Ray Bennett
Select another critic »For 161 reviews, this critic has graded:
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47% higher than the average critic
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0% same as the average critic
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53% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 0.9 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Ray Bennett's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 65 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Coriolanus | |
| Lowest review score: | Bubble | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 91 out of 161
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Mixed: 57 out of 161
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Negative: 13 out of 161
161
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Ray Bennett
Filmed in permanent twilight with a static camera and no music, it is gloomy and unrewarding with an oblique and uninformative script.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 26, 2014
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- Ray Bennett
By this time, cinematographer Fred Kelemen's mostly stationary camera has revealed about all there is to see in a fine array of textures in such things as the wooden table, the rough floors, the walls of stone, the ropes on the horse and the skin on the boiled potatoes. That does not, however, make up for the almost complete lack of information about the two characters, and so it is easy to become indifferent to their fate, whatever it is.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 3, 2012
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- Ray Bennett
Ralph Fiennes directs and stars in Coriolanus as William Shakespeare's Rambo in a production that delivers heavyweight screen acting at its best.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 1, 2011
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- Ray Bennett
It satisfies not only in the tradition of yarns boiled hard and wry, but as a savvy comment on fame and ambition.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 7, 2011
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- Ray Bennett
An earnest tale about a faded rock star who discovers he has a teenaged daughter and takes her on the road, Janie Jones follows a predictable path and despite decent performances it does not catch fire.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 22, 2011
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 29, 2011
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- Ray Bennett
With neither great insight nor any sign of wit, the film is not likely to capture interest outside France.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 23, 2011
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- Ray Bennett
Rowan Joffe's film of Graham Greene's 1938 novel "Brighton Rock" takes a gothic approach to the story of a young thug obsessed with hell with little of the writer's subtlety and too much reliance on a loud quasi-religious choral score.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 20, 2011
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- Ray Bennett
It's an impressive movie, but the indie filmmaker has little to add to the debate beyond the eternal truth that the innocent always suffer most.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 15, 2011
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- Ray Bennett
A gore fest aimed at indiscriminate action fans. Those interested in learning more about goings on in medieval history will probably find the splatter tedious and off-putting.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 5, 2011
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- Ray Bennett
As much a memorial as it is a docudrama and as such it will interest educators and students, and make for sober television. It's a pity, though, that more of an attempt wasn't made to understand the killer and explain such things as why no one apparently thought to phone for help or hit the fire alarm.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 28, 2011
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- Ray Bennett
The project suffers badly from being largely improvised as the pair fall back on familiar impressions and old jokes. Lazy and indulgent, it smacks of being what the British call a "jolly," that is a freebie with no obligation to turn in work afterward.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 7, 2011
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- Ray Bennett
Captain Jack Sparrow is back in excellent form for his fourth adventure in Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides, which is more serious in the hands of a new director, Rob Marshall, and thanks to Penelope Cruz it's also a good deal sexier.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 12, 2011
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- Ray Bennett
A short, dour and stodgy creature feature with average 3D effects that draws on so many film influences from westerns, action adventures and sci-fi tales that what fun there is comes from spotting the many sources.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 7, 2011
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- Ray Bennett
If the degree of laughter at the wrong moments and the number of walkouts at the Toronto International Film Festival are any indication, the film will appeal only to the most fondly indulgent.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 2, 2011
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- Ray Bennett
While the men are Danish, there is a universality to their story and a vitality in the filmmaking that should see the documentary in demand around the world.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 12, 2011
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- Ray Bennett
While Malcolm Venville's Henry's Crime is billed as a comedy it's more funny odd than funny ha-ha.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 4, 2011
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- Ray Bennett
Could easily be filled with cliches but in the hands of filmmaker John Gray, it's a sparkling piece of entertainment that deserves a wide audience.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 21, 2011
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 5, 2011
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- Ray Bennett
Played for laughs drawn from characters rather than funny lines, the Norwegian film is a charmer with Stellan Skarsgard for once in a role worthy of his attention.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 11, 2011
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- Ray Bennett
Acutely observed but gloomy and lacking narrative, it tells of 12 months in the life of a decent but dull suburban couple and their friends, most of whom you would go out of your way to avoid at a party.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 28, 2010
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- Ray Bennett
The real-life tale of a group of female machinists who took on the Ford Motor Co. in England and earned equal pay for women gets a rousing and entertaining telling in Nigel Cole's crowd-pleasing Made in Dagenham.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 15, 2010
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- Ray Bennett
Jonathan Lynn's lamentable black comedy Wild Target again shows that attractive and charismatic actors can do nothing to save a movie that's charmless, pointless and witless.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 24, 2010
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- Ray Bennett
The film captures the energy, the stresses and the tension of people striking punching bags and each other but without narration, it all feels a bit random and uninteresting.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 21, 2010
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- Ray Bennett
The film is in the tradition of fighting-the-system stories drawn from real life such as "Erin Brokovich," and its powerful emotional appeal should draw a substantial grownup audience.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 21, 2010
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 20, 2010
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- Ray Bennett
With compelling and charismatic performances by Keira Knightley and James McAvoy as the lovers, and a stunning contribution from Romola Garai as their remorseful nemesis, the film goes directly to "The English Patient" territory and might also expect rapturous audiences and major awards.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
Presented as a straight documentary about an American pop singer who had one U.K. hit in the 1960s as a member of a boy band and has gone missing ever since, but it plays like the slyest of spoofs.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
It succeeds on almost all fronts. The epic film is a high-octane adventure rooted in fact with a raft of arresting characters, big action sequences and twists and turns galore.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
By keeping his (Daly) focus on the two remarkable youngsters without an ounce of sentimentality he succeeds in making something true and satisfying.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
The kind of drama that British television used to do so well, a well-constructed, smartly observed story of ordinary people learning how to communicate with one another.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
Despite top-flight acting from Michael Caine and Jude Law, it loses its grip in the third act and let's the air out of what might have been a memorably gripping film.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
The English term "shambolic" best describes a slow-paced, bloated and self-indulgent picture that combines science fiction, sophomoric humor and grisly violence soaked in a music-video sensibility.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
All the action is staged with energy, but it gets relentless without anything really funny going on.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
As writer, Allen offers lazy plotting, poor characterization, dull scenes and flat dialogue.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
A ferociously entertaining thriller with sympathetic characters, stunning set pieces and pulsating excitement.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
The drive to keep alive the name of a young American woman who died beneath a U.S.-made bulldozer driven by an Israeli soldier in Palestine continues in Simone Bitton's sober documentary Rachel.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
Murphy's comic brilliance is at the service of the story and he positively shines with a number of diverse and zany impersonations, most enjoyably a Jesse Jackson takeoff.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
That rare beast, a terrific movie that boasts intelligent wit, expert storytelling, delightful characters and grown-up dialogue plus suspense and a wicked surprise ending.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
The sad result is a karaoke nightmare. Loud and pointlessly crude, the film takes the disintegration of a dysfunctional working-class family and gives it the song-and-dance treatment.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
Thought-provoking story of how terror and paranoia affect two Americans who love their country.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
The cast is uniformly fine, but Abbass and Lipaz-Michael shine as two women who bond in the fear that the best of their lives is over and neither of them is happy with what the future holds.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
Herzog's strangely beautiful film has marvelous music and hypnotic imagery. A documentary for stoners and people who are that way naturally, it is a cautionary tale for wishful thinkers.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
It's a well-constructed and thoughtfully paced drama and almost a thriller, but in the end credibility and tension get lost in the mail.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- The Hollywood Reporter
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- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
The film is neither intelligent enough nor silly or grotesque enough to become a lasting favorite.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
Grungy and uneven, but it has a rollicking pace and clearly intends to be good fun so that audiences may overlook its unsteady rhythms, pretensions and inconsistencies and take it for the fast and very furious ride it wants to be.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
As surprising as it is delicious with an indelible performance by new star Sally Hawkins.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
Eden Lake has the trappings of a low-IQ thriller but it's really a contemptible tract feeding the prejudices of the U.K.'s rightwing tabloids that claim the country is overrun by teenagers wielding knives.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
The movie is filled with small moments of tenderness, insight and considerable wisdom.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
What it lacks is a villain, and magic without danger is simply a parlor trick, which is what the film becomes.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
Colorful, noisy and brimming with special effects, the picture may please young audiences simply looking for loud action, but its corny storyline and brittle lack of warmth may discourage both parents and children.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
Paced deliberately in a way that reinforces the tragedy of evil flourishing when good men do nothing, Good may find boxoffice returns slow to build but the film's aim is true and patient audiences will be well rewarded.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
Amiel's greatest achievement is that Creation is a deeply human film with moments of genuine lightness and high spirits to go with all the deep thinking.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
The film is filled with deeply unpleasant and stupid people whose vapid speech is largely incomprehensible due to thick regional accents.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
Shot in high definition and filmed at many historic locations, the film somehow still lacks the splendor of an epic, and its urgency to get on with the next plot point leaves much unexplained while context goes out the window.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
There is a lot of very black humor; and it develops, somewhat surprisingly, into something suggesting a kind of cheerful pessimism.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
With its intelligence at the level of the simple-minded, however, the film is not likely to attract moviegoers who seek something more than a screen filled with kaleidoscopes of colored metal. Fan boys will no doubt love it, but for the uninitiated it's loud, tedious and, at 147 minutes, way too long.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
The film belongs to the women, with Knightley going from strength to strength (and showing she can sing!) and Miller again proving that she has everything it takes to be a major movie star.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
Moviegoers who know their American political history will respond to the film's immediacy and forgive the film's tight focus and narrow view. Anyone hoping for an entertaining drama about newsmen and politics along the lines of "All the President's Men" will be disappointed.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
The filmmakers succeed brilliantly in weaving these stories together, taking time to explore depth of character and relationships. The suspense builds throughout as everyone involved becomes lost in a place they don't understand with people they don't know if they can trust.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
Politicians, the media, educators, military commanders and a docile public all come under fire in a well-made movie that offers no answers but raises many important questions.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
It's a delightful piece of filmmaking with a marvelous cast topped by Meryl Streep in one of her smartest and most entertaining performances ever.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
Assayas makes the point that objects of fascination and affection to one generation may be far less so to the next. And he observes the role that people-friendly museums can play in keeping a nation's treasures safe with pleasing subtlety.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
It's very difficult to mesh fantasy with reality, but with great charm and a light touch, Almodovar shows exactly how it should be done.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
Tedious humor and sentimentality bury what could have been a pretty good road picture.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
Well crafted and acted, Declan Recks' Irish domestic drama Eden, adapted from his own play by Eugene O'Brien, offers an intimate portrait of a husband and wife who have stopped communicating with each other.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
The most affecting scenes, however, involve the class of Israeli teenagers visiting Auschwitz.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
The script by first-time director Li Yu and producer Fang Li introduces some degree of subtlety in the responses of the four principals, but the plot doesn't really hold up.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
A paranormal mystery without a spine. It has no suspense because it has no belief in itself.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
In a fine ensemble with many well-drawn smaller characters, Bleibtreu ("Run Lola Run", "The Baader-Meinhof Complex") as the hapless brother, Unel ("Head On") as the fussy chef and Bederke, as a waitress, all stand out.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
Atmospheric but pedestrian, it is a retelling of the classic tragedy of all civil wars, from the U.S. to Vietnam to England, where brother is pitched against brother.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- The Hollywood Reporter
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- The Hollywood Reporter
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- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
De Palma's screenplay is outstanding, and he draws wonderfully naturalistic performances from his youthful cast.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
Remaking eccentric English comedies is seldom a good idea, especially the ones from Ealing Studios with all those wonderful character actors. But against all odds, the new version of St. Trinian's almost pulls it off.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
Brutal but believable, the film in some ways harks back to early Hollywood, when Jimmy Cagney or Richard Widmark played callow villains out of their depth in everyday life.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
The film is well worth seeing for its views of the parched wilderness of far-flung Brazil and its talkative depiction of an unlikely friendship.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
It's entertaining nonsense with major league special effects, larger-than-life characters and inventive monsters that draw on the "Aliens" and "Predator" models, being terrifying but also vaguely sympathetic.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
The Coens' typically superior filmmaking sustains the electrifying mood for most of the picture, but they are undone by being too faithful to the source novel by Cormac McCarthy.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
Surveillance will please the B-movie crowd in theaters and on into the ancillaries- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
Shot on beautifully utilized film but employing images vividly from the Internet and mobile phones, it's an examination of the power that false ideas may have on people's imagination and beliefs when they are repeated over and over.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
Bright Star may not be a joy forever but it will do until the next joy comes along.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
The film may attract older moviegoers curious to see their generation represented onscreen doing what comes naturally for once. It's doubtful that the general audience will be so inclined.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
Owen carries the film more in the tradition of a Jimmy Stewart or Henry Fonda than a Clint Eastwood or Harrison Ford. He has to wear flip-flops for part of the time without losing his dignity, and he never reaches for a weapon or guns anyone down. Cuaron and Owen may have created the first believable 21st-century movie hero.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
Director Julian Schnabel and screenwriter Ronald Harwood have performed a small miracle in adapting for the screen Jean-Dominique Bauby's autobiography The Diving Bell and the Butterfly.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
Paced at warp speed with spectacular action sequences rendered brilliantly and with a cast so expert that all the familiar characters are instantly identifiable.- The Hollywood Reporter
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- Ray Bennett
The film's economical style, vivid cinematography and tremendous acting should attract audiences far and wide.- The Hollywood Reporter
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