Film.com's Scores
- Movies
For 1,505 reviews, this publication has graded:
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49% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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48% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 4.6 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 60
| Highest review score: | Before Night Falls | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | Movie 43 |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 776 out of 1505
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Mixed: 461 out of 1505
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Negative: 268 out of 1505
1505
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Peter Brunette
It just doesn't work. Worse, it's downright offensive.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Robert Horton
A difficult time rising above the level of a reasonably nice TV-movie.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Tom Keogh
I would rather have been scraping gum off my shoe than sitting there another minute.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Ernest Hardy
Though the film is generally weak, treading very familiar ground, those dashes of insight and humor - along with Griffiths' performance - pull you into the film.- Film.com
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- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Sean Means
It's not easy to go 12 rounds against a cliche-ridden story like Price of Glory and remain standing. But somehow stars Jimmy Smits and Jon Seda, and first-time director Carlos Avila, manage to survive.- Film.com
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- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Gemma Files
Not quite good enough to leave more than a vaguely pleasant, vaguely disappointing aftertaste.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Ernest Hardy
For anyone who wants to see wildly inventive, peerless filmmaking that's oblivious to market-place formulas, Beau Travail is an absolute must-see.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Elizabeth Weitzman
(Cusack)'s genius, however, is in his continual ability to be the most likeable of everymen.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Tom Keogh
Don't be surprised if you exit Here On Earth feeling both moved and incredulous.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Elizabeth Weitzman
Crudup tends to take average parts in standard genre films and turn them into something special.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Henry Cabot Beck
Westerners may find the religious aspects wearying and a little fantastic. The Color of Paradise is both parable and fable, a retelling of Isaac and Abraham.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Ernest Hardy
Lost its chance to be anything but an endurance test for the viewer.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Robert Horton
It's a notch above average, but Whatever It Takes can't get too far above that notch.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Tom Keogh
As he did in "Run Lola Run," he has clearly patented an original combination of cinematic eye and ear candy and a profound, irresistible fascination for the role of chance in this world.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Sean Means
The gravity-defying harness maneuvers popularized in the U.S. with "The Matrix" -- ... look really cool, but seem out of place in a realistic gang-style action movie.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Gemma Files
Retains enough of Soderbergh's usual indie sensibility to make some sly but contentious points.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Robert Horton
Takes an easy target and turns it into something naggingly weird.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Sean Means
It's hard to root against Death when the people involved are never brought to life in the first place.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Robert Horton
For a good 40 minutes or so in the middle of this movie, De Palma is in his element.- Film.com
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- Film.com
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- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Henry Cabot Beck
A long portrait of someone who outstays his welcome fairly early on.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Tom Keogh
Let your children have their childhood while you have a rare, grown-up experience at the multi-plex for a change.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Peter Brunette
What makes the film so special is that while tickling your postmodern funnybone, it never forgets to make you care for its characters, in a welcome, and almost traditional way.- Film.com
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Gemma Files
An endlessly contrived exercise in self-referential "black comedy", can't help but strike me as no kind of triumph of anything over anything.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Robert Horton
A dismal film, a flop as both 21st-century romantic comedy and gay "Kramer vs. Kramer."- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Tom Keogh
Could have afforded to be a little loftier and still be quite funny. Instead, it's a waste.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Robert Horton
When it counts, this film is absolutely successful.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Ernest Hardy
The audience for this film would be those people who like their cinematic fare pre-digested and painfully familiar.- Film.com
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- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Ernest Hardy
For those seeking even a little adventurousness in their filmgoing experiences, the movie will wear thin very quickly.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Tom Keogh
Comes across as a deceptively streamlined comic-drama; an unnervingly violent, gritty film noir with a wink.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Henry Cabot Beck
Unlikely to draw the audience it deserves, but those who do see it will have a hard time shaking its gentle, ghostly echoes.- Film.com
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- Film.com
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- Critic Score
More whimsical than gloomy, for all the horrors it alludes to or depicts.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Robert Horton
This is basically a movie about one neurotic woman and her neurotic L.A. life. .- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Ernest Hardy
What director Aviva Kempner has done is shine a light into the past and recover a classic American hero, one with all the integrity, decency and largeness of spirit that we have been taught makes up the American character.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Tom Keogh
A dark comedy that squanders its potential and never quite, as they say, suspends disbelief.- Film.com
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- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Robert Horton
Mostly this film skims by on the surface, its conflict and climax visible from the opening five minutes.- Film.com
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- Film.com
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- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Ernest Hardy
Obvious in its observations, predictable in its conclusions, and a little dull in the telling.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Tom Keogh
Gun Shy can't rise on wobbly legs, and its real potential is lost for good.- Film.com
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- Film.com
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- Film.com
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- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Robert Horton
A Mexican film that reaches for a very weird and risky tone, and, I think, fails.- Film.com
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- Film.com
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- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Robert Horton
Floating this material slightly above the assembly-line level is the energetic cast and the efforts of writer-director Kris Isacsson.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Tom Keogh
Looks and moves like a film whose vital organs were yanked before shooting commenced.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
John Hartl
The film has smarts, but what really makes it fascinating is its huge heart...and the film soars because of that.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Sean Means
But it's the boy and the dog who make My Dog Skip resonate. The formula may be an old one, but it's still a good one.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Tom Keogh
Will eventually be remembered as a disposable farce, but one that leaves a happy memory.- Film.com
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- Film.com
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- Film.com
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- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Ernest Hardy
Morris seduces us into stepping into Leuchter's world of delusion and ego.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Tom Keogh
This is still Ron Shelton in good -- not great, but good -- form here, and the rewards are plentiful.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Ernest Hardy
An often gorgeous, dizzying assault of ideas and visual flourishes...it's just not very good.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Sean Means
For fans of science fiction...Galaxy Quest is a sweet, funny valentine to their obsessiveness.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Ernest Hardy
A dark film that raises more questions than it answers -- and it's meant to.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Tom Keogh
The kind of minor work that may very well speak greater volumes about (Stone's) thoughts and feelings right now than another masterpiece would.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Peter Brunette
Never more than a dull, paint-by-numbers, overly literal transcription of the book.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Elizabeth Weitzman
Regretfully, the beginning of this movie is as good as it ever gets.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Sean Means
You just watch one carefully constructed but emotionally vacant image piled up on another - sometimes with regard to an overall effect, but often just for the sake of style over substance.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
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Reviewed by
Peter Brunette
An excellent coming-of-age story that is, for once, and very happily, focussed on a teenage girl.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Ernest Hardy
Leigh and his solid cast make sure that inside jokes translate to a broad audience, and that their rendering of the back-stage drama is smart, engrossing and often very funny.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Tom Keogh
It is Foster who presents the biggest single problem, delivering a monochromatic performance that finds her character not much more than flinty and strained.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
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- Film.com
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- Film.com
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- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Tom Keogh
Captivating an audience from the get-go and drawing our attention and emotions ever deeper into the layered mysteries of a dreamy fable.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Peter Brunette
It's epic in every sense of the word, and like most of Chen's historical dramas, not easy to follow.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Ernest Hardy
What leaves you breathless, though, is the knockout acting by the cast.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
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- Critic Score
Its grimness is so unrelenting that I can only recommend it to filmgoers who need a movie to tell them that incest is bad.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Robert Horton
Part of the appeal of John Irving's writing is its sense of bounty, the way the world is offered up as a horn of plenty. The Cider House Rules movie, by contrast, feels narrowed down to small slices of experience.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Peter Brunette
Thoroughly artificial and overly schematic, to the point of caricature even, but often lively and witty nonetheless.- Film.com
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- Film.com
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Reviewed by
John Hartl
While writer-director Frank Darabont often fails to make King's story plausible, that's no fault of the actors. The performances are the movie's strong suit.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
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Reviewed by
Tom Keogh
Rob Schneider's stab at an "Ace Ventura"-like gamble for stardom.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Henry Cabot Beck
Using current hand-held camera technology to ape the political and esthetic sensibility of the 1960s.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Tom Keogh
It certainly has a place among the year's more accomplished productions.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Ernest Hardy
It is -- in mood, execution, and shameless sentimentality -- a Bette Midler movie with an Irish accent.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Robert Horton
It's swell when a film really does capture a book in some exactitude.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Elizabeth Weitzman
There's not a single moment when you forget it's Weaver; she always seems to be inhabiting this poor character's soul for her own purposes.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
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Reviewed by
Robert Horton
I'm not even sure the movie makes sense at times, yet Campion's offbeat rhythms and eye for startling images always made me happy to be looking at the screen.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Elizabeth Weitzman
But the movie is so confused about where it wants to go, it suffers from the same identity crisis as its protagonist.- Film.com
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Gemma Files
This is independent acting (and movie-making) at its best -- true, tight, anything but trite.- Film.com
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- Film.com
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Reviewed by
John Hartl
Full of sound and fury, signifying absolutely nothing, End of Days is the loudest and least of the year's end-of-the-world movies.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Robert Horton
Doesn't have the purity, the sense of discovery, of the first Toy Story, but it's still an utter delight. Its images and gags keep replaying themselves in the mind well after the film is over.- Film.com
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- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Tom Keogh
Puts the Bond film series (this one makes number 19)-- back on track by stressing the fundamentals and applying a bit of authentic drama for a change.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Robert Horton
It is thrilling to look at, and that's more than one can say for the majority of pictures out there.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Peter Brunette
Funny and wise, lively and contemplative, intriguingly postmodern and powerfully moving, all at the same time. It's not to be missed.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Ernest Hardy
Although Mansfield Park is an enjoyable film, you can't help but wish that it were as brave, feisty and unconventional as it keeps telling us its heroine is.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Tom Keogh
Levinson is at the top of his game with Liberty Heights, his instincts acutely cinematic, his purpose clear.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Henry Cabot Beck
Perhaps the most remarkable documentary project ever undertaken, and certainly the longest, is Michael Apted's Up series, which he began shooting for the BBC in 1962.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Elizabeth Weitzman
A surprisingly adult exploration of religion refracted, as always, through (Smith's) insistently pop-culture kaleidoscope.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Ernest Hardy
Egoyan and Hoskins fans will definitely want to see this film. Others will feel their fingernails grow as they watch it.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Robert Horton
This relationship might be strong enough to carry an observational novel, but the movie feels like it's missing something.- Film.com
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- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Peter Brunette
It's all overblown: too much music, too much cutting, too much zooming, too much computerized special effects, too much clanky symbolism that never works.- Film.com
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- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Robert Horton
There isn't a moment of wonder or poetry in its very long 69 minutes.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Tom Keogh
The true star of this film, funny and often breathtakingly lovely, Zellweger carries virtually every scene in which she appears -- which aren't nearly as plentiful as one might like.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Peter Brunette
This kind of film, in its various manifestations recurring through the decades, gives us confidence that cinema can ultimately get to the heart of things.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Robert Horton
Sometimes star power alone can keep you from walking out of a movie, and this is one of those times.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Henry Cabot Beck
Every bit as reverent as "Schindler's List," and no less successful.- Film.com
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Gemma Files
If the current flood of pre-millennial tension movies teaches us nothing else, it demonstrates how desperate we've all become to see whether we could make our peace in the time provided, if forced to by circumstances beyond our control.- Film.com
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- Film.com
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Reviewed by
John Hartl
The evidence Herzog serves up is impossible to dismiss.- Film.com
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- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Elizabeth Weitzman
It's really too bad the film remains so resolutely flimsy, because the novice cast is so clearly delighted to be putting on a show, their glee is contagious enough to carry us along -- for a while.- Film.com
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Gemma Files
A magic-realistic fable whose lows soon prove as infuriating as its highs are intoxicating.- Film.com
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- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Ernest Hardy
Like the melancholy remininces of an old relative who lived through an exciting, even harrowing time, but no longer possesses the mental faculties to really flesh out the tale they're spinning.- Film.com
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Ernest Hardy
Wants to be many things, but ends up being not much of anything.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Tom Keogh
Streep delivers another of her chameleon-like transformations in appearance, accent, and manner.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Tom Keogh
The effects never really get ahead of the characters or the script's layered personality.- Film.com
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Peter Brunette
Much more mythic and risk-taking than the usual Hollywood product.- Film.com
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Gemma Files
Surreal to the point of poeticism, amusing and tragic by turns.- Film.com
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Robert Horton
Does have its share of bona fide chuckles, but it falls shy of its possibilities.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Robert Horton
I haven't got the slightest idea whether these characters are meant as satirical targets or as a reasonably fair cross-section of Today's Youth.- Film.com
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Appears to be several different movies spliced together, with unfortunate results.- Film.com
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- Film.com
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- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Ernest Hardy
Show Me Love has the pulse of teen life down-pat, shaming its many sleek and glossy American counterparts at every turn.- Film.com
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- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Peter Brunette
Tries so hard to push all the pre-ordained buttons, and it's so anxious to be liked, nay, adored, that it left me sullen and uninvolved instead.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
John Hartl
Has its clunky and wince-worthy moments, it does explore some new territory, and there are moments when it's quite fresh and moving.- Film.com
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- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Tom Keogh
A wonderfully witty homage to the very king of disco movies -- "Saturday Night Fever."- Film.com
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- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Elizabeth Weitzman
Clear-eyed and open-hearted, The Straight Story (which is based on reality) tells a simple tale, and it does so with a rare, blessed simplicity.- Film.com
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Gemma Files
It always surprises, never bores. It's also just damn good, on every possible level -- so go see it. Now.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Tom Keogh
Dreadful suspense piece that has "Mystery Science Theater" appeal written all over it.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Tom Keogh
Few movies this year have been quite so rewarding with their 11th hour epiphanies.- Film.com
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- Film.com
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Reviewed by
John Hartl
Has a cute idea. Which it promptly runs into the ground.- Film.com
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- Film.com
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- Critic Score
This meeting of two giants of European cinema only briefly comes to life.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Tom Keogh
The film's light success really comes down to Shannon, though, the exuberant "SNL" star whose alter ego actually seems more real and sympathetic here than she does in brief TV skits.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Ernest Hardy
To watch Sevigny's Lana slowly thaw to Brandon is to see the transformative, heartbreaking power of romance in a way that Hollywood is rarely able to capture anymore.- Film.com
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- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Peter Brunette
What makes the film ultimately successful, though, is the outstanding comic talents that inhabit it, especially Zahn and Macy.- Film.com
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- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Gemma Files
It doesn't really hang together. And waaay too much style. Pity.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
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Reviewed by
Tom Keogh
Doesn't go the distance in either story or style, unwilling to liberate itself from real or presumed expectations about what it takes to sell a movie featuring teenagers.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Sean Means
A biting satire of military myopia and political double-dealing -- possibly the best wartime comedy since Robert Altman's "M*A*S*H."- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Robert Horton
A generally dumb movie with a smart, appealing, gutsy leading lady.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Henry Cabot Beck
It has every element necessary to be a classic, and it never comes anywhere near achieving that potential.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Peter Brunette
It's witty, entertaining, often funny as hell and even, at times, surprisingly wise about the human condition.- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Sean Means
The audience is ready for an unhappy ending -- and Hollywood should have the courage to provide it.- Film.com
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- Film.com
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Reviewed by
Tom Keogh
If McCulloch can draw this much humanity out of his actors, and do it in comedies with a deceptively easygoing poignancy, he's definitely a director to watch.- Film.com
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- Film.com
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