Robert Abele
Select another critic »For 1,588 reviews, this critic has graded:
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44% higher than the average critic
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6% same as the average critic
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50% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 5.3 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Robert Abele's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 60 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Donbass | |
| Lowest review score: | Detention of the Dead | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 822 out of 1588
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Mixed: 489 out of 1588
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Negative: 277 out of 1588
1588
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Robert Abele
It always feels like an exercise instead of an examination, a flow chart of bad decisions and explosive violence that may not glorify the poisonous nature of hard time but rarely skims below the surface of what it means to break bad.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Aug 17, 2017
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- Robert Abele
At every turn, the Chinese globe-trotting heist flick The Adventurers, with Andy Lau as international master thief Zhang and Jean Reno as his Javert, calls to mind better, craftier precursors.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Aug 17, 2017
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- Robert Abele
It’s confused about whether it wants to be a ticking-bomb tale of heroics or a complex insider account.- TheWrap
- Posted Aug 14, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Unfortunately, the director’s breezy approach doesn’t always make for a captivating viewing experience.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Aug 10, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Whose Streets? vitally offers — despite its birth in sorrow and its many war-zone-like stretches — is a tale of alertness and awakening.- TheWrap
- Posted Aug 10, 2017
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- Robert Abele
In lieu of a literal fulfillment of the title’s promise, Dunn gives us a spiritual one, an aggressively poetic elegy to the pre-industrialized agrarian work/life ethic Berry made his most deeply felt cause.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Aug 10, 2017
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- Robert Abele
The competition in Step isn’t just to hit a stage and win a talent prize, but to beat the odds in life. Start figuring out now how to clap and dab away tears at the same time; it’s that kind of experience.- TheWrap
- Posted Aug 1, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Its low-gear celebration of fandom-inspired ingenuity, and belief in the power of creating as a reparative balm, earns it enough well-deserved smiles when things fall predictably into place in the latter stages.- TheWrap
- Posted Jul 26, 2017
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- Robert Abele
As summer movies go, Logan Lucky is especially tasty bar food, slung by a master.- TheWrap
- Posted Jul 25, 2017
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- Robert Abele
It’s a touching glimpse at a community solution to an inclusion problem, where the water’s more than just fine.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jul 20, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Crumbling nuclear families are a well-worn movie genre; you could even add “in Manhattan” to that description and the examples would be many. “Landline” is simply another one, not appreciably worse than the average, but not much better, either.- TheWrap
- Posted Jul 19, 2017
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- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jul 13, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Unfortunately, to follow these characters around is to experience not great theater, nor rich cinema, nor architectural wonder, but rather the itch of the restless spectator.- TheWrap
- Posted Jul 13, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Buenos Aires and New York are forests of romantic entanglement, identity-searching and adventure in Argentine filmmaker Matías Piñeiro’s artfully frothy Hermia & Helena.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jul 13, 2017
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- Robert Abele
As information-age documents go, it’s as necessary a glimpse of 21st century heroism and ideology warfare as you’re going to encounter, and a brutally effective argument for compassion toward those forced from their homeland.- TheWrap
- Posted Jul 7, 2017
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- Robert Abele
The movie is most interesting when addressing how important belonging in the world she covers is to Hartman as her recording it, and there’s obviously a hard-bitten, self-obsessed personality to explore, but it’s lost in the surface-skim technique.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jul 6, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Fukada’s take on family is genuinely bleak — what he sees is loneliness together instead of real companionship, and all the problems that arise from manufactured togetherness. But his storytelling instincts are solid, and his actors always bring humanity to their darkest impulses and saddest epiphanies.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jul 6, 2017
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- Robert Abele
This is the rare Morris movie that feels led by the personality of its star figure, in this case Dorfman’s wry positivity and love of what she does, rather than his need to probe.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jun 29, 2017
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- Robert Abele
As a brisk, sobering reminder of — if you’re inclined to think this way — where it all went wrong with image over meaningful policy in politics, The Reagan Show may feel like the doc of the moment.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jun 29, 2017
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- Robert Abele
The result is a “Spider-Man” that feels a little more punchy, laugh-filled, and exciting than one might expect from a property that’s already been given plenty of chances to succeed.- TheWrap
- Posted Jun 29, 2017
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- Robert Abele
One of the biggest takeaways from "My Journey” and Tavernier’s enthusiasm for the confluence of image, performance, writing and sound is something hard to ignore the next time you see a contemporary film: the care of shot selection that previous generations deployed, and that barely exists in today’s sloppy, keep-filming-and-figure-it-out-later ethos.- TheWrap
- Posted Jun 23, 2017
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- Robert Abele
While Hamm and Bateman have the right idea overall, their love of contrivance too often gives The Journey the sense of being reverse-engineered to explain a breakthrough rather than driven by the messy, human possibilities of their what-if.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jun 22, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Cohn’s slickly edited verité-style storytelling lets each person’s humanity rise to the top, just enough to mix expected poignancy with a simple clarity about the struggles of low-income, opportunity-challenged souls.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jun 22, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Annabelle: Creation is a professional jitters-fest, made with deep-seated esteem for the genre rather than cynicism about a box-office sure thing.- TheWrap
- Posted Jun 20, 2017
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- Robert Abele
A stroll along the Venice boardwalk is likely to elicit more laughs, and probably even thrills, than Once Upon a Time in Venice.- TheWrap
- Posted Jun 19, 2017
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- Robert Abele
The dramatized movie we’ve gotten, All Eyez On Me, is a hagiographic dud that unfolds like a depth-free magazine listicle.- TheWrap
- Posted Jun 15, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Unlike the thick directness in Maud’s work, the movie about her is almost pointillist in detailing the tiny steps that make up an enduring marriage.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jun 15, 2017
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- Robert Abele
It’s an illogical, simple-minded mess in which Stevens is primarily a disembodied voice in a first-person-shooter-style video game movie.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jun 15, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Action movies don’t necessarily need logic, but in the absence of entertainment value, tracking what doesn’t make sense is often the only fun.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jun 8, 2017
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- Robert Abele
An even-tempered slice of pro-animal sentimentality that may not be the smoothest piece of filmmaking, but wears its emotions honestly and benefits from offering a look at a rarely explored arena of human-animal relationships: dogs trained for combat.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jun 8, 2017
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- TheWrap
- Posted Jun 7, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Directors Tim Golden and Ross McDonnell, with the help of narrator Raul Esparza, do justice to all sides.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jun 1, 2017
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- Robert Abele
It’s almost afraid to invite true messiness or insightful belly laughs, and remains content to cruise on a wispy likability.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jun 1, 2017
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- Robert Abele
There’s a glimmer of a better movie in Richardson’s and Cox’s scenes, which suggest a thorny marriage that barely survived its low points, but it’s inevitably undercut by Teplitsky’s fondness for slo-mo memorializing, music overuse, and a simplistic pace that wants to brush away all the negativity with a well-timed come-to-Jesus moment, and a rousing radio speech.- TheWrap
- Posted May 29, 2017
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- Robert Abele
You don’t have to be a Deadhead, or even a casual listener, to find in Long Strange Trip a compelling tale of what happens when iconoclasts become icons.- TheWrap
- Posted May 27, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Afterimage may depict a losing battle for one uncompromising artist, but it’s also a bracing final dispatch for the uncompromising artist who survived long enough to tell of it.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted May 25, 2017
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- Robert Abele
If it struggles to make sense emotionally (or logistically), it benefits from the confident pace of a literate, mainstream entertainment, and the tactical showmanship of star Bryan Cranston, who’s made something of a specialty out of the average guy going through a metamorphosis.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted May 25, 2017
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- Robert Abele
The fifth entry, Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales, is the most divertingly enjoyable since the first. A professionally crafted brew of action, slapstick and supernatural mumbo-jumbo, it’s less likely to spur timepiece glances than did the last few bloated installments.- TheWrap
- Posted May 22, 2017
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- Robert Abele
As an ensemble movie, The Commune isn’t the most gripping, but when it zeroes in on Dyrholm’s affecting portrayal, it’s like Tolstoy’s famous line about the uniqueness of unhappy families, poignantly adapted for group living.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted May 18, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Angkor Awakens won’t wow you with artfulness, but as an analytical narrative of tragedy, testimony and a way ahead, it has an undeniable power.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted May 11, 2017
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- Robert Abele
It’s dispiriting to watch Lowriders make every predictable move. It clutters an otherwise well-meaning snapshot of a vibrant community underserved by mainstream filmmaking.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted May 11, 2017
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- Robert Abele
What we’ve gotten in Snatched is an uninspired, scattershot disaster romp that mostly serves the talents of one half of the marquee pairing, underuses the other half, and struggles to blend R-rated humor, foreign misadventure, and oil-and-water mother-daughter dynamic into a cohesive diversion.- TheWrap
- Posted May 10, 2017
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- Robert Abele
It’s a confident weirdness that Buster’s Mal Heart boasts as it dissects a damaged soul for signs of what’s eternal and what’s triggered when a man breaks in two.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted May 4, 2017
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- Robert Abele
In the fraught relationship between controlling subject and probing filmmaker who start out as comrades in activism, the tension should be explored, not glided over. It leaves “Risk” feeling like the outline for a dozen different documentaries, instead of a complete one itself.- TheWrap
- Posted May 4, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Chuck is, in certain ways, not unlike its flawed hero: a lot of personality, just enough ambition, more interested in a good time and simple insight than a lasting impression.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted May 4, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Sleight is slight in the good way, because it floats along and draws your attention instead of yanking it by the collar.- TheWrap
- Posted Apr 27, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Though a thoughtful reflection is occasionally allowed — sometimes humanity finds its way out — this indulgent, stylized slog is straight out of a well-worn aren’t-people-weird-and-awful playbook.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 27, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Despite appealing features, including stars Emma Watson and Tom Hanks (who morphs his patented affability into casually sinister, Jobs-ian salesmanship), The Circle never builds up a head of steam as either dark drama, modern satire or dystopian thriller.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 27, 2017
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- Robert Abele
The two leads are resolute soldiers about it all, but they’re dutifully edgy elements in a stylist’s frame instead of fully realized characters living out what is supposed to be the riskiest time of their lives.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 27, 2017
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- Robert Abele
This is history from the inside, told by people who don’t always look like they’ve gotten past it, and it’s what makes “Let it Fall” so memorable.- TheWrap
- Posted Apr 22, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Leon’s New York has plenty of uncertainty, but it hums with possibility, especially the notion that if you miss one connection, another one’s right around the corner. In that respect, Tramps is beautifully breathless.- TheWrap
- Posted Apr 20, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Patagonian landscapes in 16 mm and Hollywood real estate shot in 35 mm provide a visually sleek backdrop for mighty uninteresting relationships in the pretentious indie Somewhere Beautiful.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 20, 2017
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- Robert Abele
There’s simply no time for the impact of anything that happens to get its reflective due, because the movie is too busy reverting to the up-and-down status of Michael’s and Ana’s increasingly inconsequential relationship while lining up its next large-scale set piece.- TheWrap
- Posted Apr 18, 2017
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- Robert Abele
As externalized visions of high school hellishness go, Shaw’s doesn’t always translate into the most cohesively entertaining of mash-ups, but his techniques are attention-grabbers.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 13, 2017
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- Robert Abele
The clichéd story wouldn’t even be an issue if the movie were enjoyable. But little works as humor or suspense or sentiment once the job is on.- TheWrap
- Posted Apr 7, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Logan Sandler’s Live Cargo is stuffed with arty close-ups and stunning backdrops, but the emotions to connect them are missing.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 6, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Ever-present is the mild dissonance of fiery pioneers of expression inspiring charmingly pretty if standard art house fare.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 6, 2017
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- Robert Abele
The main flaws in “Queen,” however, are a lurching narrative coupled with dialogue awkwardness, and a blasé approach to Bell’s motivations.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 6, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Like something you peer at rather than absorb, Salt and Fire is both awful and a tad fascinating.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 6, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Wilson asks, can a male middle-aged crank get a sentimental education? If you even care whether that’s possible, Craig Johnson’s film adaptation of Daniel Clowes’ 2010 graphic novel offers a reasonably amusing case study in how that might transpire.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 23, 2017
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- Robert Abele
The humor is way more miss than hit, prone to the kind of raunch (analingus debates, homophobia teasing, who’s-hot-who’s-not) that feels available, not thought-out, and pain gags that don’t get funnier the more they’re repeated.- TheWrap
- Posted Mar 23, 2017
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- Robert Abele
The Żabińskis were as unfailingly heroic as it gets, but memorably rendering a resistance shouldn’t be so resistant itself to the rough-and-tumble humanity of the details, and the unsentimental doom that shrouded it all.- TheWrap
- Posted Mar 20, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Though not the most sure-footed of superhero entries, as an offbeat perspective on the genre, They Call Me Jeeg merits an enthusiast’s look.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 16, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Dagen Merrill’s thriller, made under the Syfy channel’s banner, is strictly cheap-TV genre fare that might have passed muster as an average episode of “The Outer Limits,” but over feature length simply feels slipshod and dull.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 16, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Song to Song is that most fascinating of busts: it spurs many feelings, but they’re sentiments like real estate envy, Austin yearning (if you’ve ever been), Lubezki admiration, and pity for A-listers who can’t improvise.- TheWrap
- Posted Mar 16, 2017
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- Robert Abele
The Ross brothers augment the teams’ richly choreographed, competition-tested routines with slow motion, superimpositions, and separately shot material with individual color guard members. But these artful divergences feel naturally expressive, the filmmakers’ way of honoring the expressiveness, and wanting in on the inspiration.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 16, 2017
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- Robert Abele
The Most Hated Woman in America is ultimately a simplistic approach to a fascinating figure, more Lifetime than a woman’s life and times.- TheWrap
- Posted Mar 16, 2017
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- Robert Abele
The meager tension generated by characters discovering their survival instincts, and why you might not want to be next to them when they do, is quickly dissipated by the realization that, at a certain point, the movie is an assembly line of killing, and not a terribly exciting or entertaining one at that.- TheWrap
- Posted Mar 15, 2017
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- Robert Abele
"Deidra & Laney” shows an easy flair for heartwarming comedy, character eccentricity and issues that sting but resolutions that soothe.- TheWrap
- Posted Mar 14, 2017
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- Robert Abele
As it plays out, it’s only a hard road for these swept-up, damaged lovers, whom Klein and his actors treat with blessedly non-exploitative honesty.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 9, 2017
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- Robert Abele
The Lure may not be everybody’s siren song, but as debut features go, it counts as a splash.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 2, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Though it’s decidedly a Hollywood product in its polished, lockstep approach toward teen mindsets — an admittedly surprising swerve toward the mainstream for indie-marinated Russo-Young — the film’s sensitivities are honest enough to make it a cut above many youth dramas.- TheWrap
- Posted Mar 2, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Touches of empathy and self-awareness invariably crystallize the unsettling emotions of revisiting one’s past life.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 2, 2017
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- Robert Abele
What initially augured a spiky portrait of late-age restlessness recedes into a woefully generic case of shopworn cross-generational uplift, sprinkled with tired wisecracks.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 2, 2017
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- Robert Abele
When Table 19 tries to be a goofy humiliation comedy, it’s barely engaging. (The pratfalls are numerous and laugh-free.) But when it settles down into something like an indie ensemble about disappointment and the comfort of strangers, Blitz finds a more effortless tone.- TheWrap
- Posted Mar 1, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Rock Dog stays firmly in the realm of the pleasant but unremarkable, an air-guitar effort when a stab at virtuosity might have yielded something more memorable.- TheWrap
- Posted Feb 23, 2017
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- Robert Abele
It’s got some future-world smarts that sporadically elevate it above the junk that dominates this genre, and they help carry it through the routine spatter-and-gore moments and sci-fi clichés.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 23, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Fist Fight is so ineptly assembled, shoddy-looking and devoid of comic tension or creative lunacy — like a movie comprised of outtakes — that you half-expect the filmmakers not even to deliver a fist fight.- TheWrap
- Posted Feb 16, 2017
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- Robert Abele
John Wick’s world is elegant and vicious, full of slaughter and courtesies and, if “Chapter 2” can’t quite replicate the original’s sense of discovery, its ending still made me wish “Chapter 3” could start right away.- TheWrap
- Posted Feb 6, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Horror films that backstory the audience to death lose all hope of mining what’s eerie and unsettling about the unknown, and Rings is a perfect example: it doesn’t so much spread its familiar myth as dilute it.- TheWrap
- Posted Feb 3, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Moore is primarily known as an actor but this is the third feature he’s directed, and he proves surprisingly unable to get layered performances out of some great actors.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 2, 2017
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- Robert Abele
It’s as if Haley viewed his star’s strengths — laconic wit, unforced masculinity, polite romanticism — as the only elements needed for a Sam Elliott showcase, rather than as the building blocks from which to mold an original character.- TheWrap
- Posted Jan 28, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Kelly, who is credited with Stacey Miller for the screenplay, is shrewd enough to keep the movie from being a dramatized op-ed piece about betrayal, instead making roiling uncertainty, loneliness and melancholy the marquee emotions.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 26, 2017
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- Robert Abele
There’s little doubt prison reform needs to address the severe effects of locking up kids for life, but They Call Us Monsters feels like a well-meaning skim rather than an impassioned, expertly reasoned plea for mercy.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 26, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Without its lead, whose full-throttle portrait is at least a burning flame, Gold wouldn’t work on any level.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 26, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Though the documentary’s early musings about athletic integrity in general are ultimately usurped by a tale of personal responsibility and nefarious global power, the disruption feels acute and essential.- TheWrap
- Posted Jan 21, 2017
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- Robert Abele
It’s made with campfire-spooky care rather than an abiding need to impress you with his gifts.- TheWrap
- Posted Jan 19, 2017
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- Robert Abele
What’s painfully clear is that all the artfully composed shots, hinky situations and extra conceptual surprises can’t make this Detour all that compelling beyond its crisp artifice.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 19, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Like a fog that corrupts your ability to be entertained, Top Coat Cash is genre amateurishness that neither thrills nor makes sense.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 12, 2017
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- Robert Abele
The Ardennes is an odd mixture of glum-chic style and emotional curiosity, a story of brotherly tensions that primarily comes off like a movie posing as a story of brotherly tensions.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 12, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Title’s command of the material is haphazard, her direction not artful enough to know when expository clunkiness is undercutting the chance to dig into the meat of personalities in deterioration.- TheWrap
- Posted Jan 12, 2017
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- Robert Abele
Instead of a grand lark of fast fists and derring-do, we get a lumbering, choppy voyage of minimal excitement.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 5, 2017
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- Robert Abele
When I, Daniel Blake regrettably piles it on at the end, it’s Loach growing weary of humanizing details and desperate to shake you up with consequences, didacticism and speechifying. It’s the finger-pointer in him, but as this movie frequently shows in its best moments, he’s still a practiced veteran at open-arms affection for the dignity of the downtrodden.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 22, 2016
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- Robert Abele
It hasn’t always been easy trying to figure out what’s going through the mind of the 44th president of the United States, but Barry is a satisfyingly curious, honest attempt to make his inner struggle a beautiful part of this groundbreaking statesman’s biography.- TheWrap
- Posted Dec 15, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Cinematic life...is in short supply in this ambitious but leaden cautionary tale, which tries to pep things up with energetic fight scenes in the avatar worlds, but can’t escape the wooden acting and zipless storytelling.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 15, 2016
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- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 15, 2016
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- Robert Abele
As a big sci-fi entertainment, it hardly feels like a movie about the problems of two emotionally desperate people in a crazy situation, and therein lies the problem.- TheWrap
- Posted Dec 15, 2016
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- Robert Abele
It’s an invitingly austere movie, designed for both searching believers and curious others. The film can be cinematically rigorous, but it’s never ritualistically flashy.- TheWrap
- Posted Dec 10, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Slick and silly, Sword Master rarely reaches the thrilling heights of the many kinetic twirl-and-slice epics directed by its producer, the legendary Tsui Hark.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 8, 2016
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- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 8, 2016
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- Robert Abele
There’s plenty of intelligence and atmosphere in play here.... But the prevailing tone is of pressure applied and nothing released, a genre exercise that plays as educational rather than exhilarating.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 8, 2016
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- Robert Abele
A busy but witless and stale comedy that rehashes every raunchy gag we expect from R-rated comedies, it also wears its hackneyed sentimentality and cookie-cutter underdog story beats as proudly as adhesive nametags.- TheWrap
- Posted Dec 7, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Keeping up with the betrayals and shifting allegiances is more tedious than fun, while the simplistic moralizing about callous corporate greed, and the detours into tragedy, fall flat.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 1, 2016
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- Robert Abele
When it’s merely a guided tour marked by sites and talking historians, Finding Babel can feel a little color-by-numbers. (Which may explain the Schreiber-read interludes.) But there are excursions that feel invigorating.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 1, 2016
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- Robert Abele
It’s too scattershot to be persuasive, even if occasionally it sparks thought about issues of cultural tradition, unfair international agreements, and nationalistic defensiveness.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 1, 2016
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- Robert Abele
As a mood killer and conscience-raiser it’s woefully obvious, but also unlikely to erase the sense memory of all the scintillatingly captured fauna that came before it.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 25, 2016
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- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 25, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Can you tell it’s a play? Absolutely. Does that mean a damn thing? Not when the writing is this richly evocative, and the cast so often soars with it.- TheWrap
- Posted Nov 22, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Allied is ultimately a thin love story, with creaky suspense machinery and star turns from Pitt and Cotillard that feel more like matinee idol dress-up than a meeting of the magnetic.- TheWrap
- Posted Nov 21, 2016
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- Robert Abele
The wistfulness on display is touching and funny, often both at the same time.- TheWrap
- Posted Nov 17, 2016
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- Robert Abele
The movie is practically a textbook about how ravenous corporations and feckless government can strip-mine the souls of workers, and replace them with a political narrative about their problems that keeps reality forever hidden behind a fine, dusty fog.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 17, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Peter and the Farm is ultimately a portrait of whatever the opposite of “getting back to nature” is: the cycle of the land as a circle of hell.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 17, 2016
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- Robert Abele
There’s zero chemistry or feeling to this sweeping, predictable endeavor, only the scent of what might have been.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 17, 2016
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- Robert Abele
A movie that, if never exactly a cathartic experience, carries you along in its clenched grip with an undeniable power. It’s sad and funny and real.- TheWrap
- Posted Nov 16, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Like others in this series (“The Black List,” “The Out List”), it’s a mix of to-the-camera testimonials and archival photos, elegantly packaged, less a movie than a companionable hour spent with a diverse collection of people wonderfully articulate about the road they’ve traveled.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 10, 2016
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- Robert Abele
The brutally serene documentary Iron Moon from Qin Xiaoyu and Wu Feiyue spotlights a handful of bottom-rung workers who write achingly clear-eyed poetry that spotlights the contours of their lives.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 10, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Don’t Call Me Son, although built on conflicts that have fractured many a family, thankfully never veers into melodrama.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 10, 2016
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- Robert Abele
For fans of exquisitely conjured nostalgia, dosed liberally with a modern attitude, The Love Witch is a velvety melodramatic treat, and a real calling card for Biller’s playfully immersive gifts. Bring your gaze, whatever your gender.- TheWrap
- Posted Nov 10, 2016
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- Robert Abele
There are times you even wonder if Cage and Dafoe should have switched roles. But the true identity swap tragedy is within Schrader, the filmmaker having substituted his trademarked thoughtful approach to unacceptable men with a cheaper, imitative brand of cartoony bleakness.- TheWrap
- Posted Nov 4, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Though there’s never a smooth path toward narrative or emotional enlightenment as you watch CRD, Kanadé’s willingness to explore the creative impulse through impish experimentation is amusing and infectious.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 3, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Slater has some effective moments and Franco excels at a certain kind of scary/funny psycho, but it doesn’t ultimately add up to much as either pulpy trash or exposé.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 27, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Daum acts as a thoughtful onscreen guide to what the picturesque hillsides and its stone remains represent.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 27, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Hunt, whose debut feature was “Frozen River,” has a steadfastly classicist approach to tried-and-true genre storytelling that’s admirable, but instead of building tension, The Whole Truth lets it bleed out.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 20, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Before the Flood is neither dull screed nor stat-heavy pamphlet, thanks largely to the questing intensity of its marquee guide.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 20, 2016
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- Robert Abele
There’s an appealingly sentimental destination in store for Ronnie and Myla’s parallel quests that keeps the movie from floating away entirely on its all-too-airy premise.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 13, 2016
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- Robert Abele
A documentary that begs to be seen in a theater, Sky Ladder: The Art of Cai Guo-Qiang offers an inviting glimpse into the life of a truly international artist, one whose colorful fireworks displays literally paint the air.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 13, 2016
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- Robert Abele
While Christine the movie may leave you in a coldly analytical space about sad people — even its dollops of humor have a chilliness — Christine the woman stays with you, thanks to a career-best performance from Hall that’s stark, thoughtful, and mesmerizing.- TheWrap
- Posted Oct 12, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Tower is art, first and foremost, a piece about adrenaline, bravery, grief and memory that stands as one of the year’s crowning achievements in emotional, illuminative storytelling.- TheWrap
- Posted Oct 11, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Often exhibiting the best of DIY cinema sensibilities — a mixture of focus, mood, and lived-in characterizations — Green is Gold augurs good things for the multi-hyphenate Baxter.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 6, 2016
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- Robert Abele
There’s little that’s not dispiriting about Among the Believers and its measured, direct entrée into a closed world of hopeless boys and girls memorizing the Koran, but forbidden from learning its meanings.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 6, 2016
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- Robert Abele
A scrappy war flick with a fair amount of combat suspense but a whole lot of clichéd dialogue.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 6, 2016
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- Robert Abele
The fantasy of a punk icon for a friend is one thing, but the filmmakers undercut the modest liveliness of their enterprise with a save-the-day storyline that seems far removed from the roiling, anti-authoritative ethos of punk.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 5, 2016
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- Robert Abele
The filmmaking has a certain paint-by-numbers frankness that works in some ways, not in others.- TheWrap
- Posted Oct 5, 2016
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- Robert Abele
The overall mood created by the crummy, pinched visuals and logic-strained rhythm is of something scanned and discarded, like a tabloid article or a Lifetime movie.- TheWrap
- Posted Oct 3, 2016
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- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Sep 29, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Though its chronological organization and issue management is rough around the edges, Esquenazi’s passionately argued film...easily convinces that the charges are impossible to believe.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Sep 29, 2016
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- Robert Abele
It’s a movie that ultimately may mean more to those raised in heavily Catholic cultures, but it has an engaging prickliness as a satiric peek into the life of a brooding idealist.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Sep 28, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Amanda Knox delivers its own justice by covering all the complexities of its ever-fascinating true crime tale.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 28, 2016
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- Robert Abele
What starts as a cheeky lark about bad reputations and snazzy transformations never really gels into something truly funny or even appetizingly weird.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Sep 22, 2016
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- Robert Abele
The color riot, the polyester/shag décor and the cartoon portrayals detract. Girl Asleep thinks it’s a stylishly resonant fairy tale about identity when the primary takeaway is an exquisitely curated slide show.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Sep 22, 2016
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- Robert Abele
The movie offers hope in the form of a survivors’ network started by another maligned victim who attempted suicide.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Sep 22, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Though its mix of European romanticism, lustrous trappings, and nostalgic movie love can occasionally make Planetarium feel like a galaxy all its own, the effect is more illusory than enveloping.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 17, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Ultimately, When Two Worlds Collide has a breathless urgency to it, even if its structuring of events feels a bit ramshackle, and the directness of its environmental warnings feel no different than a thousand other message docs.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Sep 17, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Miss Stevens bears a maturity and genuineness that thankfully feels miles apart from the inspirational assembly line of Hollywood product.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 15, 2016
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- Robert Abele
While the movie balances a spirited celebration of America’s space race ingenuity with a satire about the cleverness of mass deceit, it’s hard to ignore the one thing Operation Avalanche understands implicitly: whether you’re a believer or a skeptic, a well-crafted image can sell anything.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Sep 15, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Although Greene swerves unnecessarily into obvious audience indictment at the end, Kate Plays Christine makes for a twisty, unsettling probe into our fascination with transforming lives, and deaths, into digestible storytelling.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Sep 15, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Any movie that leeches the perverse fun out of illicit voyeurism, then tosses in a grim gotcha of an ending to make everyone feel worse, when the kids’ actions are distasteful enough, is worth avoiding.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Sep 14, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Named as if it knew its destiny, The Disappointments Room brings together those horror movie standbys that just can’t quit each other — a creepy old home and a troubled family — for some truly convoluted, non-scary, and execrable psychological mishegoss surrounding a hidden chamber and the noxious historical shame it holds.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 10, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Though its focus is the two years the Sharps spent in Europe, it rushes through elements of their lives that would seem to warrant more examination- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Sep 8, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Perhaps the best thing you can say about Kicks is that its strengths and weaknesses make for intriguing bedfellows, like a cautionary fable that’s as much about the hazards of forging an artistic authenticity as it is the pitfalls of a corrosive approach to manhood.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Sep 8, 2016
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- Robert Abele
The performances are dedicated, but the camaraderie feels perfunctory, outside of a few ruminative exchanges between Hawke and Washington.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 8, 2016
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- Robert Abele
It’s a wealth of information The Ivory Game vitally offers, and action it means to incite. That may well be enough to get audiences involved.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 3, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Sully, an honest, skillful rumination on what makes a hero, is just one more example of how Eastwood, having directed movies only slightly longer than his protagonist had been flying planes, is still a masterful pilot himself.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 2, 2016
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- Robert Abele
It’s an off-putting mix of matters whimsical and disturbing, more obvious and ludicrous than chilling.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Sep 1, 2016
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- Robert Abele
One wishes Bernstein had more cleanly presented the arc of Purcell’s life and career and how her representative eye evolved. Nevertheless, the sheer number of images shown gives this brisk foray into Purcell’s work an admirable guided-tour feel.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Sep 1, 2016
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- Robert Abele
The truest test for unrepentant treacle like this is to imagine how invested one would be if Lewis weren’t headlining his first movie in 20 years.... The answer is, barely invested at all, considering how simplified and pandering is Noah’s approach to issues of grief, aging, and family dynamics.- TheWrap
- Posted Aug 30, 2016
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- Robert Abele
DuVall shows a welcome light touch with tone, easing back and forth between humor and neurosis and never treating her material as the last word on relationships.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Aug 25, 2016
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- Robert Abele
With an unassuming directness, Moretti...toggles between work and life pressures in a way that finds the curious feelings and epiphanies that bind the two, and somehow give meaning to the whole dance.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Aug 25, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Unfortunately, the new biopic Hands of Stone...is too often content to play like a lot of other boxing flicks instead of forging its own path.- TheWrap
- Posted Aug 24, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Considering its subject often enjoys the simple wonder inherent in characters who look into the distance, Richard Linklater: Dream Is Destiny does an extra-fine job of looking back with similarly rich and appreciative curiosity.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Aug 18, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Lo and Behold: Reveries of the Connected World is just the kind of percolating, wry probe we need into this fast-moving, digitally monopolizing age.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Aug 18, 2016
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- Robert Abele
This Ben-Hur may not be an epic fail, but its steady stream of shortcomings are certainly a cautionary journey for anybody with the hubris to try and rebuild the monuments of movies past.- TheWrap
- Posted Aug 17, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Hell or High Water is that rare offering that both feels old-fashioned in its action-thriller gratification and in-the-moment about everything else.- TheWrap
- Posted Aug 11, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Downriver is the kind of graceful provocation that slips around a corner before you can pinpoint its intentions, and that keeps it arresting as both an inquiry and a character study.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Aug 11, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Neither Heaven Nor Earth is a case of the inexplicable rendered without forced mysticism or explanation, but rather explored with a clinical dramatic focus that somehow boosts the eeriness.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Aug 11, 2016
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- Robert Abele
This fourth entry after a nine-year break for Damon and Greengrass should represent, for those ready and able to separate popcorn mayhem from the grim realities of world headlines, a bruising and exhilarating ride.- TheWrap
- Posted Jul 26, 2016
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- Robert Abele
The key to the fun is that Yeon eschews lookie-loo gore for thrilling set pieces: his fleet, imaginative action scenes recall Brad Bird’s crisp transition to real people in peril when he made his “Mission Impossible” movie.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jul 21, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Men Go to Battle isn’t always effective, in that way DIY filmmaking sometimes irritates by deliberately avoiding “moments.” But as an offbeat lens through which to view an oft-mined era, it has a quiet pull.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jul 14, 2016
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- Robert Abele
The getting-to-know-them is the best part of this Ghostbusters: these women are a true democratic caucus of funny. That leaves the aforementioned bloat — CGI bigness and the current vogue for drawn-out showdowns — the only nagging glitch, although it’s all slickly rendered by the visual effects team.- TheWrap
- Posted Jul 10, 2016
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- Robert Abele
The real skill in Lane’s colorful tale about self-made millionaire, “inventor” and maverick John R. Brinkley is that it revels in how fun it is to believe in the unbelievable, and how sinisterly effective the mixture of fact and fiction can be. That includes, Lane eventually reveals, documentaries themselves.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jul 7, 2016
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- Robert Abele
For all the genuine charm on display, you may be disappointed to find that manic activity overtakes said charm, and that more isn’t made of a simple, clever premise.- TheWrap
- Posted Jul 7, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Built on a shaky comic premise based on a real Craigslist ad posted by a pair of party animals — and smacked to life with relentlessly feeble, dopey improvisation and unoriginal crudity — “Mike and Dave” is more likely to tarnish its cast’s comedy-chops goodwill than to foster a desire to see any more raunch-till-you-drop yukfests.- TheWrap
- Posted Jul 5, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Decidedly not for everyone. But for those who like a deep dive art film that caresses the dark and calls to mind the mesmerizing pull of Carl Dreyer, Sivan’s movie offers a powerfully enigmatic experience.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jun 30, 2016
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- Robert Abele
As you watch Argentina, it truly is about the all-as-one: the music, the dance, the light Saura provides, and the illumination these performers bring themselves.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jun 30, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Unlocking the Cage, despite its cameras being on hand for a historic animal rights push, shouldn’t be confused for some hot-button doc ready to slap you into sensibility about its fight. Hegedus/Pennebaker are too smart to get ahead of themselves about something they clearly believe in, when simply hewing to a can-do guy provides enough momentum.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jun 23, 2016
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- Robert Abele
The trouble is, director Wayne Blair’s perfunctorily handled adaptation of Dalia Sofer’s 2008 novel is long on cardboard characterizations and short on genuine tension.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jun 23, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Even with all the design-rich invention and admirably committed weirdness on display in “Swiss Army Man,” we’re still in the land of immature males, poor-me feelings and superpowers. While the movie focuses on one end of the body, you might be left sighing from the other.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jun 23, 2016
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- Robert Abele
The polished assuredness under which Refn operates is considerable, and even appealing, and yet there’s always one element in any given scene — a music cue, a banal sound choice, a shot held until it screams “look at me” — that breaks the mood.- TheWrap
- Posted Jun 23, 2016
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- Robert Abele
That you may learn a good deal about an unusually driven man, but never quite feel emotionally connected to him, means Ross has hit a workmanlike middle, crafting a handsome textbook more than a blood-pumping portrait.- TheWrap
- Posted Jun 20, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Though Art Bastard is a zesty, engaging documentary about a veteran outsider, when it comes to his complexities, it’s not terribly cohesive.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jun 16, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Bourek is well-meaning but woefully lacking in dimension or urgency, the movie equivalent of a scenic tourist trap.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jun 16, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Gray and listless, the Anthony Hopkins/Ray Liotta-starrer Blackway is a vengeance tale set in a cold, foggy Pacific Northwest logging town where clichés are as prevalent as trees.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jun 10, 2016
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- Robert Abele
That the film occasionally succumbs to certain rudimentary hallmarks of industrial studio horror is regrettable, but for the most part it’s agreeably suspenseful, date-night arm-squeezing genre fare.- TheWrap
- Posted Jun 9, 2016
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- Robert Abele
The movie’s physicality is never pushed to suggest suffering. It’s like a constant meditation, something to absorb and exhale.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jun 9, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Though it deals with complicated emotions surrounding acceptance and individuality, Holmer’s movie, which she wrote with Saela Davis and Lisa Kjerulff, is a model of control, not unlike its strong, watchful central character.- TheWrap
- Posted Jun 3, 2016
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- Robert Abele
"How to Let Go” says all the right things about an unnerving peril, and the various ways some highly motivated people are trying to combat it.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jun 2, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Writer-director Xu Haofeng’s movie doesn’t feel like many other movies of its ilk. That’s mostly a good thing, even if the movie can’t quite fit all its eccentric pieces into a satisfying whole.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jun 2, 2016
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- Robert Abele
The model here may be the florid, female-centered movies of Douglas Sirk, but the effect is as poetic and inspiring as a waiting-room pamphlet.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted May 26, 2016
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- Robert Abele
It’s not a complete journalistic picture, unfortunately, and it’s ham-fistedly structured to withhold information for maximum dramatic impact. But that impact, as predictable as it is, hits hard.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted May 26, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Sensitively handled yet unafraid to elicit squirming, and boasting a seriously affecting turn by Lindon — who won last year’s Cannes award for Best Actor — it’s a miniature portrait of quotidian desperation that nevertheless speaks to the collective psychic moan of job-seekers and those barely holding on everywhere.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted May 19, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Almost Holy captures something meaningfully urgent in the brutal day-to-day of tough love amid a world of tougher indifference.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted May 19, 2016
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- Robert Abele
It isn’t terribly exciting as a movie — director/co-writer Steven Chester Prince mistakes drab pacing as a stylistic match for the laconic charm of his lead actor — but the serious-minded humor has a probing sincerity that carries you along.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted May 13, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Director Stephanie Soechtig’s passionately contended, slickly produced film may not sway the most fervid 2nd Amendment defenders, but in its problem-solving vigor could spur a lot of others who believe in change to make that call, join that group, or vote a certain way.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted May 13, 2016
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- Robert Abele
At times a beautiful wandering, at other times an admirable character study, but rarely a powerful whole.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted May 13, 2016
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- Robert Abele
For reminding us all that Cage has a peculiarly gifted way with erratic types, The Trust has merit, but the rest of it strains to hold one’s interest.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted May 13, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Who knows what Pelé: Birth of a Legend could have been had it tapped more into that mysterious life force and the true messiness in harnessing it and making it glorious. Instead we get what the man himself was canny enough to ignore: a familiar game plan tediously followed.- TheWrap
- Posted May 12, 2016
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- Robert Abele
A bewilderingly facile and preposterously plotted misfire that offers few pleasures as either a star-driven thriller or a big-screen indictment of the forces that devastated global bank accounts.- TheWrap
- Posted May 12, 2016
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- Robert Abele
A director in command of everything from the watchful eyes of his actors, to the beauty of a misty morning light, to the heart-stopping vectors of arrows and swords bursting across a widescreen frame, Hu creates cinema that's the definition of kineticism.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted May 10, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Though Dheepan is another triumph for Audiard, it could have just as easily not worked had its leads not been so affecting- TheWrap
- Posted May 6, 2016
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- Robert Abele
This visually restless and ultimately ludicrous Chinese horror film from director Yip Wai Man (a.k.a. Raymond Yip) is unlikely to either shorten your breath or curl your toes.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted May 5, 2016
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- Robert Abele
In the laughably awful Code of Honor, Steven Seagal continues his campaign to make minimal onscreen movement, alarming chunkiness, and slurred, whispered threats in a weird Southern drawl, into the greatest assault on disbelief suspension in action filmmaking.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted May 5, 2016
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- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 28, 2016
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- Robert Abele
If The Man Who Knew Infinity had been more concerned with the soul of a raw talent instead of the learn-and-earn ethos of so much accomplishment cinema, it might have produced something soulful rather than something institutional.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 28, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Visually, Ratchet & Clank has its appeal.... But the story is ultimately too predictable and forgettable to make Ratchet & Clank anything but a kid-targeted holdover between slavishly awaited tentpole behemoths from the comic book world.- TheWrap
- Posted Apr 28, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Even if its trajectory hews to a well-worn format, Keepers of the Game is as strong an argument that can be made for the rich emotional rewards of schoolgirls hitting the field to show everyone and themselves what they can achieve.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 24, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Elvis & Nixon meanders its way into the big encounter with a tone too wacky and cutesy to whet our appetite for strangeness.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 21, 2016
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- Robert Abele
A slapdash tribute too humdrum to ever whip up a truly inspirational froth.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 14, 2016
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- Robert Abele
While thrashing chords score this gutbucket nightmare, Saulnier's way with overwhelmed characters, pressing evil and dangerous escape mechanics is practically symphonic.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 14, 2016
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- TheWrap
- Posted Apr 8, 2016
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- Robert Abele
A Space Program may find cheeky humor in our quest for meaningful science. But it certainly hints that there's something worshipful in the details.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 8, 2016
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- Robert Abele
By the umpteenth disruptive shock-cut and patiently framed shot of Carter staring us down, Darling has worn out its welcome even as a mood piece.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 7, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Hardcore Henry is a single-gear novelty that never achieves real liftoff.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 7, 2016
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- Robert Abele
The shared love of the movie's featured racers for their long-rebellious sport makes for a unifying energy, but their individual experiences — and different attitudes toward the future — provide an underlying complexity.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 7, 2016
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- Robert Abele
If its wobbliness doesn't always serve its commanding central performance, the movie does mark a sensitive, low-key approach to outsiders of any kind, one that legitimizes their struggle without selling them as ready-made saints.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 31, 2016
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- Robert Abele
The movie — glibly admiring of its hero's awfulness — is tone-deaf about genuine satire, assuming anything ugly (insults, nihilism, bloody violence) qualifies as sharp cultural commentary as long as the unceasingly venal, knowing narration explains it all for us.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 31, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Take Me to the River reaches its end sadder and wiser if not satisfactorily complete as a psychodrama. But Sobel thrives on the unevenness, and it gives his admirably off-putting wade into fractured-family waters its own specialized charge.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 24, 2016
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- Robert Abele
In the new documentary Mapplethorpe: Look at the Pictures, directors Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbato do an ultra-fine job tracing a born provocateur's commitment to his calling.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 24, 2016
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- Robert Abele
The fertility of Shults' image-making and storytelling skills is almost breathtaking, and much of Krisha draws on the subconscious power of his direction in tandem with Krisha Fairchild's mesmerizing turn.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 17, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Filmed in five long 35mm takes, this murder mystery features a fair amount of cinematic virtuosity, but it’s too self-conscious and uneven to be entirely successful.- TheWrap
- Posted Mar 17, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Though built to divert, Road Games mostly feels untethered to any memorably crafty storytelling.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 10, 2016
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- Robert Abele
It's a fitting tribute to the influential journalist-essayist-filmmaker: insightful about the life of a successful writer, engaging about how a smart modern woman navigated the world, but also quizzical about how Ephron was as a daughter, sister, wife and mother.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 10, 2016
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- Robert Abele
With loving shots of booming, towering ships so dominant, and decades squeezed into what feels like a week of action, there's barely enough time to develop De Ruyter as a character in his own movie, or even successfully explain his war strategies.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 10, 2016
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- Robert Abele
It's not unfunny in spots, but it huffs and puffs (among other bodily functions) more often than it splits the sides.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 10, 2016
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- Robert Abele
As long as there are enemies in Islamic lands, we'll probably have to endure risible time-wasters like London Has Fallen, designed to justify blinkered foreign policy attitudes and stoke jokey hatred.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 3, 2016
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- Robert Abele
It’s the movie equivalent of a multi-course banquet of colorful foams: wisps of flavor emerge here and there, and admiration reigns, but in the end you’re unlikely to believe you’ve actually had a meal.- TheWrap
- Posted Mar 2, 2016
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- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 25, 2016
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- Robert Abele
In a way, the movie is a tug of war between the fruits of exhaustive research into old-world madness — which plays out most prominently in the richly possessed performances (particularly Taylor-Joy and young Scrimshaw) and the evocative frontier trappings — and an entertainer's pulpier instincts.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 18, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Thankfully the creators of this expansive adventure, a crime-solving saga starring a bunny who wants to be a cop, have a bit more in mind than the usual strains of aww-dorable humor and frenetic action.- TheWrap
- Posted Feb 12, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Larraín, who wrote the movie with Guillermo Calderón and Daniel Villalobos, approaches the material like a scientist both fascinated and cynically bemused by how a particularly virulent sickness operates.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 11, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Well-intended seriousness dismantles Regression, a not-exactly-horror horror movie that's also a mystery with no mystery.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 5, 2016
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- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 4, 2016
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- Robert Abele
JeruZalem is just a wobble-a-thon with incessant screaming and a predictable trajectory for its leading ladies, even if the final, arresting image of a malevolently transformed skyline makes one wish a more enticing, original road had led there.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 23, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Depending on what you need from horror like this – shock followed by relief, or a brutalization fix – Martyrs is bait-and-switch, or it’s a drawn-out tease that makes good. Either way, it’s a sop to vile tastes.- TheWrap
- Posted Jan 22, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Prickly, suspenseful, even coolly humorous, Mojave finds noirish fun in the existential woes of a successful artist and old-fashioned movie pleasure in the parry and thrust of sharp dialogue.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 21, 2016
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- Robert Abele
It suffers from a marked lack of narrative energy and a regrettable surfeit of clichéd characterization.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 14, 2016
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- Robert Abele
A famously crackpot conspiracy theory, psychedelic humor and arty ultraviolence make for dreary bedfellows in the scattershot British comedy Moonwalkers.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 14, 2016
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- Robert Abele
While writer-director Andrew Renzi’s feature narrative debut is problematic whenever Gere isn’t onscreen (and even sometimes when he is), the veteran star exudes a damaged magnetism reminiscent of the character studies that thrilled discerning moviegoers in the ’70s.- TheWrap
- Posted Jan 14, 2016
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- Robert Abele
Occasionally Norm and everyone around him will break out into a dance, and you have to wonder if these numbers were scheduled as bathroom breaks.- TheWrap
- Posted Jan 14, 2016
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- Robert Abele
The compulsively watchable oddness of Lamb and its commingling of innocence and peril keep it from easy categorization.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 7, 2016
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- Robert Abele
A low-key, near-total charmer, writer-director Charles Poekel's Christmas, Again captures something ineffably moving about the holiday grind.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 10, 2015
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- Robert Abele
Tonally, the film is a mess, unable to decide if it's a damning downer or...the inspiring story of conquering injustice.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 10, 2015
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- Robert Abele
Is the relentlessness too much? At two and a half hours, perhaps, but inventiveness abounds.- TheWrap
- Posted Dec 4, 2015
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- Robert Abele
Instead of sinking into crude, one-night-stand joke territory, Night Owls roots around for the spark of real chemistry and, in the winning turns of Pally and Salazar, finds it.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 3, 2015
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- Robert Abele
The mix of callous humor and romantic doom doesn't always hold up, but in its best moments, The Wannabe finds real spikiness in the pitfalls of anti-hero worship.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 3, 2015
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- Robert Abele
With the intensified focus on use of force in police departments, the unsettling documentary Killing Them Safely couldn't be timelier.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 3, 2015
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- Robert Abele
Though not exactly a punishment, director Michael Dougherty’s tongue-in-cheek monster movie is hardly a celebration, either, despite initial promise that we’d be getting a niftier-than-usual package of subversive comedy and chills to shake up the usual holiday-movie sameness.- TheWrap
- Posted Dec 3, 2015
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- Robert Abele
If “The Great Beauty” was a heady, humming party you wanted to live inside, Youth — its melancholy and splendor too often at odds — never rises above feeling like a pretty, meandering gallery show.- TheWrap
- Posted Dec 2, 2015
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- Robert Abele
Censored Voices is a soul debriefing of sorts. The soldiers' tales of killing the captured and uprooting entire villages lead them to question whether the war was more about expansion than survival.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 28, 2015
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- Robert Abele
it's Nowar's ability to tell his tale so firmly from the viewpoint of his quickly growing-up protagonist, and to elicit so unforced a performance from Eid, that may be the most impressive achievement of this intimate, well-paced film.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 28, 2015
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- Robert Abele
At a certain point, though, the movie runs out of eccentricity capital and becomes just another contest documentary about determined participants — in this case, mostly obsessive young white men — and the well-worn narrative of defeat or accomplishment.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 28, 2015
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- Robert Abele
A raucous, weird, occasionally fascinating entry in the genre of disease-documenting, a portrait of raw nerve in the face of deteriorating nerves.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 19, 2015
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- Robert Abele
Flowers is too exquisitely formalist — symmetric framings followed by willfully asymmetric shots — to ever feel flushed with real feeling.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 19, 2015
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- Robert Abele
There's a chic emptiness to Entertainment, undoubtedly, and anti-comedy constructs that may rub the wrong way, but there's also a spiky intelligence at work too, one that engages through the artifice of disengagement and the illusion of "performance."- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 19, 2015
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- Robert Abele
As screenwriter, Billy Ray's adapting the original's Argentina-centric trappings to a tense post-9/11 milieu is smart, but as director his style is hardly atmospheric.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 19, 2015
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- Robert Abele
Strict adherence to the playbook may work in sports, but My All American shows the pitfalls of that approach with movies.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 16, 2015
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- Robert Abele
The access that Bécue-Renard got, reportedly after five months of being there without a camera, is remarkable.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 12, 2015
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- Robert Abele
The celebrity soup that is Love the Coopers is, indeed, a mess, the kind in which the screenplay by Steven Rogers...is made more chaotic by Jessie Nelson's tonally smeary direction.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 12, 2015
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- Robert Abele
In one punchy way it's feverishly, genre-shakingly different. That difference makes the movie almost work. Almost.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 12, 2015
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- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 5, 2015
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- Robert Abele
Heart of a Dog is that rarest of pieces, an unabashedly experimental work that's as inviting as a visit with an old friend, one who may not always make sense, who's sometimes goofy, but has been through a lot lately and treasures the opportunity to artfully unload.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 5, 2015
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- Robert Abele
Despite some scenic territory, there's just not much to this journey, leaving Lost in the Sun feeling like a short story stretched way too thinly toward feature length.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 5, 2015
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- Robert Abele
When Love works, Noé achieves a lulling, melancholic frenzy about sex and memory, but the foundation isn't strong enough to make his movie ever seem more than a stereoscopic fermata: one envelope-pushing note held way too long.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 5, 2015
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- Robert Abele
A rich, occasionally stirring and ultimately plaintive ode to the craft of velvet gloves, iron fists and how to point with either or both.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 4, 2015
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- Robert Abele
The repetitively fetishistic camera work and lunatic-asylum sound cues are meant to signify a nod to something psychological and pointed, but all it is is bilious, empty-calorie extremism, and it only ever drags you where you expect.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 29, 2015
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- Robert Abele
Tower to the People means well, and Tesla deserves his own movie, but it's like being cornered by a zealot: an educational slog that morphs into an infomercial.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 22, 2015
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- Robert Abele
In much the way "Crystal Fairy" blossomed when we were snapped out of our chuckling repulsion, Nasty Baby rights itself intriguingly when Silva pushes his characters into unknown territory and lifestyle is imposed upon by life.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 22, 2015
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- Robert Abele
Zahler's still starkness, enhanced by a fondness for long shots and dark spaces, is refreshing in this shaky-cam era, and his ear for Old West sensibilities — from the mythically polite to the realistically xenophobic — is clinically effective.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 22, 2015
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- Robert Abele
The Last Witch Hunter is one of those artlessly restless, exposition-dialogue fantasy-action slogs that, thanks to Breck Eisner's untamed direction, never manages to corral all the potion talk, mythology rationale and leaps back and forth in time into anything remotely entertaining.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 22, 2015
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- Robert Abele
Whenever the larkishness thins, though, Sheil — who could easily have modeled her face for Modigliani — grounds it all as a young woman torn between dissecting a mistake and accepting a responsible future.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 22, 2015
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- Robert Abele
Aram, Aram is almost too lightweight to have real power, but its snapshot of a vibrant local community and a hollowed-out transplant's very real identity crisis feels genuine.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 20, 2015
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- Robert Abele
Though the film is well made, the all-aftermath approach to Meadowland leaves a lot — an establishing, enlightening character stability, for one thing — to be desired.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 15, 2015
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- Robert Abele
Roberts is a compelling figure.... But the movie itself is ragged and routine.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 14, 2015
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- Robert Abele
Roth, who is no Michael Haneke (or even Adrian Lyne), seems unconcerned with creating genuine tension or digging into an allegory of moral consequence.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 8, 2015
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- Robert Abele
It's like a cozy, informational visit with a beloved professor who assumes you come with a cineaste's built-in appreciation, but enjoys connecting the dots for you in a way that makes the movement's creative signposts — nonprofessional actors, street vitality, stories about poverty and desperation — feel freshly indelible.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 8, 2015
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- Robert Abele
Leachman's facility with the wackadoodle senior is ever-admirable, but even she can't save the low-energy, charm-free thud that is This Is Happening.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 1, 2015
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- Robert Abele
No matter how reflectively mellow the gray-haired, reminiscing interviewees are, the blizzard of featured illustrations from the magazine's '70s heyday offer scads of they-couldn't-get-away-with-that-today laughter.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 1, 2015
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- Robert Abele
Under Mikael Håfström's visually clunky, rhythmless direction, it's a snooze of epic sameness: choppy action scenes, a blankly stern Cusack, and too many allegiance shifts to count or care for.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 1, 2015
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- Robert Abele
Labyrinth of Lies too often feels like machine-stamped issue cinema from a moldy Hollywood playbook.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Sep 30, 2015
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- Robert Abele
Whether you agree with his system-damning rhetoric or see him as no better than anyone else in our clogged punditocracy, Brand: A Second Coming is, if not a careful portrait, at least an orgy of personality.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Sep 24, 2015
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- Robert Abele
Prophet's Prey is a sobering reminder that tyrannical monsters who hide behind religion can be homegrown too.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Sep 24, 2015
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- Robert Abele
Rourke and Wolff certainly have chemistry, and Sarah Silverman (as Ed's concerned single mom) and Emma Roberts (as Ed's potential girlfriend) provide solid support on the edges. But the humor never feels aimed in any particular direction.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Sep 24, 2015
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- Robert Abele
With Cooties, what starts as recess fades all too rapidly into movie detention.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Sep 17, 2015
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- Robert Abele
Hellions is art book horror, something to flip through but never truly eerie or scary.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Sep 17, 2015
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