Rick Groen
Select another critic »For 1,531 reviews, this critic has graded:
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43% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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55% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 5.9 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Rick Groen's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 60 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Kafka | |
| Lowest review score: | The Amityville Horror | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 851 out of 1531
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Mixed: 449 out of 1531
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Negative: 231 out of 1531
1531
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Rick Groen
Based on an allegedly true story, this is a dark comedy that begins with a charmingly light touch.... Alas, it's when the tale stays murderous, amateur night dragging into amateur day, that the picture loses both its energy and its edge. [09 Apr 1990]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Yet the performances are just sturdy boats against the narrative current - the plot is altogether too calculated and wholly without surprises, either pleasant or unpleasant... The painting is just fine; too bad the numbers show through.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
The wonder here is that Bateman and the child actor spark off each other quite delightfully. For a few precious scenes, when father and son are alone, the movie is actually amusing, even touching.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
The target is way too easy and the tone far too smug. This time, they're shooting fish in a barrel with a bazooka and congratulating themselves on their marksmanship.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
The pretty good stuff comes early, when Nic and Ron, weary of wasting women and children, suffer an attack of conscience and desert the Crusades.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Jan 6, 2011
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- Rick Groen
Understandably, a script so obsessed with the dark doings of plot has little time left over for the study of character, and, thus, we never really get to know these people.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Any one of these narrative components might have made for a worthy picture. But that would have taken a more imaginative writer than Charles Leavitt and a more sensitive director than Gary Fleder.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Before it turns into a thriller, and goes badly awry, Red Lights paints a devastating little portrait of a marriage on the rocks.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
For some (okay, me), The Holiday, like the holidays, will require some girding up, and is best met halfway with a self-immunizing smile. Otherwise, the good cheer may ring false; worse, it might even seem to sell love cheap, and lovers short.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
After years of inadvertently making us laugh, Sylvester Stallone actually does a picture designed to be funny. It isn't, not very, but, yo, give the man credit for going with the flow. [01 May 1991]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
At least The Infidel is an equal-opportunity blasphemer, and God bless it for that. Otherwise, this thing plays like a cheeky Brit-com blown up to feature length, with a thin coat rack of plot to hang the ethnic humour on, and a wish to offend without being offensive.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
The problem is director Joe Carnahan, who’s way too manic even when the formula calls for calm – he can’t stay still long enough to drive home the punch-lines.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Beverly Hills Cop II puts its mega-star through a medieval trial, an ordeal by dullness. Survive these surroundings, Eddie Murphy, and you must truly be one very funny guy. Well, Eddie survives, barely, and taking our cue straight from him, so do we, almost. [22 May 1987]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Although there are some fluid moments, De Palma's weary direction of a once-feared mobster trying to go straight against all odds seems pistol-whipped. [15 Nov 1993]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Single-handedly, Bridges gives the film what it otherwise lacks -- energy and emotion invested in this damaged man, naked beneath his ballooning caftan, at once sadly ridiculous and ridiculously sad.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Water's kinky view of the world has simply been overtaken (hell, swallowed up) by the sheer warp of reality. [13 Apr 1994]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Bouncing about from one flawed movie to another, Steven Spielberg has lost his way of late, and Munich finds him more disoriented than ever.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
It's all meant, I suppose, to conjure up cold visions of Terminators and Robocops past, or, in this post-9/11 world, of bin Ladens and Bushes present. If so, conjure at will.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
A contrived little comedy, Dummy definitely lives down to its name -- you can see the lips moving on this wooden thing.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Embracing such depths, Bukowski somehow made his art. Simulating them, Factotum just makes us queasy.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Come to think of it, Ferrell is to the sports comedy what the Toronto Maple Leafs are to the hockey biz: Hard-core fans are sure to show up and find reasons to be amused. The rest of us can only hope for better days.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Call it "Alexander the Grate," because, over the marathon of its three-hour running time, this wonky epic really does get on your nerves.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
On the flimsy wings of this familiar fairy tale, Linklater tries to fly himself a movie, dressing up the quartet (and the strapping he-men cast to portray them) in the audience-friendly vestments of picaresque charm.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
As box-office packages go, My Girl may well become a big hit. The wrapping is colourful, even charming in spots, and that circle of black ribbon is a gravely clever touch. Get closer, though, and it's like those Christmas presents stacked around the department store tree - apparently real but really empty. [28 Nov 1991]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
More interestingly, it's also kind of sweet in a contrived and fumbling first-kiss sort of way.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Apr 29, 2011
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- Rick Groen
About a third of the way along, there's a shocking revelation that definitely packs a punch. Problem is, it's followed by a near-immediate return to familiar narrative convention, where the noir ante rises exponentially toward a climax that arrives too hastily and ends too neatly.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted May 17, 2012
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- Rick Groen
Definitely erratic, this thing -- all in all, it's the sort of commercial vehicle you might want to stay well back of.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
A swashbuckler that plays like an over-dressed serial on a slow Saturday afternoon. [22 Dec 1995]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
This is wish-fulfilment fantasy, where the laughs lie in sorting out an embarrassment of riches.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
It's all rather wacky and hard to follow or fathom, although maybe that's attributable to Virginia's schizophrenia veering off on its delusional phase.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted May 17, 2012
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- Rick Groen
In Youth in Revolt , Cera bellies up to the same table once too often. His fresh-faced act is starting to look really stale.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Krull is only half bad, which makes it half good, which puts it a broadsword ahead of most films set in the land of the mightily mythic. [30 July 1983]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Pardon my pulling anthropological rank, but Instinct -- a movie about an ape-man savant -- seems a quart low on common sense.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
What we have here is a pretty good TV show huffed and puffed into a rather mediocre film.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Perhaps for Zwigoff, directing someone else's script, this was just a job of work. If not, the talent who made "Crumb" and "Ghost World "has now made his first movie mistake.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
It's like an elevated form of sitcom acting, which may be inevitable because this movie, and all its quirky/heartfelt kin, are an elevated version of the sitcom itself.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
A feature that suffers from the rarity of its wit yet benefits from the briskness of its pace.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Watching this, we should feel an immense amount, but don't, and somehow, decades after this horrible event, that void only seems to compound the tragedy.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
When it gets right down to the climactic business at hand and arm, even the imposing skills of a Golan are put to a rigorous test. For, despite its obvious delights, armwrestling just can't compare to 10 bloody rounds from a pair of vigorous maulers or a brace of chattering machine-guns. [17 Feb 1987]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
But Keaton is a mistake. He's an actor with an innate sense of irony firmly grounded in the here and now. Even as Batman, skepticism was his forte; true belief falls way outside his range.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
It's a comedy, it's a romance, it's a gangster flick. The Cooler is all of that and much, much less. This is a movie without a compass, switching pace and direction as haphazardly as a caffeinated SUV driver on a cellphone.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
The Notebook is meant to be a romantic weepy, and you will shed tears - but only from the consistent and exhausting effort of trying to control your gag reflex. Even a body that welcomes a sugar fix will repel a sugar invasion.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Of course, the result is forgettable, but at least it's efficiently and breezily forgettable. What's more, there are laughs too and here's the best part – one or two of them are actually intentional.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Aug 16, 2012
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- Rick Groen
If this is satire, it's the smug and self-congratulatory kind that lets the audience completely off the hook. Effective satire, the Swiftian brand, seduces us first and then implicates us in the seduction -- we become a target too. But this stuff never gets past the initial step -- it's toothless, as innocuous as the puffery it pretends to skewer.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Was it worth slogging through the nearly two hours of damned muddle to get to those last affecting moments? Not often in movies is the destination so much better than the journey.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Identity opens with its mind nicely intact, suffers a major crisis about 30 minutes in, then bad turns to worse.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
The whole film occupies pretty much the same continuuum -- glimmers of intelligence followed by moments of outright hysteria punctuated by bouts of sheer haplessness.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Although director Taylor Hackford ("An Officer and a Gentleman") handles the usually cumbersome flashbacks with impressive delicacy, he can't stop the narrative from sinking under its own melodramatic weight.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Dirty Girl isn't. Sorry, but it's just faux grime, a thin layer of bad behaviour that wipes clean with a two-ply tissue to reveal the real movie beneath – all shiny sentimentality.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 21, 2011
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- Rick Groen
Here, one begins to suspect that the major impediment is the sensibility of the filmmakers themselves. They don't believe in this stuff, in its unavoidable sentimentality, and that attitude filters down to a perplexed cast.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
A contrived and tepid thriller that insists on wanting to interest us in its main plot -- the usual nefarious plan to assassinate the leader of the free world.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Amelia is the Mack truck of flight. Heavy and lumbering, it delivers the goods, but there's not an ounce of magic in the thing.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Expected too is the result: a kind of sterile opulence or, if you prefer, a magnificent emptiness.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted May 2, 2012
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- Rick Groen
I doubt that Lawrence is conscious of this process. Nevertheless, stuck in a dull commercial feature, a very good actor happens upon a new solution to an age-old problem: She improves the script by transcending it, and steals the picture by abandoning it.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Sep 20, 2012
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- Rick Groen
All dull thunder without a spark of illumination.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
In keeping with the purloining spirit of sequeldom, Woo plunders his own past. [24 May 2000, p.R1]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
The result is a political thriller refreshingly long on grown-up dialogue yet lamentably shy on, well, thrills. This chatty thing does go on.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
So we're back on "The Road ," but this time Eli's coming – better hide your heart and, while you're at it, put your brain on hold, the easier to enjoy the action-filled sermon to come.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
How's this for frightening: The casting of the lightweight Ben Affleck as a CIA agent who holds the fate of the entire world in his pretty-boy hands. Can't deny it, that got my heart pumping like a bunny.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
With the release of Stop-Loss, a precedent of sorts has definitely been set. If we've yet to see a brilliant Iraq movie, the wait is over for a bad one – this is it.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
As an examination of social psychosis, the subject is skinhead but the treatment is skin deep. [03 Dec 1993]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
At the end of these "based on a true story" flicks, it's customary to flash photos of the real people over the end credits. There, Sam Childers looks older and less handsome and awfully imposing, a scary sort of cat with raw but authentic tales to tell. I'd like to hear them.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Sep 29, 2011
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- Rick Groen
Sometimes sensitive and often silly but really, essentially, beneath his pallor and her panting and their intertwined frustrations, it's just two long hours of coitus interruptus.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
There will be occasional tears, there must be frequent laughs and the whole contrived structure has the calculated quaintness of Ye Olde Pub at a EuroDisney theme park.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Worse still is his idiotic tampering with the so-called "Happy Ending" -- in print, it's bleakly ironic; on screen, incongruously sentimental.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
For my first trick, allow me to write off an entire picture by merely affixing to the title a one-word contraction: The Incredible Burt Wonderstone isn’t. Please hold your applause.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Mar 14, 2013
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- Rick Groen
The Last Circus is a bizarre, surreal, grotesque, fascinating, demanding, disappointing and ultimately exhausting political allegory that plays like a waking nightmare.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Sep 29, 2011
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- Rick Groen
Match your expectations to the level of the humor - measurable at about knee-high to a snake's belly - and you just might enjoy Who's Harry Crumb? I mean, we're talking low comedy here, boasting more pratfalls than another losing night at the Gardens. But there is a redeeming factor in this manic equation, a high-flying blimp by the name of John Candy. [08 Feb 1989]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
A movie that serves up what its debauched subject would never have countenanced -- sanitized smut with a moral attached.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Sea Of Love has got a lot of things going for it: it's got two strong lead performances; it's got some down-and-dirty dialogue and a few sexy scenes and a couple of yuks and a nifty title tune. What it ain't got is plot, and thus suspense, and thus thrills. [15 Sep 1989]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
So why, despite everyone's best efforts, does all this bigness seem so small and unfocused and simply not up to the task?- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
The result, as a colleague once so aptly put it, is less film noir than film beige.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Nope, this picture doesn't bear thinking about, but, if you resist that nasty temptation, setting all your mental gauges at Dead Slow, the flow of the action will see you through.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
This last Merchant/Ivory film feels like a thin apparition of the team's best films -- similarly static but less substantial, less palpable, and sadly less respectable, just the vestigial remains of a better day.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Middling gets downgraded to muddling. Of course, on such slippery slopes, reputations are made. Damned if the original isn’t looking like a comparative gem.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
For the price of a ticket, and 100 minutes of your time, how many laughs are enough to qualify as just compensation? Will four or five do? Let's be generous and count five.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Clearly, Avary wrote himself into a tight corner and, unlike his mentor, lacks the narrative imagination - the clever shifting of time planes, the neat overlapping of incident - to extricate himself. Instead, quite literally, he blasts his way out and, in the process, shoots his picture in the foot. Killing Zoe starts life as a vigorous wannabe, but pulls up dead lame. [04 Nov 1994]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Maybe Bee Movie is another ground-breaking show about nothing – a hornet's nest of hype for a fat hive of nothing. If so, pay up and get stung.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Love the kid though, and Statham too – it takes a star with quality to be so rock solid in a crumbling yarn.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Apr 26, 2012
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- Rick Groen
A dull, formulaic romance comedy with an ulterior motive and a sly message. Remarkably, the message is this: "Please Re-elect George Bush."- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
The ideal: It hopes to be a suspenseful political yarn carrying a lofty message of peace and understanding. The reality: It's just a flabby thriller that gets completely lost in translation.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Although much of the bloat can be traced to the script, via the Jennifer Weiner novel, let's not absolve director Curtis Hanson from his fat share of the blame.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
An action thriller with some decent action and a few thrills, but all embedded in a yarn so hopelessly tangled that even the loose threads have knots.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
It's not the subject matter itself that's offensive -- pedophilia is as worthy a topic of investigation as any other. Instead, it's the subject's non-treatment -- we don't learn a thing that rings true.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
The movie isn't painfully bad, something to be "fully experienced"; it's just tediously bad, something to be fully forgotten.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Could have taken a witty scalpel to baby-boomer posturings. But Dolman, whose instrument of choice is the rubber mallet of smarm, just isn't the man for the job -- he ends up enshrining the very hypocrisy that should be dissected.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
As well-meaning elegies go, especially ones to working stiffs prematurely ripped from their subterranean roots, Brassed Off is the pits: It's a miner opus in a minor key.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
When the movie climactically reproduces that exhilarating Belmont, the fiction is just a pale shadow of the fact, and the realized myth that lives in our memory dies on the screen.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Typically, this sort of film is an earnest tear-jerker with moments of levity. Instead, what we have here is a raucous rib-tickler with occasional pauses for a little dramatic relief.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Aug 9, 2011
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- Rick Groen
What a featherweight epic this is, the kind of uniformed period piece where the watchword is pretty. Pretty costumes, pretty soldiers, pretty battles; pretty silly.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
The process of remembering that drives the book is gone from the film, boiled away until all that's left is the mundane residue of memory - mere incidents strung together as plot.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Yes, Mikhalkov has set himself quite the agenda, but in the end the film is too much of a piece with its topic, intensely fascinating yet seriously flawed. The verdict? Guilty, with extenuating circumstances.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
If you feel you might already have seen City of Ghosts, but can't quite place it, you'd be forgiven. Hollywood, never afraid of working a cliché to death, has turned out dozens of "City of . . ." films over the years.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Bronson is one of those “based on a true story” dramatizations where the theatrically staged drama only gets in the way of the more interesting truth.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
In short, it's much fatter with less matter and a distressing shrinkage in thought.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Judged esthetically -- the only yardstick worth applying -- it can be safely placed in that long line of indistinguishable Hollywood mediocrities, all of them trying in vain to resurrect an awfully weary genre.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
In most every frame, Hartley takes pains to tilt his camera at odd angles – in other words, he's gone literally off-kilter, and it's just off-putting. What's worse, a further hallmark of the Hartley canon, his self-reflexivity, has begun to smack of self-promotion.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
The Muppet charm, always more at home within the intimate frame of a TV set, is gone here.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Nov 23, 2011
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- Rick Groen
Made In America is not the humanist triumph it wants to be, but, thanks to Goldberg and Danson, it's a Pyrrhic victory at least - the movie marks the dubious ascendancy of acting over writing, the talent emphasizing the mediocrity in the very process of vanquishing it. [28 May 1993]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
In the future, as recorded in the bible of British cinema, it will be written that "Four Weddings and a Funeral" begat "The Full Monty" which begat "Billy Elliot" which begat way too many pale imitations struggling to peddle the same brand of sloppy sentimentality. Amen.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
This is the brand of sentimentality that comes with a high concentration of saccharine and every taste of bitterness safely removed.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
In your typical subpar Hollywood romcom, there’s only one tedious love story to put up with. Well, Valentine’s Day (such a clever title) does a whole lot better than that: It offers 10 tedious love stories to put up with.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
En route, the plot gimmick degenerates from clever to dumb, then gets forgotten entirely, and the last act simply poops out - the climax is a Bigger Bang that plays like the saddest of whimpers.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
With a plot that thickens like congealed stew, this movie about a harmless nutbar, an attorney and a cabal can leave you lost in banality.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
But wouldn't it be heavenly if a like proportion of Tinseltown producers believed in an existing need for a good script. Because this one ain't good; in fact, it's hellishly mediocre, the kind that aims for holiday charm and settles for workaday torpor.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
And veteran director Costa-Gavras, whose early work ("Z", "State Of Siege", "Missing") proves that he's no stranger to sociopolitical complexities, might well have been the man to make it. But not from this script -- it starts off as puerile and then regresses.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
No longer content with simple conservatism, this horror is downright totalitarian.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Nov 16, 2012
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- Rick Groen
No, the trouble isn't with them but with a screenplay (by Angus MacLachlan) that loads their characters with too much symbolic baggage and then points them off in obscure directions.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 20, 2010
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- Rick Groen
ONE THING about The Pick-up Artist : it's fast. Crazy fast, like a manic 2-year-old in a major pout - all energy and no direction. This is a picture for the channel-hopping set, something to watch with half an eye while all your mind is coasting elsewhere, less a movie than a feature- length trailer, a series of short, cluttered scenes cut to a rock 'n' roll score and leading . . . . Well, that's the other thing about The Pick-up Artist: it leads precisely nowhere. [18 Sept 1987]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Apparently, the idea of their passion is enough to save them from a life of boredom - if only it had the same happy effect on us.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
A story based on exceptional facts gets converted into an unexceptional movie.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 21, 2010
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- Rick Groen
The wee mousie is fun, all right, yet like the occasionally ragged editing, the fun just gets haphazardly wedged in.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
In a kind of perverse alchemy, this film manages to turn that narrative gold into dross, and reduce the daunting perils of a 4,300-mile voyage to a ho-hum checklist. Welcome to the reverse magic of the movies.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted May 2, 2013
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- Rick Groen
A sequel that immediately picks up the plot of its predecessor, and then proceeds to drive the redeemed franchise right off the deep, dark end.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Maybe this stuff works on the page, in Chuck Palahniuk's darkly comic novel, but Choke is awfully tough to digest on the screen.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Apr 25, 2013
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- Rick Groen
Radio Days, is an occasionally charming trifle, a cinematic bauble that - held up to just the right light, soft and undemanding - sparkles quite prettily. But add just a hint of the glare cast by a raised expectation, and this lightweight thing fades right out of view. [30 Jan 1987]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Like an over-ambitious freshman with a term paper, Singleton raises every issue and illuminates none. And, again, this film is better when the combative heat rises, particularly when the long-telegraphed confrontation between Malik and the neo-Nazi finally comes to a (skin)head. [13 Jan 1995, p.C3]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
I wouldn't say this is laugh-out-loud risible, but there are definitely moments. Still, you might want to consider sitting through the uneven thing just to get to the ending, because that's quite something. You may love it, you may hate it, but forget it you won't.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Yes Man puts him back in the same old quandary and, once again, Carrey lacks an identity. Alas, this time, he also lacks a script.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
As for the locals, they speak like extras from "Fargo," although, on this go-round, that weird Swedish accent has somehow lost its power to amuse.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Poor Cattrall is caught in a script that, much like the white teddy, is an impossibly tight squeeze, obliging her to hit the farcical laughs while still playing the cellulite realism.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted May 13, 2011
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- Rick Groen
In dramatizing the rigours of the ghetto, Yakin stoops to hyperbolic plot devices that tend to erode the very empathy he's striving to create. Things are surely bad, but not that bad - unwittingly, he's demonizing people who deserve better, who are better. [02 Sep 1994]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Our mission, should we choose to accept it, is to guess which gal became the wife, which gal should have become the wife and which gal is there just to play with our heads. It's exactly like that old shell game – mildly diverting, pea-sized and otherwise hollow.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Cyrano De Bergerac, the latest cinematic adaptation of the Edmond Rostand classic, is a lavishly appointed film, a decidedly handsome film, a film that wears its money on its sleeve, a film whose beauty is skin deep. The movie always moves, but it's never moving. [30 Nov 1990]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
The pedigree is impressive and so is the start, but in the long run, White Men Can't Jump lives down to its title - it doesn't even get off the ground. [27 Mar 1992]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
With its confined setting and its existential predicament, the picture owes an ostensible debt to the likes of Pinter and Kafka and Pirandello -- you know, Six Characters in Search of an Author, or, failing that, just getting the hell out of this weird place.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Director Peter Hyams strives hard to maintain a light and entertaining touch, lifting Timecop slightly above its formulaic restraints. On the one hand, there's a pleasing freshness to the movie, thanks to lots of energy and a little playful wit. On the other, there's something deeply fatiguing about this picture. Maybe it's the formula, maybe it's all that time travel, but you just can't help thinking you've seen it all before. Must be deja vu. [21 Sep 1994]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Actually, occasionally, does feel good. Now if only it had something to say.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
To reduce Leonard to shtick makes about as much sense as using a scalpel for a butter knife — even when the job gets done, it's just such a dull waste of a sharp implement.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Yes, the Empire may be crumbling, and the natives getting restless, but it's all happening with such lyrical loveliness - even the corpses look good. Consequently, when the rains in Before the Rains finally arrive, there's nothing to cleanse, no real dirt to wash away - not with history already so neatly packaged and polished to a dull shine.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
If nothing else (and there ain't much else), Everybody's Fine does prove one thing: Even an actor with the gifts of Robert De Niro can't make bland interesting.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Ghostbusters for the pre-teen set, a cartoon of a cartoon. Is there some residual charm? Not much. Are the special effects special? Not too. [19 Aug 1987]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
There is nothing worse than a thriller that doesn't play fair... The Forgotten is just a big, fat, obvious cheater.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Emmerich succeeds only in making his previous venture, the marginal Stargate, look positively inspired by comparison.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Mini-gems of comic editing grace the narrow, claustrophobic world created in Manhattan Murder Mystery. It's a safely escapist film that's vintage - albeit mid-level - Woody Allen. [20 Aug 1993]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Three words: Late Woody Allen. In the autumn of his career, toiling exclusively in Europe, Woody is like an aging cabinet maker still blessed with craft but grown erratic in design.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
The last thing I want is this: Yet another instance of black culture diluting itself by imitating a white model. Hell, Honey is hip-hop by way of Andy Hardy.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Of course, given the abundance of voice-over, Nic Cage is unburdened from any great need to act. But he narrates splendidly, delivering the stuff with an unrepentant glee laced with liberal doses of irony.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Magic it ain't, but competent isn't far off the mark. Neither is hum-drum. [28 Oct 1994]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Like a smart-ass student clever enough to see through everyone but himself, Art School Confidential falls victim to the very clichés it wants to puncture.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
The Time Traveler's Wife slips the romance cards into a stacked deck – read 'em if you will, but no need to weep.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
It's all picture and no motion, as wooden as its framing. Lovely and lifeless, the result is a traditional portrait of two defiers of tradition.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
For devotees of the genre, the bad news is the best news: Bond is back and nothing has changed except the stuntman's canvas - it's bigger than ever, duly pumped up to Schwarzeneggarian standards.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
This is a picture with a perfect sense of proportion: There's a mini-Hanks, a mini-Spacek and a mini-Kasdan in a mini-comedy that's minimally entertaining.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Like a skill player who just can't score, The Damned United is all dazzle and no finish and, ultimately, damned frustrating.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Say this for I Am Number Four: It's blessedly free of any original sins. Instead, they're all copied. Here a little "Superman," there a bit of "Spider-Man," now it's "Twilight" with aliens, then it's a spaghetti western with trucks – this thing borrows more heavily than an investment bank in an unregulated market.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Feb 17, 2011
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- Rick Groen
The Paperboy is southern Gothic wallowing in the swamp of low camp. And if the wallowing were deliberate, this might have been hugely funny.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 18, 2012
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- Rick Groen
This is a dumb action flick that pretends to have a brain, a spot of affectation that plunges the audience into double jeopardy -- forcing us to traipse through not just the standard litter of bloody corpses but (oh, damn) the added trash of bloodless ideas.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
But, if you want a treat, keep an eye out for Joan Plowright's turn as Mrs. Wilson. It's a classic example of how much a great actor can do with a tiny part in a nothing film. [25 June 1993]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
From the script to the title character to the direction, the watchwords here are three: Play it safe. The whole thing reeks of the formulaic.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Keen to be both really romantic and romantically real, the movie is neither, and falls between the cracks of its twin-ambitions. The result? Call it l'amour phooey.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Nov 3, 2011
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- Rick Groen
But the stuff looks like what it is -- trite imagery grafted over the narrative barrens, like a bad weave on a balding pate.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
To their credit, both Meirelles and his cast infuse as much realism into the artifice as they can muster, but it's not nearly enough. The too-neat script boxes them in, and leave us out. In that sense, 360 doesn't so much connect our shrunken world as strangle the life from it – the circle feels like a noose.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Aug 2, 2012
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Dec 15, 2010
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- Rick Groen
The pilgrimage is still long but, even with the crosses they bear, these are pilgrims lite – perhaps it's the modern way.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Nov 3, 2011
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- Rick Groen
If the plot thins, the performances don't. Brad Pitt's lank-haired loony, Juliette Lewis's crippled innocent, David Duchovny's well-meaning hypocrite, Michelle Forbes' black-clad shutterbug - each is a deeply etched portrait that fulfills its early promise. [24 Sep 1993]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Haven't they created a movie that is ultimately a soulless clone of a vibrant original and, thus, a splendidly dull example of the very forces it warns us against – the forces of grey and passion-sapping conformity.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
It's her first action flick, and Meryl Streep ends up with a watered-down script: the metaphoric journey is without resonance and the actual journey is without thrills. The River Wild is awfully tame. [30 Sep 1994]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
In the recent "Half Nelson," a similarly themed classroom pic, liberalism struggled to balance its lingering hopes with its systemic despair. That film was pure fiction, yet felt absolutely true. This one is apparent fact, yet seems abjectly false.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
This time the script makes scant metaphoric use of the mall. In fact, metaphors are generally in short supply here. Scares too.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
But there's still Murray, who drives the idea further than it has any right to go. He energizes the loony schtick of the opening scenes. [17 May 1991]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
What you're smelling is Ang Lee's "The Ice Storm" without the pathos and the punch, or John Updike's "Rabbit Redux" minus the insight and the style.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
There's probably a good film to be made about the judgmental world of figure skating, but The Cutting Edge isn't it. Nor does it try to be. Instead, it's the sort of movie that aims low - somewhere in the region of competent pulp - and pretty much hits the mark. [31 March 1992]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
The picture's broad outline may be fact, but everything inside gets painted in a deep shade of bogus.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Had Crossing Over chosen to tell one of them well, rather than seven badly, it would have made for a fine movie. Instead, all we get is a mess of good liberal intentions loosely anchored to a mass of pure Hollywood hokum.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Farrell looks so stymied we feel for the guy -- and when the door closes on A Home at the End of the World, that's the only feeling in town.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Really, Young Victoria is just a lot of costumes in fond search of some drama. And finding precious little.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
For this Disney remake of a saccharine 1951 baseball comedy, the targeted age group has been lowered to around nine. That means plenty of mustard-squirting slapstick and not very much of the beauty and drama of the actual game [15 July 1994]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Pakula's screenplay looks to bulldoze a clear path through the narrative thickets, but this stuff is impenetrable - meant to be complicated, it's just confusing.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
The follow-up to Three Men and a Baby offers more of the same. Mixed in among the cliches and stereotypes, there's a genial chuckle or two to be found Laughs that are strictly low-cal. [24 Nov 1990]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
The greatest story ever has finally been told. Or, if you prefer, the damn thing has come to its merciful end.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
All that starring talent isn’t exactly wasted here; it’s just diluted, watered down enough to demote “really funny” to sort of funny, now and then, here and there, some of the time. Hey, it’s the movie biz.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
White Palace starts out raw and realistic, fraught with danger, but soon metamorphoses into a soft and sugary romance. A gulp of vinegar and a Kool-Aid chaser. [19 Oct 1990]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Judged by the usual aesthetic standards – Project X sucks. It's just another lame movie. Yet apply a different standard, the mores of our time, and you get a different verdict: Suddenly, it's a perfectly lame movie that speaks intriguingly to the way we live now.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Mar 1, 2012
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- Rick Groen
A movie that tries to do to real estate what Fatal Attraction did to adultery. It fails - the script isn't half as convincing or the suspense nearly as taut, but the aim is the same. [28 Sept 1990]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Woefully short on script, the picture ends up disappearing down the wormhole of its own premise.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
This is the one Murakami work that would seem an ideal candidate for the leap from page to screen. It should be a good movie. But it isn't.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Mar 1, 2012
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- Rick Groen
Destined to disappear into the quicksand of time, too innocuous to be hated, too bland to be remembered, just awaiting some bright optimist in a distant future to press the do-over button.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
The result is less a screenplay than a manic quote machine.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
It would be easy to dismiss Celebrity as merely a wafer-thin picture about the wafer-thinness of our narcissistic culture. But the truth is shallower and even less engaging -- this flick should have been called “Unpleasantville.”- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
The only effect is to produce that most commonplace of Hollywood paradoxes -- a mood simultaneously frantic and listless.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Juice takes a black director, a black cast and a black theme - ghetto youths come of age - and turns the whole exercise into a white-bread,middle-of-the-road film. You root for it to rise to the challenge, to be better than it is, but it sticks to the straight course - polished enough yet steadfastly predictable, just another sentimental slice of mean-street life. [22 Jan 1992]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
The one source of relief comes from the score -- a sampling of period ditties by the likes of the Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, Janis Joplin and Neil Young.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
This feeble documentary ends up perpetuating the very hypocrisy it means to probe.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
The Secret Of My Success succeeds only on its very limited terms, asking us to forget the flick and remember the star, that cute little package with the endearing Canadian stamp, the flawless comic timing, and the freshest face this side of Care Bear county. Michael J. Fox. So the script is content simply to put your basic romance-comedy through some mighty conventional paces. [04 Apr 1987]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
The latest offering from the serial scribe who scripted Showgirls has another femme with an overactive libido and not much else. [13 Oct 1995]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
LawAbiding Citizen smells a bit musty these days. Indeed, in an era when the debate has shifted from too little state vigilance to too damn much, this thing seems almost quaint.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Winterbottom's efficient yet prosaic approach is evident from the first grimy frame. [18 Oct 1996]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
View the Second World War through a child's eyes and the result isn't hard to predict: a loss-of-innocence tale. Winter in Wartime is the boilerplate version, with the already dramatic facts of the era ramped up to melodramatic levels. Little wonder it rings so false.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Mar 31, 2011
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- Rick Groen
There's something here for everyone to dislike - the whole clan can have fun making fun of this thing.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
There must be something about the thriller/horror genre that attracts writers with exactly the same dysfunctional tendencies: They're all great at the foreplay but keep on messing up the climax.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Memo to screenwriters cranking out murky existential thrillers: Do not have various characters repeat on several occasions: "I know this doesn't make any sense."- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Quaid doesn't have much to work with, and so deflects the portrayal away from the mind toward the body – consistently giving the coot a hunched, pigeon-toed gait. Nice try, but that bird won't fly.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
If the lines in the script were as keenly etched as the ones in her face, Keaton would have had something to work with. Instead, during an especially lovelorn sequence, she's asked to indulge in a crying montage so painfully extended that it has us in tears too -- weeping from embarrassment for her.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
The tuneful melodies of their favourite band grace the soundtrack, but let's not confuse this with a rock 'n' roll movie -- the music is just the blank canvas awaiting the higher art of the gross-out.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
The children are engaging yet the script and direction are not, which leaves the thing to get all bogged down in its own derivative mechanics.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Dec 15, 2010
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Certainly, whatever surgery the script doctors performed, it didn't take. The limp result is a picture that is epic in intention and Lilliputian everywhere else.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Gone from the glittering original are most of the charm and all of the humor, deflating a bright balloon into little more than the rubbery flatness of a Saturday-morning cartoon.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Here, there's not much that's funny, there's too much that's too clever by half, and there's not a damn thing that's lively - this is a film about Life whose sin is its lifelessness.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Epically fantastic would be a welcome change, although epically awful would at least keep the symmetry. Alas, epically bland will have to do.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Mar 8, 2012
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- Rick Groen
We're back on the buddy-cops beat again, with Stallone emerging as a Dapper Dan this time. Sporting cerebral specs topped by an immaculate coif, he gets to wear Armani suits and speak an occasional complete sentence. Sly looks fine in the duds but seems to find those sentences a bit taxing. Guess he's just out of practice. [28 Dec 1989]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
This thing's got more plot than an Alliance convention. Unfortunately (to extend the comparison), not a whole lot of it makes a lick of common sense.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Ultimately, Just Cause is just middling. And that's a shame because, for two blistering acts, it promises to be a suspense thriller worthy of the name. [17 Feb 1995]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Even Dan Aykroyd and Kim Basinger together, acting their hearts out, can't move this turgid script to liftoff velocity. [15 Dec 1988]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
SOMEWHERE in the muddle that is Mr. Jones, there's a good movie trying to get out. And somewhere in the actor that is Richard Gere, there's a good performance hatching a similar escape. But, all tied up by an erratic script, spotty direction and a Hollywood ending, neither makes it, leaving us with the cinematic equivalent of the high-school underachiever - loads of potential, none of it realized. [9 Oct 1993]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
There are some laughs here and the cast is accomplished, but this patchwork comedy is a tad threadbare. The bottom-line school of filmmaking. [18 Aug 1990]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
It's awfully hard to think of Alan Alda as an auteur. There's just nothing remotely distinctive about his feature work, except perhaps a sitcom softness at the centre - forgettably sweet to those who like that sort of thing, forgettably saccharine to those who don't, but forgettable in either case. [22 Jun 1990]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Mr. Destiny is a sedated puppy of a movie - meant to be all warm and cuddly, it just lies there like a furry lump, waiting for an invigorating spark that never comes. You almost feel sorry for the inert thing - it wants so much to be loved, and does so little to earn it. [16 Oct 1990]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
The cast, including the Sheen clan, brings more grace to this material than it deserves, but that only seems to highlight the problem - it's like putting leather-binding on a Hubert Humphrey monologue. [22 Mar 1991]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Even though Frank Marshall's latest film Alive is based on a true story of survival, it lacks the very qualities it means to celebrate - spark, imagination and spirit. [16 Jan 1993]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Certainly, this is meant to be a bittersweet tale of the ties that bind the generations, of the love-hate relationship between a demanding Daddy and his amiable offspring. But nothing really develops, nothing ever connects. [02 Mar 1984]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
The actors do their darndest but the script puts few psychological thrills in the thriller, leaving them to work in a vacuum. [27 June 1992]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Watching a merely adequate thriller is like eating an ungarnished hot dog - it goes down all right, but where's the spice and what's the point? Narrow Margin combines a solid cast with workmanlike direction and a decent if undistinguished script. Add it up and...you guessed it...all dog and no garnish. [24 Sep 1990]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Thematically, structurally, narratively (hell, pick your adverb), this effort goes way past thin - Flesh And Bone is anorexic. [05 Nov 1993]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Other than a few gratuitous montage sequences, plus a patently clumsy echo of the shopping scene in "Pretty Woman," Marshall refuses to pull his share of the load, forcing his beleaguered cast to fend for themselves.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
It's not really serious, not especially funny, and not noticeably scary. Strikeout.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Now, forcibly deported to Chicago and peopled with American stars, the same story is huffed and puffed and squeezed into an entirely different cultural context. Guess what? Sayonara sushi, hello turkey.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Add them up and the sum has a certain mathematical inevitability: Really annoying characters, really annoying movie.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Alien Nation lives out precisely the fate of the alien nation it depicts - both full of potential, both hoping to please, and both immediately co-opted, enslaved by the same commercial forces that granted their release. [12 Oct 1988]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
In today's cultural climate, any remake of Conan the Barbarian can only be considered (a) redundant or (b) a cruel case of rubbing salt in our cinematic wounds. Either way, it ain't a pretty sight – in fact, it's downright barbaric.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Aug 18, 2011
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- Rick Groen
When a movie ostensibly on a serious subject is so God-awful silly, is it impossible to be offended, or impossible not to be?- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
A more inspired director might have salvaged something else, but Dante's point-of-view camera and consciously quirky angles just don't cut it. His horror-genre shots are stylized but not stylish, a by-the-numbers parody without any redeeming individuality. [17 Feb 1989]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
Posted Jun 29, 2017 -
- Rick Groen
If laughs are the currency of any comedy, then this one pays minimum wage and, worse, makes you work damn hard even for that pittance.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Like a two-bit philosopher working the wrong side of the stone, Howard has managed to turn gold into lead.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Add up these three intentions – the down-and-dirty tone, the tender and uplifting message, the starring vehicle – and the math ain't funny. Bottom line: This movie is a whole lot less than the sum of its parts.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Dec 9, 2011
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- Rick Groen
The original Oh, God was a one-note joke that the irresistible George Burns managed to turn into an engaging film. However, even Burns' charm is insufficient to sustain that note through the inevitable sequel. [07 Oct 1980]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
What's up with director John McTiernan? The man has got to get a career of his own -- sponging off the pale leavings of Norman Jewison just won't do.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Instead, you get a nominal character study that boasts a single mighty performance and one nifty scene; alas, both performance and scene exist in a narrative vacuum - the plot is non-existent and the pace makes the ice age seem hasty.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Whoopi (a beleaguered figure these days) single-handedly cranks up the volume now and again, earning a chuckle or two, but then settles lazily back, apparently content to bank on the formula and imagine the box- office. [10 Dec 1993]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
This story, like many of Towne's own, does not come with a happy ending. Or beginning, for that matter, because it's almost immediately clear that Ask the Dust bites the dust -- his dream movie is stillborn.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Filled with visual potential, yet Levinson can't tap it. He's just a whole lot more comfortable trying to tame the human software than the technical hardware.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
It’s hard to argue with the title here – Safe Haven, indeed. This is all about safety in the Hollywood workplace. Why make a movie when making a Hallmark-card-with-dialogue is so much less risky?- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Feb 13, 2013
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- Rick Groen
Baby Boom has the fluffy amiability of an innocuous sitcom. In their rightful place on the shrunken sets of the small screen, its teeny characters would seem comfortably at home. But blown up to feature dimensions, they betray their flimsy origins, looking thin and transparent, just a bunch of under-considered ideas decked out in over-sized finery. [10 Oct 1987]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
I confess to a deep uncertainty about whether this can be rightly called a movie. A bunch of scenes, maybe... I confess to a cynical belief that Lola isn't actually a role but just a succession of costume changes.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Basic Instinct 2 is double trouble -- the femme is to die for, the film is to die from.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Pitched Squarely to the teeny set, Can't Buy Me Love tacks a grade-school moral onto a high-school tale: be yourself, kiddies; don't follow the trendy crowd; popularity ain't what it's cracked up to be. Of course, it says all this while trying desperately to be the most popular flick since box met office. [14 Aug 1987]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
When the plot isn't lagging, it displays holes sufficiently gaping to accommodate a whole squadron of Firefoxes. [19 June 1982]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Yes, from "Blonde" to "Bunny," it's abundantly evident that the two scribes have mastered, truly mastered, the serious art of self-plagiarism.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
The result is a curious mix - a picture that simultaneously seems meanderingly loose, affording the cast plenty of performing space, and suffocatingly tight, choking off the audience from any interpretive engagement.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
It is a disappointment - just intermittently engaging, and lacking the cohesion of his best efforts, it seems less a fully realized feature than a film-school foible. [30 Aug 1996]- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
The result is a small independent film suffering from a severe case of Hollywood-itis. A cautionary tale minus the caution, Just a Kiss is just a cop-out.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- Rick Groen
Don't mean to boast, but I can suspend my disbelief as willingly as any credulous moviegoer. Yet not even an industrial crane would have helped here.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Mar 11, 2011
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