Wall Street Journal's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 1,969 reviews, this publication has graded:
-
41% higher than the average critic
-
2% same as the average critic
-
57% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 3.2 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 58
| Highest review score: |
Critic Score
100
|
|---|---|
| Lowest review score: |
Critic Score
0
|
Score distribution:
-
Positive: 946 out of 1969
-
Mixed: 624 out of 1969
-
Negative: 399 out of 1969
1,969
movie reviews
- By critic score
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
J. Michael Straczynski's disjointed script manages to ring false at almost every significant turn (Collins' psychiatric-hospital stay has grown into a latter-day version of "The Snake Pit") and Clint Eastwood's ponderous direction -- a disheartening departure from his sure touch in "Letters From Iwo Jima" and "The Bridges of Madison County" -- magnifies the flaws. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
It's really dumb, even though it starts promisingly and continues, in a self-infatuated way, to consider itself quite bright. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
You'd have to be made of granite to resist all the charms of a free-spirited, 100-pound Lab. Yet the production manages, against heavy odds, to make its canine star an incorrigible bore. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
No cues are needed to understand the plot, which feels computer-generated and barely serves to sustain an hour and a half running time. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
The production renders totally irrelevant all hopes for a well-made movie. It's one of those ragged, pandemonious studio comedies that hammers at plot points in every contrived scene. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
Operates in a dead zone roughly equidistant between parody and idiocy. You do get the connection between tongue and cheek, but much of the humor still goes thud. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
Ms. Macdonald works modest wonders within these constraints -- she's a lovely actress, and a skilled one -- but too much is asked of her; Kate's innocence finally wilts beneath the camera's fixed gaze. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
The denizens of Judd Apatow’s Funny People have been pulled every which way to fit a misshapen concept, yet they remain painfully unfunny, and consistently off-putting. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
This Transformers is a pile of glittering junk. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
Why is she (Bullock) demeaning herself with such shoddy goods? She’s a talented woman with a faithful following. She has made formula films of varying quality before, and her fans may well swallow this one, but it’s a formula for disappointment laced with dismay. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
The movie on the whole is joyless. Whatever Works doesn’t. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
In the spirit of that world, I cannot tell a lie: The Invention of Lying, which the English comedian both directed and wrote with Matthew Robinson, soon loses altitude and eventually falls flat. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
What do the Coen brothers want of us? More specifically, what do they want us to think of the repellent people in this pitilessly bleak movie? -
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
You may wonder if this screen version of the book of the same name is as unfunny and strangely mushy as it seems, but trust your instincts. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
Edge of Darkness was one of the most enthralling, intricate and genuinely thrilling productions in the history of the small screen. The big-screen version--directed by Martin Campbell, who did the original--offers an example of why the studios' numbers often add up, and why, at the same time, so many of today's Hollywood movies leave us cool if not downright cold. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
It's impossible to say who's more unhinged: Darwin, caught between faith and reason, or the filmmakers. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
Still, the action is ponderous too. Mr. Morel is no Kubrick, or Tarantino, just as Mr. Travolta's caricature of John Travolta is no Travolta. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
Adam Green's Frozen explores a tiny idea exhaustively, and I mean exhaustively. -
-
-
Reviewed by
John Anderson 30
In addition to all else, and it's a lot, The Losers wastes the riches of Hollywood technology in hot pursuit of nothing. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
The lesson here is simple: In the digital realm, the bigger the worse. What looks distinctive and believable in short takes and small doses can turn blatantly phony and deadly familiar when the scale is pumped up. Prince of Persia pumps itself up to the bursting point, and bursts. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
(It doesn't hurt that Ms. Redgrave gets to play opposite Franco Nero, who was once the love of her life and is the father of her son.) Not even she can transform lines like "Destiny wanted us to meet again." -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
A slow and lugubrious film about the impact of adoption on the lives of three women. -
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
Still, Eat Pray Love preaches a sermon it doesn't practice-the need to open one's self to the world. In a pictorial sense this is exactly what Liz does; she vacuums up the transformative essence of three continents. Yet the world gets weirdly short shrift because this transcendently narcissistic movie is, in a narrative sense, almost entirely about Liz and the movie star who plays her. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
This children's entertainment-grownups beware!-is preoccupied by squishy stuff that includes mud and poop, as well as by syrup that oozes from cabinet drawers. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
Secretariat stumbles along beneath the weight of leaden life lessons. They're dispensed at frequent intervals by Diane Lane, who does better than anyone had a right to expect, since she is saddled with dialogue of exceptional dreadfulness. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
Either you buy their Vaseline-lensed visions of the hereafter, or you watch in stony silence, as I did, wondering why there's no one to care about.- Posted Oct 21, 2010
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
This dreary drama telegraphs every punch, emotion and plot point with a dedication that would have done the old Western Union proud.- Posted Oct 28, 2010
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
What's worse, some mysterious movie curse has turned the three once-lively adventurers into wood.- Posted Dec 8, 2010
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
The result is a queasy combination of speculation and dramatic invention with the ring of half-truth, though the co-stars, Ryan Gosling and Kirsten Dunst, add as much color as they can - not much - to a monochromatic script.- Posted Dec 9, 2010
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
The only reason to see it is Riz Ahmed's performance as Omar, the supposed brains of the operation. Mr. Ahmed reminded me a bit of Robert Carlyle. He's dynamic, quick-tongued and intense. And much too classy for this tatty room.- Posted Nov 4, 2010
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
This production is a mess for many reasons, most of them having to do with its frantic efforts to be funny.- Posted Nov 11, 2010
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
The basic problem is the script, which is credited to three writers plus the director - seldom a good sign. Never mind that it's a retread of "Planes, Trains & Automobiles" minus the trains, and minus John Candy.- Posted Dec 15, 2010
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
It's dispiriting to see how little attention the filmmakers have paid to the dramatic - read human - possibilities of the original, or how much they've been overwhelmed by technology's demands. It's as though rogue programs took over the production.- Posted Dec 16, 2010
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
Country Strong comes to spontaneous life from time to time, despite maudlin devices and manipulative set pieces.- Posted Jan 6, 2011
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
Mr. Statham, the specialist in English tough guys who was so affecting in "The Bank Job," has more to offer than The Mechanic has the grace to receive.- Posted Jan 27, 2011
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
All of the nonsense piled on nonsense does provide some measure of pleasure. Unknown gets better by getting worse.- Posted Feb 17, 2011
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
There's nothing to be said in favor of sitting through garbage, and this movie is awash in the stuff, both figuratively and literally: One of its main locales is a vast garbage dump.- Posted Mar 10, 2011
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
The IMAX print I saw was so murky as to make you give thanks for the few scenes shot in simple sunlight, the 3-D wasn't worth the bother, and never before have I wanted to chloroform an entire orchestra.- Posted May 19, 2011
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
Green Lantern was meant to be a sci-fi adventure, but it proves to be a genuine mystery. How could its megamoola budget have yielded a production that looks almost as tacky as "Flash Gordon" (which had the good grace to deprecate itself at every turn)?- Posted Jun 16, 2011
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
Horrible Bosses has preposterousness to burn, but no finesse and no interest in having any.- Posted Jul 7, 2011
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
The movie transforms a dim idea - "Elmer Gantry" lite - into comedy that's dead in the water and as dull as it is broad.- Posted Jul 14, 2011
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
Cowboys versus aliens is a concept that may make you smile in anticipation, but wipe that smile off your face before buying your ticket.- Posted Jul 28, 2011
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
Ms. Weisz is always a strong presence, but her talents are wasted here on a naive heroine - the fictional Kathy is exceedingly slow to grasp the extent of the corruption - and a narrative style that turns the horror of the prostitutes' plight into harrowing melodrama.- Posted Aug 4, 2011
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
Long after lice from her children's school infested Kate's scalp, I was scratching my head about why a 91-minute movie seemed so long. The answer came from reframing the question. Why was a string of sitcom problems stretched to 91 minutes?- Posted Sep 15, 2011
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
The failure lies not with the film's director, Marc Forster, nor with its impressive star, Gerard Butler, but with Jason Keller's dreadfully earnest script, which charts the hero's spiritual journey, and his Rambo-esque exploits, without offering a scintilla of mature perspective on his state of mind.- Posted Sep 22, 2011
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
In a movie that rings false at every turn, Ms. Redgrave's Elizabeth is truly and infallibly regal.- Posted Oct 27, 2011
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
John Anderson 30
Despite all the nervous tension, the central drama is flawed - Jonathan isn't trying to find a killer. He is the killer. Something is lacking in the dramatic equation.- Posted Nov 3, 2011
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
When bad movies happen to good people, the first place to look for an explanation is the basic idea. That certainly applies to My Week With Marilyn, a dubious idea done in by Adrian Hodges's shallow script and Simon Curtis's clumsy direction.- Posted Nov 28, 2011
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
Meryl Streep as Margaret Thatcher is the main reason to see The Iron Lady, which was directed by Phyllida Lloyd - not just the main reason but the raison d'être of an otherwise misconceived movie.- Posted Dec 29, 2011
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
John Anderson 30
As an experiment in Academy Award psychology, Albert Nobbs is fascinating. As drama? It is, forgive us, a drag.- Posted Jan 26, 2012
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
In The Hunger Games it's both a feast of cheesy spectacle and a famine of genuine feeling, except for the powerful - and touchingly vulnerable - presence of Jennifer Lawrence.- Posted Mar 22, 2012
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
The remake has no grace notes, or grace, no nuance, no humanity, no character quirks, no surprises in the dialogue and no humor.- Posted Aug 2, 2012
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
You're tempted to keep watching, even though the running time is a bloated 154 minutes, to see if anyone, or the movie itself, turns remotely likable. The answer to that, alas, is no.- Posted Aug 23, 2012
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
Mr. Beall, a former LAPD cop, has written a script so devoid of feeling that the cartoons blur into thin line drawings, while what's been done with the marvelous Ms. Stone - i.e. next to nothing - is downright criminal.- Posted Jan 10, 2013
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
The only reason to see this dreary parade of deception and venality is Mark Wahlberg's performance as a disgraced ex-cop caught up in the thick of menacing events he can't understand. It's striking how this tightly focused actor can find his own firmly grounded reality in the falsest of surroundings.- Posted Jan 17, 2013
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
The essence of this grindingly violent movie can be summed up by what Parker says of his handgun to a terrified clerk at a check-cashing service: "It's small, but it hurts."- Posted Jan 24, 2013
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
It's long on Viagra jokes and whorehouse scenes, and comes up short on plausibility.- Posted Jan 31, 2013
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
What a peculiar production this is. Up to a certain point, it really does promise to be romantic.- Posted Feb 16, 2013
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
Oz the Great and Powerful, like so many products of movie studios that have lost their way, is a Tin Man of epic proportions — bright and shiny, with no heart.- Posted Mar 7, 2013
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
Nobody doesn't like Tina Fey, and anyone aware of her starring role in Admission will be wishing her well. But wishing won't make this dramedy any less dreary than it is.- Posted Mar 21, 2013
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
I won't pretend that I had a great time watching G.I. Joe: Retaliation.- Posted Mar 28, 2013
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
The story is rooted in a political past that never comes to life, and its structure is so cockeyed that we don't even get to see Nick's reaction to a climactic surprise that takes place off-screen. The film was shot by an excellent cinematographer, Adriano Goldman, though you'd never know it from the lighting, which is as flat as the writing.- Posted Apr 4, 2013
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
The movie's failures are all the more unfortunate because they detract from its central and conspicuous success, the performance of Riz Ahmed in the title role. Mr. Ahmed turns the quicksilver quality of the book's internal monologue into a tour de force of his own creation. He's a bright star in a dim constellation.- Posted Apr 25, 2013
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 30
What's intractably wrong with the film is that there's no reality to heighten; it's a spectacle in search of a soul.- Posted May 9, 2013
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Most of the prime goofiness is given over to Vassili and Konig sharpshooting at each other while the battle rages. The movie's a red elephant. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
It may be lulling to know, almost from the outset, where the plot is going, but thrilling -- or even psychological -- it is not. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Only Le Carre fans with tin ears and clouded eyes will fail to note the film's sour tone, crude performances and drab look. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
The last thing we need is entertainment that evokes the horror and then trivializes it with cheesy heroics. Never has a movie taken on a subject of greater immediacy, or handled it more ineptly. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
The Navajos must have sent much more crucial messages at much higher levels during the war, but you'd never know it from this movie. Windtalkers is practically all action and no talk. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Everything that was modest, soundly grounded and therefore horrifying about the 1971 rodentarama that starred Bruce Davison is now insistent, Grand-Guignol-intense and therefore shrug-offable when it isn't downright awful. -
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
After missing the film on the small screen the first time around, I recently watched it on video, and can only conclude that my screen wasn't small enough. -
-
-
-
Critic Score 20
The distance between tawdry and tedious can be amazingly short. It is traveled with Concorde speed in the arch Party Monster. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
The best thing about a movie as silly as this is that it makes such modest demands on your attention. As the story unfolded with all the energy of California in a Stage 3 alert, I staved off brain death by trying to imagine an alternate version. -
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Mr. Rock's opening scene is very funny. After that it's a steep downhill slide. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Relevance can't rescue this would-be epic from the swamps of inertia, absurdity and sentimentality. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
I wish I'd brought a pair of peas to the screening. Then I could have taken in the glorious scenery without the dumb dialogue, which is delivered in a jangle of accents that makes a mockery of ethnicity. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
The remake stumbles from a ragged start into a child's garden of worses -- worse than the original in more ways than you could imagine. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
A movie's script is its fate, which means this one is doomed. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
This ripoff, directed by Jerry Zucker, has a few funny moments, but it's a sad sad sad sad example of what Hollywood is currently serving up -- and what audiences are swallowing -- as summer entertainment. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
The script is woefully inept, with plot twists that wouldn't pass muster in a high-school drama class. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Manages to make its live actors sound -- and even sometimes look -- computer generated. This wan, sluggish comedy wouldn't pass muster as a premium-cable original, but here it is on the big screen. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
In a truly terrible action adventure called The Tuxedo, a high-tech monkey suit turns Jackie Chan into an all-powerful cyborg, and will turn you into a boredborg. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Rarely has a major motion picture -- and this one is major by virtue of its misplaced ambition as well as its budget -- been afflicted by such flagrant dissonance between subject and style. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Remarkably joyless, even though Ms. Jolie is a formidable presence with the potential for becoming a witty one. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Young audiences may welcome this movie, but girls, and boys, should want more. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
A gothic thriller called Cold Creek Manor extrudes an 80-minute idea -- I may be overgenerous here -- into 118 minutes that feel like an eternity. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
A sudsless soap opera with human misery as a backdrop for romantic banality. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Smith is only a rogue computer program, but this morbidly dispiriting movie makes him sound like a prophet. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Gets to be dislikable in its glib feelgoodness. The movie's many excellent actors do too much acting with too little conviction in scenes that rush through perfunctory setups to deliver pat payoffs. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
The only entertaining member of the cast is Terence Stamp. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Adam Sandler's 50 First Dates isn't just slovenly and smarmy but creepy. -
-
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
A limited movie that can't animate its subject amid all the tricks and glitz. De-Lovely is devoid of life. -
-
-
-
Critic Score 20
Well, incredibly stupid is certainly what is delivered to audiences. -
-
-
Critic Score 20
Built on such a goofy premise that your average soap-opera scriptwriter would laugh it out of a story meeting. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Mr. Sayle's portrait is painfully unfunny, and the movie as a whole is a plodding polemic. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Might have qualified as dumb fun if they hadn't left out the fun. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Disney's National Treasure is supposed to be family-friendly, a PG-rated action adventure free of hard violence and bad language. That's admirable, to be sure, but with a friend like this a family doesn't need sleeping pills. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Bad can't begin to describe Christmas With the Kranks. It's sub-humbug. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
These people -- the filmmakers as well as the cast -- have brought a rare sense of camaraderie to their work. Unfortunately, they forgot to bring a script. They even forgot, in the midst of their joyous self-involvement, to take good pictures of the places they visited. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Must be seen to be believed, though I'm not suggesting you actually see it. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Guess Who is, impurely and simply, a comic premise borrowed, turned around and dumbed down to the level of sketch or sub-sketch humor. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
The movie itself is grotesque, and may drive you nuts as it makes you laugh, mostly at the stupidity of the thing. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Why is the movie such a mess? Will Ferrell plays a washed-up actor who's supposed to be a hopeless mess, but even his character makes little sense. Is it all supposed to be postmodern? No, it's post-postmortem, the dead spirit of a dearly departed show. -
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
If I could find some facet to praise, I'd be glad to do so, but the production's mediocrity is all-pervasive -- story, character, graphic design, even music -- and it all points to a failure of corporate imagination, or maybe just nerve. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Breakfast on Pluto, with an impressive cast that includes Liam Neeson and Brendan Gleeson, deploys its whimsy in many ways, all of them cloying. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
The Producers is nightmarish, in its febrile way, a head-bangingly primitive version of an overrated Broadway show that grew out of a clumsy 1968 movie with an inflated reputation. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Even as a visual aid, though, The Da Vinci Code is a deep-dyed disappointment. Paris by night never looked murkier. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
A deeply dreadful movie -- no, a shallowly dreadful movie -- that's too unpleasant and repetitive to be entertaining, even as camp. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
It's not a good sign when a movie is called The Break-Up and you can't wait for the couple to split so they'll get some relief from one another, and give the audience some relief from them. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
There isn't a milliliter of honest feeling from start to finish, and precious little comedy or romance. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Calling Joe Carnahan's movie heartless implies that this auteur of affectless anarchy might have meant to invest it with detectable human feelings, and failed. Better to call it heart-free. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
The oddest thing about this very odd movie is that it doesn't seem to know what to make of itself. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Julie Salamon 20
Don't bother to see this film unless you expect to be tested in film class about the Coens' serial dissertation on American cinema. [10 Mar 1994, p.A16] -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Not to put too fine a point on it, Surviving Picasso is merely the worst movie ever made about a painter; worse movies have been made on other subjects, though none comes immediately to mind. [20 Sep 1996] -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Mr. Scott's idea of making movies is to bludgeon or deafen his audience with every scene. In another line of work he'd be certifiable. [16 Aug 1996, p.A8] -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
The Loss of Sexual Innocence is a work of intransigent anger and barely relieved depression. [28 May 1999] -
-
-
Reviewed by
Julie Salamon 20
Maybe the worst part (there's so much to choose from) is the sight of a good actor like Edward Herrmann parading around looking like a demented quarterback, the shoulders of his suit jacket grotesquely padded. Mr. Schumacher has dressed the adorable Corey Haim in even weirder getups, jackets with pastel stripes and little outfits that resemble dresses. The vampires aren't nearly as creepy as those clothes. [6 Aug 1987, p.1] -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
This is movie-making by and for dummies, a sappy little bible story, blissed out on its own ineptitude. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
A deadly earnest and deadly dull psychological thriller. -
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
You could make a case for this as a feature-film version of the FCC's fairness doctrine, but it feels more like a blandness doctrine, a pulling and hauling of the tone-deaf script, which is credited to Matthew Michael Carnahan, to the point of perfect vacuousness. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
The kindest context in which to put Over Her Dead Body, which was written and directed by Jeff Lowell, is that of a training film, a public display of people trying to master their craft. The best way to see it is not at all. -
-
-
Critic Score 20
The crude, sophomoric Sex and Death 101 is neither particularly dark nor even remotely funny. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Consider this more a consumer warning than a movie review: The Life Before Her Eyes will draw you in, then intrigue you, then bore you, then bewilder you, then make you crazy with its incessant flashbacks and flash forwards, and finally leave you feeling like the victim of a fraud. -
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
The best news about this clangorous clunker is that it may well have vanquished the Mummy franchise. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Elegance isn't Zack Snyder's bag; a certain sort of impact is. Watchmen establishes him as Hollywood's reigning master of psychic suffocation. -
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Motion is in copious supply -- a frenzied shootout at Manhattan's Guggenheim Museum grows interminable -- but the workings of the abstract plot are unfathomable, the characters are unpleasant and a couple of assassinations leave us as cold as the corpses. -
-
-
Critic Score 20
If the movie had even a moment of freshness or wit, one honest laugh. It doesn't--and that's the ugly truth. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
A bizarre conflation of chick flick and "A Christmas Carol." -
-
-
-
Critic Score 20
We are meant to think they are all delightfully and amusingly eccentric (characters). Actually, they're just creepy -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
This sad excuse for family entertainment tries to enshrine a classic while defacing it. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Extraordinary Measures requires extraordinary tolerance for bathos, bombast and plain old unpleasantness. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
The writing is semicoherent at best, and the buddies of this meandering road trip are not only mismatched but dislikable. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
What's wrong with this sad fiasco goes far beyond its visual deficits. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
The movie will surely find an audience, since it speaks to young people's anxieties about marriage and parenting. But what are two particularly engaging performers doing in a dump of a comedy like this? -
-
- Posted Dec 9, 2010
- Read full review
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
I wanted to give this movie a fair shake, though I can't pretend to be an admirer of Ayn Rand's writing. But the movie, the first installment of a projected trilogy, doesn't give the book a fair shake.- Posted Apr 14, 2011
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Like most other members of an excellent cast that includes James McAvoy, Kevin Kline and Tom Wilkinson, she (Robin Wright) has come under the deadening directorial hand of Robert Redford.- Posted Apr 14, 2011
- Read full review
-
-
- Posted Apr 21, 2011
- Read full review
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
What was fresh and surprising in Las Vegas turns rancid and predictable in Bangkok.- Posted May 27, 2011
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
J. Edgar, with Leonardo DiCaprio in the title role, is at war with itself, and everyone loses...Mr. Eastwood's ponderous direction, a clumsy script by Dustin Lance Black and ghastly slatherings of old-age makeup all conspire to put the story at an emotional and historical distance. It's a partially animated waxworks.- Posted Nov 10, 2011
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
John Anderson 20
The director's apparent blindness to the epic banality of her subjects suggests that the whole project is one royally misguided mess.- Posted Feb 2, 2012
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Sometime around what I guessed to be the one-hour mark in The Five-Year Engagement, I checked my watch and honestly thought the battery had given out. Five years doesn't begin to tell the interminable tale.- Posted Apr 26, 2012
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
For better or worse, Woody Allen turns out a movie every year. Last year's "Midnight in Paris" was better than better; that is to say, sublime. To Rome With Love is worse than worse, as inert as its predecessor was inspired.- Posted Jun 21, 2012
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
What I don't understand is why this extended piece of idiocy chose to sink its stinky teeth into our 16th president. If an axe-wielding hero was required, George Washington would have been the better choice, with the Redcoats as bloodsuckers.- Posted Jun 21, 2012
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
Instead of biting wit, though, the movie settles for sketch humor, standard-brand raunch and toothless slapstick that trivializes everything it touches.- Posted Aug 9, 2012
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
As juxtapositions go, regressed Goth rock star and Holocaust could hardly be more bizarre, and bizarre can be good when it's done deftly. In this case, however, it's done ponderously and sententiously.- Posted Nov 1, 2012
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
By the end I could have used a Bulleit to the mouth.- Posted Jan 31, 2013
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 20
The movie drills itself into our skulls, which are all too vulnerable to such an assault, though I must say my brain glazed over and my heart turned adamantine while the stupidities of this action thriller played themselves out.- Posted Apr 30, 2013
- Read full review
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
Nothing but miscalculation from clumsy start to chaotic finish, an action thriller with a cynical, shriveled soul. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
My Homo sapiens brain was boggled by the movie's clumsiness, while my heart was chilled by the chance that otherwise mature members of my species might mistake this disjointed botch for summer entertainment. -
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
The big news in Blade II is that there's something worse than vampires, but is there something worse than Blade II? -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
Ragging on Town & Country is like shooting a school of fish that's already belly up in a fetid barrel, but the movie's ineptitude is almost incomparable. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
What they've done here goes beyond gross -- or clumsy, or dumb -- to genuine ugliness, both cutaneous and sub. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
Built from an alloy of absurdium and stupidium, with the latter, heavier element dominating the mix. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
This noirish, sourish thriller left me unmoving as well as unmoved. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
Redefines the notion of a feature film another notch downward. -
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
Littered with low points -- lame comedy, dubious history, fumbling drama and a love story so inept as to make a pacifist long for war. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
How could a movie with such likable actors be so deeply dislikable? -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
I must confess that I was outsmarted by the ending, but by that time my brain had been bludgeoned into a state just north of stupor. -
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
Looks like the deformed spawn of a development process gone awry. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
Sara is supposed to be an adorable screwball with a fatal disease. Ms. Theron certainly gets the adorable right. With a comic style that's close to unerring, she not only deserves better than this junk but the very best. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
The worst would-be-big-and-Capraesque-but-actually-bloated-and-bloviating-beyond-belief movie of the year. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
Certainly trashy, but, stripped of Mr. Diesel's services and directed by John Singleton, it's a no-go Yugo in muscle-car sheet metal. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
A gross-out saga that sentient adults should avoid like the plague. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
Too labored to be romantic and too derivative to be funny. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
Downey is undone by a woefully amateurish production that, sadly and ironically, looks like a cheap TV show. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
Timeline has negative energy to burn. There's even less of it by the end than at the beginning. -
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
The nadir of the movie -- or cheesy zenith -- is Ollie's sodden soliloquy, delivered in the presence of his baby, in which he laments the loss of her mother and his wife. All that's missing are the strains of Ravel's "Pavane For a Dead Princess." -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
A symphony for tin ears, a sniggering assessment of human nature delivered with the faux-lofty tone of a Lexus commercial. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
This shabby enterprise gets so many things so wrong that it freezes your face into a cringe. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
A pitiful shambles of a remake, The Stepford Wives might have qualified as a rethinking of the 1975 original if there were any trace of coherent thought in the finished product. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
It's "The Sixth Sense" as nonsense, "Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind" without the sunshine. Or the mind. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
Huckabees is godawful, a mirthless, bilious bore in which the vividly focused fury of "Three Kings" has become free-floating anger at the follies of human existence. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
Robert De Niro collects another stupendous paycheck for starring in another piece of exploitable junk. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
Manages the dubious trick of being both execrable and boring. -
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
Everyone in the film seems to be in solitary, thanks to Mr. Duchovny's stultifying style. If there was a single moment of spontaneity, it escaped me. Ditto for frivolity, though bogus poetry abounds. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
The production can best be described by several f-words. It is frenetic, frazzled and febrile. It is also feeble -- almost touchingly so, if you think of what bottomless insecurity must have prompted so much bombast. -
-
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
This cloying piece of claptrap sets a high-water mark for pomposity, condescension, false profundity and true turgidity -- no small accomplishment for the man whose last two features were the deadly duo "Signs" and "The Village." -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
What a botch. All the King's Men, a remake of Robert Rossen's classic 1949 film about the rise and fall of a Southern demagogue, has no center, no coherence, no soul and no shame. -
-
-
Critic Score 10
Ms. Stone. She alternates between two expressions here: sullen, and aghast. Then again, if you were listed on the credits as the co-producer of this violently dull piece of shlock, you'd look that way, too. [16 Feb 1995, p.A12] -
-
-
Critic Score 10
The oddballs of Mixed Nuts are oddly lackluster -- starting with Mr. Martin, who ambles through the movie with a stunned look on his face. [22 Dec 1994, p.A12] -
-
-
Reviewed by
Julie Salamon 10
My Blue Heaven is interesting as an example of how talented or at least experienced people can spend a great deal of time, money and effort on a movie that fails consistently, in almost every single scene. [30 Aug 1990] -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
Mr. Brooks manages to be deeply loathsome -- no small feat for a film that's shallowly amateurish. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Julie Salamon 10
This time Rambo pulls off his superhuman Soviet-blasting stunts in Afghanistan, not quite as late on the scene as he was in Vietnam. Not very exciting; very noisy. [2 Jun 1988, p.1] -
-
-
Reviewed by
Julie Salamon 10
The movie has the cartoonish realism of a Muppet movie. However, Mr. Herman is no Kermit the Frog, although he made me feel like Oscar the Grouch. [13 Aug 1985, p.1] -
-
-
Reviewed by
Julie Salamon 10
When director Richard Attenborough isn't mangling dance numbers, he's focusing on a love story expressed almost entirely by means of close-ups of moony faces and teary eyes. [12 Dec 1985] -
-
-
Critic Score 10
In under two hours, the synthetic, insufferable I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry manages to insult gays, straights, men, women, children, African-Americans, Asians, pastors, mailmen, insurance adjusters, firemen, doctors -- and fans of show music. That's championship stuff. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
Why, beating the audience about the ears, eyes and brain with essentially the same sequence of events from eight characters' points of view, none of which adds much more than deafening hysteria and identically dreadful music. The filmmakers seem to have missed the point that each re-enactment in "Rashomon" provides new and conflicting information. It makes you wonder if they studied the wrong movie. Maybe they rented "Rush Hour," or a video on Rosh Hashanah. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
What Happens in Vegas... should have stayed in development -- forever. This ramshackle -- and occasionally repulsive -- farce doesn't even deliver on the minimal promise of its title; most of it takes place in Manhattan. -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
The Happening makes you wonder whether Mr. Shyamalan's own switch may have been flipped. How else to explain his film's befuddling infelicities, insistent banalities, shambling pace and pervasive ineptitude? -
-
-
Reviewed by
Joe Morgenstern 10
Given the importance of that subject, the real mystery of Mr. Lee's movie is why it's so diffuse, dispirited, emotionally distanced and dramatically inert. -