Robert Wilonsky
Select another critic »For 397 reviews, this critic has graded:
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31% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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67% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 15.8 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Robert Wilonsky's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 50 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind | |
| Lowest review score: | Martin Lawrence Live: Runteldat | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 133 out of 397
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Mixed: 145 out of 397
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Negative: 119 out of 397
397
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Robert Wilonsky
When Affleck keeps getting work, the terrorists HAVE won. With blank eyes and soft features, he has none of the gravitas of his predecessors, Alec Baldwin and Harrison Ford, who saved the world with swagger. Affleck merely looks like a frat boy in over his head, which is perhaps the point.- New Times (L.A.)
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- Robert Wilonsky
Northfork may be doomed, but the Polish brothers and cinematographer M. David Mullen (who worked with the brothers on their previous features, "Twin Falls, Idaho" and "Jackpot") make the place feel like heaven on earth.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
It has but one thing going for it: a cast filled with Oscar nominees.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
Why would the writers bother with narrative when the story is just something that kills time, and brain cells, between feats and fists of fury?- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
In one of the year's most woefully manipulative and oppressively pandering offerings: I Am Sam, a dolled-up TV movie-of-the-week masquerading as profound cinema.- New Times (L.A.)
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- Robert Wilonsky
The star's the thing, the only thing, and he's brilliant at playing a thinly veiled version of himself.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
If this it supposed to be comedy, why isn't it ever, for one second, funny?- New Times (L.A.)
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- Robert Wilonsky
Wacky chaos ensues, as the film veers toward a subplot about industrial espionage, but director Clare Kilner's debut is never as daft as it should have been.- New Times (L.A.)
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- Robert Wilonsky
The more technically proficient Anderson gets as a filmmaker, the more emotionally barren his movies become, till at last The Life Aquatic drowns in a sea of self-indulgent touches that delight the filmmaker but distance the filmgoer who wants to love the director and his characters but just can't, not anymore.- Dallas Observer
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- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
Not only an exceptional thriller, but a transcendent summer movie: It assumes, for two hours, you've brain and heart enough to stick with a film that doesn't condescend, doesn't beat you up and doesn't dumb you to death.- New Times (L.A.)
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- Robert Wilonsky
My Kid Could Paint That's about art—and it IS art, among the best documentaries ever made about that elusive process of manufacturing something out of nothing. But it's also a must-see for every single parent who believes their children are special, when all they want to be is your children.- Dallas Observer
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- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
September Tapes, with its torturously high-minded narration and ludicrously low-road shenanigans, uses the terror attacks of 2001 as the setup for an infuriating gotcha finale.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
A movie designed to wow winds up feeling cold, not, ya know, cool; the charm of the 2001 original has been decimated, its heart replaced with a microprocessor.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
Co-directors and writers John Musker and Ron Clements doll it up so marvelously you're sucked into the screen and forced to confront the fact that at their best, these filmmakers can make the two-dimensional astonishingly warm and full-bodied.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
One presumes the only thing worse than making this disaster is actually watching it; wouldn't wish either on anyone.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
It's either the world's greatest infomercial for fame (and its omnipresent companion, notoriety) or the saddest eulogy of all.- New Times (L.A.)
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- Robert Wilonsky
It tries to be both camp and action film--send-up and kick-ass. But it delivers so little on both fronts.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
Bernal can't decide if he's making a Tarantino homage or an Almodovar riff or an Albert Brooks tribute...and the wobbly sensibility finally knocks the movie's legs out from beneath it altogether.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
The only thing The Missing isn't missing is a handful of climaxes, all of them of the anti- variety that leave you believing, then praying the movie's over a good 30 minutes before its actual and inevitable finale.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
Freedomland manages a seemingly impossible feat: It's both turgid AND overwrought, eliciting the shriek that fades into a yawn without anyone ever noticing. It's a wholly dreary piece of work.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
The Punisher would be almost offensive were it not so inconsequential. There's just something terribly off-putting about a movie in which every gruesome death is a punch line, where a villain's homosexuality is used to lure him to his death and dozens of innocents are gunned down just to launch a film franchise.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
If only Condon kept up the Q&A format, because when he ditches it the movie turns flat and familiar.- Dallas Observer
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- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
The X-Men franchise takes a giant leap backward and off a cliff with its fourth offering.- Village Voice
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- Robert Wilonsky
Renders it a cross between "Three Men and a Baby" and "Monsters, Inc." But it's bereft of the charisma of the former and the energy of the latter; stuck in a frozen wasteland, it possesses all the vigor of a Popsicle.- New Times (L.A.)
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- Robert Wilonsky
Plays like a greatest-hits remix; like "Die Another Day," it's bent on resurrecting a moribund franchise by recalling all the things you used to love about it till you grew into big-boy pants.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
A spin-off of a sequel... It doesn't even try to be different, because it assumes the moviegoer wants only the same-ol' and then offers even less.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
Like all films constructed out of pop-culture effluvia, Zoolander runs the risk of being so last month; this is a movie that treats Fabio as the ultimate punch line and regards David Bowie as the prince of style.- New Times (L.A.)
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- Robert Wilonsky
Bearable only because, unlike the recent spate of teen films, it's so breezy it barely even registers.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
It has its moments, but they never add up to a record you'd want to play again and again in its entirety.- New Times (L.A.)
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- Robert Wilonsky
Redundant to the point of being absolutely pointless, a sequel that's almost a note-for-note, beat-for-beat redo of its predecessor, only with all the entertaining stuff left out.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
As the movie enters its final chapter, you will come to the sad, sickening realization that the filmmakers have played you for a chump. What seemed so smart, so well crafted and finely tuned, falls apart into a flaming heap of c---, and all goodwill is dashed.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
Cinema has done a fine job of documenting the anti-apartheid movement, even if too often the spotlight shone brightest on the white man through whom the black man's story was being told.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
A spastic, indecipherable, unholy, and altogether unwatchable mess.- Village Voice
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- Robert Wilonsky
What the books suggest, the movie reveals and revels in--the songs, in other words, those brilliant, backbreakingly fast anthems.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
Ultimately only Moore, with her eyes always half-damp and voice half-cracked and body language half-mad, keeps the movie on the ground, when it too often threatens to fly into the thin air, where the audience would laugh it off the screen.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
The heroes are villains, the villains are heroes, and in between are the innocents who become casualties in their wars waged in the names of morality and righteousness.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
Before things have even begun we know how they will end; this is pure Hollywood product, slicker than the insides of an oilcan.- Dallas Observer
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- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
It's this moralizing, this slamming down of a stop sign every time the movie wants to rev its engines, that keeps Lord of War from being great. But it's three-fourths of a great movie, if nothing else, it has more brains and balls than most studio releases, for which it's to be commended and recommended.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
The Kingdom is essentially "C.S.I.: Riyadh," starring Jamie Foxx in yet another movie his Oscar statue will watch with shame.- Dallas Observer
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- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
Overstuffed (three villains), overlong (at more than two hours and 20 minutes) and undercooked (plot points include amnesia and alien goo).- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
Gaghan's a filmmaker for the gamer who doesn't need to have the plot follow a neat, linear path. Besides, you don't need to know precisely what's going on; no one else in the film does either. Which is Gaghan's point.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
Certainly it exists solely to sell a soundtrack; the movie, like most made for teens, is well beside the point.- Dallas Observer
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- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
It's a plot more worn out than the tinsel boxed up in the attic. In the end, they've given us a Christmas gift barely worth returning.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
Plays like something Dr. Phil and "Sex and the City's" Carrie Bradshaw might have written during a commercial break, a feel-good fantasy that sounds deep but has no more depth than a kiddie pool drained for winter.- Dallas Observer
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- New Times (L.A.)
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- New Times (L.A.)
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- Robert Wilonsky
The first relevant film about rock and roll and the music industry, the first film that lets you in on the secret.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
It just feels like the real thing, which is a trick few writers can muster and even fewer directors can master.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
Crowe renders David's dream (and its accompanying nightmare) so literal we can't help but leave the theater feeling as though we've been lectured to, told how to feel and what to think. And for an audience, that's a bit of a nightmare.- New Times (L.A.)
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- Robert Wilonsky
It should be said that Travolta delivers a wonderful performance that's lost in a mediocre -- and, at times, rather misogynistic and homophobic -- film.- Dallas Observer
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- New Times (L.A.)
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- Robert Wilonsky
This film about sex is so joyless, so astonishingly unsexy, it's like watching porn with your grandfather going tsk-tsk-tsk over your shoulder for two hours.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
It's more like the déjà vu machine. But that does not negate this movie's copious pleasures, chief among them its prudent decision to act like it's never supposed to be more than good time, a thrilling test-drive in a car you love but can't afford to actually buy.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
Really, what women want is what all of us want: a decent movie, something vaguely insightful and occasionally funny. This isn't that movie.- Dallas Observer
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- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
Rodriguez clearly assumes Sin City to be his "Pulp Fiction," his rambling portmanteau--a blending of disparate tales to form a complete, overwhelming epic.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
In the end, The Apostle feels like a con, a movie that embraces its contradictions only because it's not smart enough to reconcile them; everything feels complex, but, in fact, it's far too simple.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
If the first movie played like a midseason TV pilot, its successor comes off like an extended episode of a generic sitcom.- Dallas Observer
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- New Times (L.A.)
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- Robert Wilonsky
Craig, excellent in both art house endeavors (The Mother, Enduring Love) and blockbuster think pieces (Munich), has both a nasty streak and a soft side never before seen in the series; Fleming would recognize him as most like his literary creation: damaged goods in a tailored tux.- Village Voice
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- Dallas Observer
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- Dallas Observer
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- Dallas Observer
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- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
An overlong compendium of Oprah moments meant to move and inspire, even if, by the end, it's too exhausted with itself to offer up a single authentic tear or revelation.- New Times (L.A.)
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- Robert Wilonsky
Morrow the actor tries too -- but he's a stylish director with a steady hand and a shaky eye (the scenes from Lyle's tortured point of view are dazzling, if not a bit unsettling). It'd make one hell of a TV movie.- New Times (L.A.)
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- Robert Wilonsky
It's not hard to see why actors love working with Penn, even in the smallest roles; he lets them speak monologues even when they're saying nothing at all.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
A comic-book movie unashamed of its roots, meaning it's unabashed about being silly, overwrought nonsense, which works to its benefit--so much so that you're almost rooting for it by the end.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
Seems to exist solely to prove there is something beneath the bottom of the barrel.- New Times (L.A.)
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- Robert Wilonsky
Serendipity already feels archaic, like some dusty relic that's been unearthed from an antique store's attic and polished off for display.- New Times (L.A.)
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- Robert Wilonsky
Adequately breezy and sleazy -- a movie about the horniest man in the universe looking for a little one-night stand.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
The movie comes off as willfully eccentric when it should have been charmingly touching.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
Somewhere between setup and punch line, American Pie 2 starts feeling less like a sequel and more like the second episode of a TV series, a case of fine-tuning after the pilot's been picked up by the network.- New Times (L.A.)
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- Robert Wilonsky
The film is ultimately so extraordinary because it deals with something so ordinary: the desire to be better than we are, without knowing how to do it.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
Younger, for whatever reason, simply can't abide their happiness, and so he destructs the relationship from time to time for no reason, using plot devices that wouldn't have been out of place in episodes of "Three's Company."- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
It may have been the perfect storm, but this is the imperfect movie.- Dallas Observer
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- Dallas Observer
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- New Times (L.A.)
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- Robert Wilonsky
A gentle, frank, and often hysterical love story about two people destined, and occasionally doomed, to be together forever. Some of us should be as lucky, as blessed, as Harvey Pekar.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
The movie resonates precisely because it serves as documentary only pretending to be fiction: It's set in a real place recovering from real pain, which Lee makes tangible.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
It wears out its welcome well before its halfway point, by which time you're either so tangled up in plot points you're strangling, or so bored you just wish you were being strangled.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
It's by turns poignant and cold, twisted and sweet, dreamy and drab, effortless and overwrought. In short, the movie is a stunning, ambitious mess that leaves you wondering how much better it might have been without Kubrick's specter peering over Spielberg's heavy shoulders.- New Times (L.A.)
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- Robert Wilonsky
This innocuous, frothy fairy tale isn't so off-putting as you might imagine, thanks in large part to Andrews' ageless charm.- New Times (L.A.)
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- New Times (L.A.)
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- Robert Wilonsky
If there's a flaw with the film, it's that Justman doesn't trust his narrators enough; too often he'll stage a re-enactment while someone's talking, as if he's afraid the mere tales themselves won't hold our interest. But they will, as long as there's a kid slapping a bass, a sampler swiping a groove or some middle-aged couple slow dancing to Marvin Gaye or the Miracles.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
"Meatballs" handled the sleep-away sex stuff better; here it feels like filler between the killer musical numbers that make even special guest Stephen Sondheim smile on his way out the door.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
Funnier when high -- what isn't? -- Harold and Kumar may also serve as the first infomercial for weed and burgers.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
It's just a familiar bore, offering chills and thrills only to those who have never seen a movie before.- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
Either a put-on or a straight shooter; that you can't tell the difference underscores its small but ultimately overwhelming flaws.- New Times (L.A.)
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- Robert Wilonsky
At its best, Cats & Dogs plays like a live-action Tex Avery cartoon, down to the exploding ACME dog bone; it's slapstick and slapdash, full of silly and violent nonsense worth a chuckle or two as dogs slam into glass doors and cats play dead on suburban streets.- New Times (L.A.)
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- Robert Wilonsky
It's far more than merely disappointing that Spy Kids 2: The Island of Lost Dreams lacks the charm and wit -- and humanity --of its predecessor. It's dispiriting.- New Times (L.A.)
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- Robert Wilonsky
It's a wise and powerful tale of race and culture forcefully told, with superb performances throughout.- New Times (L.A.)
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- Dallas Observer
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- Robert Wilonsky
Here's a tip: When Vaughn and Wilson are outed as impostors and forced to leave Walken's estate, grab your stuff and walk out. You'll think you just saw a comedy masterpiece.- Dallas Observer
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