Sean Axmaker
Select another critic »For 886 reviews, this critic has graded:
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68% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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29% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 1.2 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Sean Axmaker's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 67 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Emitaï | |
| Lowest review score: | Urban Legends: Final Cut | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 534 out of 886
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Mixed: 299 out of 886
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Negative: 53 out of 886
886
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Sean Axmaker
The song may be somewhat familiar, but Sach gets understated performances from his entire cast and finds interesting harmonies as they play out their clashing duets.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
The cozy, lived-in atmosphere created by the ensemble and the unlikely chemistry of Carell and Binoche are so genuine that you wish the rest of the film was just as effortless and authentic.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
This is a familiar journey and director/co-writer Todd Phillips sidesteps every opportunity to inject a little edge or originality into it.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Harmless and thoroughly unmemorable: colorful, cute, fast paced, and about as involving as an amusement park ride.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Director Casey La Scala directs with enough energy to carry the odyssey over the next ramp, but for all the eagerness of the performances, the conviction is strictly prepackaged.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Backseat satisfies itself with small observations and minor breakthroughs of self-awareness. In the scheme of their lives, this journey is just a speed bump, jolting them awake for a brief moment. The rest is up to them.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Mostly it's a series of dream-image clues scribbled out by juvenile seer Fanning, followed by super-powered smackdowns between agents and mercenaries with slangy titles like watchers, stitchers and sniffers.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
It's about as convincing as any other Arnie musclefest, but has a little too much resonance with real world events and ultimately comes off as insultingly simplistic.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
The film is a shapeless mess and about as convincing as a cartoon, the usual mix of slapstick, doofus humor and raunchy sex jokes lacking even the bite or attitude to make it adventurous.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
The most sensuous and intimate work of cinema of the past few years, a film that luxuriates in the immediacy of the moment. There is no guilt to the act, only exhilaration, joy and freedom. At least for the moment.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Zack and Miri is funny, and Rogen is a natural as Smith's alter-ego, spewing profane dialogue like he was born to it.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
For a film that uses race, class and sexual stereotypes as the starting point, this is disappointingly skin deep.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Varda sees herself as a gleaner as she searches for the people and cultural activities missed by the rest of the media.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
It's a gloriously baroque vision and Leconte believes in his sequin and sawdust fantasy with such unabashed enthusiasm that he makes it work even through its most absurd moments.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
All about the thrill of the chase, and Friedkin challenges the antiseptic spectacle and fantasy flamboyance of computer-enhanced blockbusters with a lean, mean manhunt thriller and gritty, hard-edged style.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Director Alfredo De Villa doesn't play it for the kind of knockabout comedy so often seen in these films (like the shrill hit "Four Christmases").- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
For all of its weakness, Ju-On: The Grudge is creepy and unnerving, qualities in short supply in gore-filled American horror films.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
An excellent documentary equal parts extreme sports and social anthropology.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
A sloppy, indifferent action movie with a sadistic edge and a sour hypocrisy.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
There's not a lot of story here and the dialogue lacks the snap one usually gets in New York stories of affluent young adults, but the characters have an authenticity.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
51 Birch Street, like the best of the recent wave of personal documentaries, is both a compelling story and an eye-opening bit of social history.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
As fresh as a highlight reel of day-after replays, Mr. 3000 is a case of major-league talent stuck in a minor-league story.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Fresh, vibrant and vital, this interpretation reminds us why Shakespeare is timeless.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
For such a harrowing portrait, Mandoki remains oddly distant but for a few scenes. He makes his points boldly when he should be making his points sting.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
It's the soulless quality of so many films that value devious plots, smug deception and quirky personality traits over actual story and character.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
The result of this blender mash of exotic horror isn't much of anything at all, neither suspenseful, terrifying or inventively gory: Turistas is dead on arrival.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
For all of its admirable intentions, the awkward melding of movie-of-the-week tragedy, non-denominational salvation drama and teen sex comedy mistakes banality for conviction.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Smokin' Aces isn't a story, it's a premise with a madhouse of characters flung into a collision course that ends at the same finish line.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Rock Star roars to life with a promise of something inspired and inventive whenever Wahlberg leaps onstage. Offstage, however, even he can't breathe life into this same old song.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
It's often quite funny (when it's not spinning its wheels in rehashed skits and recycled gags), but when Myers gets his mojo working and his mind out of the toilet, he's capable of better.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
When Plympton's freak flag flies, Hair High delivers the same whacked-out weirdness of his shorts. The rest of the film simply stretches out the simple premise and marks time between his ideas.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
When (Tykwer) connects it's exhilarating and gorgeous, a sight to behold.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Cohen drives the film at a galloping pace, but it's not fast enough to outrun its absurdity.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Black's apoplectic fits and sardonic rants are strictly a bonus for the parents dragged along for the adolescent shenanigans.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
This restrained drama of lifelong friends drifting in separate directions is a quietly rich and resonant portrait of disconnection.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Blunt, somewhat artless, but very effective.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
All processed sugar and artificial flavor, right down to the sticky but tasteless happy ending.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
The results are shapeless, excessively lurid and often unpleasant, with Argento shamelessly vamping the white-trash junkie mother and truck-stop hooker. She apparently forgot whose story she was telling.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
The stripped-down dramatic constructs, austere imagery and abstract characters are equal parts poetry and politics, obvious at times but evocative and heartfelt.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
At its best when exploring grieving and loss and anger, but Shear turns it into spiritual shock treatment.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
What begins as an introspective odyssey examining the effects of war on the young Israeli soldiers turns into a provocative exposé on the Sabra and Shatila massacre.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Pitches itself somewhere between "Bound" and "Lock, Stock, and Two Smoking Barrels," trying to add a feminist twist to the spate of Britain's bloody gangster thrillers and never quite succeeding.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Sweet, sexy, and unexpectedly enchanting, Yana's Friends is the little feel-good comedy that could.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
It's messy and painful, eased only the admirable modesty of Stockman's writing and direction.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
The sudden turns of temperament are a treat after the smart-ass attitude of American horror flicks, and the film is full of minor surprises, squirming in unexpected directions without leaving the conventions behind.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
In the best Altman manner there are no real heroes and villains, only people trapped by their vanity and ambition and the straitjackets of classism.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
The ironies and contradictions that give the first half a dark humor give way to gravity and respect as soldiers are killed (off camera).- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
It's colorful and determinedly kooky, with "Kung Fu" references and an H.R. Pufnstuf interlude between performances.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
It makes for an unusual angle on the era, and a passionate paean to the power of books, ideas and art.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
There isn't a spark in the familiar emotional situation or a reason to care how these amiably bland characters end up.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
The story -- something to do with an ancient evil returning after 3,000 years -- plays like a multi-episode story arc of the TV series.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Anderson is a hopeless romantic in a cynical world, and for a brief moment he makes the case that true love is the only power that can crack time and space.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Though it's hardly as uplifting or inspiring, it's hard not to appreciate these driven men who know they've found their calling when they start to anagram in their dreams.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Not just a bad film, Hannibal Rising is downright dull, which is a far worse crime.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
It's a fantasy of a crime epic, to be sure, but it's a glorious fantasy in which the unspoken bonds of brotherhood bathe every shootout and sacrifice in the light of myth.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Ceylan has an unerring gift for camera placement, and his slow, measured scenes can be as hypnotic as they are lovely -- at times, too much so, with the characters constrained by his poetic perfection.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Vital and alive. Frustration and malaise rumble through every richly textured frame, but behind it all is a restlessness and a desire for something better.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Both blunt and complex, Sauter's illustration of economic Darwinism at its most primal and unforgiving is a harrowing vision of human life as collateral damage in the modern global economy.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Buscemi gets a fine performance from Miller and plays his part with a murky mix of self-pity, opportunism and arrogance. A few scenes crackle with their intensity. The rest of it wallows in glib acrimony and cynicism.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
It's as if Gondry lets his performers settle into their parts and feel their way through their stories. It gives the film an ambling pace and a unique chemistry that bubbles with strange and unexpected flavors.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Inspired, inventive and funnier than it has a right to be, Larry Blamire's loopy spoof of 1950s bargain-basement sci-fi and horror knock-offs gets it right where so many well-meaning efforts go wrong.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Charged with raucous energy and a satirical slant, this witty history lesson is preaching to the converted, sharing a knowing wink with everyone who's ever inhaled.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Selick proves a clumsy director of live-action scenes and never overcomes the muddled, half-baked script or the scatological gags.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
The humorless and self-important execution attempts an operatic scale but only succeeds in sinking the remnants of the story's integrity. By the time it makes landfall, this incoherent production has blown itself out.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Writer/director Michael McCullers sprinkles the film with sight gags and comic characters (the lisping birth coach becomes funny out of sheer doggedness), but his pacing is poor and doesn't know how to showcase the small-screen chemistry of Fey and Poehler on the big screen.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
A jargon-filled documentary less interested in culture and history than mechanics, machinery and the rush of speed.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Takes itself seriously enough to pull off a clever bit of sleight of hand, but doesn't have much to offer once the twist comes out of hiding.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
For all its good intentions in exploring the grace of death, November never creates a life outside of its all-too-obvious inspirations and the mystery becomes little more than a groaner.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Presents itself as a sassy twist on "Taming of a Shrew," but what looks like just another contrived sex comedy becomes, surprisingly, an insightful and sensitive look at knots that family ties create in adult romance.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Given the possibilities it's not particularly inventive, but it is nice to see a comedy so affectionate with the conventions it spoofs.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
It's hardly original and rarely laugh-out-loud funny -- the filmmakers constantly fall back on the sight of bounding balloon Jimmy squeezing his way out of one situation after another.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
The disingenuous attempt to give the tawdry story some kind of social import only makes the tinny caricatures more insincere, while his erotic display of 15-year-old girls isn't a satire of a sexualized culture, it's just dirty.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
It is passionate and angry and rousing where you might expect it to become numbing and depressing.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
There are some flat moments, to be sure, and Palansky's direction can be a bit unsteady and awkward, but he doesn't wallow in the eccentricities or the modestly self-empowering moral. This fairy tale feels pleasantly down-to-earth.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
This is pseudo-cynical comedy, however, not social satire. All the sharp corners are smoothed over and what's left is little more than a big screen sitcom.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
If Chadha never quite overcomes her cliches, her good-natured humor and familial faith gives it a warm, winsome dimension.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
The sentiment smacks of "Titanic" for teens, but that doesn't make it any less valid, or the quietly told coda any less lovely.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Burger is so respectful of the trio that he never gets under their skin. Apart from the generosity of strangers who pay tribute to the soldiers with little acts of kindness, you get the same generic observations of any road movie.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
All the jazzy effects and jumpy editing merely move us quicker to an otherwise predetermined tragedy.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
There is no histrionic excess or crackpot camp, only hoary sentiment, the puppy-dog cuteness of the mentally handicapped, and the proposition that the "cure" for lesbianism is one good man brave enough to get in touch with his inner cow.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
There's a dark and demented little psychodrama of self-inflicted madness beneath the narrative contrivances. Vigalondo's direction makes it work more like a waking nightmare than a genuine experience, and he gives it the quality of madness.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Quaid and Russo outshine the script with their presence and chemistry alone.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Has the modesty of a savvy, smart drive-in movie with Hollywood studio polish and a movie buff's loving care.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
Director Jesse Vaughan keeps the ball in play through the aw-shucks lessons in humility and generosity, but the teamwork is shoddy, the plays lack surprise and, finally, Juwanna Mann misses more than it hits.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
The snappy wit of the script make Ol Parker's British romantic comedy the equivalent of comfort food a pleasant cinematic snack.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Sean Axmaker
It delivers everything you expect on a timetable you can predict to the minute. It's filmmaking as a cross between a carefully choreographed dance and an elaborate pageant.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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