Steven Rea
Select another critic »For 2,033 reviews, this critic has graded:
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72% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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26% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 4.7 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Steven Rea's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 70 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Touch of Evil | |
| Lowest review score: | Isn't She Great | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,609 out of 2033
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Mixed: 278 out of 2033
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Negative: 146 out of 2033
2033
movie
reviews
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- By Critic Score
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- Steven Rea
Zemeckis, who blazed trails mixing live-action with animation in "Who Framed Roger Rabbit," blazes not even a footpath here.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Guy Ritchie's Revolver premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival two years ago September. That's 26 months on a shelf somewhere, depriving moviegoers the thrill of jaw-droppingly awful Ray Liotta line readings, of bloody shoot-outs, bags of money, cutaways to frosty babes sucking on lollipops, and even a bit of violent anime.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Maybe if there was something going with the dialogue - snappy Chandlerisms, say, or even just sentences that made sense - the fussy digital artifice of The Spirit wouldn't seem so, well, dispiriting.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Without doubt one of the scariest, creepiest, gut-churningly unsettling pictures to come along in ages.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
There's nothing Disneyesque about this bomb except the forced levity of its musical score.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Easily the best stop-motion animated necrophiliac musical romantic comedy of all time. It is also just simply, wonderful: a morbid, merry tale of true love that dazzles the eyes and delights the soul.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Christopher Walken has the best moments in the whole thing, portraying the wacked-out auteur of the Gwen-and-Eddie vehicle. Sadly, he's only in America's Sweethearts a few hilarious minutes.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Anderson, 29, does so much in Magnolia, with such nerve, with wily humor and out-of-the-blue bravado, that the film's flaws and lapses don't really matter. It ain't perfect, but it's awe-inspiring.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
While Ferrell and Reilly are great together, hatching harebrained schemes that have no basis in reality, part of the unexpected treat of Step Brothers is watching Jenkins and Steenburgen sink to such blithely immature levels of rude and crude comedy.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Diaz gets her own voice-over monologue, as does Patric - the different points of view functioning like stanza refrains, born in shared familial anguish.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Has a jumpy, reality-TV kind of feel that adds to the story's sense of unsettling authenticity.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Plot contrivances, including an ominous cowboy-hatted figure who stalks Bitsey and her tagalong intern (Gabriel Mann), undermine the story's serious political themes.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Alexandra never depicts the soldiers in combat, but Sokurov nonetheless shows how war can break down the social structure, break down family, break the human soul.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
The Hangover pushes the boundaries of good taste, good sense, and good will toward man. And you'll feel good about it all.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Cold Souls entertains on its own terms, delivering irony and suspense as Giamatti discovers that his soulless self is a terrible, terrible actor.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Fans of swooping helicopter shots, alleys filled with backlit geysers of steam, and jump-cut editing that makes MTV look like Ingmar Bergman will relish the intercontinental intrigue and huggermugger that is Spy Game.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
As silly as Multiplicity is, there is an adult sensibility at work here. The movie gets some of its biggest laughs when the clones, one after the other, proceed to break rule number one: No clone nooky. There's nothing explicit about the sexual shenanigans, but the duplicates' respective dalliances with the missus serve as the basis for much of the comedy. [17 July 1996, p.E04]- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Despite its penchant for the crude and lewd, is gooey in ways that have nothing to do with bodily fluids.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
One moment it's farcical comedy, the next it's gruesome melodrama. The movie never finds the right tone.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Cinema as jazz. More precisely, jazz traded by the likes of Charlie Parker, Billie Holliday, Chet Baker -- blurry, opiated, jagged with melancholy and stone cold beautiful.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Structured in three beautifully paced, keenly observed acts, Living in Oblivion is that rare picture that leaves you gasping in disappointment at the end - gasping, that is, because it's over and you don't want it to be. [04 Aug 1995, p.05]- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Uptown Girls gives the impression that everyone behind the camera just threw up their hands in helpless resignation.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
The result is something both fluid and stark, cinematic and comic book-y, and incredible.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
A testosterone-fueled road movie that displays the same Apatow-ian obsessions, and raunch, as "Pineapple Express," "Superbad," and "The 40-Year-Old Virgin."- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
It's not often that Chinese cinema tackles same-sex relationships, and rarer still to see a film of such stark, muted emotion coming from mainland China.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Less a movie than a collection of pretty cool action set-pieces, linked together with some seriously awful acting and dialogue that even Dr. Evil couldn't deliver with a straight face.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Irma Vep is over before you know it, which is both a tribute to the talents of Assayas - he draws you in completely, his film never lags - and a bummer. You want to follow these people around a little longer, see what happens to their movie (although we do get to see something that happens, and it's weird and dazzling) and what becomes of them all. This a film about thievery - the character of Irma Vep is a jewel thief, the director is stealing from the past - and in its own very cool, very brash way, Irma Vep steals its audience's heart. [13 June 1997, p.10]- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Krueger's comedy doesn't always spark, but its underlying intelligence - not to mention Graham's eyes - shines through.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
The Weather Man belongs to a school of earnest, artsy Hollywood flicks that includes the Michael Douglas-goes-bonkers "Falling Down," and a lineage that goes back to revered 1970s pics like "Five Easy Pieces."- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
It doesn't happen often, but when it does, look out: a movie that rocks and rolls, that transports, startles, delights, shocks, seduces. A movie that is, quite simply, great.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
A small but moving film that gets the details right (life in a sleepy burg, sidewalk chats between old high school pals) and gets at the heart of human longing for family, for love.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Taken for what it is - 'tweenage escapism - Stormbreaker is moderately fun.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
At this point in her career, Lopez can clearly bend the universe -- but no amount of bending can make Enough anything more than formulaic.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Stiff but handsome film, there's little sense of the conflict and complexities that drove Alma Mahler.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Black Book doesn't let the grim facts of the Holocaust get in the way of some ripping pulp.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Thanks to a witty script and the recognizably goofy but absolutely earnest delivery of Black, Kung Fu Panda has a human soul, too.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
The truth is left for the audience to decide. And while the conclusion isn't necessarily clear, it is unsettling.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Plays with cultural stereotypes, and upends them as well. The picture starts as one thing and turns, dramatically, movingly, into something else.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Easily one of the loosest, most satisfying comedies to hail from the prolific writer/director in a while.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Although a voice-over prologue rumbles ominously in English, most of Night Watch is in the mother tongue, but even the subtitles do weird things - flying around in different sizes and fonts, punctuating the action.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Smart and novelistic and spiked with more than a bit of The Catcher in the Rye, Steers' movie is a prickly coming-of-age tale in which everybody -- but especially Culkin -- shines.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
If Weitz's Golden Compass feels, at times, too crammed with exposition and big set pieces, the film nonetheless works far more successfully than the first Potter pic - the leaden "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone" - did translating its source material.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Brazen shocker is never less than compelling -- even when you feel compelled to shut your eyes.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Much scampering, yelling, quaking and crying is required of the actors, and they acquit themselves well enough, even with oozing fake wounds and prop rebars piercing their shoulder blades.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Siegel, in his debut as director, shot the low-budget Big Fan on a digital camera and achieves an appropriately grimy, gritty look. He has an eye for the telling detail and for the comedy in tragedy.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Jeremy Irons slithers on board with a haughty sneer and papal vestments, playing Bishop Pucci.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
While the film pivots around Nazneen, perhaps at the expense of other characters, it doesn't sell her short. This is a rich, revealing and elegant portrait, and one well worth spending time with.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Michael Hoffman, whose credits include the far more lively Soapdish, directs this predictable business in a predictable fashion. [20 Dec 1996, p.03]- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
The premise of Village of the Damned remains wonderfully scary: that an alien life force has descended on a community, inseminated its women, and spawned a gaggle of evil brainiacs with platinum-blond hair who can read your mind and do funny things with their eyes. [28 Apr 1995, p.3]- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Remains rooted in the real world, which makes its story all the more satisfying -- and chilling.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Together's mix of classical gems and composer Zhao Lin's plaintive score is stirring, soaring stuff.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Possession, humiliation, jealousy, revelation . . . they're all painted in light, swift strokes by the veteran director and his two stars.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
A creaky, cliched, feel-good family drama about learning to stop and smell the roses - and planting a vegetable garden while you're at it - Uncle Nino is shameless, sappy fare.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
The Twilight star's line-readings have become like Edward and his bloodsucking kin: They lack a pulse.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
There are extraordinary collisions of image and music here that make for some breathtaking sequences, but when that portentous, Gregorian-chanting chorus kicks in with its repetitive mantra of the film's title, it sure sounds a whole lot like they're saying "narcolepsy," not "naqoyqatsi."- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Art-directed within an inch of its life, Sleuth has the smirky gloss of a project that everyone involved with thinks is terribly good, and terribly clever. These people - Branagh, Pinter, Law and the usually great Caine (even in bad stuff) - are laboring under an epic misconception. Sleuth is just terrible.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Dizzyingly incoherent and subversively surreal, this sophomore effort from the man who made the great, strange "Donnie Darko" is certain to have its fans. I'm not going to be one of them.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Cross "Get Shorty" with "State and Main" - Hollywood hustlers, colorful crooks, crafty poseurs, and a production crew on location - and you have the stuff of The Last Shot. One other thing: eliminate anything funny.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Basic Instinct 2 is supposed to help Stone show it's possible for a woman to be sexy in her late 40s. But it's Rampling - who is 60 - who comes off as the more provocative and alluring. Stone's purring, snarling, bedroom kink is embarrassing.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Russian Dolls isn't quite the gem that its precursor was. It rambles. It's less of an ensemble effort. There's more of Xavier's moping self-centeredness. But Duris is terrific as the confused cusp-of-30 protagonist, and the rest of the cast is bright and beaming.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
This is no-nonsense, let's-get-to-it business, and will probably be less satisfying, and less clear, to viewers unfamiliar with the source material.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
While the production values are top-notch, and the action artfully choreographed, in the end - and quite well before the end - a sense of tedium sets in.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
A taut, German-made thriller, Jerichow adds a bit of European xenophobia to the pulp traditions of passion and betrayal.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Jonathan and Christopher Nolan's adaptation of this novel by Christopher Priest offers three acts of exasperating muddle.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
It's a study in human behavior, describing how a self-confessed "emotional wreck," through accident and ambition, talent and temperament, became a star.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
A wicked deconstruction of a dysfunctional clan: brothers at each other's throats; a father whose legacy is anger and betrayal; an unfaithful wife; a history of deceit. It's a horror show of hatred and festering psychic wounds.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
A goofy screwball romp that affords a gaggle of A-listers the chance to hambone around in antic style.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
A slasher spoof of sorts, except that unlike the "Scream" pics, scant effort seems to have gone into the spoofing aspect of the story.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
A light and extremely likable comedy -- just what the doctor ordered right now.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
MacDowell brings an absolutely riveting conviction to her role. She's strong stuff in a movie that is likewise gripping and powerful.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
This cunning and provocative Romanian film requires patience, but its rewards are many: It's hard to imagine how a scene in which a police captain barks an order to bring him a dictionary can be loaded with suspense, but, really, it is.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Olyphant has a cool, amiable vibe, kind of postmodern Jimmy Stewart, while Mitchell brings intelligence and quietude to yet another role that doesn't deserve such consideration.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Stranger Than Fiction is slicker than Kaufman's work - and Forster's direction is certainly more studio-ish than Kaufman collaborators Spike Jonze's or Michel Gondry's. But it's a clever idea, and you feel a little smarter watching the thing unfurl.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Fly Away Home falls a little short of classic status, but it is easily one of the more appealing family films to come flying this way in quite some time. [13 Sep 1996, p.03]- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Simple, sweet family fare, and a picture that extols the virtues of comradeship and community in a spunky, spirited fashion.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
The performances are uniformly strong - nuanced, realistic, lacking any wild, flailing emoting.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Almost absurdly quiet and observant, The Limits of Control is about the space between the action, the steps along the way.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
The Road isn't a masterpiece...But I cannot think of another film this year that has stayed with me, its images of dread and fear - and yes, perhaps hope - kicking around like such a terrible dream.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Luke, who had the title role in Denzel Washington's directorial debut, "Antwone Fisher," is that rare actor who can convey profound inner conflict with just a look in his eye; his performance is attuned, astute and remarkable.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Even at just 90 minutes, Balls of Fury - with its caricatures of the Asian underworld, with its G-man malarkey and gay jokes (Feng keeps an all-boy bevy of sex slaves) - begins to outstay its welcome.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Worse yet, Romeo Is Bleeding - which is extremely bloody - just isn't all that fun. [4 Feb 1994, p.12]- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Unravels in a series of spooky dream sequences, dopey detective work, and a couple of richly hambone-ian De Niro soliloquies.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Like "Mr. Holland's Opus," only in French, with an all-boy cast in white shirts and short pants, The Chorus is the kind of sugary, crowd-pleasing fare that only the most curmudgeonly moviegoer can frown upon.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
This slight and amusing 'toon is mostly a trip designed for the kiddie crowd to take in.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Stripped of its poetry, some of the devices of the tragedy of the Moor come off here as woefully contrived.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
A devastatingly funny portrait of a wildly dysfunctional clan, Wes Anderson's The Royal Tenenbaums is a movie about how people never really mature in ways that matter.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Baker's life, like his music, was as sad as it was beautiful. And Weber's movie - obsessed with Baker's image as much as with his songs - hits all the right notes.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Cold Mountain is the equivalent of comfort food: old-fashioned, earthy (lots of root vegetables), satisfying.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Just about the only folks likely to find this humdrum hybrid of "Mission: Impossible" and "The Wind in the Willows" worthy for consideration are non-discriminating pip-squeaks.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
With a clamorous soundtrack and a whirl of elaborate chases and busily choreographed fight scenes, this is Sherlock Holmes with Attention Deficit Disorder.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
The problem with Wide Awake, which was shot by ace cinematographer Adam Holender in rich, autumnal tones, with interiors full of inspirational shafts of light, is that there isn't a genuine moment, or character, in the whole thing. [27 Mar 1998, p.14]- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Robert Burks' cinematography is outstanding, and composer Bernard Herrmann supplies one of his strongest, spookiest scores... A major influence on the movies and movie-making style of Brian De Palma (among many, many others), Vertigo has a dreamlike eeriness and a climax that is, well, downright dizzying. [29 Nov 1996, p.04]- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Think Jerry Lewis doing Eminem, or maybe it's Eminem doing Jerry Lewis (or maybe it's Pauly Shore doing Vanilla Ice), and you've got B-Rad.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
None of these elements quite come together, and while the clothes and props look authentic, the acting doesn't.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Despite its haunting artistry and its winning eccentricities, The Shipping News is a vehicle that's still very much at sea.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Montenegro's character has a spark in her eye, and a determination, that makes this quiet, intelligent film anything but boring.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
The Painted Veil is rich with history and heartbreak. It's stirring stuff.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Suffice to say it's got plenty to do with corporate karma. And the word severance is more than just a double play on words - it's a triple whammy.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Dazzling and delirious, The Fall is a celebration of cinema, of old-fashioned storytelling and globe-hopping spectacle.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Lord knows how Holofcener got the performance she did out of Goodwin, but the child actor's Annie, rude and unmanageable, is an extraordinarily rich and complicated figure.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Simply the best adaptation of any John le Carré thriller to make it to the screen.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
The British star of "Ali G" fame plays Ricky Bobby's arch-nemesis. His name: Jean Girard. His provenance: France. His sponsor: Perrier. Speaking through a set of nasty-looking, tightly clenched teeth in the faux-est of faux French accents, Cohen is hilarious.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Your body's sitting there in the theater, but it feels as if your head is someplace else.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
McAvoy is charismatic, funny, and on the mark. Hall and Eve are both just right in their roles - bringing depth and detail to what could have been caricature parts. And if Starter for 10 takes a turn into foolhardy tragedy, it doesn't linger too long there.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
It's sick. It's stupid. But it also is undeniably adept at skewering social hypocrisy, lancing the boils of political self-righteousness, and poking fun where others fear to tread.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
But moving across this tableau is Frodo and his gang, and here the trouble lies...Not a one seems believable as conveyed by Wood, who forever looks to be on the brink of a good sob. Likewise, his hobbit sidekick Samwise Gamgee (Sean Astin) is a real wuss.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Moreno, with her wide, watchful eyes, owns the camera - and the film. Her performance is perfectly natural and profoundly moving. Maria Full of Grace is a remarkable picture, full of suspense and discovery.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
It's a grand and glorious mishmash of the Bible and the Beats, of German expressionism and Hollywood B- movies, at once pretentious and naive, jokey and deadly serious. You'll love it or you'll hate it, and you know who you are. [04 Feb 1994, p.03]- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Maybe, you think, there is something daring and brilliant going on here: an excursion into the darkest territories of the human soul. But no. In the end -- or the beginning -- there is no point to all this. Or at least not a point worth making, and making us watch.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
The movie's too long - and the violence and mayhem are unexpectedly harsh and heavy - but Franco's inspired, looped performance is right up there in the annals of reefer filmdom with Jeff Bridges' the Dude in "The Big Lebowski."- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Aniston and Zahn are sweet together - their respective characters have built up psychic armor to keep the outside world at bay, and each breaks down the other's in revealing ways.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Simple, poignant and leavened with humor, it's a film that affirms the nourishing aspects of love and companionship.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
As a thriller, In the Cut, with its red herring characters and plot twists, turns dopey and predictable. As a portrait of a single woman, burned by love and wary of what's in store, Campion's movie has its trenchant, telling passages.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
The film, with its painterly juxtapositions of dockside industry, green hills, and cloud-scudded sky, is full of misguided motives and fairy-tale fraud. But it rings true at heart.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Extraordinarily sensual and extraordinarily bleak, Claire Denis' Nenette and Boni depicts a world of diffident youth, of estranged families and displaced souls. [02 May 1997, p.15]- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Gets stupider as it moves along. By the end, you just don't care whether that cold-hearted snake Petrovich (that would be Reno) gets his comeuppance. Just bring on the Battle Bots, please!- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Puccini for Beginners, which takes its title from its heroine's passion for opera, isn't just another trendy toe-dip in sexual experimentation. It may not be the real world of New York, or even of most relationships, but it's worth a visit.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Loaded with cartoon violence (exploding mail-bombs, children hanging perilously from rooftops), numerous groin-kicks and a few mild expletives, Jingle All the Way isn't exactly heartwarming, egg-noggy holiday fare. [22 Nov 1996, p.04]- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
A slo-mo gem of gangster cool, of vintage Hollywood noir reimagined by a French new waver in love with American cars, American jazz, and the kind of trench-coated tough-guys embodied by Humphrey Bogart and Robert Mitchum.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Rea, with his hangdog looks and Jimmy Stewart line readings, spends a good deal of his time writhing in fake blood and broken shards - not what you'd call glamorous work, but he does it with conviction.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Now in his late 40s and hairier than ever, Jeremy seems a simple enough, likable guy, and he has no pretensions about what he does. And no apologies either.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
In essence, a wild soap opera disguised as a political allegory, it's a movie, with its over-the-map performances, that is worth catching only for the inadvertent laugh or two.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Bridge to Terabithia the movie, like the book, is buckets-of-tears sad. Director Csupo and company manage to get that - the simple power of a story about kindred souls, about loss, about the limitless possibilities of a lively mind - just right.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Brought to the screen with a mix of jaunty humor and jagged violence that should have worked more effectively than it does.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Starts having the same effect as one too many tequilas: the Hong Kong-style stunts, the goofy wisecracks, the foxy presence of Eva Mendes -- all of it becomes blurry and numbing.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Stays with you like great movies tend to do. It asks you to examine the inner mechanisms of human beings, cheerful and miserable alike. It's not about looking at a glass half empty or a glass half full. It's about drinking down what's in that glass and letting it fill your soul.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Too long, too busy, too loud, and too reliant on slam-bang stunt work, Red's glib dialogue and sinister government scenarios begin to wear.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Poignant, funny and clear-eyed about some tough topics: homophobia, racism, AIDS.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
There's something optimistic in the filmmaker's clear-eyed, straightforward storytelling style.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
While this cheesy, heavy-metal melange of horror, space hooey and cowboy shoot-'em-ups isn't exactly dull, it isn't anything to write home about either.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
If there's a psych ward for motion pictures, It's Kind of a Funny Story should check itself in. Boden and Fleck's film suffers from bipolar disorder: manic and silly one minute, moody and muted the next.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Kari's film, witty and sad, is a spare, small thing, but Noi has a poetry about it, and a poignancy.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
By the end of the film's two-hour stream of Be-Here-Now-isms, anyone left in the audience will be wanting to yell, "Put a sock in it!" to old Soc.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
In the psychologically scarred world of The Holy Land, sex and religion, love and hate, survival and despair all ricochet around, waiting to explode.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
The romanticized image of the tortured artist - never mind how warranted his or her angst might be - is the stuff of stereotype unless it's leavened with humor, or limned in art. In Fugitive Pieces, neither element appears in sufficient quantity.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Dangerous Beauty, by any name, embodies no such thing. [27 Feb 1998, p.12]- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
If only the screenplay had more going for it than hackneyed homilies and living-in-the-ghetto stereotypes. If only first-time director Sunu Gonera had a surer hand, a knack for something bolder, wilder, goofier.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Murphy, in the boogeyman role, toggles between seductive and sinister with enough conviction to make you forget that his character makes no sense at all.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Whatever one makes of its subject's moral code and mind-set, one has to give Terror's Advocate its due: the stories are riveting, the man is real.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Several notches above the usual gay-themed indie, and mostly manages to avoid -- or at least legitimately deploy -- the gratuitous throbbing beefcake scenes that are part and parcel of the genre.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Although the pervading mood of Twin Falls Idaho - a beautifully shot, noirish thing - is one of sadness and loss, the Polishes' film is playful, too.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Has a dark, low-budget feel and an incongruous combination of self-consciously jokey patter and gross-out gore.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
There's humor in it, and sadness, and an acid-tinged humor that is miles away from the branded levity of "Friends." More power to Aniston for feeling the need to try something different, and then doing it -- well.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
The homoerotic subtext of the whole buddy movie oeuvre has never received quite the explicit lampooning it gets in this quirky, crash-and-burn action-comedy. [6 Sept 1996, p.8]- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
A promising filmmaking debut, Star Maps defines a landscape where everyone has a dream - and where a lot of people will do a lot of things to achieve that dream, however misguided and delusional it might be. [22 Aug 1997, p.10]- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
It's giving nothing away to say that Munro makes it to Bonneville, and breaks the record - which apparently still stands - on his two-wheel contraption.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
If The Golden Bowl -- isn't charged with electric emotion, well, that's not what Henry James or James Ivory is about.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
A gorgeous confection, packed with gargantuan gowns and pornographic displays of pastrystuffs, Sofia Coppola's Marie Antoinette is also a sharp, smart look at the isolation, ennui and supercilious affairs of the rich, famous and famously pampered.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
This In-Laws feels, in the end, formulaic and unnecessary, especially when the original is yours for the renting at the video store.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
It's pretty formulaic stuff, and earns its R rating with profanity and unapologetically gratuitous female nudity, but somehow has a winning knuckleheaded charm.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
With a thumping score and whirling cinematography, District 13: Ultimatum delivers two or three awesomely choreographed chase-and-fight-and-chase-and-fight-again sequences. The dialogue (in French, with subtitles) is not this movie's strength, nor should it be.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
One of the finest pieces of screen acting in the career of Juliette Binoche -- the actress playing the actress in this extraordinary film.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
An amiable mix of "Grumpy Old Men" comedy and "Apollo 13" can-we-fix-this-jalopy-before-we-die? Drama.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Too freewheeling for its own good, like a Robert Altman ensemble piece without a gravitational core. But Hawke's actors are a talented troupe, and even when things get self-indulgent and fuzzy-headed (and boy, do they!), interesting stuff is going on.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Shows glimmers of great drama, but jettisons too much essential cargo (character development, relationships, plot, common sense) in an effort to be lean and clean.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Vacancy, in the end, simply offers a particularly aggressive brand of couples counseling.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
The movie heads in a disastrous direction: namely, a police academy ceremony... This lets-wrap-this-thing-up moment sucks the life and the honesty out of an otherwise compelling portrait of tainted lawmen, tainted law.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Tender but never sappy, Monsieur Ibrahim brings two people of vastly different age and background together in ways that are touching, and telling. It's a small, glowing gem.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Quite possibly the biggest ego trip ever to play Cannes, or anywhere else, at any time.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
A surprisingly moving drama - a throwback to the small, character-driven indies of yesteryear.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
The movie's combination of unabashedly fun carnage, cool special effects, and tongue-in-cheek dialogue keeps the ball rolling (albeit at reduced speed), until the last of the titular terrors has bit the dust.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Burns' writing style is full of tepid Woodyisms about sex and romance, with Allen's Jewish guilt supplanted by the Christian variety. [23 Aug 1996, p.03]- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
A sort of full-course Father of the Bride, Lee's Eat Drink Man Woman is tender without being mushy, sweet without being syrupy - and surprising in ways that can only make you smile. [17 Aug 1994, p.E01]- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
The perfect film for anyone who likes their headbutting and kickboxing dressed up in gold brocade, frilly collars, and tri-cornered caps. And isn't that all of us?- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Roiling with laughter, tears, drunken confessions, revelatory soliloquies, pain, sorrow, hospital visits, and various kinds of love, A Christmas Tale is a smart, sprawling, and sublimely entertaining feast.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
The real problem isn't with the actors, it's with 1) the source material, a highfalutin romance novel with a clever literary conceit, and 2) LaBute's clumsy, uncomfortable efforts to telescope Byatt's book into a workable movie.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Although The Secret in Their Eyes has neither the power, the artistry, nor the electric energy of its fellow Oscar nominee, France's "A Prophet," the Argentine film nonetheless engages with style, suspense, and seriousness of intent. Criminal intent and otherwise.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Although there's nothing funny about addiction, Zahedi - a thin, bug-eyed fellow with the air of an R. Crumb sad sack - brings wit and self-deprecation to his tale of obsession and woe.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
21 makes for some slick escapist fantasy. Even if, and because, the fantasy has its roots in something real.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Deschanel does what she does seemingly without effort, managing to convey Summer's mixed-up messed-upness.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
It's great to see an American filmmaker - and a successful one at that - willing to simply train his cameras on the actors and let them, and their characters, come to life.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
A dazzling costume epic, a spectacle for the eyes and for the soul.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Dumb with a capital D, Blades of Glory takes its (almost) fleshed-out sketch-comedy idea as far as an ice-skating buddy movie with we're-not-gay jokes and a psycho stalker can go.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
It can be argued that Adam uses Asperger's as a kind of metaphor for the barriers that people erect to fend off strangers, to guard against intimacy. It can also be argued that writer/director Mayer is shamelessly manipulative.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Career Girls doesn't have the sweep of Secrets & Lies, nor the venom of Naked (which also featured the riveting Cartlidge). But in the small world it keenly describes, the film packs an emotional punch - silly voices and all.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Burns' movie shows a Woody.esque affection for a certain slice of New York and its denizens (with the angst and neuroses quieted down a notch or two).- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Girl on the Bridge, with its doomed art-house romanticism and echoes of Fellini, may not be the deepest piece of filmmaking out there now, but it is easily the most intoxicating. Take the leap.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
For sheer audacity and adrenaline-fueled carnage, Shoot 'Em Up hits its target pretty much dead on.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
What are you going to do when your lead actress offers a performance that's as unlikable as the woman she's portraying? Maybe it's the script (flimsy, formulaic), or filmmaker Alejandro Gomez Monteverde's conspicuous direction, but Tammy Blanchard's Nina, a waitress with a dour disposition and an unwanted pregnancy, pretty much sucks the life out of this well-meaning melodrama.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Freakonomics is uneven, and even a little cloying, but its sum effect isn't bad.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
As The Cable Guy progresses, its psycho-comedic tone gets sicker and its plot more predictable, until, by the end, we may as well be watching Ray Liotta as The Cop From Hell or Marky Mark as The Boyfriend From Hell. It's strictly generic, by the book, and downright exhausting. [14 June 1996, p.03]- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Not even Halle Berry, emerging from the blue Caribbean in an orange two-piece -- can bring this thing to life.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
The Watermelon Woman is a thoughtful, charming movie that takes its audience along on a journey of self-discovery - without ever taking itself too seriously.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
A smart aleck-y kidnapping caper that whooshes around to a thumping electronic beat.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Offers a worshipful but insightful portrait of the group - centered, of course, on its charismatic front man.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Heartfelt and artfully shot, the movie - with little Rodrigo Noya, wearing big eyeglasses, in the title role - is too sweet for its own good, even as some of its characters do things that aren't terribly sweet at all.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Lacks the gimmicky hook that made "Run Lola Run" an arthouse hit, but it doesn't lack for ideas, nor for images that will sweep you up in their boldness and have the resonance of dreams.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Far-fetched and utterly humorless, with a literally tacked-on conclusion (yes, more text on the screen), the only thing that's surprising about Unbreakable is how lame it is.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
A crazed symphony of the supernatural. The elements don't hang together, but Kasdan delivers real scares, and real hoots, in the midst of the mayhem and madness.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Whether or not Ainouz's stylish directorial debut gets to the "real" Madame Satã is beside the point, but as a celebration of a figure who fashioned his own identity from pieces of pop culture and street poetry, from song and fashion and fury, it's memorable.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
A thinker and an educator, Zinn has led a life of commitment and compassion, and the film offers a loving tribute.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
A loving, dopey documentary about the bird man of a place with a view of Alcatraz.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Does what the best movies can do: take viewers to what might be unfamiliar places, into a culture with unique customs and traditions, and show, through drama and comedy, how the fundamental truths of the human experience need no translation.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Lee transforms a generic cops-crooks-and-hostages scenario into a smart, sharp heist movie by the sheer force of his love for, and knowledge of, the city where he lives.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
It's simplistic and reactionary and designed to get hearts pumping but not minds thinking.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
There's more voyeurism going on here, and less insight into a certain culture (the young and the wasted), than the filmmakers would probably admit to, but the performances are scarily real, and the outcome, well, is just scary.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
The film's intimations of bisexual romance have a certain innate drama that no amount of bad acting or cornball rugby matches can completely erase.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Death Sentence's message - that vengeance is ultimately futile, spinning out a vicious circle of rage and hate - may be commendable, but there's nothing noteworthy about the way Wan, Bacon and their troops go about delivering it.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Crash fools around with chronology in a Tarantinoesque way that brings its story full circle. You could argue that as events, and people, merge, Haggis' spiky screenplay (cowritten with Bobby Moresco) gets to be, quite simply, too much.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Tony Takitani, fablelike and beautiful, requires a certain amount of patience, but its small, peculiar charms work their way into your soul.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
Owen is all right as the harried husband whose relationship at home has turned frosty, but the essential heat between him and Aniston is missing. The actress succeeds in shedding her "Friends" persona, but there's something missing here, especially as things get knottier.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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- Steven Rea
A quiet, loopy gem, Duck Season is a goofball celebration of old friends, new beginnings, adolescent freedom, and baked goods laced with a little something extra.- Philadelphia Inquirer
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