Scott Foundas
Select another critic »For 852 reviews, this critic has graded:
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54% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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44% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 4 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Scott Foundas' Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 62 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Inside Llewyn Davis | |
| Lowest review score: | Grind | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 447 out of 852
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Mixed: 278 out of 852
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Negative: 127 out of 852
852
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Scott Foundas
iInstead of a buoyant, imaginative superhero movie on the order of Sam Raimi's "Spider-Man" films or Bryan Singer's "Superman Returns," we get a lumbering, paint-by-numbers origin story.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
As kitsch, however, it's pretty enjoyable. Jolie and Owen perform with such conviction, and the film -- blissfully unaware of its own badness -- takes its paperback-romance shenanigans with such goofy gravity, that it's easy to get caught up in the whole, soap-opera thrust of the thing.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
There's nary a comic idea in Van Wilder that isn't ripped off from a recent Farrelly brothers movie. But that doesn't stop Van Wilder from being very funny, provided you're not easily offended.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Unfortunately, whenever Ledger isn't onscreen, Lords of Dogtown takes a spill.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
The rest of Sabotage rarely rises to Schwarzenegger’s level, in large measure because the other characters (of which there are far too many) aren’t nearly as sharply drawn by Ayer and co-writer Skip Woods.- Variety
- Posted Mar 27, 2014
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- Scott Foundas
Honoré never gets beneath these characters' sunburned skins, and well before the end, the film tips irretrievably over into the realm of absurdity.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
If the great movie musicals are the ones that transport us to some heady superreality, the only place Rent takes us to is the Nederlander Theatre.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
She’s the Man amounts to little more than softcore porn for the tween set, with aesthetics ripped from the pages of the Abercrombie & Fitch catalog and virtually every scene revolving around Viola/Sebastian’s crafty escape from some impromptu disrobing.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Despite agreeably short running time and committed performances, Edmond is rendered inert by its stagy atmosphere and failure to fully mine the depths of its protagonist's complex psyche.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
In a true-life sports tale like the recent "Invincible," you buy into all the inspirational clichés because the characters have inner lives and the movie is about something bigger; here, you keep hoping for something bad to happen to somebody just for the sake of balance.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
While the premise does lead to a few moments of inspired physical comedy -- the movie repeatedly falls back on poorly staged, choppily edited fight scenes between Chan and a gloomy, power-mad villain.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Intolerable Cruelty seems the kind of movie that results from two essentially erudite, anarchic talents playing down to the masses.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
The result is 90 minutes in the company of some of the nicest and most boring people you can imagine ever having a movie made about them.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Few surprises lie in store for connoisseurs of torture cinema, though unlike its 2003 predecessor, this Massacre owes less to Bay’s attention-deficient aesthetics than to the measured, Georgia O’Keefe-on-acid sensibility that guided Tobe Hooper and Kim Henkel’s much-cannibalized original.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Winning performances by a number of fresh-faced newcomers are almost but not quite enough to recommend The Secret Lives of Dorks, a fitfully amusing, more often shrill and overstated teen comedy that, like its dweeby protagonist, tries too hard to impress.- Variety
- Posted Oct 15, 2013
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- Scott Foundas
As in his previous "In Good Company," Weitz wants too much to like all of his characters, and he wants us to like them too. The result is a movie devoid of any threat, or many laughs, with barn door–broad performances.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Burns' films are invariably better directed and scripted than they are performed, and Ash Wednesday is no exception. Pic's biggest drawback is that the helmer has again cast himself in the leading role.- Variety
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Falls back on the broad characterizations and stereotypical situations that typified the earliest gay-themed movies, while preaching a familiar (though not entirely ingenuous) message of tolerance.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Gets stuck in a rut. Hearing Santa say “f---” isn't nearly as funny the 50th time as it is the first 49.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Rousing, family-friendly item has a big, epic look and state-of-the-art visual effects, which help to make pic -- a high-profile example of the mainstreaming of Christian entertainment.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Begins slavishly faithful to its low-key 1970s predecessor then sledgehammers auds with a numbing succession of shock edits and over-the-top horror effects.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
The Skeleton Key takes its time making a slow, creeping ascent, but once it starts plummeting downward, Softley keeps things moving at a furious pace, and both Hudson and Rowlands enjoy surrendering themselves to the grandiloquent lunacy of it all.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Sentinel works overtime to suggest what a thrill-a-minute world its characters inhabit; but only during the last 20 minutes does the movie's pulse (or ours) raise above a flatline. The actors look uniformly unhappy to be there - except for Basinger, who seems lost in a lithium haze.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
As usual, Statham gets a lot of mileage out of his droll, ever-present scowl, but as in “Heat,” the movie’s disparate narrative strands never really come together, and the climactic showdown feels pretty anticlimactic.- Variety
- Posted Jan 14, 2015
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- Scott Foundas
There is something too dry and austere about Greengrass and Ray’s telescoped vision, which touches only fleetingly on the pirates’ motives, the suffering of the Somali people and the collateral damage of global capitalism.- Variety
- Posted Sep 6, 2013
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- Scott Foundas
If this is what qualifies, as some critics have suggested, as an artistic advance for Mr. Park, let us pray for a hasty retreat.- L.A. Weekly
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- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Despite a promising setup, pic never really goes anywhere, instead immersing viewers in a kinetic onslaught of flesh (namely, that of Milla Jovovich) and flesh-eaters (most of the rest of the cast).- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
An accomplished but singularly unpleasant immersion in Mexico's vicious cycle of drug-fueled violence.- Variety
- Posted May 22, 2013
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- Scott Foundas
The film skews young, to be sure, and it isn't as memorable as the new Disney classics of the early 1990s, but there's still plenty here to hold the interest of viewers of all ages: delightful performances (particularly by Dench, plowing Angela Lansbury terrain), zinging comic dialogue and a soundtrack that's a wealth of sonorous riches.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
The script, credited to "Twin Peaks" co-creator Mark Frost and longtime "Simpsons" writer Don Payne, unsuccessfully strives for hipster irreverence.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Starts out as an inspired test case for the continued necessity of the Second Amendment, and only near the end does it lose some of its tightly concentrated focus.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Curiously, Jarhead transforms Swofford himself (played by Jake Gyllenhaal) from the book’s duty-bound youth, desperate to live up to his father's military legacy, into an enigmatic voyeur whose feelings and motivations are rarely made clear.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Has surprising hipness and good humor to spare, all put across with a funky, low-tech vibe.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
What neither Howard nor his screenwriter, Ken Kaufman, seem to realize is that The Missing is that much bleaker and more unsettling when its horrors spring forth from the land itself and from the souls of wayward men.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Touches of apocalyptic comedy run throughout Nightcrawler, but the movie’s overriding tone is one of strident, finger-wagging self-seriousness.- Variety
- Posted Sep 14, 2014
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- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Compulsively watchable, with its fair share of effective sledgehammer shocks; it just isn't very good.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
An appreciably moody but dramatically stilted crime drama that exudes a certain retro appeal before collapsing into a series of empty neo-noir poses.- Variety
- Posted Nov 8, 2016
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- Scott Foundas
Beerfest bubbles with the cheeky irreverence of early John Landis and David Zucker. Yet, like just about every other American screen comedy of the moment, it's far too long in the tooth, with a scattershot final half-hour that seems the work of an editor battling a bad hangover.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Bay can be a master of exuberant chaos, but here the violence mostly lands with a sickening thud, which is fitting, one supposes, but also ultimately numbing.- Variety
- Posted Apr 23, 2013
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- Scott Foundas
Iron Man 3 is more perfunctory and workmanlike than its two predecessors, but this solid production still delivers more than enough of what fans expect.- Variety
- Posted Apr 25, 2013
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- Scott Foundas
Dazzling imagery and a grab bag of wry jokes, no matter how lively, can take a movie only so far when there's no emotional ballast attached.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Far too often, Douglas indulges his preference for the superficial over the substantive: The plentiful performance footage -- shot in overproduced, music-video fashion -- overwhelms the film, as do White’s purplish, faux-poetic musings.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
A relentlessly formulaic biopic that succeeds at transforming one of the most compelling sports narratives of the 20th century into a home run of hagiography.- Variety
- Posted Apr 10, 2013
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- Scott Foundas
A deep-fried piece of Southern Gothic that wears its unpleasantness like a merit badge.- Variety
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
The Reckoning proceeds with such leaden literal-mindedness that it never seems more than a stodgy (and, at times, blatantly silly) paperback affair.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
The movie is affectionate without exactly being infectious, and Browne, who begins his film with the Michael Moore–esque revelation that Americans bowl in greater numbers than they vote, disappoints by not devoting more attention to bowling in its amateur incarnations.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Skillfully made first feature by writer-director Katrin Gebbe has some undeniably striking passages and performances, but ultimately spirals toward a gruesome third act that is no less monotonous for supposedly being based on true events.- Variety
- Posted Jun 22, 2014
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- Scott Foundas
As lead Columbine investigator Kate Battan has herself put it, “Everybody wants a quick answer. They want an easy answer so that they can sleep at night and know this is not going to happen tomorrow.” And now they have Gus Van Sant's Elephant.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
The whole movie is curiously distant and flat, like a museum object encased in extra-thick glass.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Da Sweet Blood of Jesus is at once too much and yet somehow not enough. On the one hand, it’s exciting to see the always envelope-pushing Lee working without a studio- or distributor-imposed safety net... But while the film never lacks for ambition, it fails to satisfy emotionally or intellectually in the ways Lee intends.- Variety
- Posted Jun 25, 2014
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- Scott Foundas
Rich in its love of surfing but curiously short on such footage, well-meaning directorial debut by producer Robert Mickelson is boosted by winning performances, but ultimately about as memorable as a day of 3-4 foot swells.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Most impressive in an objective sense, as a technical exercise -- its staccato technique preventing greater involvement.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
The good news is that Kevin Costner does some of the finest, most deeply felt work of his career as a widower lawyer fighting for custody of his biracial granddaughter in Mike Binder’s Black and White. The bad news is that this well-intentioned family drama never quite shakes free from its didactic, movie-of-the-week dramaturgy and a hand-holding approach to race-relations.- Variety
- Posted Sep 12, 2014
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- Scott Foundas
The Great Raid cries out for the kind of B-movie industriousness that Dahl brought to his early, low-budget films noirs (Kill Me Again, Red Rock West and The Last Seduction), but instead it has dreams of sugarplum Oscars dancing in its head, and never stops mistaking spectacle for the truly spectacular.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
A smattering of funny gags and the nostalgia value of the cast — none of whom, curiously, have ever shared the screen before — keeps the whole thing more watchable than it has any right to be.- Variety
- Posted Oct 28, 2013
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- Scott Foundas
Spottiswoode's lackluster film fails to offer any fresh perspective on these now well-known events.- Variety
- Posted Oct 24, 2010
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Handsomely mounted, this direly conventional bit of vampire business is enlivened by flashes of humor and game performances. It isn't great entertainment or camp, but pic sets its ambitions so low, it can't help partially delivering on them.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
The musical film version of The Producers is, for better or worse, a faithful record of the stage production, adhering to the same if-it-ain't-broke-don't-fix-it philosophy that informed the recent "Rent."- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
For all its infectious, go-for-broke wackiness ATHFCMFFT never quite surpasses its opening sequence.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Nearly wall-to-wall climax -- an unwieldy, two-plus-hours third act of a movie, guided by the principle (incubated by "Reloaded" and fully grown here) that too much is never too much.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Terrifically terrible, Spartan could well be Mamet's first true comedy. Only the movie thinks it's a nail biter.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Even Cohen can't dull the loony romanticism of the movie’s finale and, to his credit, stages one truly spectacular bit of action midway through, when Biel bails out behind enemy lines and narrates each harrowing moment of her earthward plummet.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Ponderously overlong and not even half as much fun as it should have been, The Equalizer still gets a lot of mileage out of Washington’s unassailable star presence.- Variety
- Posted Sep 7, 2014
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- Scott Foundas
Two superb, nervy and delicately nuanced performances by newcomers Clint Jordan and Kirsten Russell enliven and momentarily elevate writer-director Joe Maggio's Virgil Bliss above the familiar post-prison-drama cliches to which it so strenuously adheres.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Given her (Halle Berry) biggest part since winning Oscar, she responds with a zeal that's more than the movie deserves.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
More palatable than "Texas," Dawn also seems even less necessary, given how effectively the original was reworked last year in Danny Boyle's "28 Days Later."- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Ellis and screenwriter Eric Bress even go all meta on us with an "Inglourious Basterds"–esque finale set inside a 3D cinema, though their set pieces never quite muster the giddy brio of "Final Destination 1" and "3" auteur James Wong at his best.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
All of this was more enjoyable when Bellucci, Cassel and Bohringer were the stars. Hartnett is overly methodical here as Matthew, and Kruger, as in "Troy," is beautiful but lacking in dramatic intensity.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
This feels like a movie that was grown in a petri dish -- poked and prodded with all manner of overcooked symbolism and thesis statements, but fatally absent the genuine human emotions about which it incessantly prattles on.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
A lazy and listless buddy-cop action-comedy that fades from memory as quickly as its generic title.- Variety
- Posted Jan 15, 2014
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- Scott Foundas
Jolie has a gangly inelegance that suggests a giraffe trying to hang wallpaper -- but the entire movie is predicated on a spark between its prettier-than-thou stars that seems to have bypassed the screen and ignited in the tabloids instead.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Glory Road keeps its focus frustratingly narrow. There's a nugget of an interesting idea here...But first-time director James Gartner's movie is less a study of race than it is a fast break of underdog clichés and "inspirational" speeches.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
This represents at least as much of an artistic setback for Smith as "Chasing Amy" and "Dogma" were advances.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Never quite realizes its potential to evoke the real horror of the Internet -- Yet, Malone has given the film a distinctive atmosphere and occasional flashes of his perverse sense of humor.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Jacobs and his writers are notably more interested in creepy atmosphere -- and in contemplating the order of the universe -- than in jump-in-your-seat jolts. But well before day breaks, it's the movie’s plot (which would have made for an outstanding Outer Limits episode) that has come to seem stuck in an endless loop.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
By the time of its medical-operation climax, Stuck On You has focused so much on ennobling the disabled that it comes to resemble a segment of the Jerry Lewis telethon.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Watching the passionless Phantom, with its geriatric story-framing device, gooey dimestore romanticism and tawdry pop ballads about unrequited yearning, feels akin to dying and waking up in your parents’ easy-listening-radio hell.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
It's rarely a good sign when a movie feels obliged to add the words "a fable" beneath its main title -- and Undertaking Betty is no exception.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Open Water is just one tedious scene stretched out to feature length. It's terrifying all right, but only for what it says about the extents to which a couple of hungry actors and a bullish director will go to turn themselves into overnight celebrities.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
The picture shows vital signs only in a few scenes where Cedric takes on the additional role of his own lecherous uncle, but it's too little too late.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
The lively but wildly erratic result will surely please Jaglom’s winnowing fan base, while baffling most others and doing little to deter Jaglom himself.- Variety
- Posted May 2, 2014
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- Scott Foundas
Welsh director Sara Sugarman and the great cinematographer Stephen Burum (Hoffa, The Untouchables) keep the visuals bouncing along in bright, primary-color-intensive fashion, but the movie has no real heart and even less soul.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
After a lively first half-hour, the scenes start to feel heavy, as though Serrano suddenly decided he was actually making a meaningful drama, and the ensuing, halfhearted political satire is like an extra weight on top of that.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
It's not that Noya is bad as kid actors go, but a pair of dewy, crossed eyes and a beyond-his-years melancholy do not an entire movie make.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
The dancing is dazzling in director Emilio Martínez-Lázaro's The Other Side of the Bed, but the movie itself is a dud.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Promising young cast flounders amid comic material that's staler than week-old bread.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Pic's quirky-for-quirky's-sake antics are neither particularly coherent nor enjoyably incoherent.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Reverts to a fire-sale slapstick scenario that includes multiple tumbles into toilets/sewers/ dumpsters; a visit to a Harlem beauty shop that's all homily-spouting mammies and swishy, finger-snapping dandies; and the attempted inducement of a constipated dog's bowel movement.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Infernally boring for much of its running time, and then, just as the pulse starts to quicken: To be continued.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
The dance sequences might have saved it, were it not for the fact that director Guy Ferland seems to have learned everything he knows about (over) shooting and (blindly) cutting such scenes from watching "Moulin Rouge" and "Chicago."- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Lipsky is clearly reaching for something grand and cosmic here, but the results are mostly just confounding.- Village Voice
- Posted Feb 28, 2013
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- Scott Foundas
Seth MacFarlane has delivered a flaccid all-star farce that’s handsomely dressed up with nowhere to go for most of its padded two-hour running time.- Variety
- Posted May 28, 2014
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- Scott Foundas
The movies by their very nature require a certain suspension of disbelief, but Mission Park requires more suspension than a two-ton crane could provide.- Variety
- Posted Oct 3, 2013
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- Scott Foundas
Cold Creek Manor's prime reason for being seems to be a set piece involving poisonous snakes, directed by Figgis with a drunken gusto the rest of the film could use, and as a comeback vehicle for Stone, who tries hard at motherly warmth, but can't quite wash the Catherine Tramell out of her hair.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Touch of Pink is really a big glob of "The Wedding Banquet," with some "Will & Grace" mixed in to remind us that gay people are actually quaintly neurotic and funny once you get to know them.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
A colossally overproduced white elephant of a movie that obfuscates both its own protagonist and his important message with layer upon layer of unnecessary “style.”- Variety
- Posted Jan 21, 2016
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- Scott Foundas
Too often, though, Jakubowicz falls back on his relentlessly pirouetting DV camera, attention-deficient editing and ear-splitting sound effects as a substitute for real tension, or a more piercing inquiry into the bubbling tension between South America's haves and its poverty-stricken have-nots.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Last Love sticks to a flaccid middle ground lacking any real drama or pathos.- Variety
- Posted Oct 29, 2013
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- Scott Foundas
Emerges as the most conventional and least imaginative of the recent crop of high-class fright movies that includes "The Others," "Session 9" and "Wendigo."- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Even the resourceful, likable Reynolds is at a loss to elevate this rather dreary piece of would-be escapism, which calls out for the wry, pulpy touch of a John Carpenter (or his acolyte David Twohy) and instead gets the strained self-seriousness of director Tarsem Singh.- Variety
- Posted Jul 6, 2015
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- Scott Foundas
The movie is leaden and self-serious, with an unusually hollow performance from Norton, who's not for a moment convincing as a man of raging passion. Far better is Paul Giamatti.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
There are intriguing, half-formed ideas afoot in Transcendence, but the script and Pfister’s heavy, humorless direction tend to reduce everything to simplistic standoffs between good and evil.- Variety
- Posted Apr 16, 2014
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- Scott Foundas
This Thing of Ours is infatuated with the romance of gangsterism -- with an absurdly straight face, it asks us to feel mournful for the loss of “respect” and “integrity” in the mob community.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Those viewers who found anti-Semitism lurking under every stone in The Passion of the Christ may rejoice in this celebration of Jewish heroism; all others should rest assured that falling asleep in the cinema is not a mortal sin.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
With her bulging blue eyes, elaborately braided hair and slinky spandex costumes, she's an indelible icon of action-heroine chic, and, quite frankly, the films don't deserve her.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
But while some may leave the theater tapping their toes and whistling the lyrics to such inimitable original ballads as "Hard for a Pimp" and "Whoop That Trick," they should hang their heads low and mourn the sorry state of the contemporary African-American movie.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Director Black is competent with the camera, but he seems to have instructed the entire cast to deliver their lines in hushed tones and pauses pregnant with hoped-for meaning -- except for Kwanten, whose overenthusiastic impersonation of a red-state rube is as grating as horseshoes on a blackboard.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Life goes far past the boiling point for most of the characters in this hilariously overwrought ghetto soap opera from cult writer-director Buddy Giovinazzo.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
There is something sweetly naive about pic's astonished contention that this is because morals were taught in a nonreligious context. But it's not a compelling argument for the Apocalypse.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Newcomer Short has charisma, charm and athleticism to burn, but it's mostly for naught in a movie that spends two tedious hours pulling out every stop in the gold-hearted-kid-from-the-wrong-side-of-the-tracks- meets-gold-hearted-girl-who-values-true-love-above-privilege playbook.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Zombeavers is not a total wash, and seen at night, under the right combination of low expectations and controlled substances, it may even seem better than it really is.- Variety
- Posted Mar 19, 2015
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- Scott Foundas
This thoroughly unhip, unfunny political comedy is the kind of movie TV actors like Ray Romano make on hiatus from their successful series, and movie actors like Gene Hackman and Marcia Gay Harden make on hiatus from taking their careers seriously.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
The sentimental novelty of watching two childhood antiheroes have at it dissipates once you realize the lugubrious lengths to which the screenplay must go in order to make that happen.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
The results are far from perfect: For one thing, Lipsky is so far from being a fluid visual storyteller that the garishly lit, appallingly composed Flannel Pajamas makes another two-hander talkfest Lipsky famously distributed -- "My Dinner With Andre" -- seem like "Lawrence of Arabia" by comparison.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Could have used two rangier lead players than Stiller (doing his patented aggrieved-yuppie shtick) and Barrymore (who's so perky you want to slap her); the 81-year-old Essell, however, is a wicked pleasure throughout.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Harris tries his best to make something more out of his one-dimensional white-knight character, while Gooding plays his vaudeville Rainman routine to the rafters.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Despite the considerable imagination that has gone into realizing period scenes on a modest budget, all the episodes (past and present) feel hurried and clipped, like they've been passed through too many impatient editing-room hands, and the picture never fully absorbs you.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
There may not be two equal sides to every argument, but in giving such little credence to those who might oppose him, Jarecki makes us wonder what exactly it is he’s so afraid of.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Whereas Wan (who retains a producer credit here, and makes a cameo appearance) is the sort of director who can effortlessly turn a billowing curtain or creaking floorboard into an unbearable portent of dread, Whannell rarely makes the neck hairs quiver, let alone stand at attention.- Variety
- Posted Jun 4, 2015
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- Scott Foundas
Bardem, given the only fully fleshed-out character to play, is a marvel to behold...If only he had found a more soulful, less didactic movie to be plunked down into.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Despite its intelligence and a great, funny concept for a movie, this "Picnic" never gets past the appetizers; pic lacks the development needed for a full-length feature and, following a hilarious opening sequence, it becomes tiresomely one-note.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
That sly toying with audience sympathies is, alas, all that’s notable about this otherwise poverty-row quickie produced for the Chiller cable network.- Variety
- Posted Jul 18, 2013
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
No mere crime drama, but rather the latest in the recent resurgence of independently financed, spiritually themed pics that seek to couch religious dogma within the shells of B-grade genre entertainment.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
This is satire made from the inside of the ivory tower, and when, late in the third act, Fun With Dick and Jane decides to come on strong with platitudes about how the petit bourgeois really can stick it to the haute bourgeois, it goes from bad to worse.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
An inspirational sports drama that goes long on rectitudinous sermonizing but comes up short on gridiron thrills or genuine love for the game.- Variety
- Posted Aug 20, 2014
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- Scott Foundas
Ultimately has nothing of any real depth or profundity to say, but a thousand self-consciously complex ways of saying it.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
The actors sleepwalk through their roles (save for Rosemary herself, Mia Farrow, chewing the scenery with termitelike gusto as the boy's satanic protector), while Moore, who previously directed "Behind Enemy Lines" and the "Flight of the Phoenix" remake, seems completely at a loss without any planes to crash.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
There are moments of real power here -- mostly courtesy of Phillips ("Dawson's Creek"), who does a remarkable job of turning her caricature into a character -- but even more of astounding naiveté.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
What makes the movie seem crass is its refusal to present (or even to see) more than one side of any given issue. In the logic of Konner and Rosenthal, here abetted by director Mike Newell, you're either a Jackson Pollock or a Norman Rockwell.- L.A. Weekly
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- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
The 68-year-old actor (Redford) segues into full-blown irascible-old-man mode, and though the transformation isn't quite as compelling as it sounds, it's easily the best thing going for this Lasse Hallstrom–directed, Wyoming-set weepie.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Lacks so much as a single fresh idea; it lacks an entertaining way of presenting its stale ideas, too.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Long before the movie's climax, in which Magneto (Ian McKellen) turns smashed-up automobiles into fiery projectiles to be hurled at his enemies, those in the audience will know what it means to behold a flaming hunk of junk.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
There's a whiff of exploitation about any movie that claims the Holocaust as a “backdrop,” and Rolf Schübel’s treacly tale of three men lovesick for the same blue-eyed beauty fairly reeks of it.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
By and large, the jokes fall flat, and the entire film often seems as fatigued as its star.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
As in the late-period works of Mel Brooks, the very structure of the film feels irreparably fatigued.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
These resourceful actors -- to say nothing of the audience -- deserve better.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
A handsomely made but dramatically inert and not very scary sequel.- Variety
- Posted Jan 1, 2015
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- Scott Foundas
The only character who emerges as more than an ideological mouthpiece, and nearly saves the movie, is the Ambassador's resident hairstylist, who masks her faded beauty with a thick coat of eye shadow and an overteased hairdo. I kept wondering who this deeply sad, earthy actress was, making so much out of so little, until I realized it was Sharon Stone in the most naked performance she's ever given without taking her clothes off.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
What you end up with are a bunch of kids acting not like kids, but how adults who've lost all sense of what it was like to be a kid think kids behave.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
The usually zippy and subversive director Mark Waters (Freaky Friday, Mean Girls) plays things straight and suffocatingly sentimental - which actually makes the whole movie seem that much creepier.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Devil’s Knot only occasionally feels weightier than a high-end Lifetime original or “Law & Order” episode.- Variety
- Posted Sep 14, 2013
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- Scott Foundas
Manages to get a fair bit right about early 1970s surf culture when it isn’t trafficking in the hoariest of David-vs.-Goliath cliches.- Variety
- Posted Jul 31, 2013
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- Scott Foundas
Both the words and the pictures are surprisingly flaccid, largely due to Gerald DiPego’s literate but hopelessly contrived screenplay and direction that lacks Schepisi’s usual snap.- Variety
- Posted May 22, 2014
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- Scott Foundas
For all its sincere intentions, Kruishoop’s script feels cobbled together from newspaper headlines and bits of other movies rather than real, lived experience.- Variety
- Posted Apr 3, 2014
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- Scott Foundas
Are We There Yet? traps the affable Ice Cube in a dismal kiddy slapstick saga that even his considerable charisma can do little to enhance.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Audiences won't show much clemency toward Death & Texas, an uneasy (and very unfunny) marriage of sports culture satire and death penalty polemic.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Outside of Sylvia, none of the characters has any real presence or personality in a movie that takes greater interest in shots of pretty flowers than in the human beings onscreen, and in which nearly every major plot turn is the result of blind chance.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
So beneath the considerable talents of its star, Chris Rock, it's dismaying to note Rock is also the movie's director, producer and co-scenarist. Not unlike Richard Pryor a generation ago, Rock has yet to land a movie vehicle that captures the sparky energy and subversive bent of his excellent stand-up performances.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Desert Dancer traffics in the kind of spirited rebel-youth archetypes who’ve been endemic to dance movies for decades.- Variety
- Posted Apr 9, 2015
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- Scott Foundas
Totally cliched and nearly two hours long, pic takes forever to get to hopelessly obvious places.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
The Runner doesn’t lack for drama, but the characters are so thinly and predictably drawn, and the movie’s supposed insights into the art of political compromise so banal, that nothing catches fire.- Variety
- Posted Aug 4, 2015
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- Scott Foundas
Even by the low standards of high-concept Hollywood rom-coms, this charmless, prophetically titled stinker stands apart, suggesting that the recent mass firings at studio Paramount may not have been such a bad idea after all.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
The Legend of Zorro is a Saturday matinee entirely lacking in Saturday-matinee thrills or brevity -- what's passable for the first 80 minutes or so becomes intolerable as the movie ticks past the two-hour mark.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
At its best, in its early, more subdued passages, Poor White Trash provides a couple of pristine comic moments. At its worst, it spirals uncontrollably into an unfunny void.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Lounguine’s biopic is chilly and convoluted, too eventful to be boring, but never taking the time to immerse us emotionally in Makovski's world.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
The satirical jabs at celebrity culture smell like rotted leftovers from "The Fantastic Four." The token ruminations on the tension between a superhero's public and private lives seem flown in from Bryan Singer's "Superman Returns" (to say nothing of Raimi's own, superior "Darkman"). Most egregious, though, is the way Raimi and the writers reduce Spider-Man 3 to the very sort of abject distinctions between virtue and sin that the series has heretofore studiously avoided.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
The attempt to draw certain connections between Griffin's material and its autobiographical origins feels slapped together, shortchanging both aspects of the film.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Begins as a refreshingly subversive departure from the Hollywood studios' cookie-cutter romances, but the thin script can't sustain that initial charge, and it soon flattens out, like a punctured comic balloon.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
The Intended is unintentionally risible from frame one to last. But don't just blame Levring: The script was co-authored by none other than McTeer herself, and the result suggests the sort of self-flagellating, anti-vanity project that can occur when perfectly capable actors start taking themselves way too seriously.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Despite early-on guffaws, pic suffers from the same problem that has plagued nearly all of the similarly adapted “Saturday Night Live” films: It fails to sustain its initial burst of comic inspiration over the course of its feature-length running time.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
There's no question, though, that the Wayanses have dialed down the outrageousness to nearly sub-PG-13 levels.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
It all rings particularly hollow in light of several recent pics ("Last Orders" and "The Barbarian Invasions" chief among them) that have explored similar terrain with much greater emotion and intelligence.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
What keeps One Chance plugging along almost in spite of itself are the warmly engaging performances of Corden and Alexandra Roach.- Variety
- Posted Oct 17, 2013
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- Scott Foundas
The Anarchist Cookbook drops a few scant sparks onto a torch that, hopefully, some other filmmaker will come along and run with.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Lady in the Water feels very much like something its author made up as he went along; and, if it weren't so damn weird, it would most certainly put you right to sleep.- L.A. Weekly
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- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Like the movie’s mysterious Jigsaw doppelgänger, Saw IV is itself a poor substitute for the original.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Structurally, it's ambitious, but emotionally the movie never quite connects, spending so much time laboring over its parallel storytelling and its cosmic connections that the characters remain at arm's length, as intangible as reflections in glass.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
The humorless tone and relentlessly noisy (visually and sonically) aesthetics leave much to be desired.- Variety
- Posted Jun 10, 2013
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- Scott Foundas
Despite its origins, nearly every visual and storytelling idea in this green-and-black-tinted martial-arts fantasy seems to derive from "Mad Max," "The Matrix" and/or "The Lord of the Rings."- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
This is one of the most visually off-putting films ever made by a director who supposedly makes beautiful pictures.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
The script (by Matthew Perniciaro and Timm Sharp) is trite, and the direction so flat that every scene looks like it was shot in a broom closet, but the bright young cast makes things more bearable than they should be.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Emerges as an overproduced novelty pic that looks and feels more like a company promo reel than an engaging piece of storytelling.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Clooney has transformed a fascinating true-life tale into an exceedingly dull and dreary caper pic cum art-appreciation seminar — a museum-piece movie about museum people.- Variety
- Posted Jan 29, 2014
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- Scott Foundas
Its characters are as flimsy and expendable as the title suggests, while only the most gullible of viewers (i.e., those who've never seen a David Mamet picture) will likely be duped by the painfully et cetera who's-conning-whom antics or the mounds of forced sentimentality under which they're ill-disguised.- L.A. Weekly
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- Variety
- Posted Apr 8, 2013
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- Scott Foundas
Bearing a distinctly musty odor confirmed by its 2011 copyright date, this day-and-date Lionsgate pickup never achieves dramatic liftoff.- Variety
- Posted Jun 10, 2014
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- Scott Foundas
A steaming compost heap of high-art pretense and half-cocked psychoanalysis that almost makes you sorry Nicolas Roeg isn't making pictures anymore.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
This appalling multiculti upgrade of the ’50s sitcom is about as funny as a bus accident.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Kinnear and Romijn-Stamos appear to be vying for the title of filmdom's least-convincing married couple, while Robert De Niro, as the movie's modern-day Dr. Frankenstein, takes his own expert career slumming to a new depth -- he's become an evil clone of a once-great actor.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Chandrasekhar is a master forger of images and situations from horror movies past, but unlike Wes Craven did in "Scream," he doesn't build on them in any way, and the result is the opposite of what's intended; the movie is stultifying.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
The thunderous clashes between armies of computer-generated Trojans and Mycenaeans, when they do arrive, feel decidedly un-epic, as though we were watching a child's toy-box war between plastic figurines. Which makes them perfectly in line with the rest of Petersen's artless approach.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
For all of its 93 minutes, you never feel anything significant is at stake for anyone — save for a paycheck.- Variety
- Posted Jul 13, 2014
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- Scott Foundas
The movie's chief liability, though, is Rose herself, who also co-scripted with first-time director Robert Cary and who registers several notches below Nia Vardalos on the totem of unlikely double-threats.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Director Rob Reiner’s atrocious cancer “comedy” marks a new low in Hollywood’s self-flagellating “things to be thankful for” tradition.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
In fairness, the movie isn't the absolute worst of its kind and there's a certain charm to Butcher's amiable, puppy-eyed performance. But Michael McGowan's direction is as flat as an asphalt road, and his script is gasping for air long before it enters the final stretch.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
This depressingly uninspired action-comedy (based on the 1975–79 TV series) is Hollywood’s latest McMovie -- name-brand recognition as raison d’être or, if you will, creative bankruptcy on a very large scale.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Viewers of this Sam Raimi-produced, sub-"Amityville" scarefest are likely to hold the real grudge.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Not just instantly forgettable, but beginning to fade from memory even as its images still play across the screen.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
They only want us to play that tiresome guessing game: Is it all a dream or is it really happening? Instead, you may find yourself asking: Is this cinema or merely Cinemax?- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Features fewer small-town scares than a rerun of “Dawson’s Creek” and more wooden acting than a marionette theater. Memo to Rob Zombie: Don’t fear the competition.- Variety
- Posted Oct 5, 2013
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- Scott Foundas
As repellent and repellently opportunistic a piece of work as the various shock-horror provocations (The Isle, The Coast Guard) that helped to launch this worrisome career (Kim Ki-Duk).- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
There may, somewhere in the premise of Incantato, lie the inspiration for a fine farce, but under Avati's shaky stewardship, the picture is leaden and charmless.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
The result is unquestionably an auteur film, but one festooned with so many bad and unnecessary ideas that one can’t help wondering if a more modest, hemmed-in version of the same project might not have proved more effective.- Variety
- Posted Jan 27, 2014
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- Variety
- Posted May 25, 2013
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- Scott Foundas
Cosgrove and screenwriter Dean Craig aim for the kind of close-quarters chaos that John Cleese and Connie Booth turned into high comic art on "Fawlty Towers," but Caffeine's roundelay of sophomoric urination, masturbation and pedophilia gags isn't half as funny as the atrocious British accents of the largely American cast.- L.A. Weekly
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- Variety
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- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Begins as a serious, straightforward account of the origins of the cocaine trade and "gangsta" culture in 1980s Harlem, but then downward spirals due to a weak plot and gratuitous violence.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
An anemic sitcom pilot dragged out to an excruciating 108-minute running time.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Pic has a stagy, boxed-in feel. Both visually and energetically, it suggests something that has been done onstage to the point of mechanized repetition. And even though Whaley is supposed to be playing a disillusioned character, it's the actor himself who seems fatigued and over-rehearsed.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
No doubt, Levinson thought he was making this generation's "Dr. Strangelove." What he's actually made is a desperate, ponderous sop to progressives that caters to all of the left's worst fears about voter fraud, corporate malfeasance and the impossibility of effecting real change.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Like "Life Is Beautiful" before it, Imagining Argentina juxtaposes horrific images of torture and humiliation against gooey optimism and thinks it's saying something profound about human resilience in the process.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Lutz’s acting muscles aren’t nearly as well developed as his pectorals and deltoids, and while the role may not call for a master thespian, it at least begs someone who can emote without looking like he’s straining to execute a dead lift.- Variety
- Posted Jan 10, 2014
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- Scott Foundas
Where "Amores Perros" was a feast of energy, wit and imagination, 21 Grams is like a starvation diet -- a movie that wallows so profoundly in its own misery that watching it is like atoning for some sin you didn't commit.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
This Hannibal is a stick-in-the-mud altogether lacking in the wit, gourmet appetites and romantic flair required of any surrogate for Sir Anthony Hopkins. By the end of two full hours, it's only Harris' head you long to see on a plate.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
The disparate tones never gel, and the movie has an airless, stop-and-go feel, as if a studio-audience laugh track were intended but never inserted.- Variety
- Posted Feb 26, 2015
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- Scott Foundas
This is "Crash" with gun violence substituted for racism, although the tone of director–co-writer Aric Avelino's debut feature may be closer to one of those pious public-safety films that used to be shown to schoolchildren in order to frighten them out of potential bad behavior.- L.A. Weekly
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- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Oz tilts towards the mawkish, as the sham wizard learns the value of selflessness and an incessant Danny Elfman score tugs so shamelessly at your tear ducts that it would make the Tin Man surrender his heart on the spot.- Village Voice
- Posted Mar 5, 2013
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- Scott Foundas
Shyamalan is clearly a director-for-hire here, his disinterest palpable from first frame to last. Nowhere in evidence is the gifted "Sixth Sense" director who once brought intricately crafted setpieces and cinematic sleight-of-hand to even the least of his own movies.- Variety
- Posted May 30, 2013
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- Scott Foundas
Not quite aptly titled, but close, writer-director Ryan Schifrin's cheapo horror opus pits everyone's favorite hirsute hominoid against the denizens of a remote town nestled at the base of a mountain called Suicide Peak. It's not much of a contest.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
V for Vendetta is a dud - far too long at nearly two and a half hours, with flat, grungy visuals, choppy editing and no sense of urgency. But as a political work, it's something else - heavy-handed, reactionary and flat-out stupid. (For the record, Moore has publicly distanced himself from the film, saying it bears precious little resemblance to his original creation.)- L.A. Weekly
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- Variety
- Posted Sep 3, 2015
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- Scott Foundas
Calamitously uninspired and borderline incoherent, new pic lacks even those fleeting pleasures (namely, a sense of humor) that made the first film a passable popcorn attraction.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Less compelling than all the behind-the-scenes Sturm und Drang. Even Baldwin, who waived his directing credit in favor of the pseudonymous Harry Kirkpatrick, has warned fans to stay away.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
While Gens can splatter gore with the best of them -- early in the film, a human body packed with C4 goes off in graphic detail -- he fails to stage so much as a single rousing action scene, even when he has four double-fisted swordsmen facing off inside an abandoned subway car. Game over. The audience loses.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
This anemic genre parody from two of the six writers of "Scary Movie" strives for the goofball precision of the brothers Zucker and, long before it reaches the end of its 70-odd minutes, gives you newfound respect for the comic genius of the brothers Wayans (two of the other writers of "Scary Movie").- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
It's one of those rare movie failures that truly warrants being called ambitious.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Some will see this as a movie about how we're all God’s children. I saw only the misanthropic fulminations of Jensen's runaway ego.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
This is a dark, vulgar, brooding turnoff of a movie, minus the steady laugh quotient needed to appease Sandler's core constituency.- Variety
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- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
The direction is lazy and the script thoroughly witless, from its token Bergman references to dialogue that suggests a night in borscht-belt hell.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Director Jessy Terrero's spasmodically funny air-travel parody unfailingly counters every one of its genuinely uproarious gags with at least two or three others rooted in retrograde racial panic.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Into the Storm can make it rain like nobody’s business, but when it tries to be smart, it comes out all wet.- Variety
- Posted Aug 7, 2014
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- Scott Foundas
The ultimate test of one's tolerance for King's self-aggrandizing postulations about writer's block, obsessive fans and the potentially frightening manifestations of the writer's id...It's just plain lousy.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
What the movie needs is a director, and what it gets instead is Pitof, a French visual-effects maestro so much fonder of technological wizardry than of human flesh that he manages to turn even his slinky, sinuous star attraction into a digitized synthespian frolicking about endless CGI cityscapes.- L.A. Weekly
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- Variety
- Posted Jun 13, 2013
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
A limp facsimile of a Woody Allen ensembler set in a familiar world of New York Jewish intellectuals — minus only the wit, and the intellect.- Variety
- Posted Apr 3, 2014
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- Scott Foundas
Now, Soderbergh has made a movie so cool it's practically comatose. Sputtering along from one half-cocked gag line and self-satisfied in-joke to the next, Ocean's Thirteen is as slapdash and slipshod a three-quel as any in this summer's box-office sweepstakes.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
All might have been forgiven were it not for a needlessly Shyamalanized ending that deserves to earn Wyatt at least 25 years for grand-theft cinema.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Ladies in Lavender oscillates between scenes so relentlessly nice they make you want to scream and others - particularly those depicting the crush Dench develops on her new housemate - creepier than anything in "The Amityville Horror."- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Dracula Untold opts for the stately, staid approach, and even at a mere 85 minutes (sans credits) it’s something of a bore — neither scary nor romantic nor exciting in any of the ways it seems to intend.- Variety
- Posted Oct 1, 2014
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- Scott Foundas
An alleged satire that’s about as funny as a communist food shortage, and just as protracted.- Variety
- Posted Dec 12, 2014
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- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
What sounds like a veritable B-movie wet dream — with that master of the subzero scowl, Jason Statham, starring in a screenplay written by Sylvester Stallone — turns out to be considerably less than the sum of its parts.- Variety
- Posted Nov 21, 2013
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- Scott Foundas
Is there a Razzie Award for worst casting? If so, it’s one of several that can be reserved early for this fourth, spectacularly lousy screen version of Jack Finney’s 1954 novella "The Body Snatchers," which some bright light envisioned as the ideal starring vehicle for the Cold Mountain herself, Nicole Kidman, and for Daniel Craig, last seen as the most poker-faced James Bond on record.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Further proof that titular antagonist Jason Voorhes is ready for retirement -- to videostore shelves.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Easily one of the dopiest major studio releases since Elie Samaha got out of the business.- Variety
- Posted Aug 28, 2013
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- Scott Foundas
Black Snake Moan is, at its core, a fairly straightforward variation on George Bernard Shaw -- "Pigsfeetmalion," if you will. One day, when he outgrows his terminal adolescence, Brewer might be the perfect filmmaker to tackle Faulkner or Tennessee Williams.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
Directing seems an unduly elegant term for what Hollywood hack du jour Tim Story (Barbershop, Taxi) does here -- the action scenes are so choppily constructed that their excitement disappears faster than the Invisible Woman.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
An ultra-touchy-feely race-relations, civil-rights drama as imagined by theme-park organizers, with every character painted in broad strokes in a story that eagerly tugs at every available heartstring -- and rings false at every turn.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
Appealing performances by a trio of second- and third-generation Hollywood kids keep this three-hankie twaddle more bearable than it deserves.- Variety
- Posted Apr 6, 2015
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- Scott Foundas
An orgy of bloodletting and dismemberment that's more monotonous than shocking. Aja and Levasseur are to splatter what Liberace was to rhinestones: practitioners of gaud.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
When all its threads are finally pulled into place, Do You Believe? proves about as spiritually enlightening as a Kmart throw rug.- Variety
- Posted Mar 20, 2015
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- Scott Foundas
If Napoleon Dynamite really is, as reported, a semiautobiographical exercise, it is one of the most astoundingly self-hating such exercises in memory.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
The movie rarely overcomes its terminal Scorsese- and Ferrara-isms, or fulfills the promise, evident in the film's early passages, that Montias might be a fine observer of local color with his own unique stories to tell.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
The movie is so rigged to elicit the audience's empathy that it becomes difficult to watch; it's stifling.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
An insufferable, self-conscious cult movie, The Chumscrubber smugly heaps on half-baked ideas about media violence, the homogeneity of suburbia and the disintegration of the American family.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
The pic falls well short of its efforts to combine the raucous vulgarity of the “Hangover” movies with Cameron Crowe-ish depth of feeling.- Variety
- Posted Jan 29, 2014
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- Scott Foundas
Both stars are atrocious -- but the real blame for this cosmically self-indulgent disaster lies with Kevin Smith, who directs like a proud father who can't stop showing you pictures of his kids. And here's the thing: The brats are ugly.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
The movie is monotonous, and by the time it gets to its climactic re-enactment of the Tate-LaBianca killings, it seems little more than the heir to "Survive!, The Zodiac Killer" and other unsavory 1970s horror cheapies that tried to turn a quick buck on real-life tragedy.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
A chiller resolutely without chills, in which even the pool water always seems heated. And inasmuch as the pic never owns up to its own trashiness, it's not even enjoyable camp.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
The truth is still out there, like an unsold lawn chair at a garage sale, in this just plain lousy second big-screen outing for erstwhile FBI agents Fox Mulder and Dana Scully.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
The most resounding thuds in From Justin to Kelly, however, come from the musical numbers.- Variety
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- Scott Foundas
It has a terminal case of the cutes crossed with the labored earnestness of a disease-of-the-week melodrama.- L.A. Weekly
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- Scott Foundas
It’s only the Brazilian-born Da Costa who seems to be trying to create a real character.- Variety
- Posted Mar 5, 2014
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- Scott Foundas
They ought to be a whole lot scarier than they are in this tepid genre offering from director Robert Harmon, whose debut film "The Hitcher" set a high bar for screen terror in the 1980s. Pic looks like a holiday gobbler.- Variety
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- Variety
- Posted Apr 16, 2015
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- Variety
- Posted May 26, 2014
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