For 6,436 reviews, this publication has graded:
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60% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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37% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 0.4 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 62
| Highest review score: |
Critic Score
100
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| Lowest review score: |
Critic Score
0
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Score distribution:
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Positive: 3,409 out of 6436
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Mixed: 2,267 out of 6436
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Negative: 760 out of 6436
6,436
movie reviews
- By critic score
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
This is a performance, and a film, to cherish for this year and always. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
There's barely any on-field footage in The Damned United. What we get instead is fine acting and directing, splendid dialogue and a story too outrageous to be made up. -
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Reviewed by
Betsy Sharkey 100
There are so many wonderfully unconventional things to like about this tiny independent film, Monaghan's earthy and uncompromising performance chief among them, its depth surprising you at every turn. -
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Reviewed by
Gary Goldstein 100
It's hard to believe, but Hal Holbrook, one of the stage and screen's enduring talents, has never had the solo lead in a feature film. That has been duly rectified with the actor's achingly memorable star performance in the superb That Evening Sun. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
The powerfully disturbing Red Riding trilogy will haunt you waking and sleeping, night and day. If you survive the watching of it, that is, which is no easy thing. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
The Ghost Writer is the kind of impeccable adult entertainment, able to alternate edge-of-your-seat episodes with bleakly comic moments, that Hitchcock used to specialize in and that Polanski himself realized so successfully in "Chinatown" and "Rosemary's Baby." -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
To borrow a marketing phrase from another, very different film, A Prophet really is the movie that reminds you why you love the movies. Especially movies like this one. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
Subversive, provocative and unexpected, Exit Through the Gift Shop delights in taking you by surprise, starting quietly but ending up in a hall of mirrors as unsettling as anything Lewis Carroll's Alice ever experienced. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
A tremendously exciting science-fiction thriller that's as disturbing as it sounds. This is a popular entertainment with a knockout punch so intense and unnerving it'll have you worrying if it's safe to close your eyes at night. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
People fall in love in every country, but nowhere is the experience put on film with the flawless style, empathy and emotion the French provide. Mademoiselle Chambon is the latest in that line of deeply moving romances, an exquisite chamber piece made with the kind of sensitivity and nuance that's become almost a lost art. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
Faultlessly acted by top Australian talent, including Guy Pearce, Ben Mendelsohn and Jacki Weaver, Animal Kingdom marries heightened emotionality with cool contemporary style. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
Lebanon is not just the name of an excellent new Israeli film, it signifies a continuing national obsession that shows no signs of going away. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
Smartly written by Aaron Sorkin, directed to within an inch of its life by David Fincher and anchored by a perfectly pitched performance by Jesse Eisenberg, The Social Network is a barn-burner of a tale that unfolds at a splendid clip. -
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Reviewed by
Betsy Sharkey 100
Hypnotic and sprawling five-hour-plus piece of cinematic genius. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
A thrilling adventure of the spirit. Austere yet provocative, this is not only a film about faith, it also has faith that the power generated by complex moral decisions can be as unstoppable as any runaway locomotive.- Posted Feb 24, 2011
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Reviewed by
Betsy Sharkey 100
Verbinski's greatest triumph is that he allowed the animation to free rather that confine him. There is indeed a new sheriff in town, with Rango destined to become a classic.- Posted Mar 3, 2011
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 100
In only his second feature, Frammartino has found a fresh and ravishingly poetic and beautiful way to explore the relationship between the spirit, man and nature.- Posted Apr 14, 2011
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
Epic and intimate, historical and contemporary, moving and thought-provoking, the impressive The Princess of Montpensier has something for all and sundry but especially for those who like to believe that films can be as boldly intelligent as they are entertaining.- Posted Apr 16, 2011
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
It's a privilege and a pleasure to be present in a sacred space where the human and the mystical effortlessly intertwine, and we are in Werner Herzog's debt for that great gift.- Posted Apr 28, 2011
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 100
Few filmmakers juxtapose cruelty and beauty as audaciously as Japan's Takashi Miike. A master director with great style and panache, Miike's latest, 13 Assassins, is a classic samurai movie, right up there among the finest in the genre.- Posted Apr 28, 2011
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
Daring in the ways only quiet, unhurried but finally haunting films have the courage to be. A character study of remarkable subtlety joined to a carefully worked-out plot that fearlessly explores big issues like beauty, truth and mortality, it marks the further emergence of Korean writer-director Lee Chang-dong.- Posted May 5, 2011
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 100
In its masterful use of evocative imagery and music, Road to Nowhere is flawless.- Posted Jun 16, 2011
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
Rejoice provides both a melodic education and a once-in-a-lifetime concert in one soul-stirring package.- Posted Jun 23, 2011
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
An extraordinarily moving examination of how the AIDS epidemic both devastated and transformed San Francisco's gay community, this clear-eyed and soulful documentary brings us inside the contagion in a way that is so intimate, so personal, you feel like you're hearing about these catastrophic events for the first time.- Posted Sep 15, 2011
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 100
Silent Souls is a marvel. Fedorchenko's expressive powers and his visual prowess are astonishing, and though the film's conclusion is abrupt and confounding, it feels right.- Posted Oct 10, 2011
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 100
Anubhav Sinha's exhilarating fantasy Ra.One is Bollywood at its best. It has energy, spectacle and humor, song and dance, but razzle-dazzle special effects and action stunts never overwhelm its story of enduring love that unfolds amid an intricate and inspired sci-fi odyssey.- Posted Oct 29, 2011
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Reviewed by
Betsy Sharkey 100
Firmly rooted in the filmmaker's esoteric, frustrating, provoking, demanding narrative style, the movie is also amazingly romantic - lush, ripe, rich, delicious.- Posted Nov 10, 2011
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
Harrowing and unflinching, a savage nightmare so consuming and claustrophobic you will want to leave but fear to go, City of Life and Death is a cinematic experience unlike any you've had before. It's a film strong enough to change your life, if you can bear to watch it at all.- Posted Nov 16, 2011
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
It's a domestic horror story that literally gets to us where we live, a disturbing tale told with uncompromising emotionality and great skill by filmmaker Lynne Ramsay.- Posted Dec 8, 2011
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
A Separation is totally foreign and achingly familiar. It's a thrilling domestic drama that offers acute insights into human motivations and behavior as well as a compelling look at what goes on behind a particular curtain that almost never gets raised.- Posted Dec 29, 2011
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
Set in an enchanting locale where the potential for magic is everywhere, this impeccable animated film puts its complete trust in the spirit of make-believe.- Posted Feb 16, 2012
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
Exceptionally well-made and completely fearless in its depiction of the widest range of romantic emotions, this is a film as fiercely committed to passion as its heroine, and that's saying a lot.- Posted Mar 22, 2012
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Critic Score 100
The script, by Oleg Negin and Zvyagintsev, uses spare dialogue to quietly devastating effect. Performances are superb across the board, framed in elegant widescreen compositions that simmer with violence.- Posted May 24, 2012
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
Oslo is an example of strong, confident filmmaking in which nothing is miscalculated or out of place. Anchored by a devastating performance by Anders Danielsen Lie, this portrait of existential despair is beautifully made without being self-conscious about its art.- Posted Jun 1, 2012
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Reviewed by
Betsy Sharkey 100
Director Benh Zeitlin and his co-writer Lucy Alibar, a playwright whose "Juicy and Delicious" was the inspiration, have created characters that are wondrously indelible, distinctive of voice and set them inside a story that will unleash a devastating hurricane, and a flood of emotions, before it is done.- Posted Jun 27, 2012
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
Potent, persuasive and hypnotic, The Dark Knight Rises has us at its mercy. A disturbing experience we live through as much as a film we watch, this dazzling conclusion to director Christopher Nolan's Batman trilogy is more than an exceptional superhero movie, it is masterful filmmaking by any standard.- Posted Jul 18, 2012
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
The Master takes some getting used to. This is a superbly crafted film that's at times intentionally opaque, as if its creator didn't want us to see all the way into its heart of darkness.- Posted Sep 14, 2012
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
Silver Linings Playbook is rich in life's complications. It will make you laugh, but don't expect it to fit in any snug genre pigeonhole. Dramatic, emotional, even heartbreaking, as well as wickedly funny, it has the gift of going its own way, a complete success from a singular talent.- Posted Nov 15, 2012
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Reviewed by
Betsy Sharkey 100
There are always moral crosscurrents in Lee's most provocative work, but so magical and mystical is this parable, it's as if the filmmaker has found the philosopher's stone.- Posted Nov 20, 2012
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
A documentary potent enough to alter how you see the world.- Posted Nov 26, 2012
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
Romantic but pitiless, fearlessly emotional as well as edgy, Rust and Bone is a powerhouse.- Posted Dec 6, 2012
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
Directed by Ra'anan Alexandrowicz and winner of the World Cinema Grand Jury Prize at Sundance, this is the second superb Israeli documentary (after "The Gatekeepers") to come to town in less than a month and deal fearlessly with an aspect of that country's legal and political system.- Posted Dec 13, 2012
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
A perfect storm of a motion picture, with an icy, immaculate director unexpectedly taking on deeply emotional subject matter.- Posted Dec 18, 2012
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
One reason Boal makes such a potent combination with Bigelow is that her directing style moves us right along. She is so good with both action and creating a convincing look and feel for the film that the time it takes to get up to speed with the complicated plot does not feel like a problem.- Posted Dec 18, 2012
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
It's one terrific film, as smart, thoughtful and emotionally involving as just about anything that's out there.- Posted Dec 21, 2012
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Reviewed by
Betsy Sharkey 100
In "Django," Tarantino is a man unchained, creating his most articulate, intriguing, provoking, appalling, hilarious, exhilarating, scathing and downright entertaining film yet.- Posted Dec 26, 2012
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 100
Unquestionalby it's an instant classic, probably the grisliest well-made movie ever. [26 May 1983]Posted Feb 8, 2013 -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
The Silence is an exemplary German-language thriller, a complex and disturbing examination of guilt, violence and psychological torment that chills us to the core not once but two times over.- Posted Mar 7, 2013
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
From Up on Poppy Hill is frankly stunning, as beautiful a hand-drawn animated feature as you are likely to see. It's a time-machine dream of a not-so-distant past, a sweet and honestly sentimental story that also represents a collaboration between the greatest of Japanese animators and his up-and-coming son.- Posted Mar 21, 2013
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Reviewed by
Robert Abele 100
[Filho's] mastery of pacing, theme and stylistic eccentricity throughout Neighboring Sounds is so assured as to be breathtaking. Don't miss it.- Posted Apr 4, 2013
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
Part science fiction scare movie, part offbeat romance, part completely unclassifiable, "Color" is also one-man filmmaking of a remarkable sort.- Posted Apr 11, 2013
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Reviewed by
Betsy Sharkey 100
Beyond the timelessness of the story itself, the film is beautifully shot and though early in Godardās career already showcased his ability to capture emotional intensity in the very way he frames the shots.- Posted Apr 24, 2013
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Reviewed by
Betsy Sharkey 100
One of the most creatively rich and emotionally rewarding movies to come along this year.- Posted Apr 25, 2013
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
An invigorating powerhouse of a personal documentary, adventurous and absolutely fascinating.- Posted May 16, 2013
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 100
Effortless and effervescent, Frances Ha is a small miracle of a movie, honest and funny with an aim that's true.- Posted May 16, 2013
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Reviewed by
Sheila Benson 90
A film of warmth, insight, humor and surprising originality… [It] isn't perfect, but when it's good, which is every moment John Cusack is on screen, it's a living joy. And when it's not-so-good--earthbound and not inventive enough--it s till almost single-handedly redeems the breed. [14 April 1989] -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Moves way past the predictable into the shocking. Indeed, the film is so expertly structured and paced that its denouement knocks you off your feet. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Offers a riveting depiction of the classic collision of fate and character, with geography in this instance playing a crucial role. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
There is a wonderful natural quality to Jeong's storytelling that is enhanced by cinematographer Young-hwan Choi's graceful camerawork and by a dynamic, contemporary score from M&F. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Amazing, rich in authentic period atmosphere and detail, an ever-changing cyclorama of a movie. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
This modest film has virtues that come out of nowhere. It takes familiar material and develops it with such tact and skill that we find ourselves moved and sort of amazed at the same time. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
Disco's exceptional acting ensemble is especially successful at capturing the brittle rituals of this specific group of genteel, well-spoken young people on the cusp of adulthood. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
A drama of extraordinary power and insight with dazzling performances from not only Spacey but also Danny DeVito (who may well be at his best ever) and from newcomer Peter Facinelli. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
A compelling entertainment because of Hill and co-writer David Giler's adroit cinematic storytelling skills and the powerful presence of Wesley Snipes and Ving Rhames, whose talent and intelligence are as impressive as their physiques. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Eerie, quietly compelling... a fresh and mesmerizing experience...such an unsettling experience you find yourself still taking it all in well after the lights have gone up. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
A triumph for all concerned, it is especially so for the multitalented Chereau. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Cho's weapons are a wildly imaginative sense of humor and the courage to be absolutely uninhibited. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Arlington Road belongs to that splendid Hollywood tradition of dealing with serious, timely issues in the form of a suspense thriller. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
For an American film it is a groundbreaker in exploring the realm of sexual fluidity, and it does so with wit, wisdom and in a completely entertaining fashion. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
It is such a grand, romantic entertainment that it sweeps the viewer along in its swiftly escalating suspense. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Hank is but the latest of Thornton's strikingly taciturn characters in a whole string of movies, but for Berry, Leticia represents a big-screen breakthrough. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
If ever there was a prime example of art bringing order out of chaos, it is Steven Rosenbaum's 7 Days in September. -- The result is a narrative at once personal, admirably coherent and, above all, heartening. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
An across-the-board delight featuring a spot-on ensemble cast that treats the most awkward and embarrassing moments in the rites of passage with affectionate hilarity. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
Like the best of personal, independent cinema -- it is both marvelously observed and completely individual. There is no film like this film, and that is something you don't hear every day. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Jackie Chan's best American picture to date, breathes fresh life into the virtually dormant comedy-western. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
In his knockout directorial debut writer Kevin Williamson taps into such universal memories with his shrewd and energetic dark comedy. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
A diabolically clever psychological suspense movie. -
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Reviewed by
Sheila Benson 90
Biting and vicious, a styptic pencil on the battered face of "civilized divorce." It's also thoughtful, laceratingly funny, and bravely true to its own black-and-blue comic vision. [8 Dec 1989] -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
A remarkably thoughtful drama, Lantana makes it clear not only how hard to come by any emotional comfort is in this life, but more important, why we can't give up on the struggle. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
The result is a kind of ultimate romantic film, joining an almost Jamesian sadness and discipline to that extraordinary visual sensibility. It's not the kind of thing you see every day. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
All of this romantic back and forth unfolds gradually and in charming ensemble style. As the characters think about seducing each other, as they inevitably complicate their lives without being able to help themselves, the film is simultaneously seducing us. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
This is the best class of poetic realism, the kind you can believe in without a trace of hesitation. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
A smart, lively and unpretentious exploitation picture...Consistently funny and clever. -
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Reviewed by
Sheila Benson 90
Working Girl is the sparkling success that it is because of the sheer irresistibility of Melanie Griffith. [21 Dec 1988, Calendar, p.6-1] -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
A witty and sophisticated sensibility brings individuality to the classic odd-couple comedy. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
It is a film of uncommon intelligence and rigor that illuminates a complex era, and the romance at its center is also one of exceptional passion and honesty. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
A luminous, piercing film from the Elizabeth Bowen novel, richly evokes a world of privilege on the verge of disintegration. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
In a sea of one-note symphonies, this touching feature is bleak and comic, heartbreaking and affirmative, romantic and tragic, gimlet-eyed and sympathetic, all at the same time. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Moll, in only his second feature, evokes a sense of foreboding, playing the routine against the unnerving, the humorous against the sinister, with a wit and deftness that might have impressed Hitchcock. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
There is a sophistication about affairs of the heart, about the wisdom and the risks of romantic involvement that is more than quintessentially French. It's irresistible as well. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
A beautiful film that flows with a luminous ease and assurance. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
This complex, sophisticated and increasingly suspenseful tale of love and betrayal, intrigue and redemption, is as elegant as its star and its settings. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
A mesmerizing, shimmering and amazingly successful adaptation of Time Regained. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Has the same kind of humor, charm and sensuality that made "Like Water for Chocolate" the most popular foreign-language film until "Life Is Beautiful" came along. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
For so brisk and entertaining a film, sharp in its observations but light in its touch, Cooking has unexpected substance and is a formidable accomplishment in that it brings dimension to its nearly 40 principal characters. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Not only is it Merchant's best directorial effort to date but also is among the finest films the Merchant Ivory company has ever made. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Favreau, who wrote "Swingers," has now directed and written the hilarious Made, which re-teams him with Vaughn. The two play off each other so well that they recall fond memories of Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Malena the film is as beautiful and seductive as its heroine, with its ravishing Lajos Koltai cinematography and sweepingly romantic Ennio Morricone score. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Complex, challenging and richly rewarding, it glows with the kind of wrenchingly selfless portrayals that are the hallmark of the Bergman classics. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
A hoot, a hilarious comedy that's smart and caring, yet sexy and ingenious enough that it just might stir up some of that elusive "Full Monty"-style box-office appeal. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
Wonderfully humanistic film. Yi Yi investigates the entire melody of life. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
A classic war film, at once elegiac and immediate, that takes you smack into the chaos of combat yet is marked by a detached perspective. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Im Kwon Taek's exquisite Chunhyang brings to the screen one of Korea's most cherished folk tales, a timeless romance in which the lovers are challenged by differences in class. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
Being able to hear this kind of playing is a special moment in time, one we don't want to end and one that we're privileged to experience. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
For all its nonstop energy and high spirits, Can't Hardly Wait allows its characters to emerge as fully dimensional individuals; they've been written with care and perception and played with equal aplomb by a roster of talented young actors. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
For fans of this kind of roots music, it was an event you would have given anything to attend. Down From the Mountain lets you do that and gives you terrific seats in the bargain. -
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Reviewed by
Manohla Dargis 90
A seamless model of form and content. (My only quibble is the poor quality of the digital video, which doesn't do justice to Johnson's work.) -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
It is a bravura work that attests to Pineyro's command of a style rich in texture and nuance and also of multilayered material. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Identifying herself with other minorities (whose members she mimics outrageously), Cho shatters racial and sexual stereotypes with merciless wit. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Corrente's gift for evoking the lives of blue-collar men that made his debut film, "Federal Hill," so appealing blends perfectly with the antic sensibility of the Farrellys. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
Because Bay of Angels reveals rather than moralizes, because its concerns are character and psychology, it's a potent showcase for Moreau's gifts. -
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Critic Score 90
Circuitry plugs into the underground world of raves. The scene, complete with drugs and its own culture, is blissfully examined in a documentary that speaks the language of its youthful generation. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
A mature, accomplished piece of work, both funny and deeply felt, personal cinema of the best kind...Levinson has made the memory film we always hoped he would. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Haneke illuminates beautifully the lives of his people with an eye for the revealing nuance and detail. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Above all else expresses the timeless impact of Lily Bart's plight. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
Besides Montand's splendid performance, The Wide Blue Road's other treat is seeing a film that's both old-fashioned enough to believe that social concerns can lead to satisfying drama and well-made enough to deliver on that belief. A film infused with that kind of passion never goes out of style. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
A splendid instance of a surrealist vision that serves to heighten the impact of genuine emotions experienced by believably real people. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
In directing The Monkey's Mask from Annie Kennedy's adaptation of Dorothy Porter's novel-in-poetry, Samantha Lang displays considerable style and assurance, with Porter and McGillis giving beautifully nuanced portrayals. -
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Critic Score 90
A lovely piece of movie making: precisely controlled but with a lived-in scruffiness. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
A warm and feisty documentary that is as much inquiry as it is tribute. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
With the ambitious and ominous The Devil's Backbone, Del Toro rises to a new level of accomplishment, adding history and politics to his distinctive blend. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
The sweeping, confounding conclusion therefore unfolds with a beauty and an ease that seem truly organic. The Way We Laughed has that feeling of being a work of art. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
In recent years, South Korean cinema has fully flowered, producing both uncompromising highly personal films and crisp, intelligent genre movies, with Shiri the most spectacular example of the latter to date. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
Has everything a period romance should have, including a score by Michael Nyman and passionate performances by stars Ralph Fiennes and Julianne Moore. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Remains a timeless, major work of a master. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Abounds in psychological suspense and plays like a mystery film, even though the mystery at hand may be purely one of the human heart. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Martel's sharp observations of the foibles of human nature are expressed perfectly in the telling images of cinematographer Hugo Colace and tight editing of Santiago Ricci. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
Carefully made, involving and old-fashioned, the superior work it's inspired gives it an impact that lingers even when the endgame is over. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
As the film, with its haunting score and inspired use of popular music, builds flawlessly to its resounding conclusion, it is accompanied by a pitch-dark humor that grows out of the sheer absurdity of the city's daily body count. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
An elegant study of devious mind games and emotional perversion, it makes the strangest of psychological dynamics plausible and involving. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
An extraordinarily intimate, deeply affecting and revelatory documentary on how pain and passion can come together in a creative artist. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
A heart-tugger made totally irresistible because of the combination of Kitano's wry, sly sense of humor and his rigorous detachment. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Lucie Aubrac has it all: a tender romance, acute suspense, terrific acting, and a camera style and and score that are beautiful yet understated...a major work, possessing breadth, depth and passion. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
An accomplished film that continually takes us beyond our first impressions of people and situations. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
A most-affecting experience, an impressive accomplishment in all its aspects. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
Not only is the film that good, it's also that wonderfully, inescapably Czech. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
Such a smart and savvy piece of work it encourages us to feel we're eavesdropping on history. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
Ulee's Gold stands out for its sureness, its quiet emotional force and writer-director Victor Nunez's ability to find and nurture the mystery and power in the events of an ordinary life. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
A handsomely mounted, graceful production that is well-played across the board. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
A confidently adroit thriller that captures a comprehensive sense of life in an edgy, multicultural and economically diverse Paris. The large cast couldn't be better, but the film belongs to Kiberlain. -
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Critic Score 90
While it's possible to view this movie like a short-story collection, putting check marks beside the selections one likes best, to do so would deny the pleasure of experiencing this beautifully crafted, intricately designed story the way it was intended, as an organic whole. [11 June 1999, Calendar, p.F-8] -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
The Cronenberg trademarks are here in full force, including an outrageous sexual suggestiveness in his bizarre special effects. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
Truly, there can be nothing as complex as the simplest human relationships, and nothing as satisfying as a film that understands that as this one does. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
Restrained yet powerful, devastating in its emotional effects. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Boldly structured, intensely focused and briskly paced, Alice and Martin has a tremendous emotional density that places the utmost demands upon its actors--and asks a lot of audiences, too. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Although there is real pain and suffering in It All Starts Today, it is too impassioned, too brisk and too embracing of life and human foibles to be depressing. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
Gathering its forces slowly, this careful, thoughtful film, quietly but deeply moving, is dramatic without seeming to be. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
This graceful and wise film moves to its denouement with subtlety and, at its end, strikes a note that seems just right for all that has gone before. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
A wild at heart, anarchic comedy that believes in living dangerously. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
A wholly unexpected film, as heady and surprising in its humor as in its emotional texture. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
While other films struggle for their effects, Brothers simply lives and breathes, thoroughly likable from beginning to end. -
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Critic Score 90
It's a nearly pitch-perfect melding of genres, influences and modes of expression--it's the first Mafia movie for the hip-hop age. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
It takes a director with exceptional talent, skill and experience to explore ambiguity in all aspects of human nature and behavior, and Oshima has created a film of resilient, downright tensile strength that ends on a satisfyingly ironic note. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
Intimate and human yet deeply ambitious, a powerhouse of a film made with a disturbing vision. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Time is truly on Apted's side because the passing of time not surprisingly brings a richer, deeper perspective with each new segment. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Spring Forward is so fully realized and so moving that you wish you could get away with merely saying: "Go see it for yourself." -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
Branagh has mastered the tricky high-wire act of simultaneously kidding the conventions he is being absolutely faithful to, allowing us to squeal with both fright and knowing laughter. His is a film lover's film [23 Aug 1991, Calendar, p.F1] -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
Egoyan understands how potent a deliberate pace can be, how effective it is in making already powerful material strong enough to tear at your heart. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
It's a film of high energy, punctuated by rock music and a dark wit, yet it is capable of profound reflection and tragic irony. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Carvalho's superb cinematography, Antonio Pinto's score and a dedicated cast and crew admirably sustain this poetic and uncompromising film. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
Though the politically incorrect language is tough enough to have earned Clerks an initial NC-17 rating (re-rated R on appeal), its exuberance gives it an alive and kicking feeling that is welcome and rare. [19 Oct 1994] -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Ethan Hawke, in his feature directorial debut, has brought Nicolette Burdette's play to the screen with fluid grace and a perfect blend of dreaminess and grit, expressed in camerawork that seems to float and in Jeff Tweedy's shimmering, gently insistent score. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
The look and feel of the film is entirely beguiling. It is deliberately not a period piece, heavy with dated styles and fads, but instead evokes a sense of timelessness. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
We may have seen it all before, but when it's done up like this, experiencing it all over again is a pleasure. [16 June 1999, Calendar, p.F-1] -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
Not just an especially subtle and thoughtful psychological drama, it's a provocative, even an unnerving one as well. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
Made under unique and wrenching circumstances, it gained poignancy and a kind of purity from its troubles, and an already affecting film ended up suffused with emotion. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
An exquisite performance by Charlotte Rampling, whose work as Lyubov Andreyevna Ranevskaya, the matriarch of the great estate the cherry orchard sits on, is the film's dazzling centerpiece. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
Graced with performers who bring a purity of emotion to their work, the film is always dramatically convincing. There is a fundamental air of truth about it, a sense that, horrific though things seem, this is how it must have been. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
The perfect summer tonic for mature audiences looking for sophisticated escape. It's filled with beautiful people in gorgeous, exotic locales. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
A stylish work from an accomplished, sophisticated filmmaker that bristles with intelligence and gleams with Scott's and Davis' multifaceted, astutely judged portrayals. -
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Reviewed by
Manohla Dargis 90
It's sexy, brainy and slightly nuts. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
It takes exceptional acting to enable a story like this to take hold, and Campion has gotten it here. [19 Nov 1993] -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
A wholly enveloping experience. Gentle, ravishingly beautiful and awash in everyday sensuality, it so intoxicates you with the elegance and refinement of its filmmaking that even noticing, let alone caring, whether it has a plot starts to seem beside the point. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
An excellent example of its genre, with Pennebaker capturing the excitement of what was a very special, emotion-charged occasion. -
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Reviewed by
Manohla Dargis 90
By far the most approachable of the director's recent films, with an emotional depth that's true to life and a streamlined narrative that for long stretches barely contains a word. -
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Reviewed by
Manohla Dargis 90
His film may be something of a beautiful lie, but what's true about Sollett's characters is that their dreams, their grace and their struggles are as real as it gets. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
It's a classic rags-to-riches-to-rage tale about the fatal nexus of celebrity and market forces, a story that is unexpectedly poignant even though it's told to an insistent punk rock beat. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
Lumumba is potent stuff. Complex, powerful, intensely dramatic. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
The Piano Teacher will surely be too strong for some audiences and is best left to those who like films that take big risks and get away with them. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Evil Dead 2: Dead by Dawn never lets up, continually introducing new characters and adding new thrills and chills right up to the last frame⦠A terrific trip, although admittedly not one that everybody would enjoy taking. [13 Mar 1987, Calendar, p.6-14] -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
Records an accident while it's happening, revealing a situation that makes you laugh again and again while weeping, metaphorically at least, for the sheer frustration of it all. -
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Reviewed by
Sheila Benson 90
It's just that when a movie is this close, with so much of the sports flavor (co-producer Thom Mount is co-owner of the real Durham Bulls), you like to see it perfect. [15 June 1988] -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
A provocative political thriller that is as troubling today as when it came out in 1970. Maybe more so. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
A sweeping romantic fable about love and mortality, targets an audience of girls in their early teens, but has been made with such skill and sensitivity that its appeal spans generations. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Demands the utmost concentration, for to look away from the screen for even a brief moment is to risk losing a plot line or a crucial bit of information, but its cumulative, transporting impact makes it worth the effort. Above all, it has an overwhelming sense of reality atypical of the American cinema. -
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Reviewed by
Manohla Dargis 90
Here, the message is the moviemaking and the unparalleled joy you get from a film that can carry you off so completely, making you forget about everything save for the beautiful lies in front of you. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Once again Chabrol's son Mathieu has composed a crucially evocative score, and Renato Berta's cinematography is gleaming. Merci Pour le Chocolat crackles with wit and elegance, humor and pathos. -
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas 90
Boldly distinctive in its depiction of individuals caught up in a veritable infernal machine designed solely to give pleasure to a monarch, Vatel is a timeless tale of love and sacrifice in a world as opulent as it is cruel. -
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan 90
The creators of the magnificent Balseros stayed involved with its subject, a group of Cuban boat people who made it to the United States, for a full seven years. If you put in that kind of time, you witness life happening in front of you in all its compelling, confounding drama. What could be better than that? -
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Reviewed by
Manohla Dargis 90
Never before has a fiction film so clearly and to such devastating effect laid out the calculation of the Nazi machinery of death and its irrationality. -