Stephen Holden
Select another critic »For 2,306 reviews, this critic has graded:
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50% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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47% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 6.6 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Stephen Holden's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 59 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | After Life | |
| Lowest review score: | Old Dogs | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,039 out of 2306
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Mixed: 918 out of 2306
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Negative: 349 out of 2306
2306
movie
reviews
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- By Critic Score
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- Stephen Holden
Such a well-acted, literate adaptation of Karen Joy Fowler’s 2004 best seller that your impulse is to forgive it for being the formulaic, feel-good chick flick that it is.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
That it succeeds in being both stimulating and funny is a testament to the talent and open-heartedness of Ms. Dunye, who wrote and directed the movie and is its star.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
With its pointed, cavernous backgrounds and a Gotham City setting that evokes a 1940's-style futurism, "Mask of the Phantasm" looks splendid. But its story is too complicated and the editing too jerky for the movie to achieve narrative coherence. And the resemblance between the movie's hero and its enigmatic arch-villain is so close that audiences are likely to be confused.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The hokey solemnity of A Love Song for Bobby Long suggests "The Mundane Secrets of the Ya-Ya Brotherhood" or "The Notebook Goes to the Big Easy." The movie is another example of Hollywood's going soft and squishy when it goes South.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Evokes a mood of tenderness. Beyond that, it is a weightless, sentimental and intellectually lazy effort from an independent filmmaker whose movies seem increasingly insubstantial.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The movie might as well have been called "An Immersion in Tibetan Buddhism." With minimal explanation, it puts you right in the center.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
But for all its provocation, Kedma is an often dull, incoherent film, and its characters remain frustratingly sketchy- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
While Mr. Doug brings plenty of enthusiasm to the task, he doesn't have the moves, and the scene, which ends with his following a mouse into a Dumpster, is one dull thud. The movie also crams far too many subsidiary characters into its 89 bumpy minutes.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
It's about individuals, not about sensations. If the characters' backgrounds are not examined in detail, the movie still conveys an intimate sense of who they are and their emotional connections.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Although the stunts come thick and fast in The Pink Panther 2, they are jammed together in a way that gives most of them barely enough time to register.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Smoothly incorporates archival material, including scenes of Mr. Zinn's public appearances, interviews with Daniel Ellsberg, Noam Chomsky, Daniel Berrigan and Alice Walker (his student at Spelman). Matt Damon also reads well-chosen excerpts from Mr. Zinn's writing.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The story is a clever sitcomy contraption, the dialogue is pedestrian.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Tom DiCillo’s angry comedy Delirious subjects modern celebrity culture to a microscopic examination that shows the toxic virus of fame squirming and multiplying under its lens.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Fowler may be the richest character of Mr. Caine's screen career. Slipping into his skin with an effortless grace, this great English actor gives a performance of astonishing understatement whose tone wavers delicately between irony and sadness.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Quickly turns into an earnest talkfest (spiced with flashes of nudity and sexually explicit dialogue) that feels stiffly programmatic and ultimately false.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Dramatically Joe the King feels unglued, as if crucial sequences had been left on the cutting-room floor.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
So verbally dexterous and visually innovative that you can't absorb it unless you have all your wits about you. And even then, you may want to see it again to enjoy its subtle humor and warm humanity.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Tokyo Decadence is much better at evoking a creepy urban sophistication than at revealing character or telling a story.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
How light is this movie? So buoyant that even an air raid warning, signaling that this whole world is about to crumble under the blitz, can’t dampen its giddy spirits.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
An unblinking portrait of a complicated, solitary gay man who has outlived his working years.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
It isn't saying much, but at least her (Carey) work here is more substantial than in the catastrophic "Glitter."- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Anyone who attended Broadway shows in the days when ticket prices were reasonable and the actors and singers performed without amplification will feel a rush of nostalgia as these troupers offer what amounts to a breezy compilation of after-dinner remarks.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The film's energy begins to flag after less than an hour, and as its pulse slackens it turns into a quirky allegory, punctuated with brilliant visionary flashes that partially redeem a philosophic ham-handedness.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Halloween 5, which was directed by Dominique Othenin-Girard and opened yesterday at area theaters, is a bit more refined in its details than the conventional horror movie.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
In the breezy, amoral heist comedy Mad Money, “Fun With Dick and Jane” meets “9 to 5” on the way to recession.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The movie rides on Ms. Abbass's serenely confident performance. As Lilia metamorphoses from a shy housebound widow into a woman calmly rejoicing in her body and her sexuality, Ms. Abbass marks her character's every blush and hesitation in the process of letting go with a winning delicacy and sweetness.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The players in this mouth-watering Gallic soufflé are so attractive, well mannered and comfortably grounded in the bourgeois world that you needn’t fear for their well-being, minor heartaches notwithstanding.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
It may have been a shrewd business decision by the film’s director, Miguel Sapochnik, to treat the story as a nasty, comic thriller. But when, after a certain point, Repo Men subsumes its satire to strenuous action sequences, it loses its edge and turns into a chase movie of no special distinction.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
A political thriller based on fact that hammers every button on the emotional console.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
There are lots of oohs and ahs in this nasty shoot-'em-up story of a psychopathic terrorist who hijacks a jumbo jet. But beneath the thrill-by-numbers surface of the film, nothing makes much sense.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Though less reassuring and not as dramatically coherent as "Hotel Rwanda," it still packs a hard punch.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Reconfirms the filmmaker's talent as an acutely observant chronicler of upscale bohemian subcultures.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
It is a voluptuous, hot-blooded portrait of a social outcast, a black, homosexual criminal who in acting out his gaudiest Hollywood dreams, transcendently reinvented himself.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
There is so much to admire in The Weight of Water, Kathryn Bigelow's churning screen adaptation of a novel by Anita Shreve, that when the movie finally collapses on itself late in the game, it leaves you in the frustrating position of having to pick up its scattered pieces and assemble them as best you can.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The Witnesses may frustrate those who prefer movies that tell clear-cut stories in which hard lessons are learned. But in the director’s farsighted vision of life, the ground under our feet is always shifting. As time pulls us forward, the shocks of the past are absorbed and the pain recedes. In its light-handed way, The Witnesses is profound.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The movie, whose cacophonous soundtrack, when turned up, conjures your worst nightmare of sirens, car alarms, jackhammers and sundry aural assaults, is a one-trick film that rapidly wears out its welcome.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Except for the piquant garnish of Mr. MacLachlan, the movie, written and directed by Ian Iqbal Rashid, is barely a cut above an amateur production. The attempts at humor fizzle, and the performances are wooden and overstated.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The first feature written and directed by Martin Koolhoven. It reveals him as a skillful manipulator of disturbing visual images (much of the film is washed in inky blue) and a screenwriter adept at sustaining a mood of impending doom.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
This deliciously nasty French deconstruction of male pecking orders, directed by Bernard Rapp, should send a pleasant shiver down the spine of anyone who has ever obsessed about wanting to please a devious and manipulative boss.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
In its dry and forceful way, it delivers the same message as Jiri Menzel's "Closely Watched Trains" and Danis Tanovic's "No Man's Land." While acknowledging that war is hell, it goes further to suggest it is ludicrous.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
In Pierrepoint:The Last Hangman Timothy Spall sinks his teeth into one of the juiciest roles of his career.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The final product is soft at the center, a rustic cinematic greeting card.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
This small, nearly perfect film is a reminder that personal upheavals are as consequential in people's lives as shattering world events.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
More skin is shown in Spread than in most Hollywood movies. But despite twitches of insight into its characters and their world, Spread refuses go more than skin deep.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
So inept on every level, you wonder why the distributor didn't release it straight to video, or better, toss it directly into the trash.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
A small, intense period piece with a tough-love attitude toward lazy, self-indulgent little girls flirting with madness.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Robert Kane Pappas’s documentary about scientific experiments in life extension, makes a digressive, disorganized hash of a fascinating topic.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Although it leaves you with a knot in your stomach, its power is undercut by its own head-banging obviousness.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
It is a career-defining performance that could catapult the 37-year-old actor beyond bland romantic leads and into the kinds of juicy anti-heroic parts once gobbled up by Mr. Hoffman and Robert De Niro.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Sustains a mood of aimless adolescent angst, and its vision of the road is uncompromisingly bleak.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
K-9 doesn't have a shred of credibility. And Mr. Belushi, despite some rough edges, lacks a strong enough macho growl to make Dooley seem like a police dog in human clothing. But with its surefire dog tricks and breezy pacing, K-9 is at least mildly diverting.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
From its flickering, inky cinematography to its wavering late 1920's-style sound track, to Veronkha's kohl-eyed vampish look, the movie is an expert parody of a period movie style.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Although seeds of hope are woven into this tapestry of rage, sorrow and disbelief, the inability of government at almost every level to act quickly and decisively leaves you aghast at what amounts to a collective failure of will.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Muddled, pretentious assemblage of film clips of the band shot between 1966 and 1971.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Does a better-than-average job of conveying the panic and helplessness of men terrorized by a sadist in a degrading environment, but it is still not especially scary.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
For all the real problems faced by its characters, Better Than Chocolate is finally a comic rhapsody to romantic love, the possibility of happily ever after within an all-accepting subculture.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
A murky ecclesiastical horror film, may be the nadir of the subgenre that produced "The Exorcist" (at its high end) and "Stigmata" (at its middle-to-low end).- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
A virtuoso ensemble piece to rival the director's "Nashville" and "Short Cuts" in its masterly interweaving of multiple characters and subplots.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
If this oddly structured film feels like two short stories stuck together, there is enough solid glue joining them that they resonate off one another deeply.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
An abrasive but innovative fusion of farce, satire and drama that blurs their boundaries in uncomfortable ways. It's a noisy movie whose characters tend to talk at medium-to-high volume.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
On its own good-natured terms, Selena' is both pleasant to watch and instructive in familiarizing a movie audience with the Texan-Mexican borderland music known as Tejano.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The range of Ms. Locklear's lobotomized acting runs from mild irritation to mild melancholy, expressed without expression.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Holofcener's smart, acidic comedy Lovely and Amazing zeroes in on contemporary narcissism and its fallout with a relentless, needling accuracy.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Find Me Guilty, Mr. Lumet's first feature film in seven years, catches him near the top of his game.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
It is easily the finest American comedy since David O. Russell's "Flirting With Disaster," another road movie that never ran out of poignantly funny surprises.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
As the movie's frenetic visual rhythms and mood swings synchronize with the zany, adrenaline-fueled impulsiveness of its lost youth on the rampage, you may find yourself getting lost in this teeming netherworld.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The material isn't organized in any formal way but works as a mosaic that has the feel of a jam session.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
An intrepid sleuth, Ms. Snyder seems to have left no stone unturned in her search for answers.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
At its most provocative, the movie explores the masculine mystique and the myth of the black stud.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The sloppy, absent-minded Premonition is a giant step backward for Ms. Bullock.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Eloquent, meticulously structured documentary -- Sober political and legal analysis alternates with grim first-hand accounts of torture and murder in a film that has the structure of a choral symphony that swells to a bittersweet finale.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
John Rabe, has its visceral moments. But it is also burdened by manipulative clichés of a screenplay in which exposition outweighs character development. Inspired by Rabe’s diaries, from which short excerpts are read, it tells the story almost exclusively from a Western point of view.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Might be described as a muddy, cliché-ridden sudsfest that lurches uncertainly between comedy and soap opera without finding its emotional or visual footing.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Deeply whimsical beneath its poker face, The Princess and the Warrior has the structure of an elaborate mind-teasing puzzle.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
As much as Mr. Levitch's voice grates, you can't help but admire the zest for life of this heroically independent but impossibly self-centered crank.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Mr. Cusack demonstrates once again that he is Hollywood’s second-most-reliable nice guy, after Tom Hanks. Devoid of vanity, with no hidden agendas, he never strains to be likable. Good will, integrity and a native common sense ooze out of him.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
This absurdist satire of sex, sibling rivalry, Oedipal ties, homicidal fantasies and fast food in the American heartland at least has the right attitude. It just isn't funny enough in its particulars to make you break up laughing.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Despite its contemporary touches Around the World in 80 Days is a satisfying slice of old-fashioned storybook entertainment.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The characters in Alamar may be playing versions of themselves, but the writer, editor and director Pedro González-Rubio has constructed a film in which the journey has an overarching mythic resonance that evokes fables from "Robinson Crusoe" to "The Old Man and the Sea."- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Although Garmento exhibits a flailing comic energy, its eagerness to condemn everything about Seventh Avenue, along with its sub-par acting and a choppy narrative style that finally runs amok, lends it a tone of hysterical finger-pointing.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
As the film's images accumulate, the movie becomes a sustained and ultimately refreshing meditation on surrender to the idea of temporality.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Songcatcher is a sweet, lyrical ode to rural America in the early 1900's.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Sergio's urban melodrama Under Hellgate Bridge suggests the contemporary equivalent of any number of 1930's B movies.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
This entertaining movie is content to be something a bit more modest: a pungent period folk tale that teases you until the very end.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
To describe August Rush as a piece of shameless hokum doesn’t quite do justice to the potentially shock-inducing sugar content of this contemporary fairy tale.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Plods along in its sloppy, joshing way, it tastes like pasta sauce that has sat on the shelf long after the expiration date on the can.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
A respectful portrait of General Dallaire, now retired, who comes across as a thoughtful, resolute but profoundly shaken man, more philosopher than warrior.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
If The Operator, which is Mr. Dichter's directorial debut, has a clever concept, it clasps it much too fiercely to its chest.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
A movie like We Are Marshall stands or falls on its ability to make you feel the pain and loss of individuals in a place where community pride and football are one and the same. As the film, directed by McG (the "Charlie's Angels" movies) from a wooden screenplay by Jamie Linden, follows a handful of Huntington residents during the months after the accident, not one of them comes fully to life.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
As the movie accelerates out of control into a series of frantically intercut scenes that lack basic continuity, the fun turns into a collection of abrupt non sequiturs.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Corny, suds-drenched movie. The kindest way of looking at this roughly patched-together story is as the cinematic equivalent of the music it memorializes.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The Man of My Life is a sumptuously illustrated but shallow fable of the grass-is-greener conflict between freedom and commitment.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Mr. Dorff’s hot-wired portrayal of a prisoner under physical and psychic siege gives Felon its emotional through line as Wade’s attitude metamorphoses from stunned disbelief, to terror, to despair, to fury and finally to hope.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The screenplay is closer in tone to an uneasy mixture of post-"Seinfeld" bile and unfocused Altmanesque satirical misanthropy. Partly because the story's structure is so haphazard, most of the jokes land with a thud.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
What makes Frequency work despite is shamelessness is the surreal aura that imbues almost every scene with a sense of heightened feeling.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
This is the kind of comedy in which the characters are construction-paper cutouts whose abrupt changes of heart are dictated entirely by the preposterous plot and not by psychological or social reality.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
A likable rites-of-passage memory piece doused in period nostalgia, including the prominent use of vintage Movietone newsreels to mark the events of World War II.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Like "Twelve and Holding," another film from last year's New Directors series, Wild Tigers achingly sympathizes with the desperate lengths an obsessed adolescent will go to in pursuit of love. As you watch the movie, you pray that, in the language of "Tea and Sympathy," the future teachers of Logan's life lessons will "be kind."- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
A wooden police thriller that is as dull as it is impenetrable and ultimately beyond ludicrous.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Under its drab contemporary trappings, the movie, is really a Jane Austen-like moral parable in which goodness is rewarded and selfishness punished.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
A movie that knows how to pace its audience. Watching it is like going for a long and satisfying jog.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Darting around a futuristic Los Angeles on motor scooters that can fly, these plucky whiz kids are so indomitably cheery that they seem more mechanical than the demented cyber-messiah who tries to destroy them. At least he has a temper.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Grimly austere barely begins to describe the atmosphere of dread that seeps through Fear X like a toxic mist.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
May be a comedy, but its images of physical frailty are inescapably unsettling. As the camera fixates on frail, spotted trembling hands unsteadily reaching out, it is impossible not to imagine a future in which those hands could be yours.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Yes, we've seen it all before. But The Relic proves that the hoariest cliches, when stirred together with enough money, shaken vigorously and artfully lighted, can still make the adrenaline surge.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Nobody does adultery in movies with more style and zest than the French, especially when the mode is frivolous. And anyone who watches Happily Ever After can identify with the grass-is-always-greener daydreams that haunt its characters.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Keeping Up With the Steins would have been a much better film if it had waited twice as long before retracting its fangs.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
What makes this Cherry Orchard different from almost every other interpretation (and makes it essential viewing for lovers of Chekhov) is Ms. Rampling's extraordinarily rich portrait of Ranevskaya.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The film's flamboyant portrayals of characters you love to hate have a malicious comic edge. If ever there were a movie to gladden the hearts of misanthropes, this is it.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Like a giant balloon painted with Day-Glo colors, however, the whole gaudy mess wouldn't inflate without the force of Mr. Myers's comic genius. It's his baby, baby. And after three editions, it's still flying high.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Although crudely acted, with laughably inept action sequences and a story that makes little sense, it has the feverish pulse of a classic B movie, boldly angular cinematography and a blaringly cheesy jazz soundtrack.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Has neither the star power nor the epic sense of itself that infused “Cadillac Records,” the 2008 film on the same subject.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Ms. Ullmann, now 65, and Mr. Josephson, 81, have a supreme mastery of the Bergman style. Their performances are spiritual and emotional X-rays.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
You are left with an overall impression of a movie so full of life that it is almost bursting at the seams.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The movie is forever digressing so that Mr. Yankovic can offer media spoofs that have only the most tangential relation to the story. [22 Jul 1989, p.1.15]- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The Iranian director Majid Majidi’s sad, soulful film The Willow Tree is his second movie to explore blindness and sight on multiple levels.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Polite, detached documentary in which there are no highs or lows. Politically and emotionally, the movie's thermostat remains at medium cool.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The screenplay bluntly faces anxieties of aging that are rarely voiced in the movies, and it is too hard-headed to offer comfy palliatives.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
As its momentum accelerates, and its special effects transform it into a pulpy cartoon, Predators loses its judgment and turns into a frantic, clichéd chase film. This chaotic stew of fire, blood, mud and explosives is so devoid of terror and suspense that any metaphorical analysis is rendered moot.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
As the jaundiced, disjointed, drug-infested story heads toward its dismal conclusion, its reputable actors vainly struggle to infuse the goings-on with a deadpan psychotic zaniness. But even when viewed sideways, Perception is not funny; it's hardly anything at all.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Its familiar story of an embittered child's homecoming and confrontation with a parent throws off dramatic sparks, but they never flare into a blaze.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Not half as exotic or as compelling as Mr. Aïnouz’s 2002 film, “Madame Satã,” which examined the fantastic life of a transvestite prostitute and underground entertainer in 1930s and ’40s Rio de Janeiro. But it shares the earlier film’s deep sympathy with sexual free spirits in a rigid macho society.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The movie's steady attention to detail lends it a texture rarely found in films about domestic life. Its eye and ear for the particular and for what is left unsaid in tense conversation is unerring.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The film's spareness and lack of words seem affected and ultimately unrealistic. At such moments, its refusal to put things into words and its crushing sense of gloom turn self-defeating.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
I am ashamed to admit that this empty-headed, preposterous, possibly evil mélange of gunplay and high-speed car chases on Parisian boulevards is a feel-good movie that produces a buzz.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
An obscene, misanthropic go-for-broke satire, Pretty Persuasion is so gleefully nasty that the fact that it was even made and released is astonishing. Much of it is also extremely funny.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
From its sly, amused performances to its surreal comic book gloss to its artfully nervous camerawork, Lucky Number Slevin sustains the blasé tone and look of a smart-aleck thriller that buries its heart under layers of attitude.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Because all of this looks blatantly unreal, and because the timing of the shock effects is so haphazard, Dead Alive isn't especially scary or repulsive. Nor is it very funny. Long before it's over, the half-hour-plus bloodbath that is the climax of the film has become an interminable bore. [12 Feb 1993, p.C16]- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Bad Education is a voluptuous experience that invites you to gorge on its beauty and vitality, although it has perhaps the darkest ending of any of the films by the Spanish writer and director.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Often feels like two movies loosely sewn together. By far the most compelling of the two is its portrait of Ms. Boyd, a woman who for all her quirks and self-dramatizing flourishes, emerges as a noble spirit on the side of the angels.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Valiant is in dire need of some "Shrek"-ian sass, not to mention a drop or two of genuine emotion.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
As much as the story, based on a novel by Emmanuèle Bernheim, has the irresistible earmarks of the kind of high-toned bodice-ripper at which the French excel, its cinematic realization is oddly gawky and tepid.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The cinematic equivalent of sampling goodies from a spartan tastings menu in which the entrees, desserts and appetizers are confusingly jumbled together.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Doesn't trust the audience enough to keep from laying on the schmaltz.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Here the clinical, stopwatch precision of Mr. Tykwer's explorations of synchronicity and Kieslowski's warmer, metaphysically dreamy speculations about the role of chance and coincidence in human affairs synchronize into a film whose formal elegance is matched by its depth of feeling.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
There is nothing more enthralling than a good yarn, and Ten Canoes interweaves two versions of the same story, one filmed in black and white and set a thousand years ago, and an even older one, filmed in color and set in a mythic, prehistoric past.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The comedy of male midlife angst dates back at least to “The Seven-Year Itch,” when it was sweet and innocent. Each time it is recycled, it gets more sour and joyless.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
A slender Chekhovian vignette about the joys and regrets of old age and the pleasures of sociability.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
As an outcry against the forcible conscription of children into armies around the world, Innocent Voices, is an honorable film. But as a balanced portrait of a tragic civil war, it is simplistic and opaque.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Mr. Pitt is a reasonably photogenic specimen. But this actor, whose typical screen character is a broken, androgynous man-child, is disastrously miscast.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
(Patricia Arquette's) irritated reactions to her dire situation have all the force of a pet owner's whiny complaints when her feline refuses to use the cat box.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The movie, which often threatens to disappear into a tub of soapsuds, is elevated immeasurably by the calm, stately performances of Mary Alice and Mr. Freeman.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
As spare as the juvenile institution in which much of it was filmed. As you watch it, you wish the film would fill in more of each girl's background.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Smoothly balancing comedy and pathos, it infuses the fantasy with enough credibility to make you care about these people and wish them merrily on their way.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Except for the usual double entendres in which titles of mainstream Hollywood hits are twisted into salacious puns, Finding Bliss (Bliss is the name of the company's resident star) isn't especially funny. Nor is it sexy, despite flashes of nudity and fleeting glimpses of Grind's works in progress.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
An indelible and ultimately moving vision of humanity buffeted by the elements and by international political tides.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Shrewdly divided against itself. What begins as a small, cleareyed drama about a teenager with terminal cancer morphs into a gauzy tear-jerker.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Exudes a throbbing flesh-and-blood intensity so compelling that it's impossible to avert your eyes.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The film's spiritual deck is stacked. In the mawkish tradition of movies like "Simon Birch," "Wide Awake," "August Rush" and "Hearts in Atlantis," Henry Poole Is Here is insufferable hokum that takes itself very, very seriously.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Needlessly complicated, life already has more than enough petty dramas. Let It Rain may not be funny in a ha-ha sense, but it gave me an amused open-mouthed appreciation of life’s absurdities, including unanticipated nuisances like bad weather.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
About as scary as a ride on a minor roller coaster, it unrolls its amplified butcher-block shock effects within the first five minutes.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Although the movie, adapted from a book by Doris Pilkington Garimara, pushes emotional buttons and simplifies its true story to give it the clean narrative sweep of an extended folk ballad, it never goes dramatically overboard.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Once Avery's mission assumes a Freudian dimension, the allegory loses its moral force and changes from a meditation on justice, power and inequality into a gory melodrama.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
As La Ciénaga perspires from the screen, it creates a vision of social malaise that feels paradoxically familiar and new.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
What lifts The Trench above the run of the mill is the intensity of its disgust.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Ultimately seems naïve. In developing the comparison of sex and cannibalism, it never goes beyond the standard Draculian symbol of blood to include other bodily substances.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The only distinguishing characteristic of this mildly agreeable variation of a worn-out formula is that the boisterous family under examination is Puerto Rican, and the screenplay includes a smattering of Spanish.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Ma Mère may be ludicrous, but its cast displays a commitment that deserves more than grudging admiration.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
A finely acted expressionistic critique of the suburban baby culture and its joys, fears and fetishes.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
If the strong performances of its three stars infuse this metaphorically clotted movie with some life, the screenplay (some of which was improvised) has a weak narrative pulse. This political essay posing as a movie makes the mistake of confusing longwinded storytelling with compelling drama.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
As it wobbles from one episode to the next, The Pick of Destiny is a garish mess, and some of it feels padded. But it has enough jokes to keep you smiling, and the spirit Mr. Black brings to it is a fervent (and touching) affection for the music he spoofs but obviously adores.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The kind of movie that is a must to avoid on a bad day. Even on a good one, it could send you into a funk.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The first third of The Switch, directed by Josh Gordon and Will Speck, is so bizarre that it leads you to wonder if, through some miraculous lack of oversight, the movie will blaze an unpredictable path. No such luck.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The Toxic Avenger may be trash, but it has a maniacally farcical sense of humor, and Tromaville's evildoers are dispatched in ingenious ways. One is dry-cleaned to death, another made into pizza, a third partly french-fried.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The movie, like its lovers, is really two films smushed together in the faint hope that sheer incongruity can grind out laughter.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
As a cautionary tale Lou Reed’s Berlin is an 85-minute public-service announcement that preaches "Just say no." The force of the music, however, lends this tawdry melodrama a tragic stature.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The Skeptic turns into a cut-and-dried Freudian melodrama that gives repressed memory a supernatural dimension. I'll take a bunch of teenagers terrorized by chain-saw-wielding zombies any day.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Mr. Freeman projects a kindness, patience and canny intelligence that cut against the movie's fast pace and pumped-up shock effects. His performance is so measured it makes you want to believe in the movie much more than its gimmicky jerry-built plot ever permits.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The movie is so busy constructing its labyrinthine plot that it often forgets to plumb the souls of its characters.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
For all its narrative glitches and its homemade quality, Thirteen evokes the rhythm, texture and tone of Nina's world in a way that a more carefully scripted film never could.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The movie is an entirely absorbing, occasionally revelatory portrait of a brilliant talent driven to greatness by an inner chorus of demons and angels.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Mr. Lipsky’s screenplay, a messy collection of fragments arranged chronologically, adds up to one of the most intimate screen portraits of a relationship ever attempted.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Buried somewhere under the gross-out jokes and the wet-lipped ogling at an endless parade of jiggling bikini-clad flesh in Grind is the kernel of a cheerful little movie about the world of competitive skateboarding.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
At the very least, Moog should persuade you that the history of music over the last century is as much a story of technology and sound as a family tree of stylistic influences. It's a very useful reminder.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Few films have explored the human face this searchingly and found such complex psychological topography. That's why The Wings of the Dove succeeds where virtually every other film translation of a James novel has stumbled.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The message about race relations in America conveyed by The Tenants, a small, serious, but choppy and psychologically cauterized screen adaptation of Bernard Malamud's 1971 novel, is dire.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
In this elongated, formula-ridden sitcom posing as a movie, the date-weary Manhattan singles exchanging acerbic banter suggest the tougher, far less intellectual offspring of Woody Allen characters drenched in a whiny Seinfeldian dyspepsia.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Two Weeks gets into serious trouble in its clumsy attempts to offset the sadness and anxiety with humor. This pursuit of sitcom levity contaminates a movie that might have been an American answer to the hardheaded Romanian masterpiece "The Death of Mr. Lazarescu."- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Its most intriguing moments evoke the way that memory plays tricks and our visions of the past are actually scrambled composites of impressions and feelings.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Although the thriller aspect of "La Sentinelle" doesn't quite add up, the film is still an absorbing, psychologically resonant portrait of French student life. As directed by Desplechin, the attractive young cast hardly seems to be acting.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
If the concept is ingenious, its execution is erratic.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Little more than a vignette elongated into a feature-length movie. Moody and slow moving, it depends on the truthfulness of its performances to carry it.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The film has no idea of how to develop its one-joke premise. The tepid love scenes are as erotically charged as a home movie of a little girl hugging her Barbie doll, and the satire as cutting as the blunt edge of a plastic butter knife.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
As Sahara careens between swashbuckling silliness and semi-serious comment, it builds up reserves of energy and good will that pay off when it bursts into its final sprint, a rootin'-tootin' 21-gun finale as satisfying as it is preposterous.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
An intermittently funny free-for-all that tries desperately to flesh out a television sketch into a feature-length movie.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
This is synergy of a high order.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Washington leans into an otherwise schlocky movie and slams it out of the ballpark.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Was it all for naught? Only weeks after the 23 partisans were arrested (and all but two promptly executed), Paris was liberated. Army of Crime is a passionate act of remembrance.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
War, Inc. is gonzo moviemaking with a bleeding heart. A satirical farce that wants to be "Dr. Strangelove" for the age of terrorism, it is a zany, nihilistic free-for-all that goes soft.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
A sugarcoated romantic comedy that is just clever enough to make you wish it were three times as smart and only a third as sweet.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
In the same way that a crossword puzzle tickles the mind without asking to be taken as literature, November plays games for the sake of game-playing. It also has a pretentious streak.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
It captures a gritty urban reality without moralizing or sentimentalizing its hapless young protagonist.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Deteriorates into a gory shoot-'em-up gangster movie with a quick-fix ending that leaves many threads dangling. It could have been something more.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The movie is loaded with heart and the feel for local color and period detail that can only come out of a personal reminiscence.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Its insistent zaniness makes Soul Kitchen very different in spirit from Mr. Akin's two previous films, "Head-On" and "The Edge of Heaven," which established him as a major European filmmaker. Seriously silly, it evokes the same high-spirited, pan-European multiculturalism in which people of all ages and backgrounds blithely traverse national borders as they aggressively pursue their destinies.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
As you watch the comedy lurch along, the woozy, sinking sensation it produces suggests a movie slapped together after the consumption of far too many gallons of that spiked eggnog.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Mr. Macy, a master at playing sticks of human dynamite in mild-mannered camouflage, gives the nerviest screen performance of his career.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Has the feel of a clinical case study elevated into a subject of aesthetic and philosophical discourse.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
An enraptured fantasia of high times at the hotel, the film is so intoxicated with the Chelsea’s bohemian mystique it virtually consumes itself.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Because it is a film, American Radical can only begin to sketch the complicated historical and political debates that engage Mr. Finkelstein and his detractors, but it allows both sides to make their cases.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Several times while watching the movie I laughed until the tears were running down my face.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The Magdalene Sisters would be too painful to watch if it didn't have a silver lining. Suffice it to say that it is possible to fly over this religious cuckoo's nest and remain free. All it takes is courage and the timely kindness of strangers.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
It all adds up to the kind of bad family entertainment likely to raise only a few eyebrows.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Not even the skillful performances of its stars, Susan Sarandon and Pierce Brosnan, playing the boy’s parents, can cover up the mysterious gaps in continuity of a screenplay whose thudding dialogue spells out every emotion while refusing to clarify many crucial plot details.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
With its intense chiaroscuro and meticulous manipulation of color that ranges from stark black and white to richer, shifting hues in scenes set in a metaphorical orchard, the film surpasses even Michael Haneke's "White Ribbon" in the fierce beauty and precision of its cinematography (by Martin Gschlacht).- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
If Daybreak weren't so powerfully acted, its accumulating anguish would be too much to bear. As it is, all three couples, especially Knut and Mona, verge on caricature.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
In the enchanted limbo between waking and sleeping, Zathura feels both real and unreal, like a dream you could shake off at any moment.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The movie is as blunt as its title. It portrays such behavior as "evil" without offering any deep insights or revelations, beyond handing out the plot equivalent of a lollipop at the end of the movie as compensation for the vicarious anguish.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Illustrates the underlying fear that when energies that should be directed toward warfare are diverted into passion, unity is impossible.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The kindest thing to be said about this deluxe photo spread of a film is that Sienna Miller's Edie and Guy Pearce's Andy capture their characters' images and body language with relative precision.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
This devastating film persuasively portrays them (Tillman family) as finer, more morally sturdy people than the cynical chain of command that lied to them and used their son as a propaganda tool.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The movie's computer animation is so cut-rate and its direction (by Joe Chappelle) so slack that the attacks are virtually terror-free.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The movie's mentality is su'med up in one cutaway shot. A split second before a man's face is about to be shoved into a boat propeller, the movie flashes to another man pushing half an orange onto the head of a squeezer.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The movie’s most disturbing aspect, of which the filmmakers could not have been unaware, is the physical resemblance between Mr. Elba and Ms. Larter to O. J. and Nicole Brown Simpson. It lends Obsessed a distasteful taint of exploitation.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The scenes on the ballfield have a credibility that is unusual in a baseball film. Adding to the realism are the appearances of a number of major league players as the Twins' opponents. The glow and cleancut innocence of these scenes evokes the magic of the game as seen through the eyes of a youthful fan.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Faithful to the outline of the novel but emotionally and spiritually anemic, it slides into the void between art and entertainment, where well-intended would-be screen epics often land with a thud.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
There's no escaping that "Dominion" is finally an act of commercial scavenging. You may retrieve the eggshells, coffee grounds and banana peels from your trash and assemble them into a cute, novelty gift basket. But if you bend down and take a whiff, your nose is still met with the scent of garbage.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Beneath its studiedly ugly surface, this bargain-basement answer to "Thelma and Louise" is as loathsome as any mindless, blood-drenched Hollywood action-adventure yarn.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
However you respond to Wassup Rockers, it is completely alive, unlike any number of teenage Hollywood movies with their stale formulas and second-hand puerility. And that's mostly to the good.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
None of it adds up to terribly much beyond a rip-roaring adventure that shows off Carlyle and Miller as cynical British city cousins of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
What makes this exquisitely observed slice of American screen realism transcend itself is finally its moral sensibility.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The movie's biggest strength is a story that refuses to quit and almost makes sense within its own screwball logic.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
This likable, humane movie is not an attempt to recreate the epochal Woodstock Music and Art Fair captured in Michael Wadleigh’s documentary “Woodstock.” It is essentially a small, intimate film into which is fitted a peripheral view of the landmark event.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
A moth-eaten stranded-in-the-desert yarn that throws in every cheap trick in the manual to pump up your heartbeat, is so manipulative that the involuntary jolts of adrenaline it produces make you feel like a fool.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
What begins as a blushing, priapic opera buffa about coming of age turns into a verismo shocker, before softening into something mellower.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The movie is best appreciated as a collection of whimsical toys drawn from a fantasy grab bag that encompasses everything from Grimm's fairy tales to "Star Wars."- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
If you're looking for a 90-minute post-teen soap opera with pretty people, ludicrous hairpin turns and a whopper of an ending, the movie will keep you mindlessly off balance.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
It's a little sad to see actors of the quality of Christopher Plummer and Jonny Lee Miller struggling straight- faced to dignify this sewage.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
As this sweet, ineffectual comedy follows two sad sacks competing for the job of manager at a new branch of a Chicago grocery chain, it pointedly avoids the raucous bad-boy clowning of the typical Everyguy farce. Think of it as a polite, tightly muzzled "Clerks."- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Greg Whiteley's small, tender documentary portrait New York Doll looks at life after rock 'n' roll as experienced by Arthur (Killer) Kane, the original bassist for the legendary glam-punk band the New York Dolls.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
Mr. Edwards, who wrote and directed Land of the Blind (it's his debut film), might counter that the movie is a Brechtian comedy that's not supposed to make literal sense: the big picture is what matters. But the big picture is a mess.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
For all its untidiness, Washington Heights teems with life, and its star, Mr. Perez, has charisma to burn. The movie vividly depicts the interdependence and solidarity of people in working-class urban neighborhoods where residents really need one another.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
In its zeal to bring recognition to an underappreciated genre, it has an agenda similar to that of last year's revelatory documentary "Standing in the Shadows of Motown."- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
If you compared the two main characters with the cowboys in "Brokeback Mountain," they would be ignoble versions of Ennis del Mar (Jimmy) and Jack Twist (Lars). Like their American counterparts, they barely know what to do with their passion.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
By the end of The Walker a movie that begins as a dazzling round of charades has deteriorated into a plodding game of Clue.- The New York Times
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- Stephen Holden
The entrancing visual imagery goes a long way toward filling in the screenplay's gaps in logic.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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