Chicago Sun-Times' Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 8,156 reviews, this publication has graded:
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73% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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25% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 6.1 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 71
| Highest review score: | Falling from Grace | |
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| Lowest review score: | Jupiter Ascending |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 6,085 out of 8156
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Mixed: 1,243 out of 8156
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Negative: 828 out of 8156
8156
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Richard Roeper
As a record of a kind of everyday Parisian life, the film is superb. We think of the cafes of Paris as hotbeds of fiery philosophical debate, but more often, I imagine, they are just like this: people talking, flirting, posing, drinking, smoking, telling the truth and lying, while waiting to see if real life will ever begin.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
It's a crazed grabbag of a movie that does everything to keep us laughing except hit us over the head with a rubber chicken. Mostly, it succeeds. It's an audience picture; it doesn't have a lot of classy polish and its structure is a total mess. But of course! What does that matter while Alex Karris is knocking a horse cold with a right cross to the jaw?- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
Axel Freed, as played by James Caan, is himself a totally convincing personality, and original. He doesn’t derive from other gambling movies or even from other roles he’s played.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
To see strong acting like this is exhilarating. In a time of flashy directors who slice and dice their films in a dizzy editing rhythm, it is important to remember that films can look and listen and attentively sympathize with their characters. Directors grow great by subtracting, not adding, and Eastwood does nothing for show, everything for effect.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
Coppola is a fascinating director. She sees, and we see exactly what she sees. There is little attempt here to observe a plot. All the attention is on the handful of characters, on Johnny.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 22, 2010
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- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
Francois Girard’s “Thirty Two Short Films about Glenn Gould” brilliantly breaks with tradition and gives us a movie that actually inspires us to think about what it was like to be this man.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
This is clearly one of the best of the year's films. Every time an animated film is successful, you have to read all over again about how animation isn't "just for children" but "for the whole family," and "even for adults going on their own." No kidding!- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
The film is visually masterful. It's in black and white, of course.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
The brilliance of the film comes more from Polanski's direction, and from a series of genuinely inspired performances, than from the original story.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
Here is the most passionate and tender love story in many years, so touching because it is not about a story, not about stars, not about a plot, not about sex, not about nudity, but about LOVE itself.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
The movie is carefully modulated to draw us deeper and deeper into the situation, and uses no contrived plot devices to superimpose plot jolts on what is, after all, a story involving four civilized people who are only trying, each in a different way, to find happiness.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
Once again, [Cameron] has silenced the doubters by simply delivering an extraordinary film. There is still at least one man in Hollywood who knows how to spend $250 million, or was it $300 million, wisely.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
In the world of this film, conventional piety is overturned and we see into the soul of a human monster.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
There is a word to describe Ponyo, and that word is magical. This poetic, visually breathtaking work by the greatest of all animators has such deep charm that adults and children will both be touched.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Richard Roeper
It’s impossible to fathom how writer-director Adam McKay has turned this material into one of the funniest and yet most sobering, not to mention one of the most entertaining movies of 2015.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 10, 2015
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
The word genius is easily used and has been cheapened, but when it is used to describe Walt Disney, reflect that he conceived of this film, in all of its length, revolutionary style and invention, when there was no other like it--and that to one degree or another, every animated feature made since owes it something.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
Kore-eda, with this film and the 1997 masterpiece "Maborosi," has earned the right to be considered with Kurosawa, Bergman and other great humanists of the cinema. His films embrace the mystery of life, and encourage us to think about why we are here, and what makes us truly happy.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
Brokeback Mountain has been described as "a gay cowboy movie," which is a cruel simplification. It is the story of a time and place where two men are forced to deny the only great passion either one will ever feel. Their tragedy is universal.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
One reason for the fascination of Woody Allen's Match Point is that each and every character is rotten.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Richard Roeper
Anderson shoots and paces Phantom Thread almost like a 1950s mystery, and there ARE some dark elements of intrigue in the story — but this is not a Hitchcockian tale of lust and betrayal and murder. It’s a fascinating examination of an obsessive-compulsive, maddeningly self-centered, magnificently talented man .- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jan 9, 2018
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
The best approach is to begin with the characters, because the wonderful, sad, touching The Edge of Heaven is more about its characters than about its story- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
This is the kind of thriller Hitchcock was making in the 1940s, filled with macabre details, incongruous humor, and the desperation of a man convicted of a crime he didn't commit.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
One of the funniest, most intelligent, most original films.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Richard Roeper
As a fictional, big-budget, 3-D, epic interpretation of Moses’ journey, Exodus: Gods and Kings is spectacular.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 11, 2014
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
Wherever you live, when this film opens, it will be the best film in town.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
Medium Cool is finally so important, and absorbing because of the way Wexler weaves all these elements together. He has made an almost perfect example of the new movie. Because we are so aware this is a movie, It seems more relevant and real than the smooth fictional surface of, say, Midnight Cowboy.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
The acting and the best dialogue passages have an impact that has not dimmed; it is still possible to feel the power of the film and of Brando and Kazan, who changed American movie acting forever.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
It's gloriously absurd. This movie has holes in it big enough to drive the whole movie through. The laws of physics seem to be suspended here the same way as in a Road Runner cartoon.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Richard Roeper
In its own sloppy, raunchy, sophomoric, occasionally self-pleased and consistently energetic way, This Is the End is just about perfect at executing its mission, which is to poke fun at its stars, exhaust every R-rated possibility to get a laugh, and even sneak in a few insights into Hollywood, the celebrity culture and the nature of faith.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jun 11, 2013
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
More than ever it is clear that Francis Ford Coppola's Apocalypse Now is one of the great films of all time. It shames modern Hollywood's timidity. To watch it is to feel yourself lifted up to the heights where the cinema can take you, but so rarely does.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Richard Roeper
Moonlight is gorgeous and yet bleak, uplifting and yet sobering, exhilarating but also grounded in some unshakable realities.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Oct 27, 2016
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Roger Ebert
Rarely do movies affect us so deeply. The first time I saw Cries and Whispers, I found myself shrinking down in my seat, somehow trying to escape from the implications of Bergman’s story. The Exorcist also has that effect--but we’re not escaping from Friedkin’s implications, we’re shrinking back from the direct emotional experience he’s attacking us with. This movie doesn’t rest on the screen; it’s a frontal assault.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
Painful family issues are more likely to stay beneath the surface, known to everyone but not spoken of. Still Walking, a magnificent new film from Japan, is very wise about that, and very true.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
The movie heroes who affect me most are not extroverted. They don't strut, speechify and lead armies. They have no superpowers. They are ordinary people who are faced with a need and rise to the occasion. Ree Dolly is such a hero.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
Los Angeles always seems to be waiting for something. Permanence seems out of reach; some great apocalyptic event is on the horizon, and people view the future tentatively. Robert Altman's Short Cuts captures that uneasiness perfectly.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Richard Roeper
Based on a true story, this is a tribute to the strength of a matriarch who doesn’t have time to grieve or feel sorry for herself. She has children to love and protect.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jan 22, 2025
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Roger Ebert
Trucker sets out on a difficult and tricky path, and doesn't put a foot wrong.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
The directness of The Seventh Seal is its strength: This is an uncompromising film, regarding good and evil with the same simplicity and faith as its hero.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
The genius of Bob and Carol and Ted and Alice is that it understands the peculiar nature of the moral crisis for Americans in this age group, and understands that the way to consider it is in a comedy.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
This is a powerful film and a stark visual accomplishment, but no thanks to Gabita (Laura Vasiliu). The driving character is her roommate Otilia (Anamaria Marinca), who does all the heavy lifting.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
Doubt has exact and merciless writing, powerful performances and timeless relevance. It causes us to start thinking with the first shot, and we never stop. Think how rare that is in a film.- Chicago Sun-Times
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- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
To modern audiences, raised on films where emotion is conveyed by dialogue and action more than by faces, a film like The Passion of Joan of Arc is an unsettling experience--so intimate we fear we will discover more secrets than we desire.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
Movies about high school misfits are common; this is an uncommon one. Terri, so convincingly played by Jacob Wysocki, is smart, gentle and instinctively wise.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jul 20, 2011
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
The great performances in the movie are, of course, at its center. Gary Oldman plays Orton and Alfred Molina plays Halliwell, and these are two of the best performances of the year.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
A film like "Hoop Dreams" is what the movies are for. It takes us, shakes us, and make us think in new ways about the world around us. It gives us the impression of having touched life itself.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Richard Roeper
The Midnight Sky is a waking dream that keeps you in its grips.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 22, 2020
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Roger Ebert
This is a breathless, exciting story, heartbreaking and exhilarating at the same time.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
The movie is a satire that contains just enough realistic ballast to be teasingly plausible; like "Dr. Strangelove," it makes you laugh, and then it makes you wonder.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
Donald Sutherland is perfectly cast and quietly effective as a man who will not be turned aside, who does not wish misfortune upon himself or his family, but cannot ignore what has happened to the family of his friend.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
Have I mentioned A Serious Man is so rich and funny? This isn't a laugh-laugh movie, but a wince-wince movie. Those can be funny too.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
What makes Atlantic City sweet -- and that's the word for it -- is the gentleness with which Lou handles his last chance at amounting to something, and the wisdom with which Sally handles Lou.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
Against the overarching facts of his personal magnetism and the blind loyalty of his lieutenants, the movie observes the workings of the world within the bunker. All power flowed from Hitler. He was evil, mad, ill, but long after Hitler's war was lost he continued to wage it in fantasy.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Richard Roeper
Fraser becomes Charlie and infuses him with intelligence, pathos, humor and heart. It is one of the best performances of the year in one of the best movies of the year.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 19, 2022
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
Breathless remains a living movie that retains the power to surprise and involve us after all these years.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
Here is a small film to treasure, a loving, funny, understated portrait of a small Scottish town and its encounter with a giant oil company.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
Ron Howard's Parenthood is a delicate balancing act between comedy and truth, a movie that contains a lot of laughter and yet is more concerned with character than punch lines.- Chicago Sun-Times
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- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Richard Roeper
A great American novel has been turned into a great American film.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 23, 2018
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
With access to remarkable archival footage, old TV shows, home movies and the family photo album, Brown weaves together the story of the Seegers with testimony by admirers who represent his influence and legacy.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
The movie is astonishingly beautiful. The cinematography is by Bergman's longtime collaborator Sven Nykvist.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
This is one of the funniest movies ever made. To see it now is to understand that. To see it for the first time in 1968, when I did, was to witness audacity so liberating that not even "There's Something About Mary" rivals it.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Richard Roeper
Once in a great while I see a movie I know I’ll be listing as one of my all-time favorites for the rest of my days. So it is with this remarkable, unforgettable, elegant epic that is about one family — and millions of families. It’s a pinpoint-specific and yet universal story.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jul 17, 2014
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Roger Ebert
It is as assured and flawless a telling of sadness and joy as I have ever seen.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
A truly original American movie, a film like no other, a period of time spent in the company of the kinds of characters Saroyan and O'Neill would have understood, the kinds of people we try not to see, and yet might enjoy more than some of our more visible friends.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
It's pure cinema, spread over several genres. It's a caper movie, a gangster movie, a sex movie and a slapstick comedy.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
Soderbergh's story, from a screenplay by Stephen Gaghan, cuts between these characters so smoothly that even a fairly complex scenario remains clear and charged with tension.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
Do we need a fourth film? Yes, I think we do. If you only see one of them, this is the one to choose, because it has the benefit of hindsight.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jan 16, 2013
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Roger Ebert
Here is a good and joyous man who leads a life that is perfect for him, and how many people do we meet like that? This movie made me happy every moment I was watching it.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted May 19, 2011
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Roger Ebert
Some of the best moments in Downhill Racer are moments during which nothing special seems to be happening. They're moments devoted to capturing the angle of a glance, the curve of a smile, an embarrassed silence. Together they form a portrait of a man that is so complete, and so tragic, that "Downhill Racer" becomes the best movie ever made about sports -- without really being about sports at all.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
Very nice. I like Borat very much. I think it is, as everybody has been saying, the funniest movie in years.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Richard Roeper
This is one of the best and most important movies of the year.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 5, 2019
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Roger Ebert
Anyone who could read Munro’s original story and think they could make a film of it, and then make a great film, deserves a certain awe.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Richard Roeper
Directors LeBrecht and Newnham do a nimble job of threading the stories of a number of campers into a compelling narrative, deftly moving back and forth from the newsreel-style footage from the 1970s and the interviews and life updates on the campers many decades later.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Mar 26, 2020
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Richard Roeper
I’m not prepared to instantly label Avengers: Endgame as the best of the 23 Marvel Universe movies to date, but it’s a serious contender for the crown and it’s the undisputed champion when it comes to emotional punch.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Apr 23, 2019
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Roger Ebert
After seeing Awakenings, I read it, to know more about what happened in that Bronx hospital. What both the movie and the book convey is the immense courage of the patients and the profound experience of their doctors, as in a small way they reexperienced what it means to be born, to open your eyes and discover to your astonishment that "you" are alive.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
An extraordinary thriller... The film centers on two remarkable performances, by Gwyneth Paltrow and Hope Davis.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Richard Roeper
Miles Teller gives the performance of his career as the indefatigable Vinny “The Pazmanian Devil” Pazienza, and writer-director Ben Younger delivers one of the best boxing movies of the decade in Bleed for This.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Nov 17, 2016
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Roger Ebert
Crowe brings the character to life by sidestepping sensationalism and building with small behavioral details.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
All of these moments unfold in a film of astonishing maturity and confidence; Eve's Bayou, one of the very best films of the year, is the debut of its writer and director, Kasi Lemmons.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
No actor is more aware of his own instruments, and Eastwood demonstrates that in Pale Rider, a film he dominates so completely that only later do we realize how little we really saw of him.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
Lohman in particular is effective; I learn to my astonishment that she's 24, but here she plays a 15-year-old with all the tentative love and sudden vulnerability that the role requires, when your dad is a whacko confidence man.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
Certainly it is Lugosi's performance, and the cinematography of Karl Freund, that make Tod Browning's film such an influential Hollywood picture.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
To look at Bringing Out the Dead --to look, indeed, at almost any Scorsese film--is to be reminded that film can touch us urgently and deeply.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
As sheer moviemaking, it is skilled and knowing, and deserves the highest praaise you can give a horror film: It works.- Chicago Sun-Times
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- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
The Sacrifice is not the sort of movie most people will choose to see, but those with the imagination to risk it may find it rewarding.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
Romance & Cigarettes is the real thing, a film that breaks out of Hollywood jail with audacious originality, startling sexuality, heartfelt emotions, and an anarchic liberty. The actors toss their heads and run their mouths like prisoners let loose to race free.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
Charlie Chaplin was a perfectionist in his films and a calamity in his private life. These two traits clashed as he was making The Circus, one of his funniest films and certainly the most troubled.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Lore belongs in the inspiration-and-control camp. It makes dizzying flourishes out of moments that would pass as filler in other films.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Feb 13, 2013
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Roger Ebert
The film is astonishing in the amount of material it contains. It isn't thin or superficial; there is an abundance of observation and invention here.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
A sports documentary as gripping, in a different way, as "Hoop Dreams."- Chicago Sun-Times
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The wonder of the experience is helped by the corny evocation of the whole misty Irish countryside, in which the blarney and the blather seem believable. [08 Aug 1993, p.5]- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
Talk Radio is based on a play Bogosian wrote and starred in, and it was the right decision to star him in the movie, too, instead of some famous film actor. He feels this material from the inside out, and makes the character convincing. That’s especially true during a virtuoso, unsettling closing monologue, in which we think the camera is circling Bogosian - until we realize the camera and the actor are still, and the backgrounds are circling.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
The kind of film I instinctively respond to. Leave logic at the door. Do not expect subdued taste and restraint, but instead a kind of operatic ecstasy.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
Transcends its origins and becomes one of a kind. It's glorious, unashamed escapism and surprisingly touching at the same time.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
On the surface, Lucas has made a film that seems almost artless; his teenagers cruise Main Street and stop at Mel’s Drive-In and listen to Wolfman Jack on the radio and neck and lay rubber and almost convince themselves their moment will last forever. But the film’s buried structure shows an innocence in the process of being lost, and as its symbol Lucas provides the elusive blonde in the white Thunderbird -- the vision of beauty always glimpsed at the next intersection, the end of the next street.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
A great visionary achievement, a film so original and exciting, it stirred my imagination like "Metropolis" and "2001: A Space Odyssey."- Chicago Sun-Times
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Richard Roeper
The Counselor achieves the almost unheard-of daily double of giving us the most outrageous sex scene of the year AND the most unforgettably brutal murder of the year. This is a badass journey from start to finish.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Oct 23, 2013
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