Philadelphia Inquirer's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 3,149 reviews, this publication has graded:
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70% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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27% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 5.7 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 67
| 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: 2,372 out of 3149
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Mixed: 516 out of 3149
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Negative: 261 out of 3149
3,149
movie reviews
- By critic score
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
To paraphrase one of the few memorable lines in the movie, "Even stink would say this stinks." -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
It may not be the worst war epic ever made - that probably would be "Battlefield Earth" -- but it's darn close to being an unqualified disaster of that magnitude. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
A flat-out cynical attempt to launch a new Lethal Weapon-like franchise. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
Has to be the sorriest excuse for a reprise since "Highlander — The Final Dimension." -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
A high-concept hostage drama of absolutely no value to anyone -- except maybe Bell Atlantic, whose titular street-corner pay phone is on screen for almost every agonizing frame. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
Duplex's tenant-from-hell scenario is as predictable as it is tedious -- a tinny, unsatisfying throwaway farce. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
As artistic achievements go, Mona Lisa Smile is strictly a paint-by-numbers affair. No shading. Little in the way of perspective. To call it one-dimensional would be an act of charity. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
A riotously awful biopic rife with stereotypes and boxing movie cliches, Against the Ropes represents -- among other things -- a woeful turn in its star's career. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
A slasher spoof of sorts, except that unlike the "Scream" pics, scant effort seems to have gone into the spoofing aspect of the story. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
What Never Die Alone is is a hackneyed tale of vengeance set in the 'hood, teeming with stock characters, slo-mo gunplay, and rampant misogyny. -
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 38
A dull, drab and pointless rehash, Walking Tall ironically manages to diminish the Rock's stature as both a leading man and an action star. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
Where the first pic breezed along with gags and gunplay, this forced follow-up is artificial to the hilt - fueled on a kind of trying-too-hard hilarity that makes even good actors look bad. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
Apart from Williams' presence, director Christopher Erskin's feature debut isn't worth the price of submission. It's not a road trip; it's a road trap. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
Envy makes a pretty entertaining three-minute trailer. If only they'd left it at that. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
Laughably predictable and lamentably unfunny, Laws of Attraction practically creaks from the effort exerted by its cast, straining to bring snap and panache to a hackneyed exercise. Sno Ball, anyone? -
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 38
Bobby Jones plays out much like a round of golf - slow, old-fashioned, tediously long, and lacking in drama. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
Plays like "Sixteen Candles" meets "Beetlejuice." Yet for all the film's frantic pace, this plot plods, even for 'tweens at whom this suburban-girls-take-Manhattan fantasy is obviously targeted. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
Instead of paying homage to these creepy creatures of bygone Hollywood, Sommers seems to be unwittingly lampooning them. The first few minutes of Van Helsing, shot in black and white, look like outtakes from Mel Brooks' gagfest "Young Frankenstein." -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
An overblown hodgepodge of volcano-baked desertscapes, Egyptoid-gone-baroque architecture, and gladiator-geared storm troopers with goofy headpieces, The Chronicles of Riddick bears no resemblance to the movie that spawned its namesake. -
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 38
Anyone with a sizable role in Dodgeball gets mired in the script's dissipated tone. Two of the climactic jokes involve "Happy Days" references. How tenuous is that? -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
Catwoman, which talks about the "duality" inside all women (wild vs. docile, rapacious vs. cuddly), does have its guilty pleasures. Most of these come courtesy of ice queen Stone. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
Looking for plausibility in a farce is like looking for a million dollars in a box of breakfast cereal, but elements of real life can make a comedy resonate instead of thud. Little Black Book does the latter. -
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 38
Anderson gets style points for the pyramid, though. The building - a combination of Aztec, Egyptian and Cambodian elements loaded with sophisticated gadgetry - totally rocks. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
This so-called comedy is a frayed string of anxious jokes about whether male bonding is manly or sissy. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
An unfortunate collision of earnest coming-of-age cliches and off-key acting, Evergreen almost, and certainly unintentionally, presents itself as parody. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
Essentially a series of walking character sketches. The storytelling is slack and lackluster, the cliches rampant. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
The kind of glossy, Hollywood-forged waste of time that would depress even the most happily lackadaisical retiree. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
Combines fingernails-on-blackboard audio agony with bamboo-under-fingernails physical torture. -
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Critic Score 38
Alas, this eternally sunny character's mantra, "I don't have a problem, I solve problems," makes for paltry dramatic tension. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
Hoffman's turn as the drag queen has its endearing and comically catty moments, but Flawless' utter phoniness subsumes all efforts at honest acting. -
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 38
While stylishly filmed and edited, Boogeyman is filled with every imaginable fright cliche... It's like a meal consisting entirely of airy hors d'oeuvres. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
How to count the ways that Be Cool isn't? For one thing, it looks terrible: grainy, ill-lit, edited with blunt, rusty shears. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
On the evidence of Palindromes, the most misanthropic, depressing, hopeless film in memory, I'd hazard that for Solondz, childhood is a problem without a solution. -
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 38
There is a funny movie to be made from the outrageous egos and excesses of rap music. Death of a Dynasty is not that movie. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
Monster-in-Law, where Bridezilla meets Godzilla, is a comedy so anemic, so toxic, that even Dracula wouldn't bite. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
There's nothing remotely fantastic about this Fantastic Four. -
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 38
If Stealth were a recruitment film for aircraft-carrier duty, one would be tempted to say, "Mission accomplished." As a feature film, it's a washout. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
Another high school vixen movie, this one with a potty mouth (the vixen) and pretensions of social commentary (the movie), Pretty Persuasion brings to mind a number of other titles, all better. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
Domino is less a movie than a hyperkinetic slide show - presented during a nuclear attack. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
This tale of a white mother's kid gone missing in a black New Jersey neighborhood - and the tensions and news media attention that ensue - is pretty much pure jive. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
It would seem that Allen and screenwriters John Quaintance and Jessica Bendinger couldn't decide between making a movie about the summer that 'tweens become teens or "Scenes From a Mal"l for the MTV set. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
Basic Instinct 2 is supposed to help Stone show it's possible for a woman to be sexy in her late 40s. But it's Rampling - who is 60 - who comes off as the more provocative and alluring. Stone's purring, snarling, bedroom kink is embarrassing. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
By the end of the film's two-hour stream of Be-Here-Now-isms, anyone left in the audience will be wanting to yell, "Put a sock in it!" to old Soc. -
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 38
OK, they squeezed one more lap out of this franchise. It's been a fun ride, but it's time to shut things down. If you get my drift. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
If the moral of Click is a stop-and-smell-the-roses bromide about how family comes first, the real message of this sappy, potty-mouthed seriocomedy is that a steady diet of Drakes and Hostesses will do you no good. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
"The Godfather" without Brando, "GoodFellas" without Scorsese, "The Sopranos" without Gandolfini - 10th & Wolf is all that, and less. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
Trapped between edgy art flick and exploitation psychothriller, The Quiet manages to be neither, and manages to be pretty awful in the bargain. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
A mix of "Alice in Wonderland" and William S. Burroughs, "Psycho" and the psychotic. It's pretty much a squirmy experience all around. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
If all you ask of a movie is that it have scenic stars and some scenery (here the Sierras of California substitute for the Rockies of Wyoming), then Flicka is adequate. Me, I expected some conflict, some resolution, and a horse that took me on a wild ride. This one really never gets out of the gate. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
Tobey Maguire, terribly miscast and squeaky (that voice - it belongs to a kid!). -
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Critic Score 38
A predictable, by-the-numbers TV-movie-sized affair which will break your heart - especially since it also contains brief flashes of horror greatness. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
Perfect Stranger is the Egg MacGuffin of whodunits, a cheesy affair that casts so many baited lures that they tangle each other and don't hook you. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
Art-directed within an inch of its life, Sleuth has the smirky gloss of a project that everyone involved with thinks is terribly good, and terribly clever. These people - Branagh, Pinter, Law and the usually great Caine (even in bad stuff) - are laboring under an epic misconception. Sleuth is just terrible. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
Guy Ritchie's Revolver premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival two years ago September. That's 26 months on a shelf somewhere, depriving moviegoers the thrill of jaw-droppingly awful Ray Liotta line readings, of bloody shoot-outs, bags of money, cutaways to frosty babes sucking on lollipops, and even a bit of violent anime. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
Like a grade-school version of an Indiana Jones adventure. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
Drawing comparisons to "The Wire" may be unfair, but taken on its own, this anemic vehicle for Ice Cube and Tracy Morgan to mug and jive through is just weak, weak stuff. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
An abhorrent cyberthriller starring a compelling Diane Lane. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
No doubt conceived as an underwater version of "National Treasure," Andy Tennant's film plays like a Three Stooges movie with scuba gear. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
Tedious, ludicrous and harmless glimpse of the dawn of civilization. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
Judah Friedlander and Lindsay Lohan are striking, respectively, as a Lennon paparazzo and a fan creeped out by Chapman. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
88 Minutes proves itself to be a maddeningly mediocre, ineptly manipulative "real-time" thriller. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
Maybe if there was something going with the dialogue - snappy Chandlerisms, say, or even just sentences that made sense - the fussy digital artifice of The Spirit wouldn't seem so, well, dispiriting. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
An embarassingly unfunny, stumblebum adaptation of Toby Young's memoir. -
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 38
At one point, Statham chases down a sports car while pedaling madly on a kids' bike. Pathétique! -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
A generic oven-stuffer that wants to be a stocking-stuffer, is a turkey, despite the foil wrapping and some artfully deployed tinsel. -
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 38
The acting is better than the script deserves and Lexi Alexander's cut-to-the-hearse direction lends the film considerable kick. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
Like moussed hair and inverted-pyramid shoulder pads, this sloppy, sloppy slapstick is an artifact from the 1980s. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
Entertainingly goofy for about 30 minutes. And then, for the next two hours-plus, it's agony. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
Screenwriters Nicole Eastman and the "Blonde" team of Karen McCullah Lutz and Kirsten Smith provide dialogue that has the propriety of the locker room. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
A stagy, arty, and uncompelling account of the Welsh writer and his menage-y relations. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
Another tale of Tinseltown drugs, sex and excess - has transferred itself to the screen with mind-boggling, laugh-inciting horribleness. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
The film quickly turns unintentionally, and unrelentingly, awkward. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
Ostensibly a comedy, and a feeble and innocuous one at that, Post Grad is one of those what-were-they-thinking? -
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 38
Faced with the script's weak humor and feeble stabs at irony, Schwartzman and Stiller turn it way up, setting the dial at "hammy." -
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 38
Surrogates, which borrows tone and content freely from "I, Robot," is all windup and no pitch. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
It doesn't help any that Wahlberg, looking perpetually dumbstruck, is among the clunkiest line-readers working in movies today. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
Struggles mightily to find its loony essence. But Bullock's apple-cheeked larkishness is all flailing limbs and bug-eyed reaction shots - there's no there there. Cooper's character is woefully underwritten, Church's is yet another vain anchorman-wannabe cartoon. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
The Wolfman feels like a film reedited and reworked so many times it has lost all narrative rhythm and suspense. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
Michael Lembeck directs with the subtlety of a sledgehammer, pounding every joke and cliche until they are flat, flat, flat. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
Tennant aims for a contemporary version of "The Thin Man," wedding the banter of sparring spouses with sleuth work. To say that he falls short of the mark is understatement. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
As an account of how for-profit big business literally rips a consumer's heart out, Repo Men is too graphic for me. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
A mercifully fleet and lamentably uninteresting adaptation of the DC Comic about a war-weary Confederate soldier. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
Parents in a masochistic mood can compound the headache-inducing experience by paying extra for the 3-D version. -
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- Posted Dec 25, 2010
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
Cage appears as a knight of the Crusades, slogging across the continents, slaying infidels and unbelievers and anyone else who gets in his way. There isn't a minute when it looks like he's having fun.- Posted Jan 11, 2011
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
What distinguishes The Dilemma in this genre is its resounding unfunnyness, its emotional dishonesty, and the general unlikability of its cast of characters.- Posted Jan 13, 2011
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
Hiring this sensitive fantasist (Gondry) to make the superhero saga The Green Hornet is like hiring satirist John Waters to make "Rambo." Hard to think of a more mystifying mismatch of filmmaker and material.- Posted Jan 13, 2011
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
Nostalgia for the '80s - big hair, Madonna, cocaine, big hair, Duran Duran, more cocaine - is all well and good. Unless it's practiced with the charmless ineptitude of Take Me Home Tonight.- Posted Mar 3, 2011
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
Beastly offers a thoroughly dopey reread of the "Beauty and the Beast" fairy tale.- Posted Mar 3, 2011
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
A case of when bad scripts happen to good actors. Given its similarities to a bygone sitcom, one might call it "Friends" without benefits.- Posted Mar 17, 2011
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- Posted Mar 24, 2011
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 38
The aquatic and surf scenes are spectacular. The story, a clichéed climb to inspiration. Soul Surfer is more parable than plot.- Posted Apr 7, 2011
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
Here is a movie with everything going for it and nothing working.- Posted Apr 18, 2011
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
What has Campbell wrought? An intermittently amusing, interminable affair that for sheer ugliness and a scenery-chewing performance by Peter Sarsgaard has a certain Camp appeal.- Posted Jun 16, 2011
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Critic Score 38
The overwhelming sci-fi action spectacle is a merciless sensorial assault that leaves you with something akin to post-traumatic stress disorder.- Posted Jun 28, 2011
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 38
The film would be a moth-eaten mess without the wisecracking animals. Not that it's funny with them.- Posted Jul 7, 2011
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- Posted Sep 1, 2011
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Critic Score 38
Viewers get very little about Madoff himself. While the film is primarily about Markopolos, it makes little sense without much insight into his nemesis.- Posted Sep 1, 2011
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- Posted Sep 15, 2011
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
This heavy-handed muddle of a cop thriller is just impossibly bad.- Posted Nov 3, 2011
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
The greatest lacrosse movie of the 21st century - and, unless I'm mistaken, the only lacrosse movie of the 21st century.- Posted Feb 11, 2012
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 38
The problem is that these stoic warriors infect Act of Valor with more wooden acting than you'd see at a ventriloquism school.- Posted Feb 23, 2012
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 38
Rarely has a film so equally balanced macho and nacho, but Wrath does leave us with a few valuable lessons: a.) fratricide is a nasty business, best left to the Greeks and b) fighting fire with fire may sound good, but it turns out to be a really stupid idea.- Posted Mar 29, 2012
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- Posted Jun 7, 2012
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 38
Hit & Run is a pleasant enough diversion - but more of the PPV persuasion.- Posted Aug 22, 2012
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
Hobbled by a laughably bad script and a uniformly uncharismatic cast.- Posted Nov 21, 2012
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 38
This saga of a former soccer star coaching his son's team in order to worm his way back into the heart of his ex-wife aims to be warm and funny. Alas, it is mechanical and exhausting, like a windup toy of a monkey crashing together cymbals for 106 minutes while incrementally winding down.- Posted Dec 6, 2012
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- Posted Dec 20, 2012
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 38
The film has been directed in a murky, rhythmless fashion by Niels Arden Oplev.- Posted Mar 8, 2013
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Critic Score 38
Robert Altman's Kansas City is a hollow period piece, a costume melodrama that's all jazzed up without a story to tell. [16 Aug 1996, p.4]Posted Jun 4, 2013 -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 25
The unintentional effect of movies like Bless the Child is that they are enough to make agnostics out of true believers. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 25
Nothing wrong with the syrupy romance Here on Earth that a megadose of insulin couldn't fix. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 25
Full of kerplunkingly unfunny jokes and ex-"Saturday Night Live" cast members turning up to do shtick. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 25
Rarely has sex on screen been so aggressively anti-erotic. -
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Reviewed by
Desmond Ryan 25
Wastes an A-list cast in a sorry send-up of B-movie private-eye cliches. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 25
This film about a career gal's date with fate careers out of control. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 25
Connoisseurs of giant, gnarled chunks of charred flesh, rejoice! There's plenty of it -- or stuff resembling it -- in the slasher-fest convergence of two killer franchises. -
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Critic Score 25
In this frothy beach movie, they make pop-music lite together but create an utterly unconvincing romantic couple, seeming more like siblings or best friends. From Ruben to Clay might work better. -
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Reviewed by
Desmond Ryan 25
The jokes are unabashedly pitched at 12-year-old boys, with flatulence, masturbation and excretions as the leading themes. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 25
As a western, American Outlaws is an utter failure. As the basis of a "Mad TV" parody, it is an unintentional hoot. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 25
8 1/2 Women is a collage-y, self-reflexive sort of film that is designed to shock but more often just annoys. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 25
Long, lumbering and endlessly unfunny. -
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Critic Score 25
Reiner, who made "This is Spinal Tap," "The Sure Thing," "When Harry Met Sally" -- memorable movies all -- has made this silly slice of Lean Cuisine. And that, in the end, makes Alex and Emma an utter tragedy. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 25
Proves a theory first advanced in the movie "Repo Man": The more you drive, the stupider you get. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 25
"Zis is not verking! Zee glitter cannot overpower zee artist!" That, in a sentence, sums up what is wrong with this picture. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 25
The thing about stoner comedy is that, well, it helps to be stoned. -
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Critic Score 25
The highlights of the movie are a great song, Sam Phillips' "I Need Love,'' which comes at the end, and Stiles' affecting crying scene. -
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Reviewed by
Desmond Ryan 25
A standard-issue, ineptly executed serving of the genre's staples, from skeptical cops to an all-knowing psychic. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 25
The whole affair has a painfully self-conscious, self-referential air. Jokes land with a thud, and so, alas, does Rocky, who seems to have forgotten how to fly. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 25
I could make a joke here about the new Pokemon movie. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 25
Contrived story lines and an altogether phony resolution erase whatever energy and wit the film displayed, leaving the viewer with an empty, disappointed feeling. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 25
A syrup-thick New Age ghost story of the same sappy stripe and mawkishness as another Costner foray, "Message in a Bottle." -
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Critic Score 25
Written and directed on autopilot, containing every cliche endemic to these movies: clueless parents, bratty brother, nasty rich kids, pool fight, food fight, girls who can't drive. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 25
Maybe, you think, there is something daring and brilliant going on here: an excursion into the darkest territories of the human soul. But no. In the end -- or the beginning -- there is no point to all this. Or at least not a point worth making, and making us watch. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 25
Affleck, for his part, behaves as if a Zero from "Pearl Harbor" dropped one too close to his noggin. He looks permanently shell-shocked. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 25
While "Boogie Nights" was a dirge for the death of pleasure (which coincided with the death of the porn-film industry), Wonderland is death warmed over. Literally. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 25
It pains me to tell you, But really, it's true: The Cat in the Hat Is a piece of dog doo. -
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 25
Rarely do you encounter a movie without a shred of originality. You Got Served is such a cinematic vacuum. -
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 25
A dementedly artificial and artsy film, a headache-inducing jumble of fractured narrative, flashbacks within flashbacks, and shifting perspectives. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 25
Those who want something more substantial from a movie than a vid-game script with centerfold appeal will not find it in this noisy, bone-crushing survivalist flick inspired by the Game Cube diversion. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 25
Cross "Get Shorty" with "State and Main" - Hollywood hustlers, colorful crooks, crafty poseurs, and a production crew on location - and you have the stuff of The Last Shot. One other thing: eliminate anything funny. -
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 25
It's hard to understand what Malevolence is doing in theaters. If ever a movie deserved to go directly to DVD, it's this dreary horror treatment. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 25
Both the sex and the battle sequences here look like football plays drawn by an NFL coach and shot by the wide receiver's mother. Usually, even when I don't like a Stone film I admire its frenzied energy, but the editing here is as lethargic as the compositions are perfunctory. -
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 25
Even Boll seems to lose interest as the story unravels. By that time, the supernatural cliches, plot inconsistencies, dead ends and red herrings have piled up so high you can barely see the screen. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 25
Little kidniks with an appetite for zap-pow silliness might find this to their liking. Everyone else, beware. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 25
Hostage may well be the first action flick cited both for child abuse and audience abuse. In a singularly sadistic and degrading way it has something to offend everyone. -
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 25
The left hand doesn't know who the right hand is shooting in State Property 2, Damon Dash's prodigiously muddled thug-life sequel. -
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 25
This one is so bad that even Ed Norton couldn't get this mess to move through the sewer. -
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Critic Score 25
Once upon a time there were made-for-television movies. Now there are made-for-television movies for movie theaters. The Perfect Man, another anemic Hilary Duff vehicle, is a case in point. -
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 25
This insipid take on the teens-in-peril formula, with a snake-bit ghoul chasing kids around the bayou, is truly a fangless task. -
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 25
Doom is, to its detriment, a remarkably faithful re-creation of the massively popular video game. In other words, it's a dark, violent, nerve-wracking, trigger-giddy waste of time. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 25
Aja's stomach-churning remake (produced by Craven) follows the original with frightening fidelity, amping up the barbarity from a nine (on the 1-10 scale) to a 12. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 25
I would have told you that its title refers to recreational vehicle. Having seen it, I now know the initials stand for reeking vulgarity. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 25
The cast, especially The Game, does a fairly good job with this meager material, but it's like trying to make chateaubriand out of Spam. -
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 25
The script is a stupid mix of Teutonic tongue twisters (say hello to Herr Schniedelwichsen), hoary German cliches (from phallic sausages to U-boat spoofs), and bad slapstick. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 25
Has to be one of the nuttiest, sappiest (literally), most unintentionally hilarious spectacles to come down the time-travel turnpike in eons. -
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 25
Can be described as whatever is the opposite of a Christmas classic. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 25
Happily N'Ever After carjacks "Cinderella" and puts her wicked stepmother behind the wheel. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 25
The wrestler carries himself with decency and without self-seriousness, the qualities that made Arnold Schwarzenegger a star. Austin deserves better material than this. So do we. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 25
Sappy script. Cheesy supernaturalism. Tired satire. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 25
Though Hilton may be a model, if her work in Hottie is any indication, she is no actress. -
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 25
The whole project is a cloying, artificial mess. The slapstick comedy doesn't bite, and the formulaic sentimentality doesn't grip. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 25
No one is getting at anything in The Strangers, except the cheapest, ugliest kind of sadistic titillation. -
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 25
As a cinematic experience, it's like being locked in a coffin for an hour and a half. -
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 25
You would think any movie with the word "salmon" in the title would have to be funny. Think again. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 25
An inert comedy starring Kristen Bell as a workaholic unlucky in love, When in Rome is a rom-bomb. -
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Reviewed by
David Hiltbrand 25
If you actually sit through this enervating ordeal, you'll swear that time is Frozen. -
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Critic Score 25
At a certain point, it actually becomes embarrassing to watch Heigl and Kutcher play at being in love. -
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- Posted Oct 13, 2011
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 25
A lazy assemblage of sketch-comedy raunch, mock-schlock TV ads, and ideas that even the writers of "Mall Cop" and "Observe and Report" would have tossed.- Posted Mar 1, 2012
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Critic Score 25
Too bad it's hog-tied by a ridiculously familiar plot, uneven direction and characters of such dizzying simplicity that you wish the demons would get to them just to smack some sense into their heads. [26 Sept 1983, p.D3]Posted Feb 8, 2013 -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 12
Somnambulistic pacing, kerplunkingly unfunny jokes, and mugging thespians making fools of themselves. Truly torturous spectacle. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 12
The movie heads in a disastrous direction: namely, a police academy ceremony... This lets-wrap-this-thing-up moment sucks the life and the honesty out of an otherwise compelling portrait of tainted lawmen, tainted law. -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 12
Six guys and a gal who flatline on arrival. Easily the lamest action-adventure fantasy since “Wild Wild West.” -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 12
Reaches breathtaking lows of incoherence, sexism, racial stereotyping, and -- did I say incoherence? -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 0
So bad you're nostalgic for "Gigli." So painful you need an epidural. So mindless you'll lose yours wondering, "What were they thinking?" -
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Reviewed by
Carrie Rickey 0
With its first-person-shooter perspective and gun-andrun narrative, this one’s for the PlayStation crowd. It’s not a movie. It’s an adrenaline pump and purveyor of raw carnage. -
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Reviewed by
Steven Rea 0
As far as director Nicole Kassell and writer Gren Wells are concerned, the C in Big C must stand for cute. The film reaches into the pits of moviegoing hell when it finds Marley on a celestial white couch, ringed in billowing white curtains, communing with God. And God is embodied by Whoopi Goldberg.- Posted May 3, 2012
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