peter Travers
The Gatekeepers cuts deeper than any political thriller. It's a powerhouse.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 1, 2013
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- Peter Travers
Some actors don't need top-shelf material. Just the pleasure of their company is enough. And so Al Pacino, Christopher Walken and Alan Arkin turn the insubstantial Stand Up Guys into solid entertainment.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 1, 2013
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- Peter Travers
The film’s genius is the way it applies the lessons of Sound City to any job. “The human element,” says Grohl, “that’s what makes the magic.” In his directing debut, Grohl shows the instincts of a real filmmaker. Sound City hits you like a shot in the heart.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 1, 2013
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- Peter Travers
The script is too primly PG-13 to really go for it. Warm Bodies even suggests that true love can help the right zombie grow a new heart. That's a con job that makes Bodies lukewarm at best.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 1, 2013
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- Peter Travers
I can't detect the hand of Hill in even a single scene in Bullet in the Head. It plays like a Stallone vanity project, impure and stupefyingly simple.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 1, 2013
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- Peter Travers
Coscarelli junkies won't be bothered by the film's herky-jerky rhythms. Go for the freaky fun of it, though a little soy sauce on the side sure wouldn't hurt.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 25, 2013
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 25, 2013
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- Peter Travers
What to say about this lame-brained, limp dick attempt to update a classic Brothers Grimm tale into an f-bomb throwing vomit-inducing 3D franchise? I say, screw the damn thing and run the other way.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 25, 2013
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- Peter Travers
Another January dud. Broken City drops hot-shot actors in a quicksand of clichés and watches them sink.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 17, 2013
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- Peter Travers
Chastain digs deep, going beyond the call of scream-queen duty to find the passion that gives horror a pulse.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 17, 2013
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- Peter Travers
The actors are world-class charmers, and the magnificent Dame Maggie is the diva divine. Her wit still stings, as it does on "Downton Abbey."- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 10, 2013
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- Peter Travers
In his screenwriting debut, Glee's gifted Chris Colfer, 22, proves he can lace a line with sass and soul. The downside of Struck by Lightning, besides the fact that Colfer's character, Carson Phillips, is struck dead in the first scene, is that Colfer hands himself all the best lines.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 10, 2013
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- Peter Travers
This movie made my ears hurt. Raymond Chandler, Dashiell Hammett and James Ellroy could have turned this pulp into insinuating jazz. What's here is a cartoonish bore.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 10, 2013
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- Peter Travers
Director Gus Van Sant finds the human side of a knotty issue. No polemics. Just the face of a new America in crisis.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 27, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Besides being a feast for the eyes and ears, Les Misérables overflows with humor, heartbreak, rousing action and ravishing romance. Damn the imperfections, it's perfectly marvelous.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 21, 2012
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- Peter Travers
His (Chase) ardent, acutely observed debut makes him, at 67, a filmmaker to watch.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 18, 2012
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- Peter Travers
That's what makes This Is 40 so potently, painfully funny, even when it's gross. What other film would dare suggest rectal monitoring as a form of closeness?- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 18, 2012
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- Peter Travers
The go-for-broke intensity and emotional layering Watts brings to her role is an acting triumph. And McGregor matches her in a performance of ferocity and feeling.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 18, 2012
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- Peter Travers
A dash of Tarantino might have juiced up Walter Salles' wrongheadedly well-mannered take on Jack Kerouac's 1957 Beat Generation landmark. Kerouac's semi-autobiographical novel comes to the screen looking good but feeling shallow.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 18, 2012
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- Peter Travers
This is Cruise's show. And he nails it. The patented smile is gone, replaced by a glower that makes Jack Reacher a dark and dazzling ride into a new kind of hell.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 18, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Hang on tight. The knockout punch of the movie season is being delivered by Zero Dark Thirty.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 18, 2012
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- Peter Travers
These two glam stars of French cinema – Riva in 1959's "Hiroshima Mon Amour" and Trintignant in 1966's "A Man and a Woman" – give performances of breathtaking power and beauty. Prepare for an emotional wipeout.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 13, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Wake up, people. Tarantino lives to cross the line. Is Django Unchained too much? Damn straight. It wouldn't be Tarantino otherwise.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 13, 2012
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- Peter Travers
What saves the day is the spidery, schizoid Gollum, again performed by the great Andy Serkis through the craft of motion capture.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 13, 2012
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 10, 2012
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- Peter Travers
The actors can't perform miracles. Hot dogs are served in the final scene, but trust me, Hyde Park on Hudson is no picnic.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 10, 2012
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- Peter Travers
As an actor, Burns has worked the Hollywood game from "Saving Private Ryan" to "Alex Cross." But his core passion is for making indie movies without studio interference, guerilla style. Because he takes his films personally, so do we. The Fitzgerald Family Christmas is one of his best.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 10, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Murder is just another day at the office for corporate America, and the film hammers that theme home with diminishing returns. But the acting is aces, especially Pitt mixing it up with the superb James Gandolfini.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 29, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Hopkins and Mirren are acting pros in stellar form. There's no way you want to miss the pleasure of their company in a movie that offers a sparkling and unexpectedly poignant look at how to sustain a career and a marriage.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 20, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Writer-director Jacques Audiard (A Prophet) probes the psyches of two people in crisis. His hypnotic film means to shake you, and does. Schoenaerts reveals unexpected layers in Ali. And Cotillard delivers a tour de force of unleashed emotions. She's astonishing.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 20, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Lee uses 3D with the delicacy and lyricism of a poet. You don't just watch this movie, you live it.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 20, 2012
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- Peter Travers
The story has been filmed many times, but never with this kind of erotic charge. Knightley is glorious, her eyes blazing with a carnal yearning that can turn vindictive at any perceived slight.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 15, 2012
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- Peter Travers
It's Dead! It's Dead! By which I mean, It's Finished! It's Finished! Five movies have been squeezed out of four Stephenie Meyer Twilight books. All of them redefining cinematic tedium for a new century. And now, It's Over! It's Over! No more Twilight movies EVER! I'm so joyful that I might be overrating The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn, Part 2 by saying it's not half bad.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 15, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Silver Linings Playbook is eager to sting instead of soothe. It's one of the year's best movies because Russell makes you laugh till it hurts.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 15, 2012
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 8, 2012
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- Peter Travers
This is Bond like you've never seen him, almost Freudian in his vulnerability. And a dynamite Daniel Craig, never better in the role, nails Bond's ferocity and feeling.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 8, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Grace notes abound in A Late Quartet, a small, shining gem of a movie that works its way into your heart with insinuating potency of music.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 1, 2012
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- Peter Travers
You might bitch that Flight levels off after its shocking, soaring start. But you'd be missing the point of an exceptional entertainment that Zemeckis shades into something quietly devastating – not an addiction drama, but the deeper spectacle of a man facing the truth about himself.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 1, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Moore brings a video junkie's passion to the movie game, and it's hilariously infectious.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 1, 2012
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- Peter Travers
For all the spectacular settings and visionary designs, Cloud Atlas left me feeling disconnected. Sad. But that's the true true.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 25, 2012
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 18, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Holy Motors, fueled by pure feeling, is a dream of a movie you want to get lost in. It's a thing of beauty.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 18, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Don't forget Winstead when making a list of the year's Best Actress contenders. Yes, she's that good.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 11, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Just so we're straight, Ben Affleck doesn't merely direct Argo, he directs the hell out of it, nailing the quickening pace, the wayward humor, the nerve-frying suspense.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 11, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Blood splatters, heads explode, and McDonagh takes sassy, self-mocking shots at the very notion of being literary in Hollywood. It's crazy-killer fun.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 11, 2012
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- Peter Travers
The chance for delicious satire melts away quickly in Butter, a spoof without oomph.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 4, 2012
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- Peter Travers
This hot mess got booed by the snobs at Cannes, but there's no denying its profane energy.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 4, 2012
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 4, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Kendrick is terrific, taking a role that could have slid by on snide and building it into something uniquely funny and touching.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 27, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Lacing tremendously exciting action with touching gravity, Looper hits you like a shot in the heart.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 27, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Perks deserves points for going beyond the typical coming-of-age drivel aimed at teens.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 20, 2012
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- Peter Travers
End of Watch gives you the savage whoosh of being on a job that can get you killed. Sins of cop clichés can be forgiven when a movie pays honest tribute to police on the line.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 20, 2012
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 20, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Radnor and Olsen are so funny and touching you want to say happythankyoumoreplease. What you get is frustratingly less. Still, to the movie's refreshingly uncynical credit, you feel for them.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 13, 2012
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- Peter Travers
It's instructive to note what a killer actor Richard Gere can be when a movie rises to his level. Arbitrage is such a movie, a sinfully entertaining look at the sins committed in the name of money.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 13, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Written, directed, acted, shot, edited and scored with a bracing vibrancy that restores your faith in film as an art form, The Master is nirvana for movie lovers. Anderson mixes sounds and images into a dark, dazzling music that is all his own.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 10, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Headland can write zingers that would make the cruelest bridezilla blush. And Caplan's treatise on the art of the blow job is time-capsule worthy. Sadly, Bachelorette is a comic cocktail that goes heavy on the bitters. That's no way to end a wedding.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 6, 2012
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- Peter Travers
In a rare instance of truth in advertising, the movie actually is a good time.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 30, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Lawless is a solid outlaw adventure, but you can feel it straining for a greatness that stays out of reach. There's even a prologue and an epilogue, arty tropes signifying an attempt to make a Godfather-style epic out of these moonshine wars. Not happening.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 30, 2012
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 23, 2012
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- Peter Travers
This slapstick road movie feels tossed off by people on a raunchy bender. I mean that as a good thing. The trouble with Hit & Run is that it can't sustain its trippy effervescence.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 23, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Premium Rush features fearless stunt work that shames most computer trickery. Too bad I didn't believe a minute of it.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 23, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Craig Zobel's potent and provocative Compliance is torture to sit through. It's also indispensable filmmaking. How is that possible? Check it out.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 16, 2012
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- Peter Travers
It also addresses questions of aging and neglect that Hollywood likes to run from. Langella, who's played everyone from Dracula to Nixon onscreen, is giving a master class in acting. Enroll now.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 16, 2012
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- Peter Travers
This mesmerizing mind-bender ought to prove two things: (1) Robert Pattinson really can act; (2) Director David Cronenberg never runs from a challenge.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 16, 2012
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 16, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Whitney Houston deserved better than to go out onscreen with this botch job remake of a 1976 soap opera that never deserved another thought.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 16, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Like the 2010 original, The Expendables 2 is all sound and fury signifying nothing, when at the very least it should add up to big, dumb fun.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 16, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Delpy is boundlessly appealing. And Rock is acerbic fun, notably in the imaginary debates he stages with Obama. But the frenzied cross-cultural gags take the piss out of the real subject: how blood ties can turn love into a battlefield.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 9, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Hope Springs knows happy endings are provisional. What this exuberant gift of a movie offers Kay and Arnold is a renewed appetite for life. And that never gets old.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 9, 2012
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- Peter Travers
The jokes never go deep, the toothless bites at the system leave no marks. It's only the wild-card energy of Ferrell and Galifianakis that keeps you on the ticket.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 9, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Gilroy stages two riveting shootouts involving Marta at work and home. And there's a killer chase scene in Manila as the bad guys try to knock Aaron and Marta off their speeding motorcycle. It's all sound and fury signifying nothing except a desperate need to feed a franchise.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 9, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Since the new Recall is totally witless, don't expect laughs. Originality and coherence are also notably MIA.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 2, 2012
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- Peter Travers
What really lifts Celeste and Jesse Forever above the rom-com herd, besides breakout star performances from Jones and Samberg, is the movie's willingness to replace clichés with painful truths. It's irresistible.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 2, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Then there's the movie itself, which should be crazy, stupid fun but settles for just stupid.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jul 27, 2012
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- Peter Travers
A fresh and unexpected documentary that plays like a nail-biting mystery and a ticket to ride the whirlwind where art and commerce do battle.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jul 26, 2012
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- Peter Travers
The result is something you won't see coming. Don't look for sweet and embraceable. This movie is not afraid to show its claws. Like the spirited teamwork of Kazan and Dano, Ruby Sparks is honest, deep and true.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jul 26, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Even when the film goes too far over the top to be saved, McConaughey mesmerizes.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jul 26, 2012
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- Peter Travers
The sheer scope of Nolan's vision – with emotion and spectacle thundering across the screen – is staggering. The Dark Knight Rises is the King Daddy of summer movie epics.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jul 16, 2012
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- Peter Travers
A movie that offers hard speculation and harder truths. You won't be able to get it out of your head.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jul 13, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Webb never loses touch with the film's emotional through line. And he allows time and space for Garfield and Stone, both stellar, to turn a high-flying adventure into something impassioned and moving. A Spider-Man that touches the heart. Now that really is amazing.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 29, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Journeys, shot on the last two nights of Young's 2011 solo world tour, is essential Neil Young.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 29, 2012
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- Peter Travers
There's no way you won't be captivated by Wallis, chosen ahead of 3,500 candidates to play the tiny folk hero who narrates the story. Her performance in this deceptively small film is a towering achievement.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 28, 2012
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 28, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Pine is driven and touchingly vulnerable. And Banks, heartbreakingly good, nails every nuance in a raw wound of a role. Thanks to their teamwork, we believe we are watching people like us.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 28, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Magic Mike slowly degenerates into a simplistic cautionary fable. I didn't see that coming from a sharp observer like Soderbergh.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 28, 2012
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- Peter Travers
This is the vital city that inspired Fellini – alive and lived in. When an actor falters or a joke falls flat, Roma stays fresh and dynamic. You can't take your eyes off it.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 21, 2012
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 21, 2012
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- Peter Travers
I never rooted for them as a couple, never felt a chemistry in their bond. And in a romance, even one with tragic notes, that really is the end of the world.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 21, 2012
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 21, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Relationships are killers, and this tough, tender, deeply satisfying romantic comedy from writer-director Lynn Shelton is also bruisingly funny.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 14, 2012
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- Peter Travers
The hugely enjoyable Rock of Ages is saved by its music, a tasty brew drawn from Def Leppard, Journey, Foreigner, Bon Jovi, REO Speedwagon, Pat Benatar, Twisted Sister, Poison and Whitesnake. It's near impossible not to rock along.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 14, 2012
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- Peter Travers
With that cast, we rightfully expect fireworks. What we get is the film equivalent of a wet blanket.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 7, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Director Colin Trevorrow and writer Derek Connolly keep the film humming with funny and touching surprises. And Plaza is a flat-out enchantress.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 7, 2012
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- Peter Travers
The ending isn't squishy scary or deeply satisfying. Bummer. Otherwise, Prometheus – especially in its spellbinding first hour – kicks ass so hard and often that it's impossible not to be thrilled by it.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 7, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Snow White and the Huntsman is definitely a missed opportunity. Sanders was on to something in taking the Snow White tale to its most menacing extreme.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 31, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Sy and Cluzet are superb actors who demolish stereotypes about race and social class by finding a common humanity in their characters. Acting this good forgives a lot of sins.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 24, 2012
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- Peter Travers
The top-tier cast, including Tilda Swinton as a character called Social Services, may be star overload, but each actor performs small miracles.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 24, 2012
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- Peter Travers
The effects are cheese-whizzy fun, but it's the unexpected spark between Smith and Brolin that makes MiB3 primo summer fun. Way cool.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 24, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Way to go, Battleship: Take the crassest of cynical junk, slather it in jingoism and sell it as rah-rah fun for right-wingers.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 17, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Morning sickness afflicts most of the potential mommies. For me, the movie itself triggered the vomiting.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 17, 2012
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- Peter Travers
The Dictator leaves you laughing helplessly. It starts at outrageous and rockets on from there. Screw the occasional sputter.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 16, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Powered by Simon's brilliance, Under African Skies is a cultural lightning bolt that soars on its music and an unshakable belief in the transcendence of art.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 10, 2012
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- Peter Travers
The pleasures of Dark Shadows are frustratingly hit-and-miss. In the end, it all collapses into a spectacularly gorgeous heap.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 10, 2012
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- Peter Travers
So it's a shame that in the end Madden can't keep the tear-jerking from drowning this delicate cinematic flower. The book knew how to hang tough. The movie, not so much.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 4, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Droolingly stupid weepie. Useful tip: The movie dies way quicker than she does.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 4, 2012
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- Peter Travers
The Avengers has it all. And then some. Six superheroes for the price of one ticket... It's also the blockbuster I saw in my head when I imagined a movie that brought together the idols of the Marvel world in one, shiny, stupendously exciting package. It's "Transformers" with a brain, a heart and working sense of humor. Suck on that, Michael Bay. [10 May 2012, p.74]- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 28, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Cusack captures that desperation vividly enough to make you wish this was the real Poe story, which The Raven onscreen leaves buried alive.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 26, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Statham is still playing it safe in Safe, but vulnerability is showing through the cracks.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 26, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Drags and sags at 124 minutes. Luckily, the movie never runs on sitcom empty. How could it, with a terrific cast.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 26, 2012
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- Peter Travers
No use trying to describe Bernie. It's a one-of-a-kind inspiration. You will never feel closer to a convicted killer.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 26, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Is it the worst of the seven screen Sparks so far? Nope. My vote still goes to 2009's "The Last Song" with Miley Cyrus mothering those unhatched turtle eggs. But it's still pretty damn insufferable.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 19, 2012
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- Peter Travers
The Stooges were always better in short doses. And 90 minutes of PG nyuk-nyuk-nyuk can seem like an eternity.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 12, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Cabin is a deliciously devious scare dance that keeps changing the steps until you lose your shit and fall helplessly into its demonic traps.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 12, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Welcome Damsels in Distress, an exhilarating gift of a comedy about college, the female intellect, the limitless male ego, inventing a new dance, and suicide prevention.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 5, 2012
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- Peter Travers
The laughs that do achieve liftoff are killer. But the real kick is seeing the old gang back and ready to party.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 5, 2012
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- Peter Travers
This feeble followup to 2010's godawful "Clash of the Titans" sucketh the mighty big one.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 30, 2012
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- Peter Travers
The best social documents on film do more than show you what's wrong in the world – they make it personal. Bully does that with a passion.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 30, 2012
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- Peter Travers
I've been told the movie plays best with very young girls. That's an insult very young girls should not be forced to endure.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 30, 2012
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 22, 2012
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- Peter Travers
My advice is to keep your eyes on Lawrence, who turns the movie into a victory by presenting a heroine propelled by principle instead of hooking up with the cutest boy.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 21, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Adrien Brody deserves superlatives for his acting in the alternately mesmerizing and maddening Detachment.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 15, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Best known as Ed Helms' nagging fiancée in "The Hangover," Harris is just perfect without ever looking down on Linda's faith in God and herself. Her performance earns a special kind of glory.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 15, 2012
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- Peter Travers
The funny, touching and vital Jeff, Who Lives at Home reaffirms your faith in Jay and Mark Duplass. Their films hit you where you live.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 15, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Luckily, Ferrell is at his funniest being serious. Casa de Mi Padre, shot in 24 days for $6 million, is really an SNL-ish sketch stretched to feature length. But Ferrell is an hombre loco. Mi gusta.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 15, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Are we always still in high school in our heads? 21 Jump Street thinks so. And Hill and Tatum are just the crazy-ass comedy team to prove it.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 15, 2012
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- Peter Travers
This is a rich subject for satire and sticking it to political bureaucracy. Screenwriter Simon Beaufoy (127 Hours) has mined Paul Torday's book for delicious nuggets about Western capitalism at war with Muslim culture.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 8, 2012
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- Peter Travers
"Paranormal Activity" has been here before, of course, but Silent House springs tangy new tricks, and Olsen is a primo scream queen.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 8, 2012
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- Peter Travers
An indelibly funny and touching comedy with a real sting in its tail. The laughs leave scars.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 8, 2012
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- Peter Travers
John Carter bites off more than even Woola can chew, but it's built on something rare: wonder instead of Hollywood cynicism.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 8, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Here, you can feel De Niro's full engagement in a character that echoes his roles in "Taxi Driver" and "Awakenings." It's a great wreck of a performance that feels bruisingly true. At its best, when it keeps sentimentality at bay, so does Being Flynn.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 2, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Yikes! Chris Renaud and Kyle Balda direct strictly for short-attention spans on a fruit-loopy palette that made me want to puke. Had Dr. Seuss lived (he died in 1991), I'm confident he would have puked as well.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 2, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Most teen flicks just fake being fueled by anarchy. But the gut-bustingly funny Project X is the real deal. It's raunchy, reckless and ready to party. What's not to like?- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 2, 2012
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- Peter Travers
I don't know what to make of Act of Valor. It's like reviewing a recruiting poster.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 24, 2012
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- Peter Travers
There's no thrill in Gone because you can see every surprise coming. It lies there flapping like a dying fish. Skip it.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 24, 2012
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- Peter Travers
When the script sags, Wain and producer Judd Apatow rely on a top team of actors to keep you laughing.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 23, 2012
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- Peter Travers
One look at the dreadful mess that is Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance will turn your whisper into a primal Cage scream: MAKE THIS MOVIE STOP!- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 17, 2012
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- Peter Travers
A trio of appealing actors is trapped in an action-spiked romcom death-sentenced by a lack of humor, heart and a coherent reason for being.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 16, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Despite a gimmicky premise, Chronicle fuels its action with characters you can laugh with, understand and even take to heart.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 10, 2012
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- Peter Travers
In Darkness is an agonizing experience, especially when Jews are publicly humiliated in the streets and a driving rainstorm nearly drowns those cowering in the depths. Holland means to shake you. In Darkness has the power to haunt will haunt your dreams.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 10, 2012
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- Peter Travers
The Vow is a sopping hankie of a romance for women who love to suffer and the men who love them.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 10, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Yup, it could have been a bucket of bleak. But the electric talent of Harrelson and Moverman is too exciting to be anything but exhilarating.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 10, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Worse, Safe House asks us to believe that Ryan Reynolds can outclass Denzel Washington in the art of being a hard-ass. Not on this planet, baby.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 10, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Here's Madge one more time doing something for which she is eminently unsuited – directing.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 2, 2012
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- Peter Travers
The Woman in Black doesn't break new ground, but in its suggestions of fine film ghost stories, from "The Innocents" to "The Others" and "The Orphanage," it works you over with riveting restraint.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 2, 2012
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- Peter Travers
You leave Red Tails thinking of what might have been instead of what is – a missed opportunity.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 27, 2012
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- Peter Travers
The shopworn script by Pablo F. Fenjves, who ghost-wrote the unpublished O.J. Simpson book, If I Did It: The Confessions of the Killer, gets no help from director Asger Leth (Ghosts of Cite Soleil).- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 27, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Everything in One for the Money rings cringingly false, from Heigl's absurd Snooki accent to Plum's romance with Joe Morelli, an Italian cop, played by – faith and begorrah – Jason O'Mara. To dismiss Julie Anne Robinson's direction as clueless would be a kindness.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 27, 2012
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 26, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Think "The Hurt Locker," which shares a cinematographer in Barry Ackroyd with no damage to the Bard's bruising poetry. Neat trick.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 19, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Haywire comes close to achieving Soderbergh's goal of creating "a Pam Grier movie made by Alfred Hitchcock."- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 19, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Naranjo, a graduate of the American Film Institute, has a gift for staging action that defines character. The film is a harrowing experience. It cuts deep.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 13, 2012
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 13, 2012
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- Peter Travers
The Devil Inside manages not only to scrape the barrel's bottom but to drill a hole in said bottom and funnel deeper into the scum.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 13, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Acting doesn't get much better than the subtly brilliant display put on by Tilda Swinton in We Need to Talk About Kevin.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 13, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Lots of talented young singers decorate the scenery, notably Jeremy Jordan (late of Broadway's failed Bonnie & Clyde but soon-to-open in Newsies)who has vocal and acting chops that shine even in this bucket of Glee Goes Gospel cornpone.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 13, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Wahlberg could sleepwalk through this role, and does. See this movie and you'll surely follow his lead.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 13, 2012
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- Peter Travers
Solidly crafted, impeccably acted and self-important in the way that Oscar loves, Extremely Loud is also incredibly close to exploitation.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 29, 2011
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- Peter Travers
The sharp economy of Lloyd's direction allows the incontestably great Streep to take impressionistic snatches of a life and build a woman in full. This is acting of the highest order.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 29, 2011
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- Peter Travers
As directed with grit and grace by Rodrigo García, this quietly devastating film goes bone-deep.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 29, 2011
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- Peter Travers
The gifted Rees makes finding out a stirring and heartfelt journey. And Oduye is unforgettable. A star is born.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 29, 2011
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- Peter Travers
A Separation is a landmark film. No way will you be able to get it out of your head.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 29, 2011
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- Peter Travers
At times, Jolie rises to the pulpit when she should stay on the ground. Her theme is too complex for her scattered screenplay to encompass. It's as a director that Jolie shines.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 29, 2011
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 22, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Damon is extraordinary. He's heartfelt performance has a tough core of intelligence and wit.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 22, 2011
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- Peter Travers
The movie comes at you in a whoosh, like a volcano of creative ideas in full eruption.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 22, 2011
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- Peter Travers
From him (Fincher), we get – what? – a faithful adaptation that brings the dazzle but shortchanges on the daring.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 22, 2011
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- Peter Travers
The film version of Carnage hasn't just lost God from its title, it's lost the laughs from the play that brought it life.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 16, 2011
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- Peter Travers
So the sequel, A Game of Shadows, is more of the stupid same. It wouldn't matter so much if Downey and Jude Law, as the bromantic Dr. Watson, didn't look so ready to turn on the cerebral dazzle. Instead, Ritchie treats them like action goons out of his "Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels" basement.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 16, 2011
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- Peter Travers
It's implausible as hell, but no less fun for that.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 16, 2011
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- Peter Travers
In this tale of stunted development, Theron is a comic force of nature, giving her character considerable density and humanity despite her monstrous aspects.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 8, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Oldman gives a performance that is flawless in every detail.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 8, 2011
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 8, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Michael Fassbender delivers a bold and brilliantly immersive performance as a sex addict in Shame. He is so raw and riveting you won't be able to take your eyes off him.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 1, 2011
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- Peter Travers
The actors give it their all, especially Knightley, whose jaw- jutting, heavily accented and unfairly criticized portrayal gives the film its fighting spirit.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 21, 2011
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- Peter Travers
The luminous Michelle Williams goes bone-deep here. Monroe's beauty was one of a kind. No one, not even Williams, can act it. What Williams does, with fierce artistry and feeling, is illuminate Monroe's insights and insecurities about herself at the height of her fame.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 21, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Scorsese builds Hugo in the Méliès manner, creating a complete, ravishing Parisian world on a soundstage in England and reveling in the sheer transporting joy of it. Hugo will take your breath away.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 21, 2011
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 21, 2011
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- Peter Travers
The Artist encapsulates everything we go to movies for: action, laughs, tears and a chance to get lost in another world. It just might leave you speechless. How can Oscar resist?- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 21, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Start hating me now, Twihards, but the sexless, bloodless, padded and plodding Breaking Dawn, Part 1 is the worst Twilight movie to date. (I don't get it either.)- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 17, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Payne's low-key approach only deepens the film's intimate power. Want a movie you can really connect with? The Descendants is damn near perfect.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 15, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Von Trier draws us inexorably into the web of these characters. He loses us in a dream of his own devising. That's filmmaking. Now if he'd only learn to shut up at press conferences.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 10, 2011
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- Peter Travers
A total bust, a stupefyingly unfunny and shamelessly lazy farce packed with cringe-worthy jokes and overt product placement.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 10, 2011
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 9, 2011
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- Peter Travers
We're getting more of the same, but less of the impact, like weed from a bad dealer.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 3, 2011
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- Peter Travers
There's not much to say about a jerry-built caper comedy, except that this one has timeliness on it side, and some first-rate clowns.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 3, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Say this for Emmerich, he's not stuffy. And he lucks out big-time with his cast.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 27, 2011
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- Peter Travers
At best diverting, at worst drearily conventional, The Rum Diary is pre-gonzo Thompson, before the fusion of fact and trippy fantasy that flowered into a brilliant delirium.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 27, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Jones is a marvel. Sundance couldn't get enough of her. You won't, either. Her performance grabs hold and won't let go.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 27, 2011
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 27, 2011
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- Peter Travers
I fully expect Paranormal Activity 3 to be box office gold. But it's barely worth two stars, let alone two cents. As for future followups, I offer this plea: STOP!- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 21, 2011
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- Peter Travers
It's Olsen, as a damaged soul clinging to shifting ground, who makes this spellbinder impossible to shake.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 20, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Margin Call is an explosive drama that speaks lucidly and scarily to the times we live in.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 20, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Footloose 2011 is harmless as far as it goes, but on the dance floor and off it never goes nearly far enough.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 13, 2011
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- Peter Travers
One gut-busting death after another, terror giving way to tedium. Your call.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 13, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Even when the film's frigid elegance, perfectly captured by cinematographer José Luis Alcaine, becomes off-puttingly clinical, Almodóvar's passion burns through. The skin he lives in is alive to challenge no matter what warped form it takes.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 13, 2011
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- Peter Travers
The film is in black-and-white so the gore doesn't spray quite as colorfully. But you'll still puke up a storm. Not so much at the movie, whose shock value wears off quicky, but at Six, who seems to hate himself almost as much as his audience. Masochists will give the movie a thumbs-up, as long as their thumb isn't already up their ass.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 6, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Estevez keeps his touch light, with a minimum of pedantry. The Way is really a gift from this son to his father. Sheen, gradually revealing a man painfully getting reacquainted with long buried feelings, who gives the film its bruised heart.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 6, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Sugar Ray Leonard helped with the motion-capture, and it shows. Good stuff. But the tear-jerking in Real Steel is as shameless as its product placement. We're being hustled.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 6, 2011
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- Peter Travers
A big, bruisingly funny moral fable etched in acid and Obama disillusion.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 6, 2011
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 29, 2011
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- Peter Travers
A movie handled with this kind of care is a rare gift. Refusing to hide from pain or bow to it, 50/50 makes its own rules. It'll get to you.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 29, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Killer Elite pretends to be fact-based and true to its 1980s period. Just know it's all baloney.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 22, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Moneyball is one of the best and most viscerally exciting films of the year.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 22, 2011
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- Peter Travers
Wasikowska, from "Alice in Wonderland" to "Jane Eyre," is an actress of translucent expressiveness. And Hopper has his father's brooding intensity and a quicksilver humor all his own. They are both so good, I suggest you dive into the story unfolding in their eyes rather than the banal one in the script.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 15, 2011
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