Sean Axmaker
Select another critic »For 886 reviews, this critic has graded:
-
68% higher than the average critic
-
3% same as the average critic
-
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:
-
Positive: 534 out of 886
-
Mixed: 299 out of 886
-
Negative: 53 out of 886
886
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
-
- Sean Axmaker
I can imagine the pitch meeting: "It's 'Kramer vs. Kramer' meets 'Forrest Gump.' No, wait, 'Rainman' has a baby!"- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Faced with an artist defined more by his lyrics than his life story, Haynes delivers a song-cycle of a movie: vivid, exaggerated, contradictory impressions of a man who confounds a culture still looking to define him.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Not that there are any actual jokes to be had. The film simply jumps to the punch lines, a non-stop barrage of crude dialogue and vulgar sight gags that passes as humor among adolescent boys. Who exactly is the audience for this R-rated film? The terminally immature?- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
The minor pleasures of P2 lie in the simple effectiveness of the sleekly unshowy direction and the clean, unadorned script, which pares away extraneous distractions like motivation and complicated back stories to get on with the mechanics of tension and the obligatory jumps and startles (which stand in for genuine scares).- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It might be impressive as a made-for-DVD production, but coming from producer George Lucas, it makes for a cheap excuse for a big-screen spectacle.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Kahn manages to turn his feast of flesh, navel-gazing talk and self-destructive jealousy into a thoughtful reflection on the subject.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Looks simultaneously ahead of its time and delightfully quaint, a simple romantic comedy that revels in the dreamy artifice of a meticulously re-created fantasy Las Vegas.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Andrew Bujalski's refreshingly modest look at life in the directionless netherworld between college and career is the rare film that finds its story in the minor contradictions and simple conflicts of ordinary people doing, well, not exactly nothing, but nothing important.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Desplechin fearlessly dives into raw, bitter revelations and surfaces with hope as our heroes try again to get it right.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
A reminder of the offbeat comic sensibility and visceral charge that marked him (Sabu) as a director to watch.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
The concept is clever and Johnson's brisk editing, dynamic camerawork and snazzy transitions has fun with it all. It makes for an inspired time-warped teenage film noir.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
The film half-heartedly paints their actions as rebel-chic heroism even when it has all the integrity of tomcats spraying outside their yards, and it ends up just as confused as the characters.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
For all the grace of the animation and visual splendor, the stilted script and emotionless "performances" give this digital artifact a distinctly stiff, wooden flavor.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It's pure romantic fantasy, almost too cute and naively innocent for its own good. Jeff Balsmeyer, a former storyboard artist making his directorial debut, stumbles through the clumsy establishing scenes, but his playful direction smoothes out as the characters settle in.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
A playfully offbeat, willfully wide-eyed tale of lonely, inarticulate people looking for connection in a disconnected world.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
An alternately angry and sad portrait, passionate in its presentation and moving in its portrayal of individuals who sacrifice their love for the tenets of their religion.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
What it lacks in melodramatic punch it makes up for in unexpected shadings in the characters, predator and victim alike.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It's too insubstantial to support its two-hour-plus running time, and too arbitrary to work as a story, so you walk out wondering not happened, but whether anything actually did.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It's as much conceptual art as dispassionate survey of the bloodless assembly line nature of the modern food industry, all process and work, automation and repetition.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
That may be enough to keep the kids bobbing along -- and there are worse heroes for a kid to have than Arnold -- but apart from the shenanigans of civil-disobedient senior citizens, this movie offers little to keep accompanying parents interested.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Finn Taylor's lark of a movie feels like two unfinished films awkwardly fused together and ever threatening to snap apart.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
The roll call of perversions and adolescent sex gags are more creepy than kooky and the sudden shift to triumphant romantic sincerity at the climax rings as false as this film's sappy (sorry, happy) ending.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Shyamalan has learned the lessons that so many horror directors ignore: Suggestion is scarier than revelation.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Ararat is less about history than the necessity of dialogue and debate, and the devastating effects of stifling dialogue.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Barely substantial enough for a feature but just light and tasty enough to satisfy.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
While not a grand-slam comedy, the offbeat humor and easy byplay gives The Grand a winning hand.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Diverting, at times even visually impressive, but has neither the spirit or style of "Spider-Man" nor the ambition of "X-Men."- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Mamet is more respectful than exciting as an action director, but his fascination with how things work, be it the mechanics of designing and promoting a big pay-per-view event or battling a world-class Jiu-jitsu master, makes it all quite mesmerizing.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
The result is a film with an identity crisis, a fluffy romantic farce that gets progressively darker, more destructive and finally so downright demented that the featherweight story line is crushed under the weight of brutal, unpleasant truth.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It's just the kind of film that you'd expect a jury led by Quentin Tarantino to choose, a bloody and brutal revenge film immersed in madness and directed with operatic intensity.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It has a tendency to overextend its outrageous arias, but this pop-art confection both spoofs and celebrates the crazy conventions of movie melodramas and genre cinema with pure affection.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Jia's compassion for the drifting souls struggling to create a life for themselves in such a transitory existence makes the metaphor resonant.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
The faces of its inarticulate characters tell the story, and Majidi has put some amazing faces on the screen.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It's a dissection of how the media found and fed and nurtured the story in their insatiable need for content to fill their news hours and talk shows, how it just as quickly turned on them and transformed the story from celebration to vilification, and how the public turned right along with them.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
The special effects display is so lacking in imagination it turns into so much noise, just a flashy distraction from the stiff, stock cliches of the by-the-numbers script.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Giordana's redemptive vision provides a sense of discovery and a well of hope in the most devastating of troubles, and beautiful surprises in love, friendship and family.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
The funniest film you'll see this year about a political assassination.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
If there is a delicate story of forgiveness, friendship and family buried somewhere in Erica Beeney's script, Potelle and Rankin haven't managed to find it under the throes of empty rebellion and painless triumph.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Taking on the sneeringly blase Alig may be a cagey career move for Culkin, but it's a disappointingly thin performance.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
At its best, it is self-effacing fun.But the cartoonish approach takes its toll: The random twists and contrived showdowns devolve into just so much abstract business, too silly to take seriously and too unmotivated to make sense.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Call this one "Die Hard" on Alcatraz, and this time the "cuckoo crazy" maverick has got the homeboys on his side.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It comes out less like a spoof than a smart-aleck remake of "Meatballs," minus the energy of Bill Murray.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
You can't help but root for Akeelah as she reclaims the pride in her talents and her achievements. That's an idea worth spelling out to a young audience.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
A lively and lightweight comedy, the film finally connects with the real-life rush of playing music for a live audience.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It's hard to call it thrilling -- these aren't characters you actually care about and De Palma isn't as concerned with building tension as playing visual games -- but it sure sparkles.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
A vivid, thoughtful, unapologetically raw coming-of-age tale full of sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
With less lampooning and satirical asides, Sicko may be less "entertaining" than Moore's previous films, but it's also more affecting and effective.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
The film walks a fine line between contempt for Polanski's crimes and sympathy for his trials and his screwed-up psyche, and it manages both while showing us why he fled the U.S. rather than face the corrupted judicial circus.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Has all the telltale signs of desperate re-editing: mismatched shots, clumsy transitions and a devastating car wreck that occurred either on a dry sunlit day or in the midst of a nighttime downpour, depending on the flashback.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
The nuttiest big-screen video game you'll ever have the pleasure of seeing somebody else play.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Its one saving grace is Godzilla himself, the James Bond of giant monsters.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
This a rapid-fire romp through "War of the Worlds," "Saw," "The Grudge" and "The Village," cut up into skits and pieced back together in some mutant jigsaw puzzle with a few pieces missing, delivers a barrage of low-minded gags with high-spirited energy.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Don't expect a meaningful resolution, just a bouncy comedy with some hilarious moments in the stray ricochets.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It's part Jules Verne arms-race nightmare, part James Bond gadget war and part boy's own adventure.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It doesn't leave you much to hold on to in a comedy about apathy that can't even muster the energy to care.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Murders aside, Mac and Pat are the most fun-loving Shakespearean couple to hit the screen, and Morrissette's answer to Lady Macbeth's damned spot is brilliant.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It's a pretense of even-handedness. The true story has been reduced to a case for faith. It merely sacrifices all reason to get there.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Don't expect scary from this trilogy of short horror films from a trio of Asia's most interesting directors, which are not so much extreme as twisted.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
So grim and humorless that the first half almost sinks into silliness.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
A pointed satire of the dumbing down of network TV with a sour tone and a broad execution.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It's an appealing mix of an old Hollywood movie world of Upper East Side sophisticates with the character-driven spontaneity of a modern American indie, all very slight and light but deftly done.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It's the most intense, unpredictable and thrilling cinematic experience I've had the pleasure to squirm through in ages.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
True to the characters and their conflicts, the resolution is neither neat nor expected. True to Demme, it's honest and generous and very human.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Be warned that what looks to be a family comedy pushes its PG-13 rating to the edge with blatant sexual references and creatively crude sexual metaphors.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Director Cherie Nowlan creates vivid personalities for the entire family and exposes the raw nerves of the biting humor.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
There's an unconvincing warm, fuzzy happy ending, in which recognition is treated as cure and understanding heals all. But, until then, Phoebe in Wonderland is an involving and empathetic drama of mothers and daughters.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Movie magic is only as powerful as the imagination that casts it. Japanese master Hayao Miyazaki's imagination is the most creative in animated filmmaking.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Too hip to play it straight and too cool to resort to an actual story, Hartley turns the whole rambling spy game into a puzzle box where every certainty is thrown into doubt, every character has a hidden motive, and every clue is contradicted.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
A perfectly competent, if undistinguished, action film that smoothes over all the most interesting bumps in the drama.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
The triumphs still are affecting, the setting is compelling and some of the human moments amid the political circus and culture wars are downright moving.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
While the characters lack the quirks and affectations that have enlivened the impulsive figures from past Dogme films, the passion of the players and Bier's sensitive direction give these utterly normal figures a vivid aliveness, along with dignity and everyday beauty.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It's flashy, it's often funny ...,and it resembles a movie so much that soon it demands something resembling motivation, character, a plot, anything to explain the seemingly arbitrary connections between the stunts and the skits.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Favors giggly juvenile humor over inspired satire and ends up not with a moral, but a moral vacuum.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
I'd be tempted to call the whole thing cartoonish, but that would be insulting to the real thing.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Aviva emerges undamaged for all of her trauma. That may be the most compassionate, human act Solondz has offered in his career up to now.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
The film lacks the nerve for any genuinely nasty fun or comic bite.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
A mix of H.P. Lovecraft madness, David Cronenberg biological mutation and David Lynch small-town weirdness, it teasingly dangles explanations never delivered and escapes never sought, while diving into one of the most gonzo horrors to twist onto celluloid in years.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
After all of these years playing smug street thugs, cocky idiots and patsies, can you blame Dillon for giving himself an elegant girl (Natascha McElhone), a devoted guardian angel, and a little redemption?- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Confronts the line between the celebration and the exploitation of innocence with an uneasy tension that is discomforting at best.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Kassovitz keeps the film zipping along with solid pacing and just enough action to clear the credibility gaps as long as the film is rolling.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
The film shoehorns in every memorable character from the original film.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
A sly, smart and very funny caricature of corporate politics and image culture.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Doesn't necessarily offer anything new to the male/female dynamic, but it refuses to let Coles off the hook with an easy epiphany and a painless happily ever after.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
For all the tough-minded talk and frank portraits of inner-city life, however, the film is not altogether convincing.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Behind the sad and vulnerable eyes of Bernal's damaged Elvis is both a fierce rage and a desperate need for his father's recognition, but he's more enigma than person. Hurt is more nuanced as the sincerely spiritual man faced with a past that threatens his family and his future.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
A few scenes are a bit coy and the "big secrets" threaten to pitch into melodrama, but Birmingham keeps bringing the film back to the delicate dynamics of the relationships at its heart.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Fails to generate the elementary visceral thrills we've come to expect from science-fiction thrillers, let alone a compelling human drama.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Rich with emotional turmoil and searing beauty, but it could have used a little more time in the editing room to make sense of it all.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
A harried, screechy film that goes nowhere at a breakneck pace, full of sound and furious slapstick overkill but devoid of wit.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
The guys of the Broken Lizard comedy troupe (of "Super Troopers" fame) are neither subtle nor especially ingenious. But in the age of gross-out gags and high-concept gimmicks, they throw themselves into the raucous, rude style of '70s film comedy with shameless glee.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Venus is the second film from director Roger Michell and writer Hanif Kureishi to explore the sexual lives of folk that the movies treat as sexless -- the elderly. But where "The Mother" was a cold film of sexual greed and emotional pettiness, this robust yet delicate comic drama finds a kind of dignity in the old lothario whose vital life force struggles against a failing body.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It probably cost less than the catering budget of average Adam Sandler comedy and, in its own hit-and-miss scattershot fashion, it's about as funny. At least when it hits.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Makhmalbaf's astounding and haunting imagery tells a story of devastation, desperation and poverty.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Olivier Dahan's sprawling portrait of the life of Edith Piaf is the kind of grand, passionate historical drama that no one seems to be able to pull off any more.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
When Rock hits he's dangerously funny. If he didn't try so hard to be liked, he'd be even more dangerous.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Cute and often clever, there's nothing particularly memorable in this computer enhanced rerun, but this harmless little comedy has an unexpected warmth that melts the frozen plot.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
The resulting political thriller is more intriguing than riveting, flattened by Jewison's plodding direction and distracting use of British actors to play French characters.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Sour slapstick assault with a tin heart and counterfeit sentimentality.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Tommy Lee Jones steps behind the camera to direct himself in the most impressive directorial debut the American cinema has seen in some time, a contemporary western both rough and poetic, laconic and passionate.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It's the chemistry between the women and the droll scene-stealing wit and wolfish pessimism of Anna Chancellor that makes this "Two Weddings and a Funeral" fun.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Anyone who claims to support the troops owes it to them to see the film and hear their stories.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
The gags hit more than they miss, and Stiller has moments of inspired absurdity, but he's capable of something more cutting and clever. It's junk food moviemaking: fun to snack on, but hardly a substantial meal.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Director Juan Carlos Fresnadillo creates the same world of devils and innocents that grounds so much of Spain's modern, seeped-in-Satanic-evil horror, recast in a secular cinematic vocabulary.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It's a twisted but beautiful love letter to a city, not factually correct but emotionally true.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
For all its impressive set pieces and breathless momentum, it's neither passionate nor urgent.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Played by Lucy Russell with a defiant, unapologetic embrace of aristocratic privilege, Grace is a maddening yet fascinating character.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Doom may be by the numbers, with a roll call of colorful types systematically exterminated while The Rock entertains with cartoonish expressions and reactions (the closest the film comes to personality).- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Carrera's direct, unadorned style has none of the searing imagery or cinematic imagination of "Y Tu Mama," but it bristles with passion, anger and a palpable sense of betrayal.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Makes no effort to learn about the culture. It idolizes the idea of spiritual purity without offering any insight into what it really means.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
This collision of skate punk and pop-culture archaeology is the most entertaining slice of cultural history I've seen in years.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Even if you don't like the stories, the filmmakers seem incapable of finding a corner of Paris that is not photogenic.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
The anger and betrayal hanging in the wake of shattered relationships and conflicted identities leave an admirable untidiness where most films would force resolution. There are no easy answers here, and it's not for lack of questions.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Perhaps the most ingeniously imaginative element in Son of Rambow, a film exploding with imagination (some of it scrawled directly over the film in animated expressions of Will's private world), is its very conceit.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Winterbottom carves his own intimate tale out of the sprawling material, a modest miniature with witty flair and moments of humility.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
The attitude is older, maybe a tad sentimental, and as adolescent and reckless as ever. Whether that's a good thing depends on your appreciation for dead-end conversations, geek debates and the Smithspeak sandbox of creative vulgarity.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
There's a real gee-whiz kick to the fantasy of being the brainiest kid on the planet, and a down-to-earth quality to Jimmy and his not-so-bright, but ever-so-stalwart best buddies.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Director Len Wiseman, confidently stepping up from the smallish budget "Underworld" films to mega-budget Hollywood mainstream.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
As much a call to action as a documentary, it's a compelling and sobering lesson in the devastating effect of human industry on the planet. But a lesson nonetheless.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
A strangely warm, affectionate look at bad behavior amid emotional damage and a stranglehold of identity issues.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Like a boulder bouncing down a long hill, the momentum keeps the film barreling along to the tragic inevitability promised in the opening titles.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Explores cloudy, discomforting realities of the Holocaust not usually addressed in such films.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Captures the pain and desperation of adolescent powerlessness and humiliation with powerful intimacy, strung out to almost 2 1/2 lazy hours of stories that wander through an ever-widening group of characters.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
The restraint of both director and actor makes this steely gangster drama reverberate long after it ends. This kind of mystery is rare in a film culture that demands answers before the credits roll.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
He's (Carrey) a marvelous Grinch in this spirited, bustling and mostly faithful spin on Seuss.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Outside national borders, this naive vantage point is an entry into a country's history and culture, explaining without seeming patronizing.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It's all so visceral that it overwhelms the near-abstract story and smothers what passes for characters.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It plays like a big-budget, after-school special with a generous cast, who at times lift the material from its well-meaning clunkiness.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Deftly weaves history, film and memory into an imaginative meditation on why the movies become a part of our lives.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Salles tends to explain rather than suggest, but he connects with the anguish and abandonment to give this ghost story an emotionally haunting core.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Ghost Town reworks "Ghost" as a romantic comedy with a miserable hero who sees dead people and is really annoyed by them.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Time travelers, hobbits, ghosts? Those I can buy. The impossibly quaint world of small-town innocence and Hollywood harmlessness in Win a Date With Tad Hamilton? Now that demands a serious suspension of disbelief.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
-
- Sean Axmaker
It's so beautiful and moving and simple that I'm willing to forgive Majidi his contrivances.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Upbeat but generic songs (one performed by Little Richard) and jazz lines add a little energy but the film feels less like a feature than an expensive ad for the upcoming video.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Like shave ice without the topping, this cinematic snow cone is as innocuous as it is flavorless.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It's hard to believe that five different writers took credit for this feeble story and script. Who says failure is an orphan?- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Many will find Griffin profane, sexist and decidedly offensive. Many more will find his raunchy insights inspired, his body language hilarious and his gift for mimicry and caricature worth the entire show.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It's less a deconstruction of the heist film than an ambitious contemplation of our fascination with the genre, directed with a dispassionate eye at a ruminative pace and centered by a queasily emotionless figure wading through a swamp of moral ambiguity.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
While it displays precious little originality or ingenuity, A Guy Thing is less graceless than most of its ilk and benefits from a likable cast.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Isn't exactly adult animation but it's more complex and ambiguous than the usual Hollywood live-action blockbuster, and just as splashy.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It's all about waste and destruction, and not just the toxic waste -- illegally dumped in landfills -- that is poisoning the farmland and the aquifers in the region.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Abigail Breslin, the preteen Oscar nominee for "Little Miss Sunshine" and the most effortless actress of her generation, plays the precocious little girl part without overdoing the precociousness.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
A dumb film with a great conceptual hook from a director who visualizes better than he dramatizes.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It's a little long and dissipates some of its power in an unfocused subplot, but the skewed sensibility of the film is both innocent and feral and offers a smart and satisfying reworking to the familiar genre. An American remake is already in the works.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Sivan makes it all quite beautiful with verdant imagery and tastefully melodramatic direction, but at the cost of emotional and social ambiguities, not to mention living, breathing characters.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
There's every reason to believe the creators stopped taking it seriously a long time ago. What's bothersome is that they don't take the audience seriously enough to deliver an actual movie.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
In the world of comic-book movies, American Splendor is the real deal, the warts-and-all adventures of the most unlikely hero on the comic stands.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
So Close is the film "Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle" dreams of being: sleek, silly, completely ridiculous and irresistible.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
There is a heart-warming familiarity to much of its 2 1/2-hour tale, but the surprises around its edges gives Zelary a refreshing perspective.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Weaver was half-heartedly pushed as an underdog Oscar choice. If the film was worthy of her performance, Weaver may have had a shot.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It makes for a sweet and heartwarming story even as it celebrates and justifies the entire ridiculous phenomenon that Deruddere has been spoofing all along.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
What it lacks is an intensity, a passion at the center...It is, nonetheless, a lovely and often powerful film.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Erin Gruwell (Hilary Swank) is real, and for all the dramatic license that writer/director Richard LaGravenese takes in his film, her story -- and the stories of her students -- are moving.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
The psychobabble silliness passed off as investigative insight here is laughable at best.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
From Harry's perspective, it's a grotesque life, a dead end for his new protege Michel, but Moll also shows the sensitivity beneath the sniping and that's where With a Friend Like Harry ... really scores- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It's a rich work, lush and lovely and bustling with activity but paced at a contemplative stroll, like a time lapse recording in first gear.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It may be too intense at times for wee ones, but kids of 5 and up testing the limits of their independence in the big world should relate to Lucas, dig the crazy insect world and embrace the imagination behind the colorful adventure.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Like too many films of faith, it mixes its message, proclaiming that a life given over to God is a reward unto itself, and then handing over victories to its faithful like some overtime bonus.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It's an interesting experiment that doesn't quite work.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
The earthy imagery is delicate while the drama is oddly elliptical, creating a lovely film of storybook images and parables. It's both obvious and elusive and, historical specifics aside, almost timeless.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
There are too many unearned runs to fully embrace this underdog triumph.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
The film's take on media and personal responsibility recalls Brian De Palma's faux Iraq documentary, "Redacted," here dropped into a homefront turned guerrilla war zone.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Based more on rumor and supposition than fact. It's a highly entertaining set of hypotheses.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Director Troy Beyer, who adapted the original screenplay, can't seem to decide if this is a morality play or a music-video fantasy.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Like the schoolkids in this adventure, from the opening images to the closing credits, I do, I do, I do believe in fairy tales.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
A loving tribute to Hong Kong stuntmen by one of their own, the directorial debut of stuntman-turned-actor Robin Shou ("Mortal Kombat") is a wince-inducing behind-the-scenes look at the way contemporary Hong Kong action cinema is created.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
In a farce like this, where the story is merely a string of martial-arts movie cliches lined up to be parodied, that has its own rewards.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Welcome to the tawdry end of paradise, where no melodrama is too obvious and no conflict too contrived.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
A B-movie goof on an A-minus budget, Returner is a mini-epic tweaked with computer effects and one blazing gun battle after another and set to an anonymous techno-beat.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Autobiographical or not, the frankness and family hysteria of this rolling therapy session gets awkwardly intimate and at times tough to endure, as much for its raw candor as for its confessional contrivance. Too bad the revelations of past mistakes are more interesting than the story played out screen.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
A beautiful and compassionate work, at once stark, sensory and spiritually grasping, that challenges us to forgive even the most monstrous sins.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Afraid to pitch into farce, yet only half-hearted in its spy mechanics, All the Queen's Men is finally just one long drag.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
A convincing and compelling community of characters with a sure comic sense and an at times screwball sensibility.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
A satisfyingly nasty piece of work so black and cruel it's often more sick than funny.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Winterbottom's compassion transforms In This World from a political statement into an eloquent and involving human drama.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
As action movies seem to get more complicated and convoluted with international conspiracies and technological concepts, the "Transporter" franchise is refreshingly simple.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It's a little visually precious and obscure but still a marvelously wistful film of regret and retreat, in which even the magic wine of forgetfulness erases only the memories, not the pain.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It's a tender, tough, uncompromising film, photographed with a disarming directness and seeming simplicity that looks almost naked next to the dramatic constructions of most films. It just makes her precariousness all the more real.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It's a pleasure to see mature portraits of adult characters who put their vulnerabilities on the line. I enjoyed my time in the company of these strangers.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
There's simply nobody beneath the derisive attitude worth caring about.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Chabrol's deliberate and drawn-out observations often work against the dramatic tension, but his gift is making the audience believe that emotion and obsession trump logic for these deluded characters.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It's more ambitious and passionate than thoughtful. Singleton is better at criticizing than understanding, and he leaves too many characters lacking a legitimate voice.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
The Pangs are at their best playing in the style sandbox, creating shivery imagery and eerie moods while exploring nothing deeper than irony and unease, as their climax so effectively demonstrates.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
The charisma of L'il Bow Wow's spirited screen presence turn a contemporary Cinderella gimmick and a by-the-numbers script into a better film than anyone would have expected.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
For all the ephemeral pleasure of the company of old friends, there is a chasm between them and the dynamics shift from moment to moment. The beauty of the film is how director Kelly Reichardt brilliantly captures those moments with lucid simplicity.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Never quite shakes itself free of the tired cliche that street people are quirky, sometimes cute, and somehow privy to a spiritual purity lost to us social folk.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Confidently directed and elegantly designed, this smart drama is sensitive, sympathetic and refreshingly free of glib moralizing.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It's Kang's first feature and it suffers from rocky moments and an unsure eye, but his sense of detail is rich with prickly contradictions and he resists tidying up the story.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
The ploddingly literal screenplay by John Logan doesn't help matters.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
The best scenes belong to Tucker and director Brett Ratner keys in to his timing, whether it's a Chinese twist on "Who's on First" or a seduction scene in which Tucker blurts out every impulse.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Hou's first film made outside of Asia is his most emotionally turbulent, yet he remains, like the balloon, outside looking in, a compassionate but distant observer capturing it all with a graceful restraint and floating beauty that ultimately carried me away with it.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
First-time director Billie Woodruff, a music video veteran, busts his moves in the dance scenes while the movie throbs to the beat of the wall-to-wall soundtrack.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
This is a film about anger, shame and helplessness, and it offers no answers, merely hard questions and angry challenges.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It's an old-fashioned Soviet road movie, filled with kind souls of the otherwise desperate (and at times predatory) world.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
The unchecked enthusiasm of McGinley as the touchy-feely renovation guru gives slow-burn Cube the perfect foil and mellows the malicious comic tone. The rest is pure slapstick.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
This bracing portrait of a woman who painfully accepts her responsibility as a citizen is a revelation.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It's so sloppy that the flashback montage includes clips from scenes that were cut from the film!- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Park is neither glib nor pedantic as he charts the vicious circle that leaves victims in its wake, unintentional and premeditated, and takes its dehumanizing toll on his increasingly brutal heroes.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
What gives the story resonance is the tenderness and sacrifice and even innocence del Toro reveals amid the savagery.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
At least Lin's local color make the idiocy fun to watch.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Gozu is prime evidence in the argument that gonzo gangster movie maverick Takashi Miike is a major director goofing on minor works.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Writer/director Jordan Roberts aims for heartwarming drama and settles for tepid entertainment.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
In a summer of cardboard figures in splashy spectacles, that makes for a refreshing change, an intriguing, entertaining and altogether sweetly mystifying misfire. In other words, another quintessentially Alan Rudolph picture.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Isn't merely bad, it's utterly flavorless and the filmmakers are either too lazy or too cynical to even pretend there's a story behind Lawrence's 21st century homeboy shtick in 14th-century garb.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It's remarkably bright, funny and sweet for a film that wades through so much sleaze, though it can't escape all of the weirdness it worms through.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Not extreme enough to skate the edge of tasteless farce and not straight enough to play the material for edgy satire, The Ringer is a cheat right down to the final stretch. Breaking the rules should be more fun than this.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
It all feels false and calculated, an overearnest attempt to find old-fashioned romantic innocence in the modern world by someone too jaded to believe.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
A summer movie that knows it's a summer movie. You don't go to this film for the story, but for the scenery: Bikini-clad girls riding waves, surf photography as beautiful as it is breathtaking, sun, surf, sand, even a little PG-13 romance.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
At best, it's an inspired piece of free-association pop art held together by sheer momentum, at worst a noisy mess of juvenile nonsense passing itself off as a movie.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
When the spectacle turns ridiculous, the movie just becomes another big-screen video game.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Where you might expect either overheated teen melodrama or cartoonish farce, Nobuhiro creates a lively, engaging, character-driven piece with flourishes of offbeat humor dancing around the dynamics of the foursome as they pull together in rehearsals.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Morris challenges us to understand what the pictures show and what they don't show, and to see them in context. And he confronts us with the most important question surrounding them: Do they reveal a crime, an aberration in the system or standard operating procedure?- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
For all the bludgeoning insistence of Kramer's contrived plots and blunt direction, there's not much conviction to the outrage.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Uncompromising, unpleasant and emotionally brutal, this twisted love story of emotional bondage is oddly compelling.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Empowers its 14-year-olds and comes through with a Cinderella story sure to charm every girl who isn't part of the cool clique.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
There's just no juice to this thing, merely a bunch of fitfully funny gags and a climactic football match that, under Skolnick's direction, fails to show us why the Europeans find this so exciting.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Sean Axmaker
Don't watch this film unless you have a high tolerance and an undemanding appreciation for penis jokes and humor based more on a capacity to disgust than to surprise.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review