Vincent Canby
Select another critic »For 925 reviews, this critic has graded:
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43% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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54% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 4.9 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Vincent Canby's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 61 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Victor Victoria | |
| Lowest review score: | Revolution | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 405 out of 925
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Mixed: 405 out of 925
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Negative: 115 out of 925
925
movie
reviews
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- Vincent Canby
A suspense melodrama made by people whose talent for filmmaking and knowledge of international affairs would both fit comfortably into the left nostril of a small bee.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
An absurd, especially cheerless movie about child-sacrificing devil-worshippers who've slipped out of Africa and, via East Harlem, have come down into midtown Manhattan to infiltrate the ranks of the white establishment. In addition to everything else that's wrong, The Believers is more than a little bit racist.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
It's very easy to make it sound funnier than it ever is. Like ''Caddyshack'' and ''National Lampoon's Vacation,'' which Mr. Ramis also directed, and like ''Animal House'' and ''Ghostbusters,'' which he also wrote in part, Club Paradise is full of funny ideas that are never adequately developed. The best it can offer are successful one-liners....The movie is painless, and everybody associated with it is good company, but considering the obvious effort and the expense that went into it, the result should have been much, much better.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Nothing in Death Hunt makes a great deal of sense, though the scenery is rugged and the snowscapes beautiful.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
A Kiss Before Dying is not Crime and Punishment. It is pop movie making to be enjoyed without guilt.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
The Day of the Dolphin is not a movie with much personality of its own.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Exorcist II begins by looking foolish and slowly becomes a straightfaced film of the absurd.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
The scenery is pretty but the movie never makes one wish to be in it. Mr. Russell, a good, reliable actor, prompts a few smiles as the raffish, impossibly self-assured sailor who is always half tight. Mr. Short and Ms. Place also are attractive in spite of the dim material.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
To make a long story short, the film ends on a note that equally serves Great Wishing Star, the Care Bears, free enterprise and redemption. Very young kids may love this, but anybody over the age of 4 might find it too spooky.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
The screenplay is stitched together from variations on cliches used by or about the medical community.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
A nonsensical, Hollywood-made, R-rated adventure-fantasy set in a primeval past about usurped kingdoms, erring knights, recently awakened ogres, distressed princesses and various hangers-on.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
It's big, colorful, slightly vulgar, occasionally boring and full of talent not always used to its limits.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
The movie is based on characters that originally appeared in DC Comics, and means to be funnier than it ever is. It almost achieves its comic goal in one scene in which Swamp Thing and Heather Locklear, as Mr. Jourdan's innocent stepdaughter, attempt to consummate a love that cannot be. The film is otherwise composed entirely of special effects that alternate with whimsy.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
The movie fails mostly because it doesn't trust the audience to do any of the work. What the dialogue doesn't carefully explain or predict is explained or predicted by ominous music and special effects. The movie seems to be playing to itself.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
An American Tail looks good but the tale itself, as conceived by David Kirschner for the screenplay by Judy Freudberg and Tony Geiss, is witless if well-meaning. It's mostly bland, though every now and then it rises to express its own brand of kiddie-bigotry.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
The most offputting thing about such canny, tear-stained movies as The Champ is not their naïveté but their unholy sophistication. These movies don't mean to deal with the world as it really is, but as it should be, a place where there's no pile-up of emotional garbage too big that it can't be washed clean by a good cry.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Gotcha is about as devoid of personality as it's possible for a narrative movie to be.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Frank Pierson has written and directed a melodrama about three generations of gypsies that is all color and no substance.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Scrooged works in fits and starts. The mundane demands of the sentimental story keep interrupting what are, essentially, revue sketches, a few of which are hilarious.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
There's no shortage of talent in The Frisco Kid, but it's the wrong talent for the wrong material.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Spaced Invaders should have been funnier than it is. It rambles and has too many poorly defined characters. Also, because most of it takes place at night, it's not easy to tell what is going on sometimes, which will confuse the audience for which it is intended.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Taking Mr. Bright's excellent screenplay, Ms. Davis, whose background is in music videos, has made a remarkably rich melodrama with a strong narrative line and vivid characters. There's no waste space in this movie. Every second of its 97 minutes counts.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Mr. Frye's initial conceits are good ones, but the film's humor somehow gets sopped up by the spongy writing and direction. The characters are fuzzily realized. The dialogue is lame and the continuity so shaky that one entire subplot sinks in confusion.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
The film, written by John Elder and directed by Terence Fisher, is not without its intentional giggles. Compared with "Andy Warhol's Frankenstein," however, it is very straight and solemn, chock full of the old horror film values we don't see much of any more.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
The 1986 film all others will have to beat for sheer, unashamed, hilariously vulgar vaingloriousness.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Plausibility is not always important, but in a film as bereft of distinctive style and wit as Coma, it helps to believe in something. It can even help if one is offended. The aftereffect of Coma is a catlike yawn, benign and bored.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
As cheerful and painless as not going to the dentist.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
The problem is that Wisdom is aggressively boring, either because one can predict everything that's going to happen and exactly how it will look on the screen or because the concept of the film eventually seems even more confused than the title character.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
The structure of the movie is so loose that a narrator (Victor Jory) must be employed from time to time to explain the plot, as if it were a serial. Most surprising in a movie that obviously cost a good deal of money is the sloppy matching of exterior and studio photography with miniature work for special effects.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
It stars Chuck Norris in what his associates describe as ''the first comedy role in his action-packed career.'' How can they tell? Certainly not from the film, which is lightweight without being lighthearted.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
The revelation of Lipstick is another Hemingway, first name Mariel, Margaux's 14-year-old sister, who plays her sister in the film. As the chief witness to the events within the movie, and its ultimate victim, she gives an immensely moving, utterly unaffected performance that shows up everything else as a calculated swindle.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Like the novel, the movie means to be trendy but it is out of touch, though not exactly out of date. It has no recognizable center of interest, no anchor for our attention. It's a series of whoopee-cushion gags...More than anything else, The Hotel New Hampshire is exhausting.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Airport '77 looks less like the work of a director and writers than like a corporate decision.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Even when the material is feeble, as it is here, Mr. Dangerfield can sometimes be funny, a gravelly-voiced comic confusion of emotional insecurities laced with aggressive tendencies.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
When eventually, as it must, the story makes its demands on the characters, things slow down considerably. However, The Secret of My Success still leaves you with a good feeling about the idiocies of Big Business.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Mr. Rourke and Mr. Johnson handle their roles with more ease and humor than can be accommodated by a movie so stuffed with mindless fistfights, gunfights, helicopter chases, explosions and leaps from tall buildings.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
If Striking Distance were a book, it could be called a good read. Instead, it's a painless watch.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Heroes, co-starring Henry (The Fonz) Winkler and Sally (The Flying Nun) Field, brings to the motion-picture theater all of the magic of commercial television except canned laughter. Well, no truly rotten movie is perfect. Harrison Ford, who may be one of the most-seen movie actors of the day because of his role in Star Wars, is effective in a supporting role too small to make the picture worth seeing.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
A flaccid movie version of Jim Harrison's slightly less flaccid 1979 novella...The movie is soft and aimless. Revenge is the kind of film in which subsidiary characters and events are more interesting than anything the movie is supposed to be about. Even the brutality has no shock effect.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
There is a nonstop series of cheerfully low jokes that, as usual, are best when in very poor taste, about beautiful women, body functions and minorities, including homosexuals.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Miss Applegate is charming when the screenplay allows her to slow down. Working against her is the director, Stephen Herek, who pushes every gag so hard and fast that he seems to be keeping up with a laugh track only he can hear.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
It's full of film knowledge and is amazingly elaborate for a low-budget movie. The only problem is that it's not funny. One smiles at the inspiration of the jokes, though not at their execution.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
A good-natured lowbrow farce about two southern California garbage men who dream of opening their own surf shop.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
It is funny, unpretentious and fast-paced. It has a kind of comicbook appreciation for direct action and no time whatsoever for mysticism or for scenery for its own sake, though most of it was shot in Morocco and is fun to look at.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
All of the performances are terrible, but Joseph Porro's costume design is arresting. Mr. Van Damme and the other prisoner look as if they had been outfitted by an upscale outlet of a Banana Republic-type men's boutique.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
The movie makes no sense as either melodrama or metaphysics, so that its expensive special effects go up in smoke. Literally.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
The movie can't make up its mind whether it's a lighthearted comedy, set in what appears to be a posh New England-style prep school just outside Chicago, or a romantic drama about a teen-age boy who has a torrid affair with his roommate's mother. Either way it's pretty awful.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
The plot, which more or less prompts the gags without interfering with them, has something to do with a competition between the two police academies to see which one will survive a state-decreed budget cut. It's perfectly serviceable.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Class of 1999 is the paranoid student's dream movie, full of absurd battle scenes and failed attempts at dark humor.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
The January Man is well titled. It's a big-budget mainstream production that, in spite of its first-rate writer, director and cast, manages to fail in just about every department.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Every now and then a film comes along of such painstaking, overripe foolishness that it breaks through the garbage barrier to become one of those rare movies you rush to see for laughs. The clichés were everywhere, but always just slightly out of place and inappropriate.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
An earnest but clumsy tribute to the heroism of the American servicemen - mostly officers - who were captured and held prisoner by North Vietnam during the long, desperate undeclared war we now refer to simply as Vietnam.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Patrick Hasburgh, who makes his feature-film debut as the writer and director of Aspen Extreme, is a ski enthusiast and former instructor who still knows more about skiing than about movies. Even though it runs close to two hours, "Aspen Extreme" remains sort of stretched out and dramatically undeveloped.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
The Bad News Bears Go to Japan isn't the sort of bad movie that angers you. It's sad in the way of something that's been abandoned. It deserved better from the people involved.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Movies as clumsy, tasteless and self-righteous as this are worse than merely boring. By exploiting the tragedies of real people, some wildly fictionalized, The Voyage of the Damned attempts to turn them to profit without giving them any measure of the respect that is due.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Though special-effects experts in Japan and around the world have vastly improved their craft in the last 30 years, you wouldn't know it from this film.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
The surfing footage is fairly routine until the film's climax, a contest featuring some spectacular shots of surfers seen beneath the overhang of breaking waves. Otherwise, the surfing, writing, direction and performances are of a caliber to interest only undiscriminating adolescents.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Fire Birds has one director (David Green), two writers (Nick Thiel and Paul F. Edwards) and many laughs, all of them unintentional.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Within the limits and cliches of utterly predictable material, Mr. Coppola is still finally able to make this one from the heart.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Mr. Cruise goes through all this nonsense gamely, as if it were an initiation into a fraternity he wants very much to join.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
The must-miss movie of the summer. It's a witless retread of the earlier, far funnier road-movie collaborations of Mr. Needham and Mr. Reynolds.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
A big-screen blowup of the sort of "I love you, Pop" television play that littered the small screen 25 years ago.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Watching Loaded Weapon 1 is like playing Trivial Pursuit with experts. It's exhausting.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
How to Beat the High Cost of Living is a feeble house-fly of a comedy that unsuccessfully attempts to make fun of one of the more dismaying problems of our time: inflation.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
The combination of the graphic if meaningless title, Miss Blair and the incomparably funny Miss Stevens is almost irresistible. I should have resisted more. [05 Jun 1983, p.19]- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Body of Evidence ranks with the Edsel. It's not going anywhere. As a movie, it looks as if it wanted to be Basic Instinct, though it winds up more like Ilsa, She-Wolf of the SS.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Up the Academy sets out to offend almost everybody, including women, blacks, homosexuals, Arabs, the military, and so on, but they've all been more efficiently offended by other, better movies.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
It really isn't easy to make a movie as mind-bendingly bad as Best Defense. It takes hard work, a very great deal of money and people so talented that it matters when they fail with such utter lack of distinction.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
The screenplay is priceless (funny) and it's Mr. Reeve who sets the film's tone. Unfortunately, his unshadowed good looks, granite profile, bright naivete and eagerness to please - the qualities that made him such an ideal Superman - look absurd here.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Though in his last movie, Code of Silence, Mr. Norris, the karate champion-turned-movie actor, seemed on the verge of becoming a kind of benign Clint Eastwood character, he loses all credibility in this awful film.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Second Hand Hearts needs far more than a change of title to save it from oblivion. It needs a screenplay that doesn't treat its characters as if they were waste baskets to be filled with prose that any self-respecting writer would hide from his best friend.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
The highway is alive with the sound of a loud musical score, spectacular car crashes, pursuits, sudden breakdowns and jokes, practical and impractical. Some of it is ingenious, and all of it is breathless...The Cannonball Run is inoffensive and sometimes funny. Because there are only a limited number of variations that can be worked out on this same old highway race, don't bother to see it unless you're already hooked on the genre.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Gross, unfunny...In adapting it to the screen, Mr. De Palma and Michael Cristofer, who wrote the screenplay, have made a series of wrong decisions that have the effect of both softening the satire and making it seem more uncomfortably racist than the Wolfe original.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
TWENTIETH Century-Fox knew exactly what it was doing when it decided to open Modern Problems at theaters all over New York on Christmas Day, without advance screenings for the press. It's not that Modern Problems is so bad, though it is incredibly sloppy.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Madonna, left to her own devices and her own canny pace, is a very engaging comedian, and the screenplay, by Andrew Smith and Ken Finkleman, contains a lot of raffishly funny ideas that get lost in the busyness of the physical production.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
This one is a cut-rate Gremlins, about some small, nasty creatures brought forth by a young man dabbling in the occult.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
It's also not easy convincing the audience. The werewolf, when it finally comes onto the screen, looks less like a wolf than Smokey Bear with a terrible hangover.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Grizzly is not only clumsily plotted, photographed and edited, it is also downright rude when it insists on showing us the bear lopping off an arm or decapitating a horse. Because it's not good enough to earn the right to scare us, I would hope intelligent adults would avoid it and that parents would give it a personal X.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
As an actress (Derek) displays the sort of fausse naivete that is less erotic than perfunctorily calculated, in the manner of an old-fashioned, pre-porn-era stripteaser who might have started her act dressed like Heidi. This isn't Tarzan, the Ape Man. It's ''Little Bo Peep.''..The kind of movie that might seem funny when seen after several martinis. Viewed stone-sober, it's a movie of more squirms than screams.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
There are times when it appears that Solarbabies might be sending itself up. All of the time, it's an embarrassment.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
A romantic melodrama of a boringness to make your average tooth extraction seem preferable.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
As written by a gang of three totally confused writers and directed, without apparent style, by J. Lee Thompson, it's a mystery-horror movie with a fatal flaw - the denouement, in which a half-dozen grisly murders are explained, requires almost as much footage as the murders themselves.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Though the body count is high, all of the people killed are faceless or only minor characters, until the end. It's as if the movie were saying that lethal violence is acceptable (and fun) as long as the victims - like the victims of guided missiles and high-altitude bombing - remain anonymous. Any comedy that allows the mind to ponder high-altitude bombing is in deep trouble.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
It's also a mess, but one that's so giddily misguided that it's sometimes a good deal of fun for all of the wrong reasons...It's so bad that one suspects there must be a good story behind it.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Though the scenery can't be faulted, there's not a single funny or surprising moment in the movie. However, Blame It on Rio is not simply humorless. It also spreads gloom. It's one of those unfortunate projects that somehow suggests that everyone connected with the movie hated it and all of the other people involved.- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 28, 2017
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- Vincent Canby
William Lustig is the film's director, and Joe Spinell, who plays the maniac, also collaborated on the screenplay (with C.A. Rosenberg) and wrote the original story. He is terrible in all capacities, though his performance is more immediately objectionable. Watching him act like a psychopathic killer with a mommy-complex is like watching someone else throw up.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
The performances are terrible—thin and overwrought in the manner of actors trying to improvise without an idea in their heads.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
The movie, which Mr. Aldrich directed from a screenplay by Christopher Knopf, is cheap and nasty without having any redeeming vulgarity and absolutely no conviction of truth.- The New York Times
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- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
There's very little excitement, but quite a few laughs, all provided by the dialogue contributed by Bert I. Gordon, who wrote the screenplay and then produced and directed it.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
The premise, though, is the only satisfying thing about Looker, which Mr. Crichton has directed from his own original, stupifyingly nonsensical screenplay.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
An often comically inept, unsuccessfully vicious nonthriller about a beautiful young woman, her live-in lover and the crazy Peeping Tom who pursues the young woman neither wisely nor well.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
It's meant as a tiny bit of praise to say that the movie, which was made in southern California, looks as if it had been shot in Spain or Yugoslavia. It looks both big and cheap.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Blue City is full of unbelievable, ineptly staged action sequences. It's most offensive, however, for its dialogue, and for the frivolous way it debases the shock value of obscene words. If, in 10 years, we wind up with an utterly colorless language, movies like this will have been at least partly to blame.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
The title character in the new horror film titled Leprechaun is supposed to be fiendish but, though the movie's body count is respectable, he seems to be no more than dangerously cranky. That may be because the setting is rural North Dakota, which doesn't suit leprechauns, or because the screenplay and direction are amateurish, which doesn't suit films of any kind. [09 Jan 1993, p.17]- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
My mind wasn't simply wandering during the film - it was ricocheting between the screen and the exit sign.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
This one, set in a bucolic halfway house for disturbed children, is not entirely without Grand Guignol humor, but almost. It appears to have been paced by a metronome - a joke followed by a murder followed by a joke followed by a murder, until all but one of the featured played have been exterminated...It's worth recognizing only as an artifact of our culture.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Harlem Nights is not the disaster some people might have been expecting. Mr. Murphy has appeared in far worse films written and directed by people much more experienced.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
It's an unfunny horror-filmparody with a cast headed by Richard Benjamin, Paula Prentiss and Severn Darden , directed and written by Howard R. Cohen, who shouldn't be trusted to park the cars of such people, much less make a movie with them.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
A charmless feature-length joke about the world's most elaborate speed trap.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Cocktail, which opens today at the Cinema 2 and other theaters, is ''Saturday Night Fever'' without John Travolta, the Bee-Gees and dancing. It is an inane romantic drama that only a very young, very naive bartender could love. How it got that way is difficult to understand.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Even more foolish, more tacky and more self righteously inhumane than the 1974 melodrama off which it has been spun by the none-too-nimble fingers of Michael Winner, who directed the original film.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
ZAPPED! is a half-baked, rather retarded parody of Carrie and a number of other films that, using the awesome power of their ignorance, drove telekinesis into the ground.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
With Still Smokin', Cheech Marin and Tommy Chong are scraping the bottom of their barrel and finding only bits and pieces of the characters and comedy routines that were so successful in their earlier films, including ''Up in Smoke,'' ''Nice Dreams'' and ''Cheech and Chong's Next Movie.'' [7 May 1983, p.16]- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Serie Noire,' adapted by Mr. Corneau and Georges Perec from ''A Hell of a Woman'' by the late Jim Thompson, takes itself much too seriously, as is the way with humorless French adapters of American fiction of this sort.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
Though Nela's is a spiritual journey, Mr. Pintilie dramatizes it in the bitter ways of social satire. The movie has the tempo of cabaret theater. It is wildly grotesque, shocking and sometimes very funny. The details are vivid.- The New York Times
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- Vincent Canby
The narrative unfolds in a series of short, sometimes enigmatic scenes that have the effect of a series of simple declarative sentences. They describe the action without ever interpreting it. After a while, one realizes that there really isn't an awful lot to interpret.- The New York Times
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