St. Louis Post-Dispatch's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 1,847 reviews, this publication has graded:
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66% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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32% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 3.6 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 68
| Highest review score: | Asteroid City | |
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| Lowest review score: | The Divergent Series: Insurgent |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,361 out of 1847
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Mixed: 317 out of 1847
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Negative: 169 out of 1847
1847
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Joe Williams
Like black coffee that's flung in our face, The Killer Inside Me silences the question of whether it's good or bad. But for darn sure, it's strong.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 27, 2014
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Joe Williams
A film that aims for the stars and may have found one here on earth.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 24, 2014
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Joe Williams
If cranking out this kind of mediocre, head-scratching blarney is the only option available to Hollywood veterans like Reiner, we have some friendly advice: Open a haberdashery.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 24, 2014
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Joe Williams
Although Besson, the director of “La Femme Nikita” and the producer of “Taken,” indulges in some operatic violence, the film is more spacey than pacey.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 24, 2014
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Calvin Wilson
The rare film that will remain on your mind long after you’ve left the theater.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 24, 2014
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Joe Williams
Mainstream audiences will note that Hudson has never been better and that the tearjerking taps into something universal. For audiences seeking shelter from superhero carnage, Wish I Was Here is a lovely place to be.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 17, 2014
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Joe Williams
Without the kindling of character development, Planes: Fire and Rescue is no smoldering success, but if Disney’s flight plan is to share Pixar’s airspace, it’s getting warmer.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 17, 2014
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Reviewed by
Kevin C. Johnson
Like the first movie The Purge: Anarchy, is trash masking as social commentary, and its depiction of unrelenting, sanctioned violence can be hard to stomach.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 17, 2014
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Joe Williams
Directed by Steve James, whose “Hoop Dreams” Ebert hailed as the best film of the 1990s, it’s the kind of documentary the dying man wanted — honest, humane and inclusive.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 10, 2014
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Calvin Wilson
Third Person doesn’t lack for ambition, and it’s nice to see Neeson in the kind of role that he excelled at before he morphed into an action star.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 10, 2014
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Joe Williams
In one of the most wickedly funny scenes in sci-fi history, Koba uses monkeyshines to bamboozle some gun-toting yahoos and scuttle the peace treaty.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 10, 2014
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Joe Williams
Doggedly indie but unpretentious, Begin Again is one of the best movies I’ve seen about the music industry and the ways it changes people whose paths diverge.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 2, 2014
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Joe Williams
McCarthy and first-time director Falcone must have assumed that tossing a drunk and a dunce into a Cadillac would negate the need for a motive or even a script.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 1, 2014
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Joe Williams
Chartered to provide both sides of every debate, CNN has positioned itself as the middle ground for discussions of current events. But without a knowledgeable teacher (or filmmaker) to lead such discussions into new territory, they devolve into noisy bull sessions.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 26, 2014
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Joe Williams
Sorry, partisans, but there’s nothing obvious about Obvious Child.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 26, 2014
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Joe Williams
Because the affable Wahlberg is making the sales pitch, you could kid yourself that this is just a high-tech vacuum cleaner, built to siphon loose change like popcorn. But our failure to understand the terrifying significance of the “Transformers” series is why we're in the age of extinction.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 26, 2014
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Joe Williams
For real balance, the debate needs fiercely leftist truth-tellers in tri-corner hats, calling themselves the Organic Chai Tea Party.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 19, 2014
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 19, 2014
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Reviewed by
Kevin C. Johnson
Every character from the original is here, navigating the dating jungle, but this time there’s no pushing of Steve Harvey’s book.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 19, 2014
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Joe Williams
The worst thing about this multifaceted failure is the two-time Oscar winner behind the camera. Where there ought to be a director, there’s nothing but an empty chair.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 19, 2014
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- Critic Score
Thankfully, all of the voice actors from the original return, including Kristen Wiig, Jonah Hill and Craig Ferguson, and keep lightening the mood.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 12, 2014
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Joe Williams
The sharp writing and tag-team antics lift 22 Jump Street to a high level.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 12, 2014
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Joe Williams
This movie is so tone-deaf it would only make sense in Vincent van Gogh’s missing ear.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 5, 2014
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Joe Williams
The movie looks like it was made for broadcast television, the place where words and pictures go to die.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 5, 2014
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Joe Williams
By design it’s monotonous, and with so much clunky hardware, Liman can’t generate the same pace he produced in the “Bourne” movies. Edge of Tomorrow has neither an edge nor a vision of tomorrow that matters today.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jun 5, 2014
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Joe Williams
Although Steadman’s artwork seems like sloppy pen-and-ink caricature, there’s a method to the madness.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 29, 2014
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Calvin Wilson
Cold in July has all the qualifications of a midnight movie in the making.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 29, 2014
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Joe Williams
’Round these parts, when a movie promises a million laughs but only delivers a dozen chuckles, that’s a hanging offense.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 29, 2014
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Joe Williams
The Immigrant is not unlike a Prohibition-era “Taxi Driver,” with Cotillard as the apprentice hooker, Phoenix as the sweet-talking pimp and Jeremy Renner (playing the theater’s magician, Orlando) as the would-be savior.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 22, 2014
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Joe Williams
Best of all is Favreau. Instead of mass-producing another superhero epic, he has given the overfed public a dish of right-sized comfort food.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 22, 2014
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Joe Williams
As usual for the comedies he produces, Sandler keeps pooping in the sandbox, and he expects the audience to give him a cookie for it. It’s a shame that he forces Barrymore to get soiled too.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 22, 2014
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Joe Williams
How could you not marvel at a movie that includes a revisionist explanation of the JFK assassination, a football stadium floating over the White House and the sight of Richard Nixon firing a .45 at a villain in a Christ-figure pose?- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 22, 2014
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Joe Williams
You can tell by some loose threads and hurried workmanship that God’s Pocket is a knock-off, but it’s so stuffed with value, it’s an offer you can’t refuse.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 15, 2014
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Joe Williams
As predictable as a 3-and-0 pitch down the middle, but when it’s baseball season, who wants dark clouds?- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 15, 2014
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Joe Williams
The latest Hollywood version of the Godzilla story is neither fun nor fearsome. It’s an empty spectacle in which the humans are as meaningless as the monster.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 15, 2014
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Joe Williams
With stately surroundings and hissable villains, director Amma Assante imbues the finale with such dramatic resonance that Belle becomes a ringing proclamation of human dignity.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 15, 2014
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Joe Williams
Yet if you’re old enough to read this and you find yourself at a screening, try thinking about the munchkins who worked so hard on the psychedelic scenery.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 8, 2014
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Joe Williams
With a mad captain at the helm, this documentary version of Jodorowsky’s “Dune” is probably more entertaining than what Hollywood would have done to it, with a clearer message: Our lives are like sands though an hourglass, so dream the impossible dream.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 8, 2014
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Joe Williams
Fading Gigolo is like two different movies on an awkward blind date at a jazz club. While Allen charms us with a parody of “Broadway Danny Rose,” Turturro is off-key in his lounge-lizard riff on “The Piano.”- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 8, 2014
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Joe Williams
It’s a party where we want to stay, until we’re dragged out kicking and screaming.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 8, 2014
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Calvin Wilson
An enthralling lament for an era in which beauty is in danger of becoming extinct.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 1, 2014
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Joe Williams
Easy to watch but hard to pin down, like a creature with eight legs going in different directions.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted May 1, 2014
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Joe Williams
Colin Firth is an Academy Award winner, so perhaps his lack of chemistry with fellow honoree Nicole Kidman is a carefully laid clue that his middle-aged newlywed Eric Lomax is damaged goods. Yet to the drama’s detriment, Lomax is about as poisonous as a week-old crumpet.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 24, 2014
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Joe Williams
One part personal mystery and one part art-appreciation class.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 24, 2014
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Reviewed by
Kevin C. Johnson
This send-up of current horror movies is a go-for-broke hoot, a hot mess of a comedy that doesn’t have a lick of sense. And knowing that going in adds to the often knee-slapping laughs.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 18, 2014
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Joe Williams
The movie is best enjoyed as a minor-key operatic, not a coherent story. While Law bellows blasphemous poetry, his director orchestrates a noirish light show with a cockeyed rhythm.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 17, 2014
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Joe Williams
An ambitious movie, but ultimately there’s too much “artificial” and not enough “intelligence.”- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 17, 2014
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Joe Williams
Written, directed and acted by Hollywood pros, Heaven Is For Real is a polished little movie with a hopeful message, but when it literalizes the divine mysteries, it opens the door to a Doubting Thomas.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 15, 2014
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Joe Williams
The plot is murky, the acting is melodramatic and the movie is way too long, but the target audience will salivate over the inventively choreographed set-pieces.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 10, 2014
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Joe Williams
For better or worse, the whole exercise in lurid leg-pulling goes out with a bang.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 10, 2014
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Joe Williams
While Green is force-feeding us this hard-boiled hokum, he doesn’t distract us with many memorable images, as he did in his earliest films.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 10, 2014
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Joe Williams
This hand-drawn French import is fresh evidence that you don’t need computers and singing princesses to make a charming animated movie.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 10, 2014
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Kevin C. Johnson
The flashbacks, which get almost as much screen time as the present day story, are far more compelling.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 10, 2014
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Joe Williams
Draft Day isn’t quite a comedy, but it’s got a similar kind of flow that makes it as easily consumable as lite beer.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 10, 2014
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Joe Williams
The debut creation of director Ritesh Batra, it’s a lovely little film from a place where the little things linger.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 3, 2014
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Joe Williams
Presented as a stand-alone film, but without an explanation for the protagonist’s physical and emotional injuries, it’s a head-scratcher. As with Joe’s sexual compulsion, scratching can’t cure the itch.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 3, 2014
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Joe Williams
With his glorified Frisbee and good-guy smile, Evans is engaging, but “The Winter Soldier” might be stronger with a little less Captain and a little more America.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Apr 3, 2014
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Joe Williams
If we want a bigger picture, we’ll have to wait for God to green-light “Noah: The Next Generation.”- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Mar 27, 2014
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Joe Williams
This is an extremely gory flick, with autopsy scenes to complement Schwarzenegger’s usual shoot-first sensibilities. After 30 years, it’s pointless to complain about the collateral damage in his movies, but here Schwarzenegger is taking vigilante justice to dark new levels that can only be reached via plot holes big enough for a Hummer.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Mar 27, 2014
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Joe Williams
The way that Muppets Most Wanted grabs for the green is criminal.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Mar 21, 2014
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Joe Williams
After feeding on this sweet buffet, sated cinephiles will want to call the front desk to extend their stay.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Mar 20, 2014
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Joe Williams
Bad Words is often very funny, thanks to Bateman’s brick-wall malevolence and screenwriter Andrew Dodge’s inventively rude dialogue.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Mar 20, 2014
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Gail Pennington
What about those who haven’t read the book? Divergent, the movie, still offers a smart, spunky, sympathetic heroine, a hunky love interest and a sobering if rather obvious message about the value of being true to oneself rather than mindlessly conforming.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Mar 20, 2014
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Joe Williams
Periodically deviating from its fly-on-the-wall aesthetic, the film does a noticeably better job than the Joan Rivers movie of incorporating old footage and photos to underscore its subject’s importance.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Mar 13, 2014
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Joe Williams
What the movie crucially lacks is the clockwork complications that produce a payoff.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Mar 13, 2014
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Joe Williams
Jenison, who had never painted a thing in his life, does indeed produce a beautiful work, but we should never forget that Penn and Teller are professional bamboozlers, and their attempt to re-frame the definition of genius might be nothing but smoke and mirrors.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Mar 6, 2014
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Joe Williams
Typically lovely to look at, with big-eyed young people espousing high ideals amid natural splendor. But outside of their bubble, a prickly history looms, and Miyazaki’s dubious attitude toward the wartime role of his hero makes the movie a mixed blessing.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 27, 2014
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- Posted Feb 27, 2014
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Joe Williams
In Secret is so stifled, it makes “Les Misérables” look like “Amélie.”- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 20, 2014
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Kevin C. Johnson
The four leads are entirely engaging including the manic Hart.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 13, 2014
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 13, 2014
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Joe Williams
A faithful remake of RoboCop would be timely. Instead, the producers of this new version have retreated back to the lab, concocting a creaky hybrid of “Frankenstein” and “Call of Duty.”- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 12, 2014
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 6, 2014
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Joe Williams
It’s admirable, but Monuments Men just poses on a porous foundation like a statue.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Feb 6, 2014
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Joe Williams
Garcia’s performance, which won the best actress award at last year’s Berlin International Film Festival, is a marvel of self-effacing artistry.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jan 30, 2014
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Joe Williams
With Labor Day, director Jason Reitman turns a Nicholas Sparks scenario into an Alfred Hitchcock creep-show.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jan 30, 2014
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Joe Williams
Although it’s superficially grungy, this true story isn’t much more substantive than something that star Vanessa Hudgens might have made for the Disney Channel and considerably less shocking than her career gambit in “Spring Breakers.”- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jan 23, 2014
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Joe Williams
Kevin Hart hits the vicinity of humor with a few of his drive-by wisecracks, but the movie itself has nothing under the hood.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jan 16, 2014
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Joe Williams
This dead-on-arrival ’toon is some of the worst p.r. for rodents since bubonic plague hit medieval Europe.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jan 16, 2014
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Joe Williams
Her may be the most technologically astute movie since Stanley Kubrick’s “2001: a Space Odyssey.” And as the friendly ghost in the machine, Samantha is a more inviting companion for the great leap forward than HAL9000 could ever dream of being.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jan 9, 2014
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Joe Williams
For those who appreciate fiery dialogue delivered by fine actors, August: Osage County is heaven-sent.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jan 9, 2014
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Joe Williams
A good and necessary film, but like the man himself it’s not immune to scrutiny.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Dec 25, 2013
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Joe Williams
The most exhilarating film of the year is also the most exhausting.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Dec 25, 2013
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Joe Williams
Strange hybrid of science lesson and Saturday-morning cartoon.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Dec 19, 2013
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Calvin Wilson
What Inside Llewyn Davis is all about: the passion, and the pain, of being an artist.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Dec 19, 2013
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Joe Williams
As much as anything, the wildly entertaining ’70s flashback American Hustle is a triumph of style.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Dec 19, 2013
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Joe Williams
OK, the musical ode to Doby the shark elicits a grin, but the low-percentage script is loaded with buckshot, not harpoons, and Anchorman 2 ends up sinking.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Dec 17, 2013
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Joe Williams
On a moral-justice level, we’d like to see this worm squirm a little more over his treatment of ex-colleagues before we let him off the hook to say that everyone else was cheating too.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Dec 12, 2013
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Joe Williams
We were promised desolation, but “The Hobbit” just keeps dragon on.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Dec 12, 2013
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- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Dec 5, 2013
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Joe Williams
A co-star deserving special mention is Nebraska itself, which Payne films in black-and-white to mirror the austerity of life on the de-populated prairie. These corners of the Cornhusker State are as empty as the promise of a sweepstakes prize. In this land of ghosts, one old pioneer tries to grab his stake before he becomes another windblown husk.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Nov 27, 2013
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Joe Williams
For all its professionalism, I found it as cold as the ice rink at Rockefeller Center.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Nov 27, 2013
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Kevin C. Johnson
Count Black Nativity as a more noble than notable effort.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Nov 26, 2013
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Joe Williams
It requires a mild suspension of disbelief to accept that slacker David would suddenly intervene in so many lives, pretending to be a good Samaritan.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Nov 21, 2013
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Joe Williams
The ingredients are in place for a potent finale, but “Catching Fire” is watered down.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Nov 21, 2013
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Kevin C. Johnson
A full plate of tear-jerking drama is served here. And it’s even tastier than the first time around.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Nov 14, 2013
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Calvin Wilson
At once a fascinating character study and a scathing indictment of the role of the medical-pharmaceutical complex in exacerbating the AIDS crisis, the fact-based Dallas Buyers Club is one of the best films of the year.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Nov 14, 2013
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Joe Williams
I’m pretty sure it would still be one of the best films of the year if the explicit lesbian sex scenes were censored, but it wouldn’t earn a penny in Peoria.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Nov 7, 2013
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Joe Williams
This very male and methodical movie is like the anti-“Gravity,” as the un-moored hero is quietly in control of his options and at peace with his possible failure.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Nov 7, 2013
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