genienlp/local_data/test_fine_sent.csv

224 KiB
Raw Blame History

1labelsentence
21No movement, no yuks, not much of anything.
30A gob of drivel so sickly sweet, even the eager consumers of Moore's pasteurized ditties will retch it up like rancid crème brûlée.
42'How many more voyages can this limping but dearly-loved franchise survive?'
52So relentlessly wholesome it made me want to swipe something.
60Gangs of New York is an unapologetic mess, whose only saving grace is that it ends by blowing just about everything up.
70We never really feel involved with the story, as all of its ideas remain just that: abstract ideas.
84This is one of Polanski's best films.
93Take Care of My Cat offers a refreshingly different slice of Asian cinema.
101Acting, particularly by Tambor, almost makes "Never Again" worthwhile, but (writer/director) Schaeffer should follow his titular advice
113The movie exists for its soccer action and its fine acting.
121Arnold's jump from little screen to big will leave frowns on more than a few faces.
132A reasonably efficient mechanism, but it offers few surprises and finds its stars slumming in territory they should have avoided.
140If this holiday movie is supposed to be a gift, somebody unwrapped it early, took out all the good stuff, and left behind the crap (literally).
153Jason X has cheesy effects and a hoary plot, but its macabre, self-deprecating sense of humor makes up for a lot.
161Even as lame horror flicks go, this is lame.
171Oft-described as the antidote to American Pie-type sex comedies, it actually has a bundle in common with them, as the film diffuses every opportunity for a breakthrough
184Though the violence is far less sadistic than usual, the film is typical Miike: fast, furious and full of off-the-cuff imaginative flourishes.
190When a set of pre-shooting guidelines a director came up with for his actors turns out to be cleverer, better written and of considerable more interest than the finished film, that's a bad sign.
202William Shatner, as a pompous professor, is the sole bright spot...
214The passions aroused by the discord between old and new cultures are set against the strange, stark beauty of the Mideast desert, so lovingly and perceptively filmed that you can almost taste the desiccated air.
223If your senses haven't been dulled by slasher films and gorefests, if you're a connoisseur of psychological horror, this is your ticket.
230Any one episode of The Sopranos would send this ill-conceived folly to sleep with the fishes.
241As conceived by Mr. Schaeffer, Christopher and Grace are little more than collections of quirky traits lifted from a screenwriter's outline and thrown at actors charged with the impossible task of making them jell.
251Those who managed to avoid the Deconstructionist theorizing of French philosopher Jacques Derrida in college can now take an 85-minute brush-up course with the documentary Derrida.
263Most new movies have a bright sheen.
271But what saves lives on the freeway does not necessarily make for persuasive viewing.
283Steve Irwin's method is Ernest Hemmingway at accelerated speed and volume.
292D.J. Qualls as Indiana Jones?
302It ultimately stands forth as an important chronicle of the abuses of one of Latin America's most oppressive regimes.
313Nicely serves as an examination of a society in transition.
320The film would work much better as a video installation in a museum, where viewers would be free to leave.
331Culkin exudes none of the charm or charisma that might keep a more general audience even vaguely interested in his bratty character.
342Sometimes, fond memories should stay in the past: a lesson this film teaches all too well.
351The whole thing plays out with the drowsy heaviness of synchronized swimmer wearing a wool wetsuit.
363Not a cozy or ingratiating work, but it's challenging, sometimes clever, and always interesting, and those are reasons enough to see it.
371The premise for this kegger comedy probably sounded brilliant four six-packs and a pitcher of margaritas in, but the film must have been written ... in the thrall of a vicious hangover.
384It's a pleasure to see Seinfeld griping about the biz with buddies Chris Rock, Garry Shandling and Colin Quinn.
393Finally, a genre movie that delivers -- in a couple of genres, no less.
401The low-budget Full Frontal was one of the year's murkiest, intentionally obscure and self-indulgent pictures, and Solaris is its big-budget brother.
414Exquisitely acted and masterfully if preciously interwoven... (the film) addresses in a fascinating, intelligent manner the intermingling of race, politics and local commerce.
423An enthralling, playful film that constantly frustrates our desire to know the 'truth' about this man, while deconstructing the very format of the biography in a manner that Derrida would doubtless give his blessing to.
434As a singular character study, it's perfect.
443Haneke challenges us to confront the reality of sexual aberration.
453An experience so engrossing it is like being buried in a new environment.
464All the performances are top notch and, once you get through the accents, All or Nothing becomes an emotional, though still positive, wrench of a sit.
473A cockamamie tone poem pitched precipitously between swoony lyricism and violent catastrophe... the most aggressively nerve-wracking and screamingly neurotic romantic comedy in cinema history.
482Is it a total success?
491I don't have an I Am Sam clue.
503Zhang Yimou delivers warm, genuine characters who lie not through dishonesty, but because they genuinely believe it's the only way to bring happiness to their loved ones.
513The pleasures of Super Troopers may be fleeting, but they'll register strongly with anybody who still retains a soft spot for precollegiate humor.
522The New Guy is one of them.
531The thrill is (long) gone.
544Much monkeyfun for all.
550A dreary, incoherent, self-indulgent mess of a movie in which a bunch of pompous windbags drone on inanely for two hours...a cacophony of pretentious, meaningless prattle.
562This is really just another genre picture.
574Much of the way, though, this is a refreshingly novel ride.
583For the first time in several years, Mr. Allen has surpassed himself with the magic he's spun with the Hollywood empress of Ms. Leoni's Ellie.
593One scarcely needs the subtitles to enjoy this colorful action farce.
601As it abruptly crosscuts among the five friends, it fails to lend the characters' individual stories enough dramatic resonance to make us care about them.
613What might have been a predictably heartwarming tale is suffused with complexity.
621With generic sets and B-grade special effects, Jason is about as convincing on the sci-fi front as TV's defunct Cleopatra 2525.
634This is simply the most fun you'll ever have with a documentary!
644It represents better-than-average movie-making that doesn't demand a dumb, distracted audience.
650...the sum of the parts equals largely a confused mediocrity.
661It may be an easy swipe to take, but this Barbershop just doesn't make the cut.
674The fact that The Rookie is a nearly impeccable cinematic experience -- and a wonderful all-ages triumph besides -- is a miracle akin to the story the film portrays.
680How on earth, or anywhere else, did director Ron Underwood manage to blow $100 million on this?
693For all its failed connections, Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood is nurturing, in a gauzy, dithering way.
701As are its star, its attitude and its obliviousness.
711Sluggishly directed by episodic TV veteran Joe Zwick, it's a sitcom without the snap-crackle.
722Ferrara directs the entire film with the kind of detachment that makes any given frame look like a family's custom-made Christmas card.
734A dream cast of solid female talent who build a seamless ensemble.
741The plot is straight off the shelf, the performances are television- caliber and the message of providing solace through deception is a little creepy.
751Instead of accurately accounting a terrible true story, the film's more determined to become the next Texas Chainsaw Massacre.
763The movie is well shot and very tragic, and one to ponder after the credits roll.
773It is ridiculous, of course... but it is also refreshing, disarming, and just outright enjoyable despite its ridiculousness.
784Everything you loved about it in 1982 is still there, for everybody who wants to be a kid again, or show it to their own kids.
792Big deal!
804Tadpole is a sophisticated, funny and good-natured treat, slight but a pleasure.
810A turgid little history lesson, humourless and dull.
820The cartoon that isn't really good enough to be on afternoon TV is now a movie that isn't really good enough to be in theaters.
832A heavy reliance on CGI technology is beginning to creep into the series.
843A sensual performance from Abbass buoys the flimsy story, but her inner journey is largely unexplored and we're left wondering about this exotic-looking woman whose emotional depths are only hinted at.
852Dissing a Bond movie is quite like calling a dog stupid, but when it has the temerity to run over two hours, you feel like winding up with a kick.
863A harmless and mildly amusing family comedy.
871Not 'terrible filmmaking' bad, but more like, 'I once had a nightmare like this, and it's now coming true' bad.
881A movie that, rather than skip along the Seine, more or less slogs its way through soggy Paris, tongue uncomfortably in cheek.
893It does succeed by following a feel-good formula with a winning style, and by offering its target audience of urban kids some welcome role models and optimism.
902The story wraps back around on itself in the kind of elegant symmetry that's rare in film today, but be warned: It's a slow slog to get there.
913(Schweiger is) talented and terribly charismatic, qualities essential to both movie stars and social anarchists.
921A well acted and well intentioned snoozer.
934Serry does a fine job of capturing the climate of the times and, perhaps unwittingly, relating it to what is happening in America in 2002.
941For all its alleged youthful fire, XXX is no less subservient to Bond's tired formula of guns, girls and gadgets while brandishing a new action hero.
953This cuddly sequel to the 1999 hit is a little more visually polished, a little funnier, and a little more madcap.
961Now it's just tired.
971Not so much a movie as a picture book for the big screen.
980It's difficult to say whether The Tuxedo is more boring or embarrassing--I'm prepared to call it a draw.
991About as satisfying and predictable as the fare at your local drive through.
1001The movie succumbs to being nothing more than a formulaic chase in the dark.
1013As lo-fi as the special effects are, the folks who cobbled Nemesis together indulge the force of humanity over hardware in a way that George Lucas has long forgotten.
1023Writer-director Burger imaginatively fans the embers of a dormant national grief and curiosity that has calcified into chronic cynicism and fear.
1031Truth to tell, if you've seen more than half-a-dozen horror films, there's nothing here you haven't seen before.
1041George, hire a real director and good writers for the next installment, please.
1052Sensitive though not quite revelatory documentary.
1060All these developments and challenges facing Santa weigh down the plot so heavily that they drain all the film of its energy and needlessly strain credibility.
1070It's so full of wrong choices that all you can do is shake your head in disbelief -- and worry about what classic Oliver Parker intends to mangle next time.
1083The film runs on equal parts of innocence and wisdom -- wisdom that comes with experience.
1092Too sincere to exploit its subjects and too honest to manipulate its audience.
1104Goyer's screenplay and direction are thankfully understated, and he has drawn excellent performances from his cast.
1113Reinforces the often forgotten fact of the world's remarkably varying human population and mindset, and its capacity to heal using creative, natural and ancient antidotes.
1120Abandons all pretense of creating historical context and waltzes off into a hectic soap about the ups and downs of the heavy breathing between the two artists.
1133If it tried to do anything more, it would fail and perhaps explode, but at this level of manic whimsy, it is just about right.
1143Scores a few points for doing what it does with a dedicated and good-hearted professionalism.
1151Director Dirk Shafer and co-writer Greg Hinton ride the dubious divide where gay porn reaches for serious drama.
1160Without a strong script and energetic acting, Dogma films can produce the same sleep-inducing effects as watching your neighbor's home videos.
1171A frantic search for laughs, with a hit-to-miss ratio that doesn't exactly favour the audience.
1180De Niro may enjoy the same free ride from critics afforded to Clint Eastwood in the lazy Bloodwork.
1193An intelligent fiction about learning through cultural clash.
1204Greengrass has delivered an undoubted stylistic tour-de-force, and has managed elements such as sound and cinematography with skill
1212You won't believe much of it, but you will laugh at the audacity, at the who's who casting and the sheer insanity of it all.
1221There's something fundamental missing from this story: something or someone to care about.
1234At heart the movie is a deftly wrought suspense yarn whose richer shadings work as coloring rather than substance.
1243Sometimes, nothing satisfies like old-fashioned swashbuckling.
1251Enough similarities to Gymkata and Howie Long's Firestorm that my fingernails instinctively crawled towards my long-suffering eyeballs.
1264Despite what anyone believes about the goal of its makers, the show ... represents a spectacular piece of theater, and there's no denying the talent of the creative forces behind it.
1273Here's a British flick gleefully unconcerned with plausibility, yet just as determined to entertain you.
1283A well-made and often lovely depiction of the mysteries of friendship.
1291If I Spy were funny (enough) or exciting (enough) then it would be fairly simple to forgive the financial extortion it's trying to reap from the moviegoing public.
1301A great ending doesn't make up for a weak movie, and Crazy as Hell doesn't even have a great ending.
1311Demands too much of most viewers.
1324Rare is the 'urban comedy' that even attempts the insight and honesty of this disarming indie.
1331Its lack of quality earns it a place alongside those other two recent Dumas botch-jobs, The Man in the Iron Mask and The Musketeer.
1344A deviant topical comedy which is funny from start to finish.
1351Arguably the year's silliest and most incoherent movie.
1361The movie quickly drags on becoming boring and predictable.
1372A well-made, thoughtful, well-acted clunker, but a clunker nonetheless.
1383While not as aggressively impressive as its American counterpart, "In the Bedroom," Moretti's film makes its own, quieter observations
1392Asia authors herself as Anna Battista, an Italian superstar and aspiring directress who just happens to be her own worst enemy.
1402Aaliyah rarely dampens her diva persona enough to spark genuine chemistry with Townsend.
1411Imagine if you will a Tony Hawk skating video interspliced with footage from Behind Enemy Lines and set to Jersey shore techno.
1423A refreshingly authentic coming-of-age tale.
1432The Marquis de Sade couldn't have been as dull a person as this film makes him out to be.
1442Somehow both wildly implausible and strangely conventional.
1452Ben Affleck as Jack Ryan, Tom Clancy's intrepid hero?
1464The smartest bonehead comedy of the summer.
1472The crime matters less than the characters, although the filmmakers supply enough complications, close calls and double-crosses to satisfy us.
1483U.S. audiences may find (Attal and Gainsbourg's) unfamiliar personas give the film an intimate and quaint reality that is a little closer to human nature than what Hollywood typically concocts.
1493Escapism in its purest form.
1504The cast is uniformly excellent and relaxed.
1513Works because, for the most part, it avoids the stupid cliches and formulaic potholes that befall its brethren.
1521Sucking all the 'classic' out of Robert Louis Stevenson's Treasure Island and filling the void with sci-fi video game graphics and Disney-fied adolescent angst...
1531Audiences conditioned to getting weepy over saucer-eyed, downy-cheeked moppets and their empathetic caretakers will probably feel emotionally cheated by the film's tart, sugar-free wit.
1543Despite some gulps the film is a fuzzy huggy.
1550Nothing debases a concept comedy quite like the grinding of bad ideas, and Showtime is crammed full of them.
1563It's an example of sophisticated, challenging filmmaking that stands, despite its noticeable lack of emotional heft, in welcome contrast to the indulgent dead-end experimentation of the director's previous Full Frontal.
1571Even if Britney Spears is really cute, her movie is really bad.
1580The backyard battles you staged with your green plastic army men were more exciting and almost certainly made more sense.
1590The Ring just left me cold and wet like I was out in the Seattle drizzle without rainwear.
1601The plot is very clever, but Boyd weighs it down with too many characters and events, all intertwined and far too complicated to keep track of.
1614It's one of the saddest films I have ever seen that still manages to be uplifting but not overly sentimental.
1621It's all pretty cynical and condescending, too.
1633It takes this never-ending confusion and hatred, puts a human face on it, evokes shame among all who are party to it and even promotes understanding.
1642A cinematic sleeping pill of impressive potency.
1651Barely goes beyond comic book status.
1663Even if you can't pronounce "gyro" correctly, you'll appreciate much of Vardalos' humor, which transcends ethnic boundaries.
1671Borrows from so many literary and cinematic sources that this future world feels absolutely deja vu.
1682Fans of the TV series will be disappointed, and everyone else will be slightly bored.
1692It won't rock any boats but is solid meat-and-potatoes filmmaking.
1703Once again, director Jackson strikes a rewarding balance between emotion on the human scale and action/effects on the spectacular scale.
1711As adapted by Kevin Molony from Simon Leys' novel "The Death of Napoleon" and directed by Alan Taylor, Napoleon's journey is interesting but his Parisian rebirth is stillborn
1723Not everything works, but the average is higher than in Mary and most other recent comedies.
1731It smacks of purely commercial motivation, with no great love for the original.
1743A fairly by-the-books blend of action and romance with sprinklings of intentional and unintentional comedy.
1751A dreary rip-off of Goodfellas that serves as a muddled and offensive cautionary tale for Hispanic Americans.
1763Sits uneasily as a horror picture ... but finds surprising depth in its look at the binds of a small family.
1770Lacking gravitas, MacDowell is a placeholder for grief, and ergo this sloppy drama is an empty vessel.
1784An impressive debut for first-time writer-director Mark Romanek, especially considering his background is in music video.
1791It's push-the-limits teen comedy, the type written by people who can't come up with legitimate funny, and it's used so extensively that good bits are hopelessly overshadowed.
1801The story and characters are nowhere near gripping enough.
1810Ridiculous.
1821No.
1834If it seems like a minor miracle that its septuagenarian star is young enough to be the nonagenarian filmmaker's son, more incredible still are the clear-eyed boldness and quiet irony with which actor and director take on life's urgent questions.
1842If this movie belonged to a sorority, it would be called Beta Alpha Delta.
1851A long-winded and stagy session of romantic contrivances that never really gels like the shrewd feminist fairy tale it could have been.
1860A film so tedious that it is impossible to care whether that boast is true or not.
1873And in this regard, On Guard delivers.
1884something the true film buff will enjoy.
1891The result is solemn and horrifying, yet strangely detached.
1903A gentle, compassionate drama about grief and healing.
1912The actors are so terrific at conveying their young angst, we do indeed feel for them.
1920the story itself is uninteresting, and the songs are painfully undistinguished: They Might Be Giants' So to Be One of Us may be the most tuneless tune ever composed.
1933It's the cinematic equivalent of a good page-turner, and even if it's nonsense, its claws dig surprisingly deep.
1944The result is something quite fresh and delightful.
1954If you love Motown music, you'll love this documentary.
1964It's solid and affecting and exactly as thought-provoking as it should be.
1973You have to pay attention to follow all the stories, but they're each interesting.
1983(Wendigo is) why we go to the cinema: to be fed through the eye, the heart, the mind.
1993Lovingly choreographed bloodshed taking place in a pristine movie neverland, basically.
2003A thoughtful, moving piece that faces difficult issues with honesty and beauty.
2011For a film about two mismatched buddies, Crystal and De Niro share little screen time and even less chemistry.
2020Spousal abuse is a major problem in contemporary society, but the film reduces this domestic tragedy to florid melodrama.
2034Frida's artistic brilliance is undeniable -- it's among the most breathtakingly designed films I've ever seen.
2041I hate this movie
2051Not so much funny as aggressively sitcom-cute, it's full of throwaway one-liners, not-quite jokes, and a determined TV amiability that Allen personifies.
2064The film overcomes the regular minefield of coming-of-age cliches with potent doses of honesty and sensitivity.
2074Like Dickens with his passages, McGrath crafts quite moving scenes throughout his resolutely dramatic variation on the novel.
2083City by the Sea is the cinematic equivalent of defensive driving: It's careful, conscientious and makes no major mistakes.
2093It's both a necessary political work and a fascinating documentary...
2103This insightful, Oscar-nominated documentary, in which children on both sides of the ever-escalating conflict have their say away from watchful parental eyes, gives peace yet another chance.
2111This film is so slick, superficial and trend-hoppy, that it's easy to imagine that a new software program spit out the screenplay.
2120Too much of this well-acted but dangerously slow thriller feels like a preamble to a bigger, more complicated story, one that never materializes.
2134So young, so smart, such talent, such a wise ***.
2142Only a few minutes elapse before the daddy of all slashers arrives, still with the boiler suit and white mask, which look remarkably clean for a guy who has been mass-murdering since 1978 but has never been seen doing laundry.
2154Resourceful and ingenious entertainment.
2160'Enigma' is a good name for a movie this delibrately obtuse and unapproachable.
2174Rain is a small treasure, enveloping the viewer in a literal and spiritual torpor that is anything but cathartic.
2183This romantic thriller is steeped in the atmosphere of wartime England, and ably captures the speech patterns, moral codes and ideals of the 1940s.
2191Reggio falls victim to relying on the very digital technology that he fervently scorns, creating a meandering, inarticulate and ultimately disappointing film.
2204A masterpiece four years in the making.
2212Polished Korean political-action film is just as good -- and bad -- as Hollywood action epics.
2220"An entire film about researchers quietly reading dusty old letters."
2233In Adobo, ethnicity is not just the spice, but at the heart of more universal concerns.
2240Do we really need a 77-minute film to tell us exactly why a romantic relationship between a 15-year-old boy and a 40-year-old woman doesn't work?
2250This self-infatuated goofball is far from the only thing wrong with the clumsy comedy Stealing Harvard, but he's the most obvious one.
2264The film often achieves a mesmerizing poetry.
2272The movie isn't always easy to look at.
2284A triumph, relentless and beautiful in its downbeat darkness.
2291The movie's biggest offense is its complete and utter lack of tension.
2303Digital-video documentary about stand-up comedians is a great glimpse into a very different world.
2312It wants to be thought of as a subversive little indie film, but it has all the qualities of a modern situation comedy.
2324Impresses you with its open-endedness and surprises.
2330The smug, oily demeanor that Donovan adopts throughout the stupidly named Pipe Dream is just repulsive.
2344Her delivery and timing are flawless.
2350If High Crimes were any more generic it would have a universal product code instead of a title.
2364Almost every scene in this film is a gem that could stand alone, a perfectly realized observation of mood, behavior and intent.
2371When it's on dry land, though, this surfer-girl melodrama starts gasping like a beached grouper.
2380Like a tone-deaf singer at a benefit concert, John Q. is a bad movie appearing on behalf of a good cause.
2391Boring we didn't.
2403A spunky, original take on a theme that will resonate with singles of many ages.
2411Undercover Brother doesn't go far enough.
2421Moot point.
2430Let's cut to the consumer-advice bottom line: Stay home.
2443As green-guts monster movies go, it's a beaut.
2453Elling, portrayed with quiet fastidiousness by Per Christian Ellefsen, is a truly singular character, one whose frailties are only slightly magnified versions of the ones that vex nearly everyone.
2464The movie is full of fine performances, led by Josef Bierbichler as Brecht and Monica Bleibtreu as Helene Weigel, his wife.
2473Münch's genuine insight makes the film's occasional overindulgence forgivable.
2480The Sum of All Fears is almost impossible to follow -- and there's something cringe-inducing about seeing an American football stadium nuked as pop entertainment.
2493All but the most persnickety preteens should enjoy this nonthreatening but thrilling adventure.
2502While obviously an extremely personal work, it remains inextricably stuck in an emotionally unavailable rut.
2511The problem, it is with most of these things, is the script.
2521Beyond a handful of mildly amusing lines ... there just isn't much to laugh at.
2530This miserable excuse of a movie runs on empty, believing Flatbush machismo will get it through.
2543For the first two-thirds of this sparklingly inventive and artful, always fast and furious tale, kids will go happily along for the ride.
2552Ultimately, the message of Trouble Every Day seems to be that all sexual desire disrupts life's stasis.
2562No question.
2570Neither funny nor suspenseful nor particularly well-drawn.
2581A compendium of Solondz's own worst instincts in under 90 minutes.
2590All I can say is fuhgeddaboutit.
2604Biggie and Tupac is so single-mindedly daring, it puts far more polished documentaries to shame.
2611Anyone who can count to five (the film's target market?)
2621Warmed-over Tarantino by way of wannabe Elmore Leonard.
2634An endearingly offbeat romantic comedy with a great meet-cute gimmick.
2644Emerges as something rare, an issue movie that's so honest and keenly observed that it doesn't feel like one.
2652Cuts right through the B.S. giving a big middle-fingered "shut up" to those who talk up what is nothing more than two guys beating the hell outta one another.
2664Sharp, lively, funny and ultimately sobering film.
2673Shainberg weaves a carefully balanced scenario that is controlled by neither character, is weirdly sympathetic to both and manages to be tender and darkly comic.
2681Thirty years ago, it would have been groundbreaking.
2690It is a comedy that's not very funny and an action movie that is not very thrilling (and an uneasy alliance, at that).
2701Unfortunately, as a writer, Mr. Montias isn't nearly as good to his crew as he is as a director or actor.
2711A long-winded, predictable scenario.
2724Invincible is a wonderful movie.
2733Earns its laughs from stock redneck 'types' and from the many, many moments when we recognize even without the Elizabethan prose, the play behind the thing.
2744A smart, sweet and playful romantic comedy.
2753A moody horror/thriller elevated by deft staging and the director's well-known narrative gamesmanship.
2760A dreadful live-action movie.
2774s personal revelations regarding what the shop means in the big picture, iconic characters gambol fluidly through the story, with charming results.
2783For the most part, I Spy was an amusing lark that will probably rank as one of Murphy's better performances in one of his lesser-praised movies.
2793Though the controversial Korean filmmaker's latest effort is not for all tastes, it offers gorgeous imagery, effective performances, and an increasingly unsettling sense of foreboding.
2804well worth the time.
2811They felt like the same movie to me.
2823Witty, touching and well paced.
2831I would have preferred a transfer down the hall to Mr. Holland's class for the music, or to Robin Williams's lecture so I could listen to a teacher with humor, passion, and verve.
2843This is the best American movie about troubled teens since 1998's Whatever.
2851Absorbing and disturbing -- perhaps more disturbing than originally intended -- but a little clarity would have gone a long way.
2864Good movie.
2872Lilia's transformation from strict mother to sensual siren is superficially preposterous, but Abbas infuses the role with an unimpeachable core of emotional truth.
2884I whole-heartedly recommend that everyone see this movie-- for its historical significance alone.
2890It's badly acted, blandly directed, and could have been scripted by someone who just graduated from elementary school.
2904But what spectacular sizzle it is!
2912Enduring love but exhausting cinema.
2923Stephen Earnhart's homespun documentary Mule Skinner Blues has nothing but love for its posse of trailer park denizens.
2933It's a sly wink to The Others without becoming a postmodern joke, made creepy by its "men in a sardine can" warped logic.
2943A cop story that understands the medium amazingly well.
2951Taken individually or collectively, the stories never add up to as much as they promise.
2962... understands that a generation defines its music as much as the music defines a generation.
2970When she speaks, her creepy Egyptian demigod voice is as computer processed and overproduced as it was in her music.
2982So faithful to the doldrums of the not-quite-urban, not-quite-suburban milieu as to have viewers recoiling from the reality check.
2994One of the greatest romantic comedies of the past decade.
3000The plot grinds on with yawn-provoking dullness.
3013An amusing, breezily apolitical documentary about life on the campaign trail.
3023Time Changer may not be the most memorable cinema session but its profound self-evaluation message about our fragile existence and the absence of spiritual guidance should at least invade an abundance of mindsets
3034A very witty take on change, risk and romance, and the film uses humour to make its points about acceptance and growth.
3041...the last time I saw a theater full of people constantly checking their watches was during my SATs.
3054These are lives worth watching, paths worth following.
3061Static, repetitive, muddy and blurry, Hey Arnold!
3070This is a throwaway, junk-food movie whose rap soundtrack was better tended to than the film itself.
3082We may never think of band camp as a geeky or nerdy thing again.
3094The WWII drama is well plotted, visually striking and filled with enjoyably complex characters who are never what they first appear.
3104A film that is a portrait of grace in an imperfect world.
3111Ultimately the project comes across as clinical, detached, uninvolving, possibly prompting audience members to wonder, 'What's the point?'
3124The best movie of its kind since 'Brazil.'
3132As a director, Mr. Ratliff wisely rejects the temptation to make fun of his subjects.
3142The disarming cornball atmosphere has a way of infecting the entire crowd as the film rolls on.
3154Davis has filled out his cast with appealing fresh faces.
3163It might be tempting to regard Mr. Andrew and his collaborators as oddballs, but Mr. Earnhart's quizzical, charming movie allows us to see them, finally, as artists.
3171Sadly, Hewitt's forte is leaning forward while wearing low-cut gowns, not making snappy comebacks.
3182This one does.
3190So what is the point?
3201The issue of faith is not explored very deeply
3212Everything that's worthwhile about Collision Course can already be seen on television.
3224My oh my, is this an invigorating, electric movie.
3233Director Ferzan Ozpetek creates an interesting dynamic with the members of this group, who live in the same apartment building.
3241I kept thinking over and over again, 'I should be enjoying this.'
3252It's not thirsty, consuming passion which drives this movie.
3260Don't expect any surprises in this checklist of teamwork cliches...
3271I saw Knockaround Guys yesterday, and already the details have faded like photographs from the Spanish-American War ... It's so unmemorable that it turned my ballpoint notes to invisible ink.
3284The stunning, dreamlike visuals will impress even those viewers who have little patience for Euro-film pretension.
3293An eccentric little comic/thriller deeply in love with its own quirky personality.
3302Behan himself knew how to spin a tale and one can't help but think he'd appreciate this attempt to turn his life into art.
3313My goodness, Queen Latifah has a lot to offer and she seemed to have no problem flaunting her natural gifts.
3322Often moving and explores the discomfort inherent in the contacts between the American 'hosts' and their 'guests.'
3332Anthony Hopkins?
3341Egoyan's movie is too complicated to sustain involvement, and, if you'll excuse a little critical heresy, too intellectually ambitious.
3354Will grab your children by the imagination and amaze them and amuse them.
3361A chaotic panorama that's too busy flying a lot of metaphoric flags.
3371The overall feel of the film is pretty cheesy, but there's still a real sense that the Star Trek tradition has been honored as best it can, given the embarrassing script and weak direction.
3384This is one for the ages.
3393The animated subplot keenly depicts the inner struggles of our adolescent heroes - insecure, uncontrolled, and intense.
3402Bennett's dramatization of her personal descent into post-breakup perdition has a morbid appeal that's tough to shake.
3412Every so often a movie comes along that confirms one's worse fears about civilization as we know it.
3424A compelling, moving film that respects its audience and its source material.
3433The talents of the actors helps "Moonlight Mile" rise above its heart-on-its-sleeve writing.
3440As elegantly crafted as it often is, Anderson's movie is essentially a one-trick pony that, hampered by an undeveloped script, ultimately pulls up lame.
3452Can't kick about the assembled talent and the Russos show genuine promise as comic filmmakers.
3460All the characters are stereotypes, and their interaction is numbingly predictable.
3472I wonder why.
3483Day is not a great Bond movie, but it is a good Bond movie, which still makes it much better than your typical Bond knock-offs.
3491The tug-of-war at the core of Beijing Bicycle becomes weighed down with agonizing contrivances, overheated pathos and long, wistful gazes.
3501Quick: who wants to see a comedy about shoddy airport security?
3512Karmen moves like rhythm itself, her lips chanting to the beat, her long, braided hair doing little to wipe away the jeweled beads of sweat.
3522It is nature against progress.
3531By the end, I was looking for something hard with which to bludgeon myself unconscious.
3540The only element of suspense is whether the movie will change titles or distributors again before the closing credits roll.
3554This clever caper movie has twists worthy of David Mamet and is enormous fun for thinking audiences.
3563Most of Crush is a clever and captivating romantic comedy with a welcome pinch of tartness.
3573Makmalbaf follows a resolutely realistic path in this uncompromising insight into the harsh existence of the Kurdish refugees of Iran's borderlands.
3581Despite a blue-chip cast and a provocative title, writer-director Peter Mattei's first feature microwaves dull leftover romantic motifs basted in faux-contemporary gravy.
3594Well-written, nicely acted and beautifully shot and scored, the film works on several levels, openly questioning social mores while ensnaring the audience with its emotional pull.
3603This isn't a narrative film -- I don't know if it's possible to make a narrative film about September 11th, though I'm sure some will try -- but it's as close as anyone has dared to come.
3613Christians sensitive to a reductionist view of their Lord as a luv-spreading Dr. Feelgood or omnipotent slacker will feel vastly more affronted than secularists, who might even praise God for delivering such an instant camp classic.
3622Heavy-handed exercise in time-vaulting literary pretension.
3633A clever blend of fact and fiction.
3642All Ms. Jovovich, as the sanctified heroine, has to do is look radiant, grimly purposeful and mildly alarmed while forcing open doors, wielding wrenches and fleeing monsters.
3651There's plenty of style in Guillermo Del Toro's sequel to the 1998 hit but why do we need 117 minutes to tell a tale that simply can't sustain more than 90 minutes.
3661The writers, director Wally Wolodarsky, and all the actors should start their own coeducational fraternity: Kappa Rho Alpha Phi.
3672A sudsy cautionary tale.
3683The filmmakers skillfully evoke the sense of menace that nature holds for many urban dwellers.
3691It's best to avoid imprisonment with the dull, nerdy folks that inhabit Cherish.
3701Based on a David Leavitt story, the film shares that writer's usual blend of observant cleverness, too-facile coincidence and slightly noxious preciousness.
3713Pray's film works well and will appeal even to those who aren't too familiar with turntablism.
3722Those with an interest in new or singular sorts of film experiences will find What Time Is It There?
3730It's drained of life in an attempt to be sober and educational, and yet it's so devoid of realism that its lack of whistles and bells just makes it obnoxious and stiff.
3742It's a deeply serious movie that cares passionately about its subject, but too often becomes ponderous in its teaching of history, or lost in the intricate connections and multiple timelines of its story.
3753To the film's credit, the acting is fresh and unselfconscious, and Munch is a marvel of reality versus sappy sentiment.
3761Why come up with something even quasi-original, when you can pillage from Shirley Jackson, Richard Matheson ... and puke up something like ROSE RED?
3773An absorbing trip into the minds and motivations of people under stress as well as a keen, unsentimental look at variations on the theme of motherhood.
3783Though a bit of a patchwork in script and production, a glossy, rich green, environment almost makes the picture work.
3791Well-shot but badly written tale set in a future ravaged by dragons.
3801Outrageousness is all Plympton seemed to be going for this time.
3812Sheridan ... smoothes over sources of conflict that could have lent the film a bit more depth.
3824There's a vastness implied in Metropolis that is just breathtaking.
3834A feel-good picture in the best sense of the term.
3844This is a happy throwback to the time when cartoons were cinema's most idiosyncratic form instead of one of its most predictable.
3854Newton draws our attention like a magnet, and acts circles around her better known co-star, Mark Wahlberg.
3863Vividly conveys both the pitfalls and the pleasures of over-the-top love.
3870Formula 51 is so trite that even Yu's high-energy action stylings can't break through the stupor.
3883When your leading ladies are a couple of screen-eating dominatrixes like Goldie Hawn and Susan Sarandon at their raunchy best, even hokum goes down easily.
3890Flaccid drama and exasperatingly slow journey.
3900Too silly to be frightening, too stolid to be funny, it projects the same lazy affability as its nominal star, David Arquette.
3911Overall, the film misses the brilliance of Jelinek's novel by some way.
3923An incredibly low-rent Danish film, it brings a group of people together in a sweet and charming way, if a little convenient
3931The film meant well in its horse tale about freedom, but wasn't able to reach the heart because it was too overbearing.
3944Occasionally funny, always very colorful and enjoyably overblown in the traditional Almodóvar style.
3951High Crimes miscasts nearly every leading character.
3963Pretty darn good, despite its smarty-pants aura.
3971A mixed bag of a comedy that can't really be described as out of this world.
3984A movie that will touch the hearts of both children and adults, as well as bring audiences to the edge of their seats.
3994(An) hilarious romantic comedy.
4003Both deeply weird and charmingly dear.
4011The ill-conceived modern-day ending falls flat where it should deliver a moral punch.
4024The movie has lots of dancing and fabulous music.
4033What you would end up with if you took Orwell, Bradbury, Kafka, George Lucas and the Wachowski Brothers and threw them into a blender.
4044A hip ride into hyper-time, Clockstoppers is a lively and enjoyable adventure for all ages at any time.
4051It risks seeming slow and pretentious, because it thinks the gamble is worth the promise.
4063Occasionally melodramatic, it's also extremely effective.
4071A very stylish but ultimately extremely silly tale...a slick piece of nonsense but nothing more.
4081It's really yet another anemic and formulaic Lethal Weapon-derived buddy-cop movie, trying to pass off its lack of imagination as hip knowingness.
4094An enjoyably half-wit remake of the venerable Italian comedy Big Deal on Madonna Street.
4101Rainy days and movies about the disintegration of families always get me down.
4114The second chapter of the Harry Potter series is even more magical than the first and simply the best family film of the year.
4120It's hard not to feel you've just watched a feature-length video game with some really heavy back story.
4134It's one of the most honest films ever made about Hollywood.
4141Where last time jokes flowed out of Cho's life story, which provided an engrossing dramatic through line, here the comedian hides behind obviously constructed routines.
4154(But it's) worth recommending because of two marvelous performances by Michael Caine and Brendan Fraser.
4162The weakest of the four Harry Potter books has been transformed into the stronger of the two films by the thinnest of margins.
4173There is a kind of attentive concern that Hoffman brings to his characters, as if he has been giving them private lessons, and now it is time for their first public recital.
4182Though the plot is predictable, the movie never feels formulaic, because the attention is on the nuances of the emotional development of the delicate characters.
4190Philip K. Dick must be turning in his grave, along with my stomach.
4201Its characters are thinner than cardboard -- or even comic-book paper.
4211Fine acting but there is no sense of connecting the dots, just dots.
4221Theology aside, why put someone who ultimately doesn't learn at the center of a kids' story?
4234The movie's quiet affirmation of neighborhood values gives it an honest, lived-in glow.
4241It might as well have been Problem Child IV.
4250Feels like one of those contrived, only-in -Hollywood productions where name actors deliver big performances created for the sole purpose of generating Oscar talk.
4263Good ol' urban legend stuff.
4274The film's greatest asset is how much it's not just another connect-the-dots, spy-on-the-run picture.
4281Home Alone goes Hollywood, a funny premise until the kids start pulling off stunts not even Steven Spielberg would know how to do.
4292... a joke at once flaky and resonant, lightweight and bizarrely original.
4304If it's possible for a sequel to outshine the original, then SL2 does just that.
4314One of those rare, exhilarating cinematic delights that gets even better in hindsight, as you mull over its every nuance in your mind.
4321Sunshine State lacks the kind of dynamic that Limbo offers, and in some ways is a rather indulgent piece.
4333Painful to watch, but viewers willing to take a chance will be rewarded with two of the year's most accomplished and riveting film performances.
4340Do not, under any circumstances, consider taking a child younger than middle school age to this wallow in crude humor.
4353He simply presents his point of view that Ayurveda works.
4361For all its surface frenzy, High Crimes should be charged with loitering -- so much on view, so little to offer.
4371Like a marathon runner trying to finish a race, you need a constant influx of liquid just to get through it.
4382Kidman is really the only thing that's worth watching in Birthday Girl, a film by the stage-trained Jez Butterworth (Mojo) that serves as yet another example of the sad decline of British comedies in the post-Full Monty world.
4390It took 19 predecessors to get THIS?
4401...perhaps the heaviest, most joyless movie ever made about giant dragons taking over the world.
4413While surprisingly sincere, this average little story is adorned with some awesome action photography and surfing.
4424An endlessly fascinating, landmark movie that is as bold as anything the cinema has seen in years.
4431Begins as a promising meditation on one of America's most durable obsessions but winds up as a slender cinematic stunt.
4443A yarn that respects the Marvel version without becoming ensnared by it.
4454(Howard) so good as Leon Barlow ... that he hardly seems to be acting.
4463The tug of war that ensues is as much a snapshot of modern China in microcosm as it is a crash course in movie mythology.
4470But in its child-centered, claustrophobic context, it can be just as frightening and disturbing -- even punishing.
4483The whole cast looks to be having so much fun with the slapstick antics and silly street patois, tossing around obscure expressions like Bellini and Mullinski, that the compact 86 minutes breezes by.
4491Though Ganesh is successful in a midlevel sort of way, there's nothing so striking or fascinating or metaphorically significant about his career as to rate two hours of our attention.
4504The people in Dogtown and Z-Boys are so funny, aggressive and alive, you have to watch them because you can't wait to see what they do next.
4511Reggio's trippy, ambitious downer can also sometimes come across like nothing more than a glorified Nike ad.
4522You've already seen Heartbreak if you've watched the far superior Nurse Betty or Sunset Boulevard.
4533(Fessenden) is much more into ambiguity and creating mood than he is for on screen thrills
4543If you can get past the fantastical aspects and harsh realities of "The Isle" you'll get a sock-you-in-the-eye flick that is a visual tour-de-force and a story that is unlike any you will likely see anywhere else.
4552the plot is so amusingly contrived and outlandish in its coincidences that no one could ever mistake it for anything resembling reality
4563Jacquot's Tosca is a treat.
4570You're better off staying home and watching The X-Files.
4584The drama is played out with such aching beauty and truth that it brings tears to your eyes.
4590The sequel has turned completely and irrevocably bizarre to the point of utter nonsense.
4604Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood may not be exactly divine, but it's definitely -- defiantly -- ya ya, what with all of those terrific songs and spirited performances.
4612The movie sticks much closer to Hornby's drop-dead confessional tone than the film version of High Fidelity did.
4621The subject of swinging still seems ripe for a documentary -- just not this one.
4634The principals in this cast are all fine, but Bishop and Stevenson are standouts.
4643But it offers plenty to ponder and chew on as its unusual relationship slowly unfolds.
4650The ending is a cop-out.
4661The makers of Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood should offer a free ticket (second prize, of course, two free tickets) to anyone who can locate a genuinely honest moment in their movie.
4671No, it's not nearly as good as any of its influences.
4681But he loses his focus when he concentrates on any single person.
4690Bullock's complete lack of focus and ability quickly derails the film
4701Say this for the soundtrack, it drowns out the lousy dialogue.
4711All ends well, sort of, but the frenzied comic moments never click.
4722You see Robert De Niro singing - and dancing to - West Side Story show tunes.
4730Proves that a movie about goodness is not the same thing as a good movie.
4744Workmanlike, maybe, but still a film with all the elements that made the other three great, scary times at the movies.
4751This formulaic chiller will do little to boost Stallone's career.
4763Like the film's almost anthropologically detailed realization of early-'80s suburbia, it's significant without being overstated.
4771Accuracy and realism are terrific, but if your film becomes boring, and your dialogue isn't smart, then you need to use more poetic license.
4783Elling really is about a couple of crazy guys, and it's therapeutic to laugh along with them.
4791... too gory to be a comedy and too silly to be an effective horror film.
4800A boring, formulaic mix of serial killers and stalk'n'slash.
4812Take away all the cliches and the carbon copy scenes from every drug movie we've seen and all you have left are John Leguizamo's cool jackets.
4824A refreshing Korean film about five female high school friends who face an uphill battle when they try to take their relationships into deeper waters.
4834Hu and Liu offer natural, matter-of-fact performances that glint with sorrow, longing and love.
4842Insomnia is involving.
4851The kids often appear to be reading the lines and are incapable of conveying any emotion.
4860Just one more collection of penis, breast and flatulence gags in search of a story.
4873Not a bad journey at all.
4883Has a shambling charm...a cheerfully inconsequential diversion.
4892Passably entertaining but also mechanical and joyless.
4901The film's 45-minute running time stops shy of overkill, though viewers may be more exhausted than the athletes onscreen.
4911Collateral Damage is, despite its alleged provocation post-9/11, an antique, in the end.
4921Even those of a single digit age will be able to recognize that this story is too goofy... even for Disney.
4934Bubba Ho-Tep is a wonderful film with a bravura lead performance by Bruce Campbell that doesn't deserve to leave the building until everyone is aware of it.
4942Although the editing might have been tighter, Hush!
4952It's an earnest debut full of heartfelt performances, but is ultimately let down by a story that is all too predictable.
4960The movie is as far as you can get from racy, to the point where it almost stops the blood flow to your brain; it has a dull, costumey feel.
4972You could say that it's slow at times, you could say that a few of the characters act in ways that real people wouldn't, but one thing you couldn't say is that Alias Betty is predictable.
4984Hilarious, touching and wonderfully dyspeptic.
4993It is a film that will have people walking out halfway through, will encourage others to stand up and applaud, and will, undoubtedly, leave both camps engaged in a ferocious debate for years to come.
5001A cumbersome and cliche-ridden movie greased with every emotional device known to man.
5014A comprehensive and provocative film -- one that pushes the boundaries of biography, and challenges its audience.
5021Despite the authenticity of the trappings, the film is overblown in its plotting, hackneyed in its dialogue and anachronistic in its style.
5031The character is too forced and overwritten to be funny or believable much of the time, and Clayburgh doesn't always improve the over-the-top mix.
5043This version incarnates the prophetic book in a way even its exacting author might admire.
5052'Charly' will divide its audience in two separate groups, those reaching for more tissues and those begging for mercy...
5061Herzog is obviously looking for a moral to his fable, but the notion that a strong, unified showing among Germany and Eastern European Jews might have changed 20th-Century history is undermined by Ahola's inadequate performance.
5071The performances are so leaden, Michael Rymer's direction is so bloodless and the dialogue is so corny that the audience laughs out loud.
5084A thoughtful, provocative, insistently humanizing film.
5091The movie bounces all over the map.
5102If there's nothing fresh about Wannabes, which was written by Mr. DeMeo, who produced and directed the film with Charles A. Addessi, much of the time the movie feels authentic.
5112There's no way to sort out the mess in our heads and deconstruct where it all went wrong.
5121A frustrating combination of strained humor and heavy-handed sentimentality.
5134It's traditional moviemaking all the way, but it's done with a lot of careful period attention as well as some very welcome wit.
5144It's as close as we'll ever come to looking through a photographer's viewfinder as he works.
5154The film is all a little Lit Crit 101, but it's extremely well played and often very funny.
5162It's a trifle.
5174De Oliveira creates an emotionally rich, poetically plump and visually fulsome, but never showy, film whose bittersweet themes are reinforced and brilliantly personified by Michel Piccoli.
5183Funny and, at times, poignant, the film from director George Hickenlooper all takes place in Pasadena, "a city where people still read."
5190Too loud, too long and too frantic by half, Die Another Day suggests that the Bond franchise has run into a creative wall that 007 cannot fly over, tunnel under or barrel through.
5201The film is itself a sort of cinematic high crime, one that brings military courtroom dramas down very, very low.
5214Fuller would surely have called this gutsy and at times exhilarating movie a great yarn.
5221A long slog for anyone but the most committed Pokemon fan.
5232Disney has always been hit-or-miss when bringing beloved kids' books to the screen...Tuck Everlasting is a little of both.
5241Though Avary has done his best to make something out of Ellis' nothing novel, in the end, his Rules is barely worth following.
5250This idea has lost its originality ... and neither star appears very excited at rehashing what was basically a one-joke picture.
5261Little more than a frothy vanity project.
5270A depressing confirmation of everything those of us who don't object to the description "unelected" have suspected all along: George W. Bush is an incurious, uncharismatic, overgrown frat boy with a mean streak a mile wide.
5284An enchanting film that presents an audacious tour of the past and takes within its warm embrace the bounties of cultural artifacts inside St.Petersburg's Hermitage Museum.
5293The New Guy does have a heart.
5301Screenwriters Scott Abbott and Michael Petroni have turned Rice's complex Akasha into a cartoon monster.
5313Nolan bravely treads where few American films dare to delve -- into the world of ambivalence and ambiguity...
5324Few films this year have been as resolute in their emotional nakedness.
5331I didn't laugh at the ongoing efforts of Cube, and his skinny buddy Mike Epps, to make like Laurel and Hardy 'n the hood.
5341The streets, shot by cinematographer Michael Ballhaus, may be as authentic as they are mean, but it is nearly impossible to care about what happens on them.
5350If you're looking for comedy to be served up, better look elsewhere.
5360The movie makes absolutely no sense.
5373It extends the writings of Jean Genet and John Rechy, the films of Fassbinder, perhaps even the nocturnal works of Goya.
5383Edited and shot with a syncopated style mimicking the work of his subjects, Pray turns the idea of the documentary on its head, making it rousing, invigorating fun lacking any MTV puffery.
5392Mocking kung fu pictures when they were a staple of exploitation theater programming was witty.
5404This ecologically minded, wildlife friendly film teaches good ethics while entertaining with its unconventionally wacky but loving family
5411Almost everything else is wan.
5424As Hugh Grant says repeatedly throughout the movie, 'Lovely!
5434It never fails to engage us.
5442It is now.
5454Only an epic documentary could get it all down, and Spike Lee's Jim Brown: All American at long last gives its subject a movie worthy of his talents.
5462Or Tom Green as Han Solo?
5472It might be the first sci-fi comedy that could benefit from a Three's Company-style laugh track.
5480Shadyac shoots his film like an M. Night Shyamalan movie, and he frequently maintains the same snail's pace; he just forgot to add any genuine tension.
5494Waydowntown is by no means a perfect film, but its boasts a huge charm factor and smacks of originality.
5504I complain all the time about seeing the same ideas repeated in films over and over again, but The Bourne Identity proves that a fresh take is always possible.
5510The stupidest, most insulting movie of 2002's first quarter.
5521No more.
5531(Newton)wanders through CHARLIE completely unaware she needs to show some presence and star quality.
5541I didn't believe for a moment in these villains or their plot.
5552Purely propaganda, a work of unabashed hero worship, it is nonetheless -- and likely inadvertently -- a timely and invaluable implicit reminder of the role that U.S. foreign policy has played in the rise of Castro.
5562A mild, reluctant, thumbs down.
5573A tale of horror and revenge that is nearly perfect in its relentless descent to the depths of one man's tortured soul.
5583An original gem about an obsession with time.
5591She lists ingredients, but never mixes and stirs.
5601None of this violates the letter of Behan's book, but missing is its spirit, its ribald, full-throated humor.
5612Tadpole is emblematic of the witless ageism afflicting films: Young is cool, and too young is too cool.
5623A journey through memory, a celebration of living, and a sobering rumination on fatality, classism, and ignorance.
5633This is art paying homage to art.
5643Happily for Mr. Chin -- though unhappily for his subjects -- the invisible hand of the marketplace wrote a script that no human screenwriter could have hoped to match.
5654Makes S&M seem very romantic, and Maggie Gyllenhaal is a delight.
5661Like most Bond outings in recent years, some of the stunts are so outlandish that they border on being cartoonlike.
5672How anyone over the age of 2 can stomach the touchy-feely message this preachy produce promotes is beyond us.
5682Despite its many infuriating flaws -- not the least of which is Amy's self-absorbed personality -- Amy's O's honesty will win you over.
5694It has the courage to wonder about big questions with sincerity and devotion.
5701In the second half of the film, Frei's control loosens in direct proportion to the amount of screen time he gives Nachtwey for self-analysis.
5714The year's happiest surprise, a movie that deals with a real subject in an always surprising way.
5722Andersson creates a world that's at once surreal and disturbingly familiar; absurd, yet tremendously sad.
5734An intelligent, moving and invigorating film.
5744Daring, mesmerizing and exceedingly hard to forget.
5754...as the story congeals you feel the pieces of the Star Wars saga falling into place in a way that makes your spine tingle with revelation and excitement.
5763Never (sinks) into exploitation.
5771Leaves you with a knot in your stomach, its power is undercut by its own head-banging obviousness.
5781The cast is so low-wattage that none of the characters comes off as big ... and the setting remains indistinct.
5794A splendid entertainment, young in spirit but accomplished in all aspects with the fullness of spirit and sense of ease that comes only with experience.
5803It's hard not to be seduced by (Witherspoon's) charisma, even in this run-of-the-mill vehicle, because this girl knows how to drive it to the max.
5811Glib, satirical documentary that fudges facts, makes facile points and engages in the cinematic equivalent of tabloid journalism.
5824With the film's striking ending, one realizes that we have a long way to go before we fully understand all the sexual permutations involved.
5830You'll have more fun setting fire to yourself in the parking lot.
5843Foster nails the role, giving a tight, focused performance illuminated by shards of feeling.
5853It dares to be a little different, and that shading is what makes it worthwhile.
5860fear dot com is so rambling and disconnected it never builds any suspense.
5872...has freaky scenes where the crew wonder if they're ghosts imagining themselves as alive.
5883Tuck Everlasting achieves a delicate balance of romantic innocence and philosophical depth.
5894This is Carion's debut feature but his script and direction hums with a confidence that many spend entire careers trying to reach.
5904An elegant, exquisitely modulated psychological thriller.
5911Stars Matthew Perry and Elizabeth Hurley illicit more than a chuckle, and more jokes land than crash, but ultimately Serving Sara doesn't distinguish itself from the herd.
5922The ending does leave you unfulfilled, but these are performances to enjoy in a memorable ensemble piece.
5931Hey, who else needs a shower?
5941But even a hero can stumble sometimes.
5951The tone shifts abruptly from tense to celebratory to soppy.
5963Moore's performance impresses almost as much as her work with Haynes in 1995's Safe.
5970Not even the Hanson Brothers can save it
5983A picture that extols the virtues of comradeship and community in a spunky, spirited fashion.
5993Too bad, but thanks to some lovely comedic moments and several fine performances, it's not a total loss.
6004His characters are engaging, intimate and the dialogue is realistic and greatly moving.
6013Now trimmed by about 20 minutes, this lavish three-year-old production has enough grandeur and scale to satisfy as grown-up escapism.
6022For the most part, the ingredients are there.
6032Hardly makes the kind of points Egoyan wanted to make, nor does it exist as the kind of monument he wanted to build, to victims whose voices have never gained the ears of the world.
6043An imaginative comedy/thriller.
6051Technically, the film is about as interesting as an insurance commercial.
6061The only thing in Pauline and Paulette that you haven't seen before is a scene featuring a football field-sized Oriental rug crafted out of millions of vibrant flowers.
6074Offers enough playful fun to entertain the preschool set while embracing a wholesome attitude.
6083There are times when A Rumor of Angels plays like an extended episode of Touched by an Angel -- a little too much dancing, a few too many weeping scenes -- but I liked its heart and its spirit.
6090For anyone who grew up on Disney's 1950 Treasure Island, or remembers the 1934 Victor Fleming classic, this one feels like an impostor.
6104...an inviting piece of film.
6111...a big, baggy, sprawling carnival of a movie, stretching out before us with little rhyme or reason.
6121Flashy, pretentious and as impenetrable as Morvern's thick, working-class Scottish accent.
6131Maudlin and melodramatic we expected.
6141Shocking only in that it reveals the filmmaker's bottomless pit of self-absorption.
6152Not a cheap slasher flick, as the subject matter would suggest, but is a little like a nature film, showing a patient predator and his foolish prey.
6163The visuals alone make Metropolis worth seeing.
6171Uncertain in tone... a garbled exercise in sexual politics, a junior varsity Short Cuts by way of Very Bad Things.
6180A waste of good performances.
6191One of those movies where you walk out of the theater not feeling cheated exactly, but feeling pandered to, which, in the end, might be all the more infuriating.
6201A bit of an unwieldy mess.
6211The picture, scored by a perversely cheerful Marcus Miller accordion/harmonica/banjo abomination, is a monument to bad in all its florid variety.
6220Julia is played with exasperating blandness by Laura Regan.
6233A romantic comedy that operates by the rules of its own self-contained universe.
6242Noyce films it more as a shocking history lesson than as drama.
6251Liman, of Swingers and Go, makes his big-budget action film debut something of a clunker as he delivers a long, low-heat chase, interrupted by a middling car chase.
6264A triumph of art direction over narrative, but what art direction!
6271Propelled not by characters but by caricatures.
6281Never mind whether you buy the stuff about Barris being a CIA hit man.
6291Here's a self-congratulatory 3D IMAX rah-rah.
6300Every bit as bogus as most Disney live action family movies are -- no real plot, no real conflict, no real point.
6313One of the most haunting, viciously honest coming-of-age films in recent memory.
6324The film has just enough of everything -- re-enactments, archival footage, talking-head interviews -- and the music is simply sublime.
6334I like the new footage and still love the old stuff.
6341I weep for the future when a good portion of the respected critical community in this country consider Blue Crush to be an intelligent film about young women.
6351Without September 11, Collateral Damage would have been just another bad movie.
6364Gollum's 'performance' is incredible!
6373Superior genre storytelling, which gets under our skin simply by crossing the nuclear line.
6381There are films that try the patience of even the most cinema-besotted critic -- and this was one of them.
6393An unabashedly schmaltzy and thoroughly enjoyable true story.
6401If this dud had been made in the '70s, it would have been called The Hills Have Antlers and played for about three weeks in drive-ins.
6413A deliciously mordant, bitter black comedy.
6421A sophomoric exploration of 'life problems' most people solved long ago -- or at least got tired of hearing people kvetch about.
6433Flavorful and romantic, you could call this How Martha Got Her Groove Back -- assuming, that is, she ever had one to begin with.
6443Director Rob Marshall went out gunning to make a great one.
6452It would have benefitted the dialogue.
6461Lanie's professional success means she must be a failure at life, because she's driven by ambition and Doesn't Know How to Have Fun.
6472This movie is about lying, cheating, but loving the friends you betray.
6483It almost plays like Solaris, but with guns and jokes.
6491Kwan makes the mix-and- match metaphors intriguing, while lulling us into torpor with his cultivated allergy to action.
6501You could nap for an hour and not miss a thing.
6514The tenderness of the piece is still intact.
6520These people wouldn't know subtle characterization if it put on a giant furry monster costume and then gave them a lapdance.
6531A graceless, witless attempt at mating Some Like It Hot with the WWII espionage thriller.
6541The impact of the Armenian genocide is diluted by too much stage business in the modern day.
6553While Undercover Brother is definitely one for the masses, it's also full of sharp, smart satire.
6562Two hours of melodramatic musical married to two hours of underdog sports intrigue, if the picture also shares the weaknesses of both genres, more's the pity.
6574Visits spy-movie territory like a novel you can't put down, examines a footnote to history seldom brought to light on the screen, and keeps you guessing from first frame to last.
6582Just how extreme are these ops?
6592Too leisurely paced and visually drab for its own good, it succeeds in being only sporadically amusing.
6603It suggests the wide-ranging effects of media manipulation, from the kind of reporting that is done by the supposedly liberal media ... to the intimate and ultimately tragic heartache of maverick individuals like Hatfield and Hicks.
6612Just one problem: Fish out of water usually die.
6622Some actors steal scenes.
6634This warm and gentle romantic comedy has enough interesting characters to fill several movies, and its ample charms should win over the most hard-hearted cynics.
6641Half of it is composed of snappy patter and pseudo-sophisticated cultural observations, while the remainder...would be more at home on a daytime television serial.
6651Though Howard demonstrates a great eye as a director, this Southern Gothic drama is sadly a tough sit, with an undeveloped narrative and enough flashbacks and heavy-handed metaphors to choke a horse -- or at least slow him down to a canter.
6663A tough go, but Leigh's depth and rigor, and his skill at inspiring accomplished portrayals that are all the more impressive for their lack of showiness, offsets to a notable degree the film's often-mined and despairing milieu.
6671At first, the sight of a blind man directing a film is hilarious, but as the film goes on, the joke wears thin.
6684A charming romantic comedy that is by far the lightest Dogme film and among the most enjoyable.
6693While The Isle is both preposterous and thoroughly misogynistic, its vistas are incredibly beautiful to look at.
6704Denis and co-writer Michele Petin's impeccable screenplay penetrates with a rawness that that is both unflinching and tantalizing.
6711Expect to be reminded of other, better films, especially Seven, which director William Malone slavishly copies.
6724Lathan and Diggs have considerable personal charm, and their screen rapport makes the old story seem new.
6733The reason this picture works better than its predecessors is that Myers is no longer simply spoofing the mini-mod-madness of '60s spy movies.
6740He has not learnt that storytelling is what the movies are about.
6753An intelligent, earnest, intimate film that drops the ball only when it pauses for blunt exposition to make sure you're getting its metaphysical point.
6763Majidi's poetic love story is a ravishing consciousness-raiser, if a bit draggy at times.
6772It's a sometimes interesting remake that doesn't compare to the brilliant original.
6783Westfeldt and Juergensen exude a chemistry and comfort level that's both saucy and endearing.
6793Quite funny for the type of movie it is...
6804Run, don't walk, to see this barbed and bracing comedy on the big screen.
6810Matthew McConaughey tries, and fails, to control the screen with swaggering machismo and over-the-top lunacy.
6821A predictable and stereotypical little B-movie.
6832A morality tale whose thought-provoking potential is hampered by a made-for-TV look, rigid performances and an asinine 'twist' that brazenly rips off The Sixth Sense.
6841I'm not suggesting that you actually see it, unless you're the kind of person who has seen every Wim Wenders film of the '70s.
6851Dialogue-heavy and too cerebral for its own good -- or, at any rate, too cerebral for its racy subject matter.
6864When it's all wet, Blue Crush is highly enjoyable.
6872A ponderous meditation on love that feels significantly longer than its relatively scant 97 minutes.
6883A somewhat crudely constructed but gripping, questing look at a person so racked with self-loathing, he becomes an enemy to his own race.
6891Usually when I get this much syrup, I like pancakes to go with it.
6903Mr. Wedge and Mr. Saldanha handle the mix of verbal jokes and slapstick well.
6913Longley has constructed a remarkably coherent, horrifically vivid snapshot of those turbulent days.
6924A slick, well-oiled machine, exquisitely polished and upholstered.
6933The result is mesmerizing -- filled with menace and squalor.
6943Don't plan on the perfect ending, but Sweet Home Alabama hits the mark with critics who escaped from a small town life.
6954A stunning piece of visual poetry that will, hopefully, be remembered as one of the most important stories to be told in Australia's film history.
6961Too timid to bring a sense of closure to an ugly chapter of the twentieth century.
6971Plays less like a coming-of-age romance than an infomercial.
6981All that (Powerpuff Girls) charm is present in the movie, but it's spread too thin.
6994Jirí Hubac's script is a gem.
7000As (the characters) get more depressed, the story gets more tiresome, especially as it continues to mount a conspicuous effort to be profound.
7013Even when foreign directors ... borrow stuff from Hollywood, they invariably shake up the formula and make it more interesting.
7022In a word -- yes.
7031Feels like six different movies fighting each other for attention.
7042No worse than a lot of the crap we've been offered this summer, and slightly better than Men in Black 2 as far as slapdash extraterrestrial comedies go.
7054This bold and lyrical first feature from Raja Amari expands the pat notion that middle-aged women just wanna have fun into a rousing treatise of sensual empowerment.
7062Admirable, certainly, but not much fun to watch.
7072"The Emperor's New Clothes" begins with a simple plan....Well, at least that's the plan.
7084Often gruelling and heartbreaking to witness, but Seldahl and Wollter's sterling performances raise this far above the level of the usual maudlin disease movie.
7091A mix of velocity and idiocy, this ruinous remake lacks the brawn -- and the brains -- of the 1970s original.
7103Cantet perfectly captures the hotel lobbies, two-lane highways, and roadside cafes that permeate Vincent's days
7111Friday After Next has the same problem that Next Friday did -- it's called Where's Chris Tucker When You Need Him?
7121Extremely confusing.
7132(Hawn's character)is so bluntly written, without a trace of sentimentality, and so blisteringly defined, that every other character seems overlooked and underwritten.
7141Well-intentioned though it may be, its soap-opera morality tales have the antiseptic, preprogrammed feel of an after-school special.
7153But fans should have fun meeting a brand-new Pokemon called Celebi.
7161Son of the Bride may be a good half-hour too long but comes replete with a flattering sense of mystery and quietness.
7171It's laughing at us.
7182Haynes has so fanatically fetishized every bizarre old-movie idiosyncrasy with such monastic devotion you're not sure if you should applaud or look into having him committed.
7191Like most sequels, it takes what worked last time, repeats it and adds more characters, more stunts, more stuff in attempt to camouflage its sameness.
7201This film's relationship to actual tension is the same as what Christmas-tree flocking in a spray can is to actual snow: a poor -- if durable -- imitation.
7211Helmer DeVito...attempts to do too many things in this story about ethics, payola, vice, murder, kids' TV and revenge.
7221The humor is hinged on the belief that knees in the crotch, elbows in the face and spit in the eye are inherently funny.
72334 friends, 2 couples, 2000 miles, and all the Pabst Blue Ribbon beer they can drink - it's the ultimate redneck road-trip.
7241Still, I'm not quite sure what the point is...
7251Has it ever been possible to say that Williams has truly inhabited a character?
7260After that, it just gets stupid and maudlin.
7270Unfortunately, Heartbreak Hospital wants to convey the same kind of haughtiness in its own sketchy material but this territory has already been explored previously with better aplomb and sardonic wit.
7283By the end of No Such Thing the audience, like Beatrice, has a watchful affection for the monster.
7290A baffling misfire, and possibly the weakest movie (Woody Allen) has made in the last twenty years.
7303The production values are up there.
7311Rates an 'E' for effort -- and a 'B' for boring.
7322It seems just a long, convoluted ploy to get men into drag -- period drag, no less.
7333The Pianist is a fine valedictory work for Polanski, made richer by his own experiences, making his other movies somehow richer in the bargain.
7341Being author Wells' great-grandson, you'd think filmmaker Simon Wells would have more reverence for the material.
7351A modest and messy metaphysical thriller offering more questions than answers.
7364It's the best film of the year so far, the benchmark against which all other Best Picture contenders should be measured.
7372Like a documentary version of Fight Club, shorn of social insight, intellectual pretension and cinematic interest.
7382Whether Kiss is a future cult classic or destined to be completely forgotten is open to question, but the risk-takers in the crowd should check it out and form their own opinion.
7392There aren't many laughs in this interesting study of the cultural mores of Georgian Jews in Tel Aviv.
7403Smith's approach is never to tease, except gently and in that way that makes us consider our own eccentricities and how they are expressed through our homes.
7411A shambles of a movie--visually unattractive, unbearably loud and utterly silly...its hilarity is completely unintentional.
7423Its direction, its script, and Weaver's performance as a vaguely discontented woman of substance make for a mildly entertaining 77 minutes, if that's what you're in the mood for.
7433It is so refreshing to see Robin Williams turn 180 degrees from the string of insultingly innocuous and sappy fiascoes he's been making for the last several years.
7441"Collateral Damage" goes by the numbers and reps decent action entertainment until the silly showdown ending that forces the viewer to totally suspend disbelief
7451Still, this thing feels flimsy and ephemeral.
7464A blessed gift to film geeks and historians.
7473What Jackson has accomplished here is amazing on a technical level.
7484It should be mentioned that the set design and interiors of the haunted vessel are more than effectively creepy and moodily lit.
7492Yes, one enjoys seeing Joan grow from awkward young woman to strong, determined monarch, but her love for the philandering Philip only diminishes her stature.
7504There's no denying the physically spectacular qualities of the film ... or the emotional integrity of the performances.
7513Whether you're moved and love it, or bored or frustrated by the film, you'll still feel something.
7523A psychologically rich and suspenseful moral thriller with a stellar performance by Al Pacino.
7533An absorbing, slice-of-depression life that touches nerves and rings true.
7541Moderately involving despite bargain-basement photography and hackneyed romance.
7554This is a film well worth seeing, talking and singing heads and all.
7562Boisterous and daft documentary.
7572Sometimes smart but more often sophomoric.
7581What was subtle and mystifying in the novella is now broad and farcical.
7592Is it something any true film addict will want to check out?
7602The movie is too cute to take itself too seriously, but it still feels like it was made by some very stoned college students.
7611The plot is so predictable and sentimental that viewers are likely to lose interest before Sandrine and her goats walk off into the sunset.
7623Roger Michell, who did an appealing job directing Persuasion and Notting Hill in England, gets too artsy in his American debut.
7631Maybe it's asking too much, but if a movie is truly going to inspire me, I want a little more than this.
7644...there are enough moments of heartbreaking honesty to keep one glued to the screen.
7654I loved it!
7664Brilliant!'
7671Some studio pizazz might have helped.
7681It will come as no surprise that the movie isn't scary.
7690All the well-meaningness in the world can't erase the fact that The Believer feels like a 12-Step Program for the Jewish Nazi.
7701A grim, flat and boring werewolf movie that refuses to develop an energy level.
7711A hideous, confusing spectacle, one that may well put the nail in the coffin of any future Rice adaptations.
7722The film is directed by Wally Wolodarsky from a script by Joe Jarvis and Greg Coolidge.
7732Director Barry Skolnick and his screenwriters glibly tick off every point of "The Longest Yard" playbook like a checklist.
7742I haven't seen one in so long, no wonder I didn't recognize it at first.
7751As Tweedy talks about canning his stockbroker and repairing his pool, you yearn for a few airborne TV sets or nude groupies on the nod to liven things up.
7764Cedar takes a very open-minded approach to this sensitive material, showing impressive control, both visually and in the writing.
7771You can practically smell the patchouli oil.
7784Cute, funny, heartwarming digitally animated feature film with plenty of slapstick humor for the kids, lots of in-jokes for the adults and heart enough for everyone.
7793What Full Frontal lacks in thematic coherence it largely makes up for as loosey-goosey, experimental entertainment.
7802This 72-minute film does have some exciting scenes, but it's a tad slow.
7812It will probably prove interesting to Ram Dass fans, but to others it may feel like a parody of the mellow, peace-and-love side of the '60s counterculture.
7821Mark me down as a non-believer in werewolf films that are not serious and rely on stupidity as a substitute for humor.
7833Maguire is a surprisingly effective Peter/Spider-Man.
7843Windtalkers is shapelessly gratifying, the kind of movie that invites you to pick apart its faults even as you have to admit that somehow it hit you where you live.
7854For its seriousness, high literary aspirations and stunning acting, the film can only be applauded.
7861So clichéd that, at one point, they literally upset an apple cart.
7873A byzantine melodrama that stimulates the higher brain functions as well as the libido.
7884Cho's fearless in picking apart human foibles, not afraid to lay her life bare in front of an audience.
7893About nowhere kids who appropriated turfs as they found them and become self-made celebrity athletes -- a low-down version of the American dream.
7901... an unimaginative, nasty, glibly cynical piece of work.
7914...In this incarnation its fizz is infectious.
7922The Gantzes' interviews tend to let the guys off the hook.
7930It's just incredibly dull.
7944Genuinely touching because it's realistic about all kinds of love.
7954Nicolas Philibert observes life inside a one-room schoolhouse in northern France in his documentary To Be and to Have, easily one of the best films of the year.
7964It's rare to find a film that dazzles the eye, challenges the brain, AND satisfies our lust for fast-paced action, but Minority Report delivers all that and a whole lot more.
7974A charming, quirky and leisurely paced Scottish comedy -- except with an outrageous central gimmick that could have been a reject from Monty Python's Meaning of Life.
7984A graceful, contemplative film that gradually and artfully draws us into a world where the personal and the political get fatally intertwined.
7990What will, most likely, turn out to be the most repellent movie of 2002.
8001A little too pat for its own good.
8011The story is familiar from its many predecessors; like them, it eventually culminates in the not-exactly -stunning insight that crime doesn't pay.
8021Even legends like Alfred Hitchcock and John Huston occasionally directed trifles... so it's no surprise to see a world-class filmmaker like Zhang Yimou behind the camera for a yarn that's ultimately rather inconsequential.
8033If nothing else, this movie introduces a promising, unusual kind of psychological horror.
8040A sermonizing and lifeless paean to teenage dullards.
8051For all its highfalutin title and corkscrew narrative, the movie turns out to be not much more than a shaggy human tale.
8060Had anyone here done anything remotely intelligent, we all could have stopped watching long ago.
8073A teasing drama whose relentless good-deed/bad-deed reversals are just interesting enough to make a sinner like me pray for an even more interesting, less symmetrical, less obviously cross-shaped creation.
8080There is not a character in the movie with a shred of plausibility, not an event that is believable, not a confrontation that is not staged, not a moment that is not false.
8090Bad Company leaves a bad taste, not only because of its bad-luck timing, but also the staleness of its script.
8102Just like every other Seagal movie, only louder and without that silly ponytail.
8111McKay deflates his piece of puffery with a sour cliche and heavy doses of mean-spiritedness
8121Ethan Hawke has always fancied himself the bastard child of the Beatnik generation and it's all over his Chelsea Walls.
8131The film might have been more satisfying if it had, in fact, been fleshed out a little more instead of going for easy smiles.
8143An unbelievably fun film just a leading man away from perfection.
8150Extremely dumb.
8162In the end, Ted Bundy's only justification is the director's common but unexplored fascination with the frustrated maniac; there's no larger point, and little social context.
8171Flotsam in the sea of moviemaking, not big enough for us to worry about it causing significant harm and not smelly enough to bother despising.
8182Just what makes us happy, anyway?
8191Cliches are as thick as the cigarette smoke.
8202Just like the deli sandwich: lots of ham, lots of cheese, with a sickly sweet coating to disguise its excrescence until just after (or during) consumption of its second half.
8212Enjoy it for what it is; you can hate yourself later.
8220Leave these Flowers unpicked -- they're dead on the vine.
8231When the plot kicks in, the film loses credibility.
8243May be spoofing an easy target -- those old '50's giant creature features -- but ... it acknowledges and celebrates their cheesiness as the reason why people get a kick out of watching them today.
8252Morton is a great actress portraying a complex character, but Morvern Callar grows less compelling the farther it meanders from its shocking start.
8262All prints of this film should be sent to and buried on Pluto.
8270The unceasing sadism is so graphically excessive, the director just ends up exposing his own obsession.
8282It's a worse sign when you begin to envy her condition.
8291Imagine the James Woods character from Videodrome making a home movie of Audrey Rose and showing it to the kid from The Sixth Sense and you've imagined The Ring.
8301This film was made to get laughs from the slowest person in the audience -- just pure slapstick with lots of inane, inoffensive screaming and exaggerated facial expressions.
8311It's so underwritten that you can't figure out just where the other characters, including Ana's father and grandfather, come down on the issue of Ana's future.
8324Think of it as a sort of comfort food for the mind.
8334Hilarious, acidic Brit comedy.
8343An incredibly clever and superbly paced caper filled with scams within scams within scams.
8351Myers never knows when to let a gag die; thus, we're subjected to one mind-numbingly lengthy riff on poo and pee jokes after another.
8364But watching Huppert, a great actress tearing into a landmark role, is riveting.
8374A marvellous journey from childhood idealism to adolescent self-absorption.
8384Whether seen on a 10-inch television screen or at your local multiplex, the edge-of-your-seat, educational antics of Steve Irwin are priceless entertainment.
8390How did it ever get made?
8403It is also, at times, curiously moving.
8414It is inspirational in characterizing how people from such diverse cultures share the same human and spiritual needs.
8424A candid and often fascinating documentary about a Pentecostal church in Dallas that assembles an elaborate haunted house each year to scare teenagers into attending services.
8432The film provides some great insight into the neurotic mindset of all comics -- even those who have reached the absolute top of the game.
8443The invincible Werner Herzog is alive and well and living in LA
8452The additional storyline is interesting and entertaining, but it doesn't have the same magical quality as the beginning of the story.
8463Worth the effort to watch.
8472Morrissette's script and direction show a fair amount of intelligence and wit -- but it doesn't signify a whole lot either.
8484Everything that has to do with Yvan and Charlotte, and everything that has to do with Yvan's rambunctious, Jewish sister and her non-Jew husband, feels funny and true.
8493Grant gets to display his cadness to perfection, but also to show acting range that may surprise some who thought light-hearted comedy was his forte.
8501Just a bloody mess.
8510Suffers from rambling, repetitive dialogue and the visual drabness endemic to digital video.
8524The film is often filled with a sense of pure wonderment and excitement not often seen in today's cinema du sarcasm
8533I don't think I've been as entranced and appalled by an Asian film since Shinya Tsukamoto's Iron Man.
8544The Powers team has fashioned a comedy with more laughs than many, no question.
8553Anchored by a terrific performance by Abbass, Satin Rouge shows that the idea of women's self-actualization knows few continental divides.
8563Kaufman creates an eerie sense of not only being there at the time of these events but the very night Matthew was killed.
8571As an actor, The Rock is aptly named.
8584Thoughtful, provocative and entertaining.
8591Scene-by-scene, things happen, but you'd be hard-pressed to say what or why.
8601At nearly three hours, the whole of Safe Conduct is less than the sum of its parts.
8611Dawdles and drags when it should pop; it doesn't even have the virtue of enough mindless violence to break up the tedium of all its generational bonding.
8621Places a slightly believable love triangle in a difficult-to-swallow setting, and then disappointingly moves the story into the realm of an improbable thriller.
8632The recording session is the only part of the film that is enlightening -- and how appreciative you are of this depends on your level of fandom.
8640Trivial where it should be profound, and hyper-cliched where it should be sincere.
8653There's not much more to this adaptation of the Nick Hornby novel than charm -- effortless, pleasurable, featherweight charm.
8661Good for a few unintentional laughs, "Extreme Ops" was obviously made for the "XXX" crowd, people who enjoy mindless action without the benefit of decent acting, writing, and direction.
8673Tim Story's not there yet - but 'Barbershop' shows he's on his way.
8684A sports movie with action that's exciting on the field and a story you care about off it.
8693Those outside show business will enjoy a close look at people they don't really want to know.
8703The values that have held the Enterprise crew together through previous adventures and perils do so again-courage, self-sacrifice and patience under pressure.
8711What happened with Pluto Nash?
8722Using his audience as a figurative port-of-call, Dong pulls his even-handed ideological ship to their dock for unloading, before he continues his longer journey still ahead.
8731Notorious C.H.O. has oodles of vulgar highlights.
8741Before long, the film starts playing like General Hospital crossed with a Saturday Night Live spoof of Dog Day Afternoon.
8751It's just a silly black genre spoof.
8760As written by Michael Berg and Michael J. Wilson from a story by Wilson, this relentless, all-wise-guys-all-the-time approach tries way too hard and gets tiring in no time at all.
8773In Fessenden's horror trilogy, this theme has proved important to him and is especially so in the finale.
8780Splashes its drama all over the screen, subjecting its audience and characters to action that feels not only manufactured, but also so false you can see the filmmakers' puppet strings.
8794Offers that rare combination of entertainment and education.
8804Romanek keeps the film constantly taut...reflecting the character's instability with a metaphorical visual style and an unnerving, heartbeat-like score.
8813despite the long running time, the pace never feels slack -- there's no scene that screams "bathroom break!"
8824Greene delivers a typically solid performance in a role that is a bit of a departure from the noble characters he has played in the past, and he is matched by Schweig, who carries the film on his broad, handsome shoulders.
8832The heightened symmetry of this new/old Cinema Paradiso makes the film a fuller experience, like an old friend haunted by the exigencies of time.
8844Moore's complex and important film is also, believe it or not, immensely entertaining, a David and Goliath story that's still very much playing itself out.
8851There's no denying the elaborateness of the artist's conceptions, nor his ability to depict them with outrageous elan, but really the whole series is so much pretentious nonsense, lavishly praised by those who equate obscurity with profundity.
8862Hip-hop has a history, and it's a metaphor for this love story.
8874As a belated nod to some neglected all-stars, Standing in the Shadows of Motown is cultural history of the best kind: informative, revealing and richly entertaining.
8884Engagingly captures the maddening and magnetic ebb and flow of friendship.
8893Eventually, it wins you over.
8904You'll be left with the sensation of having just witnessed a great performance and, perhaps, give in to the urge to get on your feet and shake it.
8912Effective but too-tepid biopic
8921If we don't demand a standard of quality for the art that we choose, we deserve the trash that we get.
8934The acting alone is worth the price of admission.
8944I admired this work a lot.
8951Might have been better off as a documentary, with less of Mr. Eyre's uninspired dramatics and more of his sense of observation and outrage.
8961It tries too hard, and overreaches the logic of its own world.
8972The final result makes for adequate entertainment, I suppose, but anyone who has seen Chicago on stage will leave the theater feeling they've watched nothing but a pale imitation of the real deal.
8983Highlights are the terrific performances by Christopher Plummer, as the prime villain, and Nathan Lane as Vincent Crummles, the eccentric theater company manager.
8993Bullock does a good job here of working against her natural likability.
9004The 3D images only enhance the film's otherworldly quality, giving it a strange combo of you-are-there closeness with the disorienting unreality of the seemingly broken-down fourth wall of the movie screen.
9013This version's no classic like its predecessor, but its pleasures are still plentiful.
9020It's neither as romantic nor as thrilling as it should be.
9030If this is the Danish idea of a good time, prospective tourists might want to consider a different destination -- some jolly country embroiled in a bloody civil war, perhaps.
9043But some unexpected zigs and zags help.
9053We can see the wheels turning, and we might resent it sometimes, but this is still a nice little picture, made by bright and friendly souls with a lot of good cheer.
9063It is not a mass-market entertainment but an uncompromising attempt by one artist to think about another.
9074An irresistible combination of a rousing good story set on a truly grand scale.
9083De Niro and McDormand give solid performances, but their screen time is sabotaged by the story's inability to create interest.
9090The Master Of Disaster - it's a piece of dreck disguised as comedy.
9104As Weber and Weissman demonstrate with such insight and celebratory verve, the Cockettes weren't as much about gender, sexual preference or political agitprop as they were simply a triumph of the indomitable human will to rebel, connect and create.
9112The attempt is courageous, even if the result is wildly uneven.
9124A psychological thriller with a smart script and an obsessive-compulsive's attention to detail.
9133Interacting eyeball-to-eyeball and toe-to-toe, Hopkins and Norton are a winning combination -- but Fiennes steals 'Red Dragon' right from under their noses.
9141What could and should have been biting and droll is instead a tepid waste of time and talent.
9151If you think that Jennifer Lopez has shown poor judgment in planning to marry Ben Affleck, wait till you see Maid in Manhattan.
9164A map of the inner rhythms of love and jealousy and sacrifice drawn with a master's steady stroke.
9172Offers an unusual opportunity to observe the inequities in the death penalty, not just the inherent immorality but also the haphazard administration of it and public misperception of how the whole thing works.
9183There isn't a weak or careless performance amongst them.
9193The perfect film for those who like sick comedies that can be snide.
9202Brimful.
9211It virtually defines a comedy that's strongly mediocre, with funny bits surfacing every once in a while.
9224The film benefits greatly from a less manic tone than its predecessor, as Cho appears to have settled comfortably into her skin.
9233Fans of Nijinsky will savor every minute of Cox's work.
9242Viewed on its own terms, Treasure Planet is better-than-average family entertainment, but true fans of the Stevenson's novel will likely prefer Disney's more faithful 1950 live-action swashbuckling classic.
9254Novak manages to capture a cruelly hilarious vein of black comedy in the situation with his cast of non-actors and a gritty, no-budget approach.
9263What really surprises about Wisegirls is its low-key quality and genuine tenderness.
9274I enjoyed the ride (bumps and all), creamy depth, and ultimate theme.
9280What you get with Empire is a movie you've seen many times before, repackaged as new material because there is a Latino in the lead.
9291A very average science fiction film.
9301It's a great deal of sizzle and very little steak.
9310The film is like a series of beginnings and middles that never take off.
9321Verbinski substitutes atmosphere for action, tedium for thrills.
9330No reason for anyone to invest their hard-earned bucks into a movie which obviously didn't invest much into itself either.
9341The charms of willful eccentricity, at least as evidenced by this latest cinematic essay, are beginning to wear a bit thin.
9351Though everything might be literate and smart, it never took off and always seemed static.
9361We miss the quirky amazement that used to come along for an integral part of the ride.
9374Complex, affecting and uniquely Almodóvar, the film evokes strong emotions and pushes viewers to question their deepest notions of moral right and wrong.
9382Maybe it's just because this past year has seen the release of some of the worst film comedies in decades ... But honestly, Analyze That really isn't all that bad.
9392The reason I found myself finally unmoved by this film, which is immaculately produced and has serious things to say, is that it comes across rather too plainly as allegory.
9404A savvy exploration of paranoia and insecurity in America's culture of fear.
9411While the mystery surrounding the nature of the boat's malediction remains intriguing enough to sustain mild interest, the picture refuses to offer much accompanying sustenance in the way of characterization, humor or plain old popcorn fun.
9424Theirs is a simple and heart-warming story, full of mirth that should charm all but the most cynical.
9432The problem is that rather than dramatizing this premise, Mr. Desplechin is content to state it.
9442The element of surprise might be the only thing Femme Fatale has going for it.
9452Great story, bad idea for a movie.
9461Cho's fans are sure to be entertained; it's only fair in the interest of full disclosure to say that -- on the basis of this film alone -- I'm not one of them.
9473While it would be easy to give Crush the new title of Two Weddings and a Funeral, it's a far more thoughtful film than any slice of Hugh Grant whimsy.
9481While Benigni (who stars and co-wrote) seems to be having a wonderful time, he might be alone in that.
9494Smith's point is simple and obvious -- people's homes are extensions of themselves, and particularly eccentric people have particularly eccentric living spaces -- but his subjects are charmers.
9501Divertingly ridiculous, headbangingly noisy.
9510Extremely boring.
9523An impossible romance, but we root for the patronized Iranian lad.
9531I doubt anyone will remember the picture by the time Christmas really rolls around, but maybe it'll be on video by then.
9544Eight Crazy Nights is a showcase for Sandler's many talents.
9551Too lazy to take advantage of its semi-humorous premise.
9563If there's a way to effectively teach kids about the dangers of drugs, I think it's in projects like the (unfortunately R-rated) Paid.
9570You'll be more entertained getting hit by a bus.
9583An enjoyable film for the family, amusing and cute for both adults and kids.
9594It's a glorious groove that leaves you wanting more.
9601There are touching moments in Etoiles, but for the most part this is a dull, dour documentary on what ought to be a joyful or at least fascinating subject.
9613More honest about Alzheimer's disease, I think, than Iris.
9622Hey, at least the title of this film lets you know exactly where it's heading.
9630What's at stake in this film is nothing more than an obsolete, if irritating, notion of class.
9641Offensive in the way it exploits the hot-button issue of domestic abuse for cheap thrills and disgusting in the manner it repeatedly puts a small child in jeopardy, treating her as little more than a prop to be cruelly tormented.
9653Some movies are like a tasty hors-d'oeuvre; this one is a feast.
9660It wouldn't be my preferred way of spending 100 minutes or $7.00.
9673You might not want to hang out with Samantha, but you'll probably see a bit of yourself in her unfinished story.
9681A monster combat thriller as impersonal in its relentlessness as the videogame series that inspired it.
9694Effectively feeds our senses with the chilling sights and sounds from within the camp to create a completely numbing experience.
9701Life is a crock -- or something like it.
9714A richly imagined and admirably mature work from a gifted director who definitely has something on his mind.
9723From spiritual rebirth to bruising defeat, Vincent's odyssey resonates in a profound way, comparable to the classic films of Jean Renoir.
9733Isn't quite the equal of Woo's best earlier work, but it's easily his finest American film...comes close to recapturing the brilliance of his Hong Kong films.
9742Secret Ballot is too contemplative to be really funny.
9750The Weight of Water uses water as a metaphor for subconscious desire, but this leaky script barely stays afloat.
9760Automatically pegs itself for the straight-to-video sci-fi rental shelf.
9772It's often infuriatingly glib and posturing, and yet it has been made with great evident care and manages to deliver up the man in a way to arouse further curiosity in even the most unknowing viewer.
9781One minute, you think you're watching a serious actioner; the next, it's as though clips from The Pink Panther Strikes Again and/or Sailor Moon have been spliced in.
9794Director Benoit Jacquot, making his first opera-to-film translation with Tosca, conveys the heaving passion of Puccini's famous love-jealousy- murder-suicide fandango with great cinematic innovation.
9802This film, starring Anthony Hopkins and Chris Rock, is your typical 'fish out of water' story.
9810A boring, wincingly cute and nauseatingly politically correct cartoon guaranteed to drive anyone much over age 4 screaming from the theater.
9821Never quite transcends jokester status ... and the punchline doesn't live up to Barry's dead-eyed, perfectly chilled delivery.
9830Choppy editing and too many repetitive scenes spoil what could have been an important documentary about stand-up comedy.
9843Makes an aborbing if arguable case for the man's greatness.
9851An unsatisfying hybrid of Blair Witch and typical stalk-and-slash fare, where the most conservative protagonist is always the last one living.
9863The diversity of the artists represented, both in terms of style and ethnicity, prevents the proceedings from feeling repetitious, as does the appropriately brief 40-minute running time.
9871Unfortunately, they're sandwiched in between the most impossibly dry account of Kahlo's life imaginable.
9880This extremely unfunny film clocks in at 80 minutes, but feels twice as long.
9893It's like a poem.
9902...lacks the punch and verve needed to make this genre soar.
9911A strong first quarter, slightly less so second quarter, and average second half.
9921Earnest but earthbound...a slow, soggy, soporific, visually dank crime melodrama/character study that would be more at home on the small screen but for its stellar cast.
9931It's as flat as an open can of pop left sitting in the sun.
9940A movie far more cynical and lazy than anything a fictitious Charlie Kaufman might object to.
9952Here, thankfully, they are.
9960A sour, nasty offering.
9971Everyone connected to this movie seems to be part of an insider clique, which tends to breed formulaic films rather than fresh ones.
9980This time Kaufman's imagination has failed him.
9993...breathes surprising new life into the familiar by amalgamating genres and adding true human complexity to its not-so-stock characters.
10001Suggests puns about ingredients and soup and somebody being off their noodle, but let's just say the ingredients don't quite add up to a meal.
10014The movie has an avalanche of eye-popping visual effects.
10022Has all the poignancy of a Hallmark card and all the comedy of a Gallagher stand-up act.
10031This is junk food cinema at its greasiest.
10043Clever, brutal and strangely soulful movie.
10051(Director) Byler may yet have a great movie in him, but Charlotte Sometimes is only half of one.
10064If you liked the 1982 film then, you'll still like it now.
10073A miniscule little bleep on the film radar, but one that many more people should check out
10080Shamelessly sappy and, worse, runs away from its own provocative theme.
10092Frailty isn't as gory or explicit.
10103Choose your reaction: A.) That sure is funny!
10112It's got its heart in the right place, but it also wilts after awhile.
10121It's the kind of movie that ends up festooning U.S. art house screens for no reason other than the fact that it's in French (well, mostly) with English subtitles and is magically 'significant' because of that.
10133Droll caper-comedy remake of "Big Deal on Madonna Street" that's a sly, amusing, laugh-filled little gem in which the ultimate "Bellini" begins to look like a "real Kaputschnik."
10144Call me a wimp, but I cried, not once, but three times in this animated sweet film.
10152Search it out.
10162It would be interesting to hear from the other side, but in Talk to Her, the women are down for the count.
10173Japan's premier stylist of sex and blood hits audiences with what may be his most demented film to date.
10182Easier to respect than enthuse over, Andersson's rigorous personal vision is not only distanced but distancing.
10193And if The Hours wins 'Best Picture' I just might.
10201Another rent installment for the Ian Fleming estate.
10211Instead of kicking off the intrigue and suspense and mystery of the whole thing, Hart's War, like the St. Louis Rams in the Super Bowl, waits until after halftime to get started.
10224Murderous Maids may well be the most comprehensive of these films and also strike closest to the truth.
10230Some of Seagal's action pictures are guilty pleasures, but this one is so formulaic that it seems to be on auto-pilot.
10244One of the greatest family-oriented, fantasy-adventure movies ever.
10251For Caine Lovers only.
10262It may be a prize winner, but Teacher is a bomb.
10272Elicits more groans from the audience than Jar Jar Binks, Scrappy Doo and Scooby Dumb, all wrapped up into one.
10280A trashy, exploitative, thoroughly unpleasant experience.
10290Opens at a funeral, ends on the protagonist's death bed and doesn't get much livelier in the three hours in between.
10301... surprisingly inert for a movie in which the main character travels back and forth between epochs.
10314Thrilling, provocative and darkly funny, this timely sci-fi mystery works on so many different levels that it not only invites, it demands repeated viewings.
10323Farrell ... thankfully manages to outshine the role and successfully plays the foil to Willis's world-weary colonel.
10333That Zhang would make such a strainingly cute film -- with a blind orphan at its center, no less -- indicates where his ambitions have wandered.
10342It's fun, but a psychological mess, with Austin Powers bumping his head on the way out of the closet.
10354Those who would follow Haneke on his creepy explorations ... are rewarded by brutal, committed performances from Huppert and Magimel.
10362It's too long, too repetitive, and takes way too many years to resolve to be a total winner.
10371But it pays a price for its intricate intellectual gamesmanship.
10384A fascinating and fun film.
10394The use of CGI and digital ink-and-paint make the thing look really slick.
10403A sad, superior human comedy played out on the back roads of life.
10411The lack of opposing viewpoints soon grows tiresome -- the film feels more like a series of toasts at a testimonial dinner than a documentary.
10420Wait for video -- and then don't rent it.
10432An extraordinary Swedish film about the soul adventure of marriage -- the kind of intimate and character-driven film that Bille August does best.
10441Remember when Bond had more glamour than clamor?
10451(I)f you've been to more than one indie flick in your life, chances are you've already seen this kind of thing.
10464Excellent acting and direction.
10474A tender and touching drama, based on the true story of a troubled African-American's quest to come to terms with his origins, reveals the yearning we all have in our hearts for acceptance within the family circle.
10484A very funny movie.
10492Both awful and appealing.
10502Wallace seems less like he's been burning to tell a war story than he's been itching to somehow tack one together
10514Ranks among Willams' best screen work.
10524You can feel the heat that ignites this gripping tale, and the humor and humanity that root it in feeling.
10533This may not have the dramatic gut-wrenching impact of other Holocaust films, but it's a compelling story, mainly because of the way it's told by the people who were there.
10541These spiders can outrun a motorcycle and wrap a person in a sticky cocoon in seconds, but they fall short of being interesting or entertaining.
10554It's a terrific American sports movie and Dennis Quaid is its athletic heart.
10562Had the film boasted a clearer, more memorable, the creepiness would have gotten under the skin.
10572Scotland, PA. blurs the line between black comedy and black hole.
10581There are weird resonances between actor and role here, and they're not exactly flattering.
10591The fight scenes are fun, but it grows tedious.
10601Considering the harsh locations and demanding stunts, this must have been a difficult shoot, but the movie proves rough going for the audience as well.
10612The seaside splendor and shallow, beautiful people are nice to look at while you wait for the story to get going.
10623An idealistic love story that brings out the latent 15-year-old romantic in everyone.
10633What kids will discover is a new collectible.
10641Could the whole plan here have been to produce something that makes Fatal Attraction look like a classic by comparison?
10650Even die-hard fans of Japanese animation ... will find this one a challenge.
10664It's a brave attempt to tap into the heartbeat of the world, a salute to the universal language of rhythm and a zippy sampling of sounds.
10672This is an hour and a half of daydreaming.
10684Ford deserves to be remembered at Oscar time for crafting this wonderful portrait of a conflicted soldier.
10694That rara avis: the intelligent romantic comedy with actual ideas on its mind.
10700Could The Country Bears really be as bad as its trailers?
10711While McFarlane's animation lifts the film firmly above the level of other coming-of-age films ... it's also so jarring that it's hard to get back into the boys' story.
10720When (De Palma's) bad, he's really bad, and Femme Fatale ranks with the worst he has done.
10733Behind the snow games and lovable Siberian huskies (plus one sheep dog), the picture hosts a parka-wrapped dose of heart.
10743A captivating cross-cultural comedy of manners.
10754Hawke draws out the best from his large cast in beautifully articulated portrayals that are subtle and so expressive they can sustain the poetic flights in Burdette's dialogue.
10763A deceivingly simple film, one that grows in power in retrospect.
10774Dolgin and Franco fashion a fascinating portrait of a Vietnamese-born youngster who eagerly and easily assimilated as an all-American girl with a brand new name in southern Tennessee.
10783Look, this is a terrific flick replete with dazzling camera-work, dancing and music.
10793Presents an astute appraisal of Middle American musical torpor and the desperate struggle to escape it.
10802The film apparently takes place in a fantasy world where people in hotel hallways recite poetry in voice-over instead of speaking to each other.
10812But director Danny DeVito and screenwriter Adam Resnick (remember Cabin Boy?)
10822Besides, real movie producers aren't this nice.
10831Mocking them now is an exercise in pointlessness.
10844This is how you use special effects.
10852Haneke keeps us at arm's length.
10861Like its two predecessors, 1983's Koyaanisqatsi and 1988's Powaqqatsi, the cinematic collage Naqoyqatsi could be the most navel-gazing film ever.
10873What's most striking about this largely celebratory film ... is the sense of isolation that permeates these bastions of individuality in an Ikea world.
10883He's Super Spy!
10891Though the book runs only about 300 pages, it is so densely packed ... that even an ambitious adaptation and elaborate production like Mr. Schepisi's seems skimpy and unclear.
10903I don't know precisely what to make of Steven Soderbergh's Full Frontal, though that didn't stop me from enjoying much of it.
10911Has the feel of an unedited personal journal.
10921The film takes too long getting to the good stuff, then takes too long figuring out what to do next.
10933Skip work to see it at the first opportunity.
10940Ecks this one off your must-see list.
10954Gosling provides an amazing performance that dwarfs everything else in the film.
10962Drives for the same kind of bittersweet, conciliatory tone that Three Seasons achieved but loses its way in rhetorical excess and blatant sentimentality.
10972Human Nature initially succeeds by allowing itself to go crazy, but ultimately fails by spinning out of control.
10981The movie has very little to offer besides unintentional laughs.
10991Ostensibly celebrates middle-aged girl power, even as it presents friendship between women as pathetic, dysfunctional and destructive.
11004The Movie will reach far beyond its core demographic.
11013So many documentaries like this presuppose religious bigotry or zealous nuttiness of its antagonists, but Family Fundamentals displays a rare gift for unflinching impartiality.
11023Smart science fiction for grown-ups, with only a few false steps along the way.
11034The movie is one of the best examples of artful Large Format filmmaking you are likely to see anytime soon.
11043Merely as a technical, logistical feat, Russian Ark marks a cinematic milestone.
11054But if it is indeed a duty of art to reflect life, than Leigh has created a masterful piece of artistry right here.
11061Not a movie but a live-action agitprop cartoon so shameless and coarse, it's almost funny.
11071Murder and mayhem of this sort quickly becomes monotonous.
11084Even with all those rough edges safely sanded down, the American Insomnia is still pretty darned good.
11091The reason we keep seeing the same movie with roughly the same people every year is because so many of us keep going and then, out of embarrassment or stupidity, not warning anyone.
11100There is not an ounce of honesty in the entire production.
11112But in 2002, such revelations wilt.
11121It's getting harder and harder to ignore the fact that Hollywood isn't laughing with us, folks.
11131Gee, a second assassin shot Kennedy?
11142Engrossing and affecting, if ultimately not quite satisfying.
11151Birot's directorial debut (she co-wrote the script with Christophe Honoré) isn't so much bad as it is bland.
11163As Bundy, Michael Reilly Burke (Octopus 2: River of Fear) has just the right amount of charisma and menace.
11170It feels like a community theater production of a great Broadway play: Even at its best, it will never hold a candle to the original.
11181Scarlet Diva has a voyeuristic tug, but all in all it's a lot less sensational than it wants to be.
11190B.) That sure is pathetic!
11201This pep-talk for faith, hope and charity does little to offend, but if saccharine earnestness were a crime, the film's producers would be in the clink for life.
11212All's well that ends well, and rest assured, the consciousness-raising lessons are cloaked in gross-out gags.
11224The director, Steven Shainberg, has succeeded by focusing intently on his characters, making them quirky individuals rather than figures of fun.
11232It won't bust your gut -- and it's not intended to -- it's merely a blandly cinematic surgical examination of what makes a joke a joke.
11243It's a decent glimpse into a time period, and an outcast, that is no longer accessible, but it doesn't necessarily shed more light on its subject than the popular predecessor.
11252Several degrees shy of the gross-out contests one expects from current teen fare.
11260(U)nrelentingly stupid.
11272Or a profit.
11280The film makes a tragic error by going on for too long, trying to mirror every subsequent event in Chinese history: war, revolution, Communism, etc.
11294Compelling as it is exotic, Fast Runner has a plot that rivals Shakespeare for intrigue, treachery and murder.
11302Faultlessly professional but finally slight.
11314Renner's performance as Dahmer is unforgettable, deeply absorbing.
11321Big Fat Liar is just futile silliness looking to tap into the kiddie sensibilities.
11330Afraid to pitch into farce, yet only half-hearted in its spy mechanics, All the Queen's Men is finally just one long drag.
11342Bright seems alternately amused and disgusted with this material, and he can't help throwing in a few of his own touches.
11351A painfully leaden film destined for pre-dawn cable television slots.
11360It would be hard to think of a recent movie that has worked this hard to achieve this little fun.
11370A recipe for cinematic disaster...part Quentin Tarantino, part Guy Ritchie, and part 1960s spy spoof, it's all bad.
11384Hands down the year's most thought-provoking film.
11391The furious coherence that (DeNiro) brings to this part only underscores the fuzzy sentimentality of the movie itself, which feels, as it plods toward the end, less like a movie than like the filmed reading of a script in need of polishing.
11402There was time on that second round to see the subtleties of Ramsay's portrait of grief.
11412perfectly enjoyable, instantly forgettable, nothing to write home about.
11421You might not buy the ideas.
11430Looks like a high school film project completed the day before it was due.
11443As shaky as the plot is, Kaufman's script is still memorable for some great one-liners.
11453Not for everyone, but for those with whom it will connect, it's a nice departure from standard moviegoing fare.
11464This road movie gives you emotional whiplash, and you'll be glad you went along for the ride.
11471Too stupid to be satire, too obviously hateful to be classified otherwise, Frank Novak's irritating slice of lumpen life is as reliably soul-killing as its title is nearly meaningless.
11481At times, however, Dogtown and Z-Boys lapses into an insider's lingo and mindset that the uninitiated may find hard to follow, or care about.
11493a compelling journey...and "His Best Friend Remembers" is up there with the finest of specials.
11503A real movie, about real people, that gives us a rare glimpse into a culture most of us don't know.
11511After seeing SWEPT AWAY, I feel sorry for Madonna.
11521But buying into sham truths and routine "indie" filmmaking, Freundlich has made just another safe movie.
11531A clutchy, indulgent and pretentious travelogue and diatribe against... well, just stuff.
11541The vampire thriller Blade II starts off as a wild hoot and then sucks the blood out of its fun toward the end, you can feel your veins cringing from the workout.
11552This horror-comedy doesn't go for the usual obvious laughs at the expense of cheap-looking monsters -- unless you count Elvira's hooters.
11562Yes, you are, Ben Kingsley.
11573What makes the movie a comedy is the way it avoids the more serious emotions involved.
11580It's not horrible, just horribly mediocre.
11590The title's lameness should clue you in on how bad the movie is.
11601A gimmick in search of a movie: how to get Carvey into as many silly costumes and deliver as many silly voices as possible, plot mechanics be damned.
11611Nothing about it fits.
11620The makers have forsaken the entertaining elements of the original and, instead, rehash old jokes and leave any life at the doorstep.
11630ordinary melodrama that is heavy on religious symbols but wafer-thin on dramatic substance
11644It's a good film -- not a classic, but odd, entertaining and authentic.
11654A bold and subversive film that cuts across the grain of what is popular and powerful in this high-tech age, speaking its truths with spellbinding imagery and the entrancing music of Philip Glass.
11663It's rather like a Lifetime special -- pleasant, sweet and forgettable.
11674Must-see viewing for anyone involved in the high-tech industry.
11684Does what a fine documentary does best: It extends a warm invitation into an unfamiliar world, then illuminates it fully and allows the larger implications of the journey to sink in unobtrusively.
11691When the first few villians are introduced as "Spider" and "Snake" you know you're in for a real winner, creativity at its peak.
11700This isn't a "Friday" worth waiting for.
11711Maybe I found the proceedings a little bit too conventional.
11720Even the unwatchable Soapdish is more original.
11734A wildly funny prison caper.
11743It's not exactly a gourmet meal but the fare is fair, even coming from the drive-thru.
11751Obvious politics and rudimentary animation reduce the chances that the appeal of Hey Arnold!
11761Nair stuffs the film with dancing, henna, ornamentation, and group song, but her narrative clichés and telegraphed episodes smell of old soap opera.
11770Unfortunately, the picture failed to capture me.
11781Its save-the-planet message clashes with its crass marketing.
11790When a film is created SOLELY because it's a marketable product, soulless and ugly movies like this are the result.
11804Often hilarious, well-shot and, importantly, entertaining, Hell House is a fascinating document of an event that has to be seen to be believed.
11812When Perry fists a bull at the Moore Farm, it's only a matter of time before he gets the upper hand in matters of the heart.
11823There's enough science to make it count as educational, and enough beauty to make it unforgettable.
11831It's also heavy-handed and devotes too much time to bigoted views.
11843Although very much like the first movie based on J.K. Rowling's phenomenal fantasy best sellers, this second go-round possesses a quite pleasing, headlong thrust and a likably delinquent attitude.
11852Though it draws several decent laughs, it's low-cal Woody at best.
11863Merchant effectively translates Naipaul's lively mix of characters from the page to screen.
11870Others may find it migraine-inducing, despite Moore's attempts at whimsy and spoon feeding.
11881You've seen them a million times.
11894The comic performances are all spot on, especially Lee Ross's turn as Ken.
11901Nothing plot-wise is worth e-mailing home about.
11913Message movie or an action-packed submarine spectacular?
11924Disney's live-action division has a history of releasing cinematic flotsam, but this is one occasion when they have unearthed a rare gem.
11931First good, then bothersome.
11942To portray modern women the way director Davis has done is just unthinkable.
11950Adam Sandler is to Gary Cooper what a gnat is to a racehorse.
11962Manages to be original, even though it rips off many of its ideas.
11970Even by dumb action-movie standards, Ballistic: Ecks vs. Sever is a dumb action movie.
11984If no one singles out any of these performances as award-worthy, it's only because we would expect nothing less from this bunch.
11990...watching this film nearly provoked me to take my own life.
12002Human Resources was a good, straightforward tale, but Time Out is better.
12012A subtle variation on I Spit On Your Grave in which our purported heroine pathologically avenges a hatred for men.
12021But this time there's some mold on the gold.
12034A model of what films like this should be like.
12041A soggy, cliche-bound epic-horror yarn that ends up being even dumber than its title.
12052Light, cute and forgettable.
12061(T)hose same extremes prevent us from taking its message seriously, and the Stepford Wives mentality doesn't work in a modern context.
12072A restrained Ribisi convinces as an Italian, though if ever a movie needed one of the actor's whiny jags to pump it up, this has to be among the rare ones.
12082Immediately.
12092Melanie eventually slugs the Yankee.
12103A movie for 11-year-old boys with sports dreams of their own and the preteen girls who worship Lil' Bow Wow.
12114Aside from being the funniest movie of the year, Simone, Andrew Niccol's brilliant anti-Hollywood satire, has a wickedly eccentric enchantment to it.
12124A fast-moving and remarkable film that appears destined to become a landmark in Japanese animation.
12132If the '70's were your idea of a good time at the movies, this will make you very happy.
12144A truly moving experience, and a perfect example of how art -- when done right -- can help heal, clarify, and comfort.
12154The Hours is what movies are supposed to be...
12160Just another fish-out-of-water story that barely stays afloat.
12173When it really counts ... Bloody Sunday connects on a visceral level that transcends language.
12182For all of the contemporary post-colonialist consciousness that Kapur tries to bring to The Four Feathers, the oddest thing about the movie is how it winds up affirming the same damn moldy values the material has always held dear.
12190...with the candy-like taste of it fading faster than 25-cent bubble gum, I realized this is a throwaway movie that won't stand the test of time.
12204A remarkable 179-minute meditation on the nature of revolution.
12210Nothing more than a mediocre trifle.
12224Full of profound, real-life moments that anyone can relate to, it deserves a wide audience.
12232This is a good movie in spurts, but when it doesn't work, it's at important times.
12241You would be better off investing in the worthy EMI recording that serves as the soundtrack, or the home video of the 1992 Malfitano-Domingo production.
12252Equal parts bodice-ripper and plodding costume drama.
12262Johnson has, in his first film, set himself a task he is not nearly up to.
12272Not as distinctive or even as humorous as its needs to be to stand out, but it has clearly been made with affection and care.
12280Audiences can be expected to suspend their disbelief only so far -- and that does not include the 5 o'clock shadow on the tall wooden kid as he skips off to school.
12293A perverse little truffle, dainty psychological terror on the outside with a creamy filling of familial jealousy and unrepentant domestic psychopathy.
12302A whimsical if predictable time-travel fable marred by a willful single-mindedness.
12313As a randy film about sexy people in gorgeous places being pushed and pulled (literally and figuratively) by desire ... (Sex and Lucía) makes for an arousing good time.
12323A work of intricate elegance, literary lyricism and profound common sense.
12333Solid, lump-in-the-throat family entertainment that derives its power by sticking to the facts.
12342Remains a solid, if somewhat heavy-handed, account of the near-disaster...done up by Howard with a steady, if not very imaginative, hand.
12353For all its serious sense of purpose ... (it) finds a way to lay bare the tragedies of its setting with a good deal of warmth and humor.
12363Far from perfect, but its heart is in the right place...innocent and well-meaning.
12373Despite its flaws, Secretary stays in your head and makes you question your own firmly held positions.
12383The film hinges on its performances, and both leads are up to the task.
12390The Irwins emerge unscathed, but the fictional footage is unconvincing and criminally badly acted.
12403It helps that the central performers are experienced actors, and that they know their roles so well.
12412One of (Herzog's) least inspired works.
12421The title Trapped turns out to be a pretty fair description of how you feel while you're watching this ultra-manipulative thriller.
12431The thriller side of this movie is falling flat, as the stalker doesn't do much stalking, and no cop or lawyer grasps the concept of actually investigating the case.
12440As with too many studio pics, plot mechanics get in the way of what should be the lighter-than-air adventure.
12450It's an awfully derivative story.
12460Now it's a bad, embarrassing movie.
12471Fails to bring as much to the table.
12483Sturdy, entertaining period drama ... both Caine and Fraser have their moments.
12490focuses on Joan's raging hormones and sledgehammers the audience with Spanish inquisitions about her "madness" so much that I became mad that I wasted 123 minutes and $9.50 on this 21st century torture device.
12504There are moments in this account of the life of artist Frida Kahlo that are among cinema's finest this year.
12514Dark, resonant, inventively detailed and packed with fleet turns of plot and a feast of visual amazement.
12523Narc may not get an 'A' for originality, but it wears its B-movie heritage like a badge of honor.
12534The story may not be new, but Australian director John Polson, making his American feature debut, jazzes it up adroitly.
12543I admired it, particularly that unexpected downer of an ending.
12551A TV episode inflated past its natural length.
12563Zany, exuberantly irreverent animated space adventure.
12571The creaking, rusty ship makes a fine backdrop, but the ghosts' haunting is routine.
12583It's not so much enjoyable to watch as it is enlightening to listen to new sides of a previous reality, and to visit with some of the people who were able to make an impact in the theater world.
12594Celebrated at Sundance, this slight comedy of manners has winning performances and a glossy, glib charm that's hard to beat.
12603(Davis) has a bright, chipper style that keeps things moving, while never quite managing to connect her wish-fulfilling characters to the human race.
12610Enough trivializes an important crisis, reduces it to an almost comic embarrassment.
12622By taking Entertainment Tonight subject matter and giving it humor and poignancy, Auto Focus becomes both gut-bustingly funny and crushingly depressing.
12633The film is an enjoyable family film -- pretty much aimed at any youngster who loves horses.
12641Watching Trouble Every Day, at least if you don't know what's coming, is like biting into what looks like a juicy, delicious plum on a hot summer day and coming away with your mouth full of rotten pulp and living worms.
12652A journey that's too random and inconclusive to be compelling, but which Hoffman's brilliance almost makes worth taking.
12664Rarely do films come along that are as intelligent, exuberant, and moving as Monsoon Wedding.
12673The laser-projected paintings provide a spell-casting beauty, while Russell and Dreyfus are a romantic pairing of hearts, preciously exposed as history corners them.
12682What happens to John Q?
12691There are a few laughs and clever sight gags scattered about, but not enough to make this anything more than another big-budget bust.
12703A thoughtful look at a painful incident that made headlines in 1995.
12711An intermittently pleasing but mostly routine effort.
12721The film has a few cute ideas and several modest chuckles but it isn't exactly kiddie-friendly... Alas, Santa is more ho-hum than ho-ho-ho and the Snowman (who never gets to play that flute) has all the charm of a meltdown.
12730Marisa Tomei is good, but Just A Kiss is just a mess.
12743As teen movies go, "Orange County" is a refreshing change
12752There's not much going on in this movie unless you simply decide to buy into the notion that something inexplicably strange once happened in Point Pleasant.
12763Attal mixes comedy with a serious exploration of ego and jealousy within a seemingly serene marriage.
12771With a story inspired by the tumultuous surroundings of Los Angeles, where feelings of marginalization loom for every dreamer with a burst bubble, The Dogwalker has a few characters and ideas, but it never manages to put them on the same path.
12781A mostly tired retread of several other mob tales.
12791Flaunts its quirky excesses like a New Year's Eve drunk sporting a paper party hat.
12800Lame, haphazard teen comedy.
12814Somewhat blurred, but Kinnear's performance is razor sharp.
12821...fifty minutes of tedious adolescent melodramatics followed by thirty-five minutes of inflated nonsense.
12831No number of fantastic sets, extras, costumes and spectacular locales can disguise the emptiness at the center of the story.
12842The cumulative effect of the relentless horror on parade numbs the movie's power as a work of drama.
12852just pound away.
12863A slick, skillful little horror film.
12873There are as many misses as hits, but ultimately, it finds humor in the foibles of human behavior, and it's a welcome return to the roots of a genre that should depend on surprises.
12883More a load of enjoyable, Conan-esque claptrap than the punishing, special-effects soul assaults the Mummy pictures represent.
12892...does such a fine job of engulfing you in its world and allying you with its characters' choices, good and ill, that its shortcomings are remembered only as an afterthought.
12903On the surface, it's a lovers-on-the-run crime flick, but it has a lot in common with Piesiewicz's and Kieslowski's earlier work, films like The Double Life of Veronique.
12911In the end, Punch-Drunk Love is one of those films that I wanted to like much more than I actually did.
12923It helps that Lil Bow Wow ... tones down his pint-sized gangsta act to play someone who resembles a real kid.
12934Finds a way to tell a simple story, perhaps the simplest story of all, in a way that seems compelling and even original.
12940Most of the supporting characters in Eastwood films are weak, as are most of the subplots.
12950Began life as a computer game, then morphed into a movie -- a bad one, of course.
12964It's a beautifully accomplished lyrical meditation on a bunch of despondent and vulnerable characters living in the renown Chelsea Hotel ...
12972Parker probably thinks he's shaking up a classic the way Kenneth Branagh and Baz Luhrmann have, but this half-hearted messing-about just makes us miss Wilde's still-contemporary play.
12980Much of what is meant to be 'inspirational' and 'uplifting' is simply distasteful to audiences not already sharing (the movie's) mindset.
12993But based on CQ, I'll certainly be keeping an eye out for his next project.
13004Disturbing and brilliant documentary.
13011Chaotic, self-indulgent and remarkably ugly to look at, it's...like a series of pretentiously awful student films strung together into one feature-length horror.
13024Windtalkers celebrates the human spirit and packs an emotional wallop.
13033What it lacks in originality it makes up for in intelligence and B-grade stylishness.
13042To say Analyze That is De Niro's best film since Meet the Parents sums up the sad state of his recent career.
13054An exciting and involving rock music doc, a smart and satisfying look inside that tumultuous world.
13062The worst kind of independent; the one where actors play dress down hicks and ponderously mope around trying to strike lightning as captured by their 1970s predecessors
13071The lack of pace kills it, although, in a movie about cancer, this might be apt.
13082This film is full of rabbits.
13091Alas, it's neither.
13101...this movie has a glossy coat of action movie excess while remaining heartless at its core.
13111Men in Black II has sequel-itis something fierce.
13123Not too far below the gloss you can still feel director Denis Villeneuve's beating heart and the fondness he has for his characters.
13133It's astonishing.
13143A film that takes you inside the rhythms of its subject: You experience it as you watch.
13153A resonant tale of racism, revenge and retribution.
13163A mostly intelligent, engrossing and psychologically resonant suspenser.
13171Between bedroom scenes, viewers may find themselves wishing they could roll over and take a nap.
13181The central story lacks punch.
13191Not every animated film from Disney will become a classic, but forgive me if I've come to expect more from this studio than some 79-minute after-school "cartoon".
13202Hmm.
13210A didactic and dull documentary glorifying software anarchy.
13224A well-made thriller with a certain level of intelligence and non-reactionary morality.
13234If you're like me, a sucker for a good old fashion romance and someone who shamelessly loves to eat, then Mostly Martha offers all the perfect ingredients to more than satisfy your appetite.
13241All in all, there's only one thing to root for: expulsion for everyone.
13250It's never a good sign when a film's star spends the entirety of the film in a coma.
13263We need (Moore's) noisy, cocky energy, his passion and class consciousness; we need his shticks, we need his stones.
13273Roman Coppola may never become the filmmaker his Dad was, but heck few filmmakers will.
13283Gets under the skin of a man who has just lost his wife.
13290National Lampoon's Van Wilder could be the worst thing to come out of National Lampoon since Class Reunion
13301The acting by the over-25s lacks spark, with Csokas particularly unconnected.
13312I wonder what the reaction of Israelis will be to this supposedly evenhanded presentation.
13322Over-the-top and a bit ostentatious, this is a movie that's got oodles of style and substance.
13332It has a subtle way of getting under your skin and sticking with you long after it's over.
13342Possession is Elizabeth Barrett Browning meets Nancy Drew, and it's directed by... Neil LaBute.
13354(Broomfield) uncovers a story powerful enough to leave the screen sizzling with intrigue.
13363It's the kind of pigeonhole-resisting romp that Hollywood too rarely provides.
13371has a plot full of twists upon knots...and a nonstop parade of mock-Tarantino scuzbag types that starts out clever but veers into overkill.
13381There's nothing provocative about this film save for the ways in which it studiously avoids provoking thought.
13392This boisterous comedy serves up a cruel reminder of the fate of hundreds of thousands of Chinese, one which can only qualify as a terrible tragedy.
13403A gentle blend of present day testimonials, surviving footage of Burstein and his family performing, historical archives, and telling stills.
13411(It's) a prison soccer movie starring charismatic tough guy Vinnie Jones, but it had too much spitting for me to enjoy.
13423There are slow and repetitive parts, but it has just enough spice to keep it interesting.
13430Rambles on in a disjointed, substandard fashion from one poorly executed action sequence to the next.
13441If this is satire, it's the smug and self-congratulatory kind that lets the audience completely off the hook.
13453Here, Adrian Lyne comes as close to profundity as he is likely to get.
13463Jagger the actor is someone you want to see again.
13474The level of maturity displayed by this 33-year-old first-time feature director is astonishing, considering her inexperience and her subject matter.
13480Murder By Numbers is like a couple of mediocre TV-movie -of-the-week films clumsily stuck together.
13493But in Imax 3-D, the clichés disappear into the vertiginous perspectives opened up by the photography.
13501There's more scatological action in 8 Crazy Nights than a proctologist is apt to encounter in an entire career.
13511The two leads chomp considerably more scenery with their acting than fire-breathing monsters barbecue with their breath...
13524...a roller-coaster ride of a movie
13530Just like Hearst's enormous yacht, it's slow and unwieldy and takes a long time to reach its destination.
13543Tsai Ming-liang has taken his trademark style and refined it to a crystalline point.
13551God help the poor woman if Attal is this insecure in real life: his fictional Yvan's neuroses are aggravating enough to exhaust the patience of even the most understanding spouse.
13563The film is surprisingly well-directed by Brett Ratner, who keeps things moving well -- at least until the problematic third act.
13573The story feels more like a serious read, filled with heavy doses of always enticing Sayles dialogue.
13582The rest of the plot is impossible to explain without blowing whatever tension there is, although it's more comedy than suspense De Palma creates.
13593The Hours makes you examine your own life in much the same way its characters do, and the experience is profound.
13604Hugh Grant and Sandra Bullock are two such likeable actors.
13613In its ragged, cheap and unassuming way, the movie works.
13622When not obscured by the booming bass-heavy soundtrack, the conversation presents the kind of linguistic fumbling not heard since Macy Gray's game of Chinese whispers with Mr Bean.
13632Not always too whimsical for its own good (but enough to do harm), this strange hybrid of crime thriller, quirky character study, third-rate romance and female empowerment fantasy never really finds the tonal or thematic glue it needs.
13642Well before it's over, Beijing Bicycle begins spinning its wheels.
13650While the film misfires at every level, the biggest downside is the paucity of laughter in what's supposed to be a comedy.
13664I love the way that it took chances and really asks you to take these great leaps of faith and pays off.
13670Lacks heart, depth and, most of all, purpose.
13680Oedekerk wrote Patch Adams, for which he should not be forgiven.
13691With a story as bizarre and mysterious as this, you don't want to be worrying about whether the ineffectual Broomfield is going to have the courage to knock on that door.
13701Marries the amateurishness of The Blair Witch Project with the illogic of Series 7: The Contenders to create a completely crass and forgettable movie.
13712The film's implicit premise is that the faith of the Tonga people is in every way inferior to that of John.
13723The movie's eventual success should be credited to Dennis Quaid, in fighting trim shape as an athlete as well as an actor
13730The actors don't inhabit their roles -- they're trapped by them, forced to change behavior in bizarre unjustified fashion and spout dialog that consists mostly of platitudes.
13741Strong setup and ambitious goals fade as the film descends into unsophisticated scare tactics and B-film thuggery.
13750Vile and tacky are the two best adjectives to describe Ghost Ship.
13764Bow's best moments are when he's getting busy on the basketball court because that's when he really scores.
13771A movie that tries to fuse the two 'woods' but winds up a Bolly-Holly masala mess.
13781But that's just the problem with it - the director hasn't added enough of his own ingredients.
13793Who knows what exactly Godard is on about in this film, but his words and images don't have to add up to mesmerize you.
13801It becomes gimmicky instead of compelling.
13811Sets up a nice concept for its fiftysomething leading ladies, but fails loudly in execution.
13820Undone by its overly complicated and derivative screenplay, the glacier-paced direction and the stereotypical characters.
13830Some, like Ballistic, arrive stillborn... looking like the beaten, well-worn video box cover of seven years into the future.
13840The sort of movie that gives tastelessness a bad rap.
13851This time out, (Sade) is an unsettlingly familiar figure -- in turns loyal and deceitful, responsible and reckless, idealistically selfless and coldly self-interested.
13863A pleasant romantic comedy.
13871The director's twitchy sketchbook style and adroit perspective shifts grow wearisome amid leaden pacing and indifferent craftsmanship (most notably wretched sound design).
13883Must be seen to be believed.
13893...a poignant and powerful narrative that reveals that reading writing and arithmetic are not the only subjects to learn in life.
13903This is a film brimming with detail and nuance and one that speaks volumes about the ability of the human spirit to find solace in events that could easily crush it forever.
13911Birot is a competent enough filmmaker, but her story has nothing fresh or very exciting about it.
13922It's a flashy, star-splashed reduction.
13933It's a minor comedy that tries to balance sweetness with coarseness, while it paints a sad picture of the singles scene.
13941It delivers some chills and sustained unease, but flounders in its quest for Deeper Meaning.
13951Shot perhaps 'artistically' with handheld cameras and apparently no movie lights by Joaquin Baca-Asay, the low-budget production swings annoyingly between vertigo and opacity.
13960It's painful.
13972Chalk it up to my adoration for both De Niro and Murphy, but I had a pretty good time with this movie - despite its myriad flaws.
13982The story is less vibrant, the jokes are a little lukewarm, but will anyone really care?
13992Is office work really as alienating as 'Bartleby' so effectively makes it?
14001A simple, sometimes maddeningly slow film that has just enough charm and good acting to make it interesting, but is ultimately pulled under by the pacing and lack of creativity within.
14013As blunt as it is in depicting child abuse, El Bola is a movie steeped in an ambiguity that lends its conflicts a symbolic resonance.
14024Morton is, as usual, brilliant.
14031The picture is a primer on what happens when lack of know-how mixes with lack of give-a-damn.
14041...a weak, manipulative, pencil-thin story that is miraculously able to entertain anyway.
14053What could have become just another cautionary fable is allowed to play out as a clever, charming tale as pleasantly in its own way as its self-dramatizing characters.
14063Culkin, who's in virtually every scene, shines as a young man who uses sarcastic lies like a shield.
14074For anyone who remembers the '60s or is interested in one man's response to stroke, Ram Dass: Fierce Grace is worth seeking out.
14081Falters when it takes itself too seriously and when it depends too heavily on its otherwise talented cast to clown in situations that aren't funny.
14091It won't be long before you'll spy I Spy at a video store near you.
14102Oh, it's extreme, all right.
14113An engaging overview of Johnson's eccentric career.
14121Proof that a thriller can be sleekly shot, expertly cast, paced with crisp professionalism... and still be a letdown if its twists and turns hold no more surprise than yesterday's weather report.
14132That is essentially what's missing from Blackboards -- the sense of something bigger, some ultimate point.
14143The movie stays afloat thanks to its hallucinatory production design.
14151This goofy gangster yarn never really elevates itself from being yet another earnestly generic crime-busting comic vehicle -- a well-intentioned remake that shows some spunk and promise but fails to register as anything distinctive or daring
14161Sorry, Charlie
14173It's a hoot and a half, and a great way for the American people to see what a candidate is like when he's not giving the same 15-cent stump speech.
14184In scope, ambition and accomplishment, Children of the Century ... takes Kurys' career to a whole new level.
14191The sad thing about Knockaround Guys is its lame aspiration for grasping the coolness vibes when in fact the film isn't as flippant or slick as it thinks it is.
14201The more Kevin Costner rests on his pretty-boy laurels, the public is, regrettably, going to have tepid films like Dragonfly tossed at them.
14211...(a) strained comedy that jettisons all opportunities for Rock to make his mark by serving up the usual chaotic nonsense.
14221Blessed with immense physical prowess he may well be, but Ahola is simply not an actor.
14231Another big, dumb action movie in the vein of XXX, The Transporter is riddled with plot holes big enough for its titular hero to drive his sleek black BMW through.
14241Nothing Denis has made before, like Beau Travil and Nenette et Boni, could prepare us for this gory, perverted, sex-soaked riff on the cannibal genre.
14253Led by Griffin's smartly nuanced performance and enthusiasm, the cast has a lot of fun with the material.
14261It's frustrating to see these guys -- who are obviously pretty clever -- waste their talent on parodies of things they probably thought were funniest when they were high.
14270I watched the brainless insanity of No Such Thing with mounting disbelief.
14282With recent tensions rekindled by the Kathleen Soliah trial and the upcoming trial of SLA members Emily and William Harris, not to mention Sept. 11, its difficult these days to appreciate Fire's bright side.
14290The angst-ridden, affluent slacker characters are more grating than engaging.
14302The film goes from being an unusual sci-fi character study to a chase flick that detracts from its ending.
14312Girls gone wild and gone civil again
14322But what about the countless other people who'd merely like to watch a solid tale about a universally interesting soul?
14333He just wants them to be part of the action, the wallpaper of his chosen reality.
14343The movie's ripe, enrapturing beauty will tempt those willing to probe its inscrutable mysteries.
14350Like so many other allegedly scary movies, it gets so tangled up in The Twist that it chokes the energy right out of the very audience it seeks to frighten.
14363Isn't it great?
14373Enormously likable, partly because it is aware of its own grasp of the absurd.
14384This is as powerful a set of evidence as you'll ever find of why art matters, and how it can resonate far beyond museum walls and through to the most painfully marginal lives.
14391Guillen rarely gets beneath the surface of things.
14404The film is exhilarating to watch because Sandler, liberated from the constraints of formula, reveals unexpected depths as an actor.
14414Ranging from funny to shattering and featuring some of the year's best acting, Personal Velocity gathers plenty of dramatic momentum.
14423The film is faithful to what one presumes are the book's twin premises -- that we become who we are on the backs of our parents, but we have no idea who they were at our age; and that time is a fleeting and precious commodity no matter how old you are.
14431Some decent actors inflict big damage upon their reputations.
14442Part comedy, part drama, the movie winds up accomplishing neither in full, and leaves us feeling touched and amused by several moments and ideas, but nevertheless dissatisfied with the movie as a whole.
14451Human Nature talks the talk, but it fails to walk the silly walk that distinguishes the merely quirky from the surreal.
14461Doesn't amount to much of anything.
14474Huppert gives Erika a persona that is so intriguing that you find yourself staring hypnotically at her, trying to understand her and wondering if she'll crack.
14484an exceedingly clever piece of cinema.
14494Lead provocatuers Testud and Parmentier give superlative performances
14500Apallingly absurd...the chemistry or lack thereof between Newton and Wahlberg could turn an Imax theater into a 9" black and white portable TV.
14512Between the drama of Cube?
14522While the glass slipper doesn't quite fit, Pumpkin is definitely a unique modern fairytale.
14530Meandering, sub-aquatic mess: It's so bad it's good, but only if you slide in on a freebie.
14543Rather quickly, the film falls into a soothing formula of brotherly conflict and reconciliation.
14551When the painted backdrops in a movie are more alive than its characters, you know you're in trouble.
14560This overproduced and generally disappointing effort isn't likely to rouse the Rush Hour crowd.
14574Having never been a huge fan of Dickens' 800-page novel, it surprised me how much pleasure I had watching McGrath's version.
14582It's fun, but the code-talk will fly right over everyone's head
14591The noble tradition of men in drag hits an all-time low in Sorority Boys, whose makers apparently believe that women's clothing can cover up any deficiency in acting, writing or direction.
14601If you collected all the moments of coherent dialogue, they still wouldn't add up to the time required to boil a four- minute egg.
14612I've heard that the fans of the first Men in Black have come away hating the second one.
14621The problem with this film is that it's forced to make its characters idiots in order to advance the plot.
14631It's disappointing when filmmakers throw a few big-name actors and cameos at a hokey script.
14641The story is naturally poignant, but first-time screenwriter Paul Pender overloads it with sugary bits of business.
14651So lazy and slipshod it confuses the mere flashing of kinky soft-core imagery with naughty fun.
14662This dramatically shaky contest of wills only reiterates the old Hollywood saw: Evil is interesting and good is boring.
14674A love for films shines through each frame and the era is recreated with obvious affection, scored to perfection with some tasty boogaloo beats.
14681I tried to read the time on my watch.
14691Writer/director John McKay ignites some charming chemistry between Kate and Jed but, when he veers into sodden melodrama, punctuated by violins, it's disastrous and Kate's jealous female friends become downright despicable.
14702Cry havoc and let slip the dogs of cheese, indeed.
14711The movie takes itself too seriously and, as a result, it makes for only intermittent fun.
14723I like Frank the Pug, though.
14731An overstuffed compendium of teen-Catholic-movie dogma.
14742Largely a for-fans artifact.
14753An involving true story of a Chinese actor who takes up drugs and winds up in an institution--acted mostly by the actual people involved.
14761Nearly surreal, dabbling in French, this is no simple movie, and you'll be taking a risk if you choose to see it.
14770would seem to have a lock on the title of ugliest movie of the year.
14782...a well-observed and disturbing little movie
14794An incendiary, deeply thought-provoking look at one of the most peculiar (and peculiarly venomous) bigotries in our increasingly frightening theocracy
14802Movies like this are selling the old European candor, the old wink of 'bold' revelation.
14813Lee Jeong-Hyang tells it so lovingly and films it so beautifully that I couldn't help being captivated by it.
14823The episodic film makes valid points about the depersonalization of modern life.
14834It's almost impossible not to be moved by the movie's depiction of sacrifice and its stirring epilogue in post-Soviet Russia.
14843Though the film's scenario is certainly not earthshaking, this depiction of fluctuating female sexuality has two winning lead performances and charm to spare.
14854Kinnear gives a tremendous performance.
14863Perhaps no picture ever made has more literally showed that the road to hell is paved with good intentions.
14871Dull, if not devoid of wit, this shaggy dog longs to frisk through the back alleys of history, but scarcely manages more than a modest, snoozy charm.
14883'...both hokey and super-cool, and definitely not in a hurry, so sit back, relax and have a few laughs while the little ones get a fuzzy treat.'
14893Windtalkers blows this way and that, but there's no mistaking the filmmaker in the tall grass, true to himself.
14904An intriguing and entertaining introduction to Johnson.
14911Ray Liotta and Jason Patric do some of their best work in their underwritten roles, but don't be fooled: Nobody deserves any prizes here.
14922The new faces are interesting, but the old story isn't, especially when it starts to seem more improvised than scripted.
14931Sushi for the connoisseurs of the macabre.
14944It further declares its director, Zhang Yang of Shower, as a boldly experimental, contemporary stylist with a bright future.
14950The only way this supernatural snore-fest could give anyone a case of the frights is if they were put to sleep by the movie and had a nightmare.
14963Although it bangs a very cliched drum at times, this crowd-pleaser's fresh dialogue, energetic music, and good-natured spunk are often infectious.
14973Claude Miller airs out a tight plot with an easy pace and a focus on character drama over crime-film complications.
14980To imagine the life of Harry Potter as a martial arts adventure told by a lobotomized Woody Allen is to have some idea of the fate that lies in store for moviegoers lured to the mediocrity that is Kung Pow: Enter the Fist.
14993The film is just a big, gorgeous, mind-blowing, breath-taking mess.
15003Daughter from Danang is a film that should be seen by all, especially those who aren't aware of, or have forgotten about the unmentioned victims of war.
15014It's also the year's sweetest movie.
15023This is such a high-energy movie where the drumming and the marching are so excellent, who cares if the story's a little weak.
15033A whole lot foul, freaky and funny.
15043There are a few stabs at absurdist comedy ... but mostly the humor is of the sweet, gentle and occasionally cloying kind that has become an Iranian specialty.
15050For me, this opera isn't a favorite, so it's a long time before the fat lady sings.
15061A 93-minute condensation of a 26-episode TV series, with all of the pitfalls of such you'd expect.
15071And in truth, cruel as it may sound, he makes Arnold Schwarzenegger look like Spencer Tracy.
15082Lawrence preaches strictly to the converted.
15091Given that both movies expect us to root for convicted violent felons over those assigned to protect us from same, we need every bit of sympathy the cons can muster; this time, there isn't much.
15103"Antwone Fisher" is an earnest, by-the-numbers effort by Washington.
15113Succeeds in providing a disquiet world the long-dreaded completion of the Police Academy series.
15122You don't have to be an especially tough grader to give a charitable B-minus to The Emperor's Club.
15132The film's bathos often overwhelms what could have been a more multifaceted look at this interesting time and place.
15141If you're not the target demographic ... this movie is one long chick-flick slog.
15151The actors are forced to grapple with hazy motivations that never come into focus.
15161The best you can say about it is it's so uninspired, it barely gives one pause when considering some of the other dreck out there right now.
15173By presenting an impossible romance in an impossible world, Pumpkin dares us to say why either is impossible -- which forces us to confront what's possible and what we might do to make it so.
15183After making several adaptations of other writers' work, Armenian-Canadian director Atom Egoyan broached an original treatment of a deeply personal subject.
15191All the necessary exposition prevents the picture from rising above your generic sand 'n' sandal adventure.
15201Audiences will find no mention of political prisoners or persecutions that might paint the Castro regime in less than saintly tones.
15212A sly game of cat and mouse that's intense and thrilling at times, but occasionally stretches believability to its limits and relies on predictable plot contrivances.
15220... just a big mess of a movie, full of images and events, but no tension or surprise.
15232What The Four Feathers lacks is genuine sweep or feeling or even a character worth caring about.
15241I kept wishing I was watching a documentary about the wartime Navajos and what they accomplished instead of all this specious Hollywood hoo-ha.
15252Unlike most teen flicks, Swimming takes its time to tell its story, casts mostly little-known performers in key roles, and introduces some intriguing ambiguity.
15264The film delivers not just the full assault of Reno's immense wit and insight, but a time travel back to what it felt like during those unforgettably uncertain days.
15271One groan-inducing familiarity begets another.
15280John McTiernan's botched remake may be subtler than Norman Jewison's 1975 ultraviolent futuristic corporate-sports saga.
15294An earnest, heartrending look at the divide between religious fundamentalists and their gay relatives.
15303A pleasurably jacked-up piece of action moviemaking.
15311But an unwillingness to explore beyond the surfaces of her characters prevents Nettelbeck's film from coming together.
15321Too clunky and too busy ribbing itself to be truly entertaining.
15331The enormous comic potential of an oafish idiot impersonating an aristocrat remains sadly unrealized.
15344Everywhere the camera looks there is something worth seeing.
15353The best thing the film does is to show us not only what that mind looks like, but how the creative process itself operates.
15363A modest pleasure that accomplishes its goals with ease and confidence.
15372We may get the full visceral impact of a ruthless army on the warpath but no sense of the devilish complexity of the Balkans conflict.
15384One of the best examples of how to treat a subject, you're not fully aware is being examined, much like a photo of yourself you didn't know was being taken.
15392I believe the message is in the messenger: The agent is a woman.
15404Mixes likeable personalities, inventive photography and cutting, and wall-to-wall toe-tapping music to paint a picture of a subculture that is at once exhilarating, silly, perverse, hopeful and always fun.
15411But I wasn't.
15424Though of particular interest to students and enthusiast of international dance and world music, the film is designed to make viewers of all ages, cultural backgrounds and rhythmic ability want to get up and dance.
15431A silly, self-indulgent film about a silly, self-indulgent filmmaker.
15444Most impressive, though, is the film's open-ended finale that refuses to entirely close its characters' emotional wounds.
15451It's a movie forged in the fires of Chick Flick Hell.
15462A combination of standard, stiff TV-style animation and snazzy-looking digital effects that do little to disguise the fact that the characters barely move.
15471It's fairly self-aware in its dumbness.
15483Credit must be given to Harland Williams, Michael Rosenbaum and Barry Watson, who inject far more good-natured spirit and talent into this project than it deserves
15490The Piano Teacher is the sort of movie that discourages American audiences from ever wanting to see another foreign film.
15501Watching it is rather like viewing a long soap opera in which only the first episode was any good.
15513A simmering psychological drama in which the bursts of sudden violence are all the more startling for the slow buildup that has preceded them.
15522That's the only sane rationale I can think of for Swimfan's existence.
15533There's a disreputable air about the whole thing, and that's what makes it irresistible.
15543A pleasant ramble through the sort of idoosyncratic terrain that Errol Morris has often dealt with...it does possess a loose, lackadaisical charm.
15554This is one of the most visually stunning and thematically moving epics in recent memory, and in spite of numerous minor flaws, Scorsese's best in more than a decade.
15563For a good chunk of its running time, Trapped is an effective and claustrophobic thriller.
15574Full Frontal is the antidote for Soderbergh fans who think he's gone too commercial since his two Oscar nominated films in 2000
15581Even the imaginative gore can't hide the musty scent of Todd Farmer's screenplay, which is a simple retread of the 1979 Alien, with a plucky heroine battling a monster loose in a spaceship.
15593As if to prove a female director can make a movie with no soft edges, Kathryn Bigelow offers no sugar-coating or interludes of lightness.
15601The filmmakers juggle and juxtapose three story lines but fail to come up with one cogent point, unless it's that life stinks, especially for sensitive married women who really love other women.
15612But if you expect light romantic comedy, good gosh, will you be shocked.
15620Made by jackasses for jackasses.
15630If Melville is creatively a great whale, this film is canned tuna.
15641Pretentious editing ruins a potentially terrific flick.
15651Topkapi this is not.
15663But he somehow pulls it off.
15672The film seems all but destined to pop up on a television screen in the background of a scene in a future Quentin Tarantino picture
15680Bartleby is a one-joke movie, and a bad joke at that.
15692An earnest racial-issues picture that might have gotten respectful critical praise in a different era -- say, the '60s.
15704It is risky, intelligent, romantic and rapturous from start to finish.
15714A worthwhile way to spend two hours.
15722Illuminating if overly talky documentary.
15731Never Again swings between false sentiment and unfunny madcap comedy and, along the way, expects the audience to invest in the central relationship as some kind of marriage of true minds.
15744Two generations within one family test boundaries in this intelligent and restrained coming-of-age drama.
15753(Gai) comes closer to any actress I can remember to personifying independence in its purest and, yes, most intimidating form.
15763A broadly played, lowbrow comedy in which the cast delivers mildly amusing performances and no farm animals were injured by any of the gags.
15772It doesn't quite deserve the gong, but there are more fascinating acts than "Confessions of a Dangerous Mind."
15780Filmmakers have to dig deep to sink this low.
15791Then lower them a bit more.
15800I cry for I Spy -- or I would if this latest and laziest imaginable of all vintage-TV spinoffs were capable of engendering an emotional response of any kind.
15810A very bad sign.
15822The cartoon is about as true to the spirit of the Festival of Lights as Mr. Deeds was to that of Frank Capra.
15832Sometimes, that's enough.
15841Well, it does go on forever.
15852There is an almost poignant dimension to the way that every major stunt Seagal's character ... performs is shot from behind, as if it could fool us into thinking that we're not watching a double.
15860This isn't just the CliffsNotes version of Nicholas Nickleby, it's the CliffsNotes with pages missing.
15873It's all very cute, though not terribly funny if you're more than six years old.
15880Fortunately for all involved, this movie is likely to disappear as quickly as an ice cube thrown into a pot of boiling water.
15890Guided more by intellect than heart, his story flattens instead of sharpens.
15903It's an old story, but a lively script, sharp acting and partially animated interludes make Just a Kiss seem minty fresh.
15912There's something deeply creepy about Never Again, a new arrow in Schaeffer's quiver of ineptitudes.
15921It's the kind of movie you can't quite recommend because it is all windup and not much of a pitch, yet you can't bring yourself to dislike it.
15932"its successes are also tempered with elements which prove the direct antithesis of what it gets right."
15944An excellent romp that boasts both a heart and a mind.
15952It's not that Waiting For Happiness is a bad film, because it isn't.
15960John Leguizamo may be a dramatic actor -- just not in this movie.
15974Tender yet lacerating and darkly funny fable.
15984This delicately observed story, deeply felt and masterfully stylized, is a triumph for its maverick director.
15991A Generation X artifact, capturing a brief era of insanity in the sports arena that surely cannot last.
16001The film's center will not hold.
16013It is far from the worst, thanks to the topical issues it raises, the performances of Stewart and Hardy, and that essential feature -- a decent full-on space battle.
16022Literally nothing in The Pool is new, but if you grew up on the stalker flicks of the 1980's this one should appease you for 90 minutes.
16031It's also stupider.
16041None of these characters resembles anyone you've ever met in real life, unless you happen to know annoyingly self-involved people who speak in glib sentences that could have only come from the pen of a screenwriter.
16054Sensitive, insightful and beautifully rendered film.
16063A bowel-curdling, heart-stopping recipe for terror.
16070Although based on a real-life person, John, in the movie, is a rather dull person to be stuck with for two hours.
16081'Abandon all hope, ye who enter here'...you should definitely let Dante's gloomy words be your guide.
16092He can scale a building like a super hero, he can out-stealth any agent, he'll get the girl.
16102So I just did.
16111An ultra-low-budget indie debut that smacks more of good intentions than talent.
16121There's not enough to sustain the comedy.
16131Fairly successful at faking some pretty cool stunts but a complete failure at trying to create some pretty cool characters.
16141The film is really not so much bad as bland.
16150Schmaltzy and unfunny, Adam Sandler's cartoon about Hanukkah is numbingly bad, Little Nicky bad, 10 Worst List bad.
16163A vivid cinematic portrait.
16173It's a refreshing change from the self-interest and paranoia that shape most American representations of Castro.
16183The Bourne Identity is what summer screen escapism used to be in the decades when it was geared more to grownups.
16192Alex Nohe's documentary plays like a travelogue for what mostly resembles a real-life, big-budget NC-17 version of Tank Girl.
16202It is, by conventional standards, a fairly terrible movie ... but it is also weirdly fascinating, a ready-made Eurotrash cult object.
16212...Tunney is allowed to build an uncommonly human character, an almost real-live girl complete with trouble and hope.
16224It could change America, not only because it is full of necessary discussion points, but because it is so accessible that it makes complex politics understandable to viewers looking for nothing but energetic entertainment.
16231Frenetic but not really funny.
16243Sandra Nettelbeck beautifully orchestrates the transformation of the chilly, neurotic, and self-absorbed Martha as her heart begins to open.
16251It's a film that hinges on its casting, and Glover really doesn't fit the part.
16261Ritchie's treatment of the class reversal is majorly ham-fisted, from the repetitive manifestos that keep getting thrown in people's faces to the fact Amber is such a joke.
16273This is such a dazzlingly self-assured directorial debut that it's hard to know what to praise first.
16281Apparently kissing leads to suicide attempts and tragic deaths.
16294Andy Garcia enjoys one of his richest roles in years and Mick Jagger gives his best movie performance since, well, Performance.
16303(Anderson) uses a hit-or-miss aesthetic that hits often enough to keep the film entertaining even if none of it makes a lick of sense.
16313This is a startling film that gives you a fascinating, albeit depressing view of Iranian rural life close to the Iraqi border.
16320This film looks like it was produced in 1954, shelved for 48 years, and repackaged for a 2002 audience.
16334Dazzling and sugar-sweet, a blast of shallow magnificence that only sex, scandal, and a chorus line of dangerous damsels can deliver.
16343From the big giant titles of the opening credits to Elmer Bernstein's perfectly melodic score, Haynes gets just about everything right.
16350Watching it is rather like an overlong visit from a large group of your relatives.
16364As the story moves inexorably through its seven day timeframe, the picture becomes increasingly mesmerizing.
16373Working from Elliott's memoir, Rohmer fashions the sort of delicate, articulate character- and- relationship study he's favored for decades.
16383Watching Scarlet Diva, one is poised for titillation, raw insight or both.
16391Intended to be a comedy about relationships, this wretched work falls flat in just about every conceivable area.
16404(A) rare, beautiful film.
16411...the film falls back on the same old formula of teen sex, outrageous pranks and scenes designed to push the envelope of bad taste for laughs.
16420Suffocated at conception by its Munchausen-by-proxy mum.
16434While not all transitions to adulthood are so fraught, there's much truth and no small amount of poetry in Girls Can't Swim.
16441Opens as promising as any war/adventure film you'll ever see and dissolves into a routine courtroom drama, better suited for a movie titled "Glory: A Soldier's Story."
16452... an agreeable time-wasting device -- but George Pal's low-tech 1960 version still rules the epochs.
16464It's (Ricci's) best work yet, this girl-woman who sincerely believes she can thwart the world's misery with blind good will.
16472Is there enough material to merit a documentary on the making of Wilco's last album?
16480This may be the dumbest, sketchiest movie on record about an aspiring writer's coming-of-age.
16492It tells more than it shows.
16503Evokes a little of the fear that parents have for the possible futures of their children--and the sometimes bad choices mothers and fathers make in the interests of doing them good.
16512Director Clare Kilner's debut is never as daft as it should have been.
16523As expected, Sayles' smart wordplay and clever plot contrivances are as sharp as ever, though they may be overshadowed by some strong performances.
16532...the gentle melding of drama and comedy makes "What Time Is It There?"
16541Too bad the former Murphy Brown doesn't pop Reese back.
16553It's predictable, but it jumps through the expected hoops with style and even some depth.
16562Taken purely as an exercise in style, this oppressively gloomy techno-horror clambake is impossible to ignore.
16573George Clooney proves he's quite a talented director and Sam Rockwell shows us he's a world-class actor with Confessions of a Dangerous Mind.
16584... mesmerizing, an eye-opening tour of modern Beijing culture in a journey of rebellion, retreat into oblivion and return.
16593The film is painfully authentic, and the performances of the young players are utterly convincing.
16603A potent allegorical love story.
16614Provides an intriguing window into the imagination and hermetic analysis of Todd Solondz.
16623It's endearing to hear Madame D. refer to her husband as 'Jackie' -- and he does make for excellent company, not least as a self-conscious performer.
16631So few movies explore religion that it's disappointing to see one reduce it to an idea that fits in a sampler.
16640Needless to say, the dramatics that follow are utter hooey.
16650Calling this movie brainless would be paying it a compliment: it's more like entertainment for trolls.
16662Overly stylized with lots of flash black-&-white freeze frames reminiscent of a pseudo-hip luxury car commercial, (it's) at its worst when it's actually inside the ring.
16674It is a kickass, dense sci-fi action thriller hybrid that delivers and then some.
16684It's a movie -- and an album -- you won't want to miss.
16692The appearance of Treebeard and Gollum's expanded role will either have you loving what you're seeing, or rolling your eyes.
16701Now, if it only had a brain.
16714a budget affair that exposes the generally sad existence of the Bedouins while providing a precious twinkle of insight into their lives.
16721Like a south-of-the-border Melrose Place.
16733It's a bittersweet and lyrical mix of elements.
16740This series should have died long ago, but they keep bringing it back another day as punishment for paying money to see the last James Bond movie.
16754Fans of Behan's work and of Irish movies in general will be rewarded by Borstal Boy.
16763Everytime you think Undercover Brother has run out of steam, it finds a new way to surprise and amuse.
16773A startling and fresh examination of how the bike still remains an ambiguous icon in Chinese society.
16783Although it's a bit smug and repetitive, this documentary engages your brain in a way few current films do.
16790Watching Haneke's film is, aptly enough, a challenge and a punishment.
16801Once the audience figure out what's being said, the filmmaker's relative passivity will make it tough for them to really care.
16810But like Bruce Springsteen's gone-to-pot Asbury Park, New Jersey, this sad-sack waste of a movie is a City of ruins.
16824Stay clear of reminding yourself that it's a "true story" and you're likely to have one helluva time at the movies.
16831So routine, familiar and predictable, it raises the possibility that it wrote itself as a newly automated Final Draft computer program.
16842Lends itself to the narcotizing bland (sinister, though not nearly so sinister as the biennial Disney girl movie) machinations of the biennial Disney boy movie.
16853In the process, they demonstrate that there's still a lot of life in Hong Kong cinema.
16863Though Mama takes a bit too long to find its rhythm and a third-act plot development is somewhat melodramatic, its ribald humor and touching nostalgia are sure to please anyone in search of a Jules and Jim for the new millennium.
16872What begins as a seemingly brainless, bubbly romantic comedy becomes a cliche-drenched melodrama by mid-film and, by film's end, a feminist action fantasy.
16883It's absolutely spooky how Lillard channels the Shagster right down to the original Casey Kasem-furnished voice.
16891Like those to Rome, all roads in The Banger Sisters inevitably lead to a joke about Hawn's breasts, which constantly threaten to upstage the woman sporting them.
16903A provocative movie about loss, anger, greed, jealousy, sickness and love.
16913Its scenes and sensibility are all more than familiar, but it exudes a kind of nostalgic spy-movie charm and, at the same time, is so fresh and free of the usual thriller nonsense that it all seems to be happening for the first time.
16921A soggy, shapeless mess...just a dumb excuse for a waterlogged equivalent of a haunted-house movie.
16932Though this film can be clumsy, its ambitions are equally -- and admirably -- uncommercial.
16942Only two words will tell you what you know when deciding to see it: Anthony.
16951There's an audience for it, but it could have been funnier and more innocent.
16963Achieves a sort of filmic epiphany that revels in the true potential of the medium.
16973If you sometimes like to go to the movies to have fun, Wasabi is a good place to start.
16981But hard-to-believe plot twists force the movie off track in its final half hour.
16994... always remains movingly genuine.
17001Maybe it's the star power of the cast or the redundant messages, but something aboul "Full Frontal" seems, well, contrived.
17011The situations and jokes are as predictable and as lowbrow as the endless pratfalls the boys take in their high heels.
17022A trite psychological thriller designed to keep the audience guessing and guessing -- which is not to be confused with suspecting -- until it comes time to wrap things up and send the viewers home.
17031Schindler's List it ain't.
17043a compelling portrait of moral emptiness
17051Let your silly childhood nostalgia slumber unmolested.
17064(A) superbly controlled, passionate adaptation of Graham Greene's 1955 novel.
17074A refreshingly honest and ultimately touching tale of the sort of people usually ignored in contemporary American film.
17080No, it's the repetition of said behavior, and so Children of the Century is more mindless love than mad, more grating and boring than anything else.
17094A comic gem with some serious sparkles.
17100Desperately unfunny when it tries to makes us laugh and desperately unsuspenseful when it tries to make us jump out of our seats.
17114The movie is a blast of educational energy, as bouncy animation and catchy songs escort you through the entire 85 minutes.
17121A bravura exercise in emptiness.
17133This concoction, so bizarre to the adult mind, is actually a charming triumph where its intended under-12 audience is concerned.
17140This one's weaker than most.
17154A lighthearted, feel-good film that embraces the time-honored truth that the most powerful thing in life is love.
17161The story bogs down in a mess of purposeless violence.
17170I Spy is an embarrassment, a monotonous, disjointed jumble of borrowed plot points and situations.
17181A mawkish, implausible platonic romance that makes Chaplin's City Lights seem dispassionate by comparison.
17194Rich in detail, gorgeously shot and beautifully acted, Les Destinees is, in its quiet, epic way, daring, inventive and refreshingly unusual.
17204An offbeat, sometimes gross and surprisingly appealing animated film about the true meaning of the holidays.
17212The journey toward redemption feels more like a cinematic experiment than a full-blown movie.
17224another great 'what you don't see' is much more terrifying than what you do see thriller, coupled with some arresting effects, incandescent tones and stupendous performances
17231If you pitch your expectations at an all time low, you could do worse than this oddly cheerful -- but not particularly funny -- body-switching farce.
17241Feels less like it's about teenagers, than it was written by teenagers.
17251Going to the website may be just as fun (and scary) as going to the film.
17261Is this progress?
17271For a shoot-'em-up, Ballistic is oddly lifeless.
17284One of the best of the year.
17293There are moments it can be heart-rending in an honest and unaffected (and gentle) way.
17300Credibility levels are low and character development a non-starter.
17311Looks awfully like one long tourist spot for a Mississippi that may never have existed outside of a scriptwriter's imagination.
17322Bears resemblance to, and shares the weaknesses of, too many recent action-fantasy extravaganzas in which special effects overpower cogent story-telling and visual clarity during the big action sequences.
17333A solidly seaworthy chiller.
17342High on melodrama.
17351When it comes to entertainment, children deserve better than Pokemon 4Ever.
17360If this is the resurrection of the Halloween franchise, it would have been better off dead.
17371Still, I thought it could have been more.
17383A recent favourite at Sundance, this white-trash satire will inspire the affection of even those unlucky people who never owned a cassette of Def Leppard's Pyromania.
17393Though it is by no means his best work, Laissez-Passer is a distinguished and distinctive effort by a bona-fide master, a fascinating film replete with rewards to be had by all willing to make the effort to reap them.
17401Like Mike doesn't win any points for originality.
17413Ms. Fulford-Wierzbicki is almost spooky in her sulky, calculating Lolita turn.
17424The movie has a soft, percolating magic, a deadpan suspense.
17433Legendary Irish writer Brendan Behan's memoir, Borstal Boy, has been given a loving screen transferral.
17444At times funny and at other times candidly revealing, it's an intriguing look at two performers who put themselves out there because they love what they do.
17451It's often faintly amusing, but the problems of the characters never become important to us, and the story never takes hold.
17464It's amazingly perceptive in its subtle, supportive but unsentimental look at the Marks family.
17473It uses an old-time formula, it's not terribly original and it's rather messy -- but you just have to love the big, dumb, happy movie My Big Fat Greek Wedding.
17484If you liked such movies as Notting Hill, Four Weddings And A Funeral, Bridget Jones' Diary or High Fidelity, then you won't want to miss About A Boy.
17493Katz uses archival footage, horrifying documents of lynchings, still photographs and charming old reel-to-reel recordings of Meeropol entertaining his children to create his song history, but most powerful of all is the song itself
17501(It's) difficult to get beyond the overall blandness of American Chai, despite its likable performances and refreshingly naive point of view.
17513A worthy tribute to a great humanitarian and her vibrant 'co-stars.'
17520But as a movie, it's a humorless, disjointed mess.
17533What's next?
17541Frustratingly, Dridi tells us nothing about El Gallo other than what emerges through his music.
17551Showtime is closer to Slowtime.
17562Thankfully, the film, which skirts that rapidly deteriorating line between fantasy and reality ... takes a tongue-in-cheek attitude even as it pushes the Croc Hunter agenda.
17572The AM-radio soundtrack and game cast -- Tierney and the inimitable Walken especially -- keep this unusual comedy from choking on its own conceit.
17584Tim Allen is great in his role but never hogs the scenes from his fellow cast, as there are plenty of laughs and good lines for everyone in this comedy.
17593Britney has been delivered to the big screen safe and sound, the way we like our 20-year-old superstar girls to travel on the fame freeway.
17601Has little on its mind aside from scoring points with drag gags.
17614An enchanting spectacular for Potter fans anxious to ride the Hogwarts Express toward a new year of magic and mischief.
17622The story, like life, refuses to be simple, and the result is a compelling slice of awkward emotions.
17633It's a nicely detailed world of pawns, bishops and kings, of wagers in dingy backrooms or pristine forests.
17640A real clunker.
17650The film seems a dead weight.
17663The voices are fine as well.
17674It turns out to be a cut above the norm, thanks to some clever writing and sprightly acting.
17681An awkward and indigestible movie.
17690Showtime is one of the hapless victims of the arrogant "if we put together a wry white man and a chatty black man and give them guns, the movie will be funny" syndrome.
17704A frisky and fresh romantic comedy exporing sexual politics and the challenges of friendships between women.
17711But the characters tend to be cliches whose lives are never fully explored.
17722Yes, 4Ever is harmless in the extreme and it'll mute your kids for nearly 80 minutes, but why not just treat the little yard apes to the real deal and take them to Spirited Away?
17732The movie addresses a hungry need for PG-rated, nonthreatening family movies, but it doesn't go too much further.
17741As your relatives swap one mundane story after another, you begin to wonder if they are ever going to depart.
17753Wasabi is slight fare indeed, with the entire project having the feel of something tossed off quickly (like one of Hubert's punches), but it should go down smoothly enough with popcorn.
17762Despite all the talking, by the time the bloody climax arrives we still don't feel enough of an attachment to these guys to care one way or another.
17771The film equivalent of a toy chest whose contents get scattered over the course of 80 minutes.
17782Even if it ultimately disappoints, the picture does have about a matinee admission's worth of funny to keep it afloat.
17794Go see it and enjoy.
17800Her film is unrelentingly claustrophobic and unpleasant.
17814Chicago is sophisticated, brash, sardonic, completely joyful in its execution.
17820Obstacles are too easily overcome and there isn't much in the way of character development in the script.
17831A hysterical yet humorless disquisition on the thin line between sucking face and literally sucking face.
17840The cold and dreary weather is a perfect metaphor for the movie itself, which contains few laughs and not much drama.
17852Stevenson's performance is at once clueless and fiercely committed, a volatile combination.
17864On its own cinematic terms, it successfully showcases the passions of both the director and novelist Byatt.
17871Pryor Lite, with half the demons, half the daring, much less talent, many fewer laughs.
17884This is a terrific character study, a probe into the life of a complex man.
17893A romantic comedy, yes, but one with characters who think and talk about their goals, and are working on hard decisions.
17902While the film shuns the glamour or glitz that an American movie might demand, Scherfig tosses us a romantic scenario that is just as simplistic as a Hollywood production.
17912You bet.
17921Any film featuring young children threatened by a terrorist bomb can no longer pass as mere entertainment.
17931What parents will suspect is that they're watching a 76-minute commercial.
17941Don't let your festive spirit go this far.
17954Eastwood is an icon of moviemaking, one of the best actors, directors and producers around, responsible for some excellent work.
17964A historical epic with the courage of its convictions about both scope and detail.
17972(Nelson's) movie about morally compromised figures leaves viewers feeling compromised, unable to find their way out of the fog and the ashes.
17982Spielberg is the rare director who does not want to invite viewers to gawk at or applaud his special effects.
17991A thinly veiled excuse for Wilson to play his self-deprecating act against Murphy's well-honed prima donna shtick.
18004An epic of grandeur and scale that's been decades gone from the popcorn pushing sound stages of Hollywood.
18012Occasionally amateurishly made but a winsome cast and nice dialogue keeps it going.
18021Preposterous and tedious, Sonny is spiked with unintentional laughter that, unfortunately, occurs too infrequently to make the film even a guilty pleasure.
18034It will delight newcomers to the story and those who know it from bygone days.
18041The saturation bombing of Reggio's images and Glass' evocative music ... ultimately leaves viewers with the task of divining meaning.
18053As a witness to several Greek-American weddings -- but, happily, a victim of none -- I can testify to the comparative accuracy of Ms. Vardalos' memories and insights.
18064A wonderful character-based comedy.
18072Sure, it's more of the same, but as the film proves, that's not always a bad thing.
18082The average local news columnist has a bigger rant on the war between modern landscape architecture and small-town America.
18091K-19 may not hold a lot of water as a submarine epic, but it holds even less when it turns into an elegiacally soggy Saving Private Ryanovich.
18100Don't waste your money.
18111Dreary, highly annoying...'Some Body' will appeal to No One.
18121Just when the movie seems confident enough to handle subtlety, it dives into soapy bathos.
18133A carefully structured scream of consciousness that is tortured and unsettling--but unquestionably alive.
18141Punish the vehicle to adore the star.
18153Reign of Fire may be little more than another platter of reheated Aliens, but it's still pretty tasty.
18164Thoughtful, even stinging at times, and lots of fun.
18173It's a humble effort, but spiced with wry humor and genuine pathos, especially between Morgan and Redgrave.
18180The editing is chaotic, the photography grainy and badly focused, the writing unintentionally hilarious, the direction unfocused, the performances as wooden.
18191The movie feels like it's going to be great, and it carries on feeling that way for a long time, but takeoff just never happens.
18203An uneven but intriguing drama that is part homage and part remake of the Italian masterpiece.
18213A sweet-natured reconsideration of one of San Francisco's most vital, if least widely recognized, creative fountainheads.
18220With Spy Kids 2: The Island of Lost Dreams writer/director/producer Robert Rodriguez has cobbled together a film that feels like a sugar high gone awry.
18230I found it slow, drab, and bordering on melodramatic.
18241(Sen's) soap opera-ish approach undermines his good intentions.
18251The stories here suffer from the chosen format.
18264... a cute and sometimes side-splittingly funny blend of Legally Blonde and Drop Dead Gorgeous, starring Piper Perabo in what could be her breakthrough role.
18274Offers a breath of the fresh air of true sophistication.
18283A pro-fat farce that overcomes much of its excessive moral baggage thanks to two appealing lead performances.
18292However clever Nelson has been in providing variation within the confines of her structure and staging, the question remains whether this should, indeed, have been presented as a theatrical release.
18301There is no entry portal in The Rules of Attraction, and I spent most of the movie feeling depressed by the shallow, selfish, greedy characters.
18311At the bottom rung of the series' entries.
18323Whatever Eyre's failings as a dramatist, he deserves credit for bringing audiences into this hard and bitter place.
18333The spark of special anime magic here is unmistakable and hard to resist.
18341Despite apparent motives to the contrary, it ends up being, like (Seinfeld's) revered TV show, about pretty much nothing.
18354Mr. Parker has brilliantly updated his source and grasped its essence, composing a sorrowful and hilarious tone poem about alienated labor, or an absurdist workplace sitcom.
18363The Transporter is as lively and as fun as it is unapologetically dumb
18371...too dull to enjoy.
18384This is cool, slick stuff, ready to quench the thirst of an audience that misses the summer blockbusters.
18392This ill-fitting Tuxedo is strictly off-the-rack.
18401Characters wander into predictably treacherous situations even though they should know better.
18414With a cast that includes some of the top actors working in independent film, Lovely & Amazing involves us because it is so incisive, so bleakly amusing about how we go about our lives.
18421... (like)channel surfing between the Discovery Channel and a late-night made-for-cable action movie.
18430I hated every minute of it.
18444This is a very fine movie -- go see it.
18453This isn't my favorite in the series, still I enjoyed it enough to recommend.
18462It's tough, astringent, darkly funny and... well, it's also generic, untidy, condescending and mild of impact rather than stunning.
18471A benign but forgettable sci-fi diversion.
18481A bigger holiday downer than your end-of-year 401(k) statement.
18490Godawful boring slug of a movie.
18504Provide(s) nail-biting suspense and credible characters without relying on technology-of-the-moment technique or pretentious dialogue.
18511But like most rabbits, it seems to lack substance.
18523Once you get into its rhythm ... the movie becomes a heady experience.
18534It is intensely personal and yet -- unlike Quills -- deftly shows us the temper of the times.
18541Just because it really happened to you, honey, doesn't mean that it's interesting to anyone else.
18553Hayek is stunning as Frida and...a star-making project.
18560About as cutting-edge as Pet Rock: The Movie.
18573A quietly reflective and melancholy New Zealand film about an eventful summer in a 13-year-old girl's life.
18584An amazing and incendiary movie that dives straight into the rough waters of contradiction.
18593Benefits from a strong performance from Zhao, but it's Dong Jie's face you remember at the end.
18602Too simple for its own good.
18613it's a worthwhile tutorial in quantum physics and slash-dash
18622We've already seen the prequel to The Silence of the Lambs and Hannibal -- and it was better the first time.
18630The acting is stiff, the story lacks all trace of wit, the sets look like they were borrowed from Gilligan's Island -- and the CGI Scooby might well be the worst special-effects creation of the year.
18643Star Wars is back in a major way.
18653Unlike the nauseating fictions peddled by such 'Have-yourself-a-happy-little-Holocaust' movies as Life Is Beautiful and Jakob the Liar, The Grey Zone is honest enough to deny the possibility of hope in Auschwitz.
18661Director Nalin Pan doesn't do much to weigh any arguments one way or the other.
18671The pivotal narrative point is so ripe the film can't help but go soft and stinky.
18681Most of the action setups are incoherent.
18693Compelling revenge thriller, though somewhat weakened by a miscast leading lady.
18702Despite her relentless vim and winsome facial symmetry, Witherspoon is just too dialed-up to be America's Sweetheart.
18710If you're not into the Pokemon franchise, this fourth animated movie in four years won't convert you -- or even keep your eyes open.
18720In a normal screen process, these bromides would be barely enough to sustain an interstitial program on the Discovery Channel.
18730The only thing worse than your substandard, run-of-the-mill Hollywood picture is an angst-ridden attempt to be profound.
18741Winds up feeling like lots of other quirky movies that try to score hipness points with young adults.
18750An instant candidate for worst movie of the year.
18762Anyway, for one reason or another, Crush turns into a dire drama partway through.
18774A highly intriguing thriller, coupled with some ingenious plot devices and some lavishly built settings..
18783Director Kapur is a filmmaker with a real flair for epic landscapes and adventure, and this is a better film than his earlier English-language movie, the overpraised Elizabeth.
18792Even those who would like to dismiss the film outright should find much to mull and debate.
18804Good actress.
18810An overblown clunker full of bad jokes, howling cliches and by-the-numbers action sequences.
18821I can only imagine one thing worse than Kevin Spacey trying on an Irish accent, and that's sultry Linda Fiorentino doing the same thing.
18832Has something to say... but it is a statement and issue worthy of a much more thoughtfulness and insight than a melodramatic and wholly predictable thriller.
18842Long after you leave Justine, you'll be wondering what will happen to her and wishing her the best -- whatever that might mean.
18851On the right track to something that's creepy and effective ... It's just going to take more than a man in a Bullwinkle costume to get there.
18861If Myers decides to make another Austin Powers movie, maybe he should just stick with Austin and Dr Evil.
18870An atonal estrogen opera that demonizes feminism while gifting the most sympathetic male of the piece with a nice vomit bath at his wedding.
18880Bad beyond belief and ridiculous beyond description.
18892The parts are better than the whole (bizarre, funny, tragic - like love in New York).
18901However, it lacks grandeur and that epic quality often associated with Stevenson's tale as well as with earlier Disney efforts.
18914A classy item by a legend who may have nothing left to prove but still has the chops and drive to show how its done.
18923it sounds sick and twisted, but the miracle of Shainberg's film is that it truly is romance
18931What could have been a neat little story about believing in yourself is swamped by heavy-handed melodrama.
18943A very funny look at how another culture handles the process of courting and marriage.
18951Instead, we just get messy anger, a movie as personal therapy.
18963Like old myths and wonder tales spun afresh.
18973With Danilo Donati's witty designs and Dante Spinotti's luscious cinematography, this might have made a decent children's movie -- if only Benigni hadn't insisted on casting himself in the title role.
18983Nervy and sensitive, it taps into genuine artistic befuddlement, and at the same time presents a scathing indictment of what drives Hollywood.
18991I regret to report that these ops are just not extreme enough.
19003I loved looking at this movie.
19014Binoche and Magimel are perfect in these roles.
19024Doug Liman, the director of Bourne, directs the traffic well, gets a nice wintry look from his locations, absorbs us with the movie's spycraft and uses Damon's ability to be focused and sincere.
19033The film's sharp, often mischievous sense of humor will catch some off guard...
19040I wish I could say "Thank God It's Friday", but the truth of the matter is I was glad when it was over.
19054Lauren Ambrose comes alive under the attention from two strangers in town - with honest performances and realistic interaction between the characters, this is a coming-of-age story with a twist.
19063Occasionally, in the course of reviewing art-house obscurities and slam-bam action flicks, a jaded critic smacks into something truly new.
19073"Men in Black II," has all the earmarks of a sequel.
19083This is a raw and disturbing tale that took five years to make, and the trio's absorbing narrative is a heart-wrenching showcase indeed.
19092The cast is uniformly excellent ... but the film itself is merely mildly charming.
19104Yeah, these flicks are just that damn good.
19114A worthy entry into a very difficult genre.
19122There's no mistaking the fact that this hybrid misses the impact of the Disney classic, and even that of the excellent 1934 MGM version.
19130Soul is what's lacking in every character in this movie and, subsequently, the movie itself.
19142This charmless nonsense ensues amid clanging film references that make Jay and Silent Bob's Excellent Adventure seem understated.
19152His warriors collide in balletic explosion that implies an underlying order throughout the chaos.
19162Feels like the grittiest movie that was ever made for the Lifetime cable television network.
19173Majidi gets uniformly engaging performances from his largely amateur cast.
19182The kind of nervous film that will either give you a mild headache or exhilarate you.
19193An impressive if flawed effort that indicates real talent.
19201The best way to hope for any chance of enjoying this film is by lowering your expectations.
19213Still pretentious and filled with subtext, but entertaining enough at 'face value' to recommend to anyone looking for something different.
19223Woo's fights have a distinct flair.
19231The only thing that could possibly make them less interesting than they already are is for them to get full montied into a scrappy, jovial team.
19240... has virtually no script at all ...
19252If it's another regurgitated action movie you're after, there's no better film than Half Past Dead.
19261We are left with a superficial snapshot that, however engaging, is insufficiently enlightening and inviting.
19272Flawed but worthy look at life in U.S. relocation camps.
19280Why he was given free reign over this project -- he wrote, directed, starred and produced -- is beyond me.
19293Gloriously goofy (and gory) midnight movie stuff.
19303The film makes a strong case for the importance of the musicians in creating the Motown sound.
19312The movie is saved from unbearable lightness by the simplicity of the storytelling and the authenticity of the performances.
19323At its best, The Good Girl is a refreshingly adult take on adultery...
19333Nair does capture the complexity of a big family and its trials and tribulations...
19344Throwing caution to the wind with an invitation to the hedonist in us all, Nair has constructed this motion picture in such a way that even the most cynical curmudgeon with find himself or herself smiling at one time or another.
19353Although Life or Something Like It is very much in the mold of feel-good movies, the cast and director Stephen Herek's polished direction pour delightfully piquant wine from aged bottles.
19363At its best early on as it plays the culture clashes between the brothers.
19370The story ... is moldy and obvious.
19380Scotland, Pa. is a strangely drab romp.
19390Better at putting you to sleep than a sound machine.
19404... one of the most ingenious and entertaining thrillers I've seen in quite a long time.
19410Denzel Washington's efforts are sunk by all the sanctimony.
19421Despite a powerful portrayal by Binoche, it's a period romance that suffers from an overly deliberate pace and uneven narrative momentum.
19433She must have a very strong back.
19442Ultimately, it ponders the reasons we need stories so much.
19453We get some truly unique character studies and a cross-section of Americana that Hollywood couldn't possibly fictionalize and be believed.
19461The story drifts so inexorably into cliches about tortured (and torturing) artists and consuming but impossible love that you can't help but become more disappointed as each overwrought new sequence plods on.
19473An utterly compelling 'who wrote it' in which the reputation of the most famous author who ever lived comes into question.
19483This is the kind of movie that used to be right at home at the Saturday matinee, and it still is.
19492A standard haunted house tale transplanted to the high seas.
19501Not sweet enough to liven up its predictable story and will leave even fans of hip-hop sorely disappointed.
19513(Drumline) is entertaining for what it does, and admirable for what it doesn't do.
19521The two leads are almost good enough to camouflage the dopey plot, but so much naturalistic small talk, delivered in almost muffled exchanges, eventually has a lulling effect.
19533Despite a story predictable enough to make The Sound of Music play like a nail-biting thriller, its heart is so much in the right place it is difficult to get really peeved at it.
19543Noyce's film is contemplative and mournfully reflective.
19552The title helpfully offers the most succinct review of it you'll read anywhere.
19561Despite the premise of a good story ... it wastes all its star power on cliched or meaningless roles.
19571Succumbs to the same kind of maudlin, sentimental mysticism that mars the Touched by an Angel school of non-God spiritual-uplift movies.
19582I enjoyed Time of Favor while I was watching it, but I was surprised at how quickly it faded from my memory.
19593Watching Beanie and his gang put together his slasher video from spare parts and borrowed materials is as much fun as it must have been for them to make it.
19602It doesn't quite work, but there's enough here to make us look forward to the Russos' next offering.
19611Bears is bad.
19621Any movie this boring should be required to have ushers in the theater that hand you a cup of coffee every few minutes.
19633A film of precious increments artfully camouflaged as everyday activities.
19644The inherent strength of the material as well as the integrity of the filmmakers gives this coming-of-age story restraint as well as warmth.
19651I just didn't care as much for the story.
19663very solid, very watchable first feature for director Peter Sheridan
19671While Super Troopers is above Academy standards, its quintet of writers could still use some more schooling.
19680The overall effect is so completely inane that one would have to be mighty bored to even think of staying with this for more than, say, ten... make that three minutes.
19691Pumpkin sits in a patch somewhere between mirthless Todd Solondzian satire and callow student film.
19701If Kaufman kept Cameron Diaz a prisoner in a cage with her ape, in his latest, he'd have them mate.
19711Still, it gets the job done -- a sleepy afternoon rental.
19722If the message seems more facile than the earlier films, the images have such a terrible beauty you may not care.
19731Consider the title's clunk-on-the-head that suggests the overtime someone put in to come up with an irritatingly unimaginative retread concept.
19744Leave it to Rohmer, now 82, to find a way to bend current technique to the service of a vision of the past that is faithful to both architectural glories and commanding open spaces of the city as it was more than two centuries ago.
19753Sam Jones became a very lucky filmmaker the day Wilco got dropped from their record label, proving that one man's ruin may be another's fortune.
19761A minor picture with a major identity crisis -- it's sort of true and it's sort of bogus and it's ho-hum all the way through.
19774A taut, intelligent psychological drama.
19784Barney has created a tour de force that is weird, wacky and wonderful.
19791It settles for being merely grim.
19804A work of astonishing delicacy and force.
19813Dark and disturbing, but also surprisingly funny.
19824A loving little film of considerable appeal.
19830Watching the film is like reading a Times Portrait of Grief that keeps shifting focus to the journalist who wrote it.
19840A free-for-all of half-baked thoughts, clumsily used visual tricks and self-indulgent actor moments.
19851The problem isn't that the movie hits so close to home so much as that it hits close to home while engaging in such silliness as that snake-down-the-throat business and the inevitable shot of Schwarzenegger outrunning a fireball.
19861can see where this dumbed-down concoction is going.
19874Parker holds true to Wilde's own vision of a pure comedy with absolutely no meaning, and no desire to be anything but a polished, sophisticated entertainment that is in love with its own cleverness.
19880These are names to remember, in order to avoid them in the future.
19891If somebody was bored and ... decided to make a dull, pretentious version of Jesus' Son, they'd come up with something like Bart Freundlich's World Traveler.
19900New Best Friend shouldn't have gone straight to video; it should have gone straight to a Mystery Science Theater 3000 video.
19911As a revenge thriller, the movie is serviceable, but it doesn't really deliver the delicious guilty pleasure of the better film versions.
19921I was perplexed to watch it unfold with an astonishing lack of passion or uniqueness.
19934(Director Peter) Jackson and his crew have so steeped themselves in the majesty of Tolkien's writing that every frame produces new joys, whether you're a fan of the books or not.
19943... ambition is in short supply in the cinema, and Egoyan tackles his themes and explores his characters' crises with seriousness and compassion.
19950It doesn't help that the director and cinematographer Stephen Kazmierski shoot on grungy video, giving the whole thing a dirty, tasteless feel.
19962Baran isn't the most transporting or gripping film from Iran -- or, indeed, by its director -- but it's a worthy companion to the many fine, focused films emerging from that most surprising of nations.
19972What is captured during the conceptual process doesn't add up to a sufficient explanation of what the final dance work, The Selection, became in its final form.
19981(Two) fairly dull -- contrasting and interlocking stories about miserable Scandinavian settlers in 18th-century Canada, and yuppie sailboaters in the here and now.
19991Somewhere short of Tremors on the modern B-scene: neither as funny nor as clever, though an agreeably unpretentious way to spend ninety minutes.
20001Their film falters, however, in its adherence to the Disney philosophy of required poignancy, a salute that I'd hoped the movie would avoid.
20013The latest installment in the Pokemon canon, Pokemon 4ever is surprising less moldy and trite than the last two, likely because much of the Japanese anime is set in a scenic forest where Pokemon graze in peace.
20023It's still worth a look.
20031Jolie's performance vanishes somewhere between her hair and her lips.
20042It's a Count for our times.
20052Chao was Chen Kaige's assistant for years in China.
20061Never engaging, utterly predictable and completely void of anything remotely interesting or suspenseful.
20071Although trying to balance self-referential humor and a normal ol' slasher plot seemed like a decent endeavor, the result doesn't fully satisfy either the die-hard Jason fans or those who can take a good joke.
20083A pleasant enough movie, held together by skilled ensemble actors.
20093Intriguing and beautiful film, but those of you who read the book are likely to be disappointed.
20101Too close to Phantom Menace for comfort.
20113Without heavy-handedness, Dong provides perspective with his intelligent grasp of human foibles and contradictions.
20121Somehow we're meant to buy that this doting mother would shun her kids, travel to one of the most dangerous parts of the world, don fatigues and become G.I. Jane.
20133Marvelous, merry and, yes, melancholy film.
20143Reinforces the talents of screenwriter Charlie Kaufman, creator of Adaptation and Being John Malkovich.
20151The timing in nearly every scene seems a half beat off.
20162Despite its title, Amy's Orgasm is not a porno, though it is as tedious as one.
20173More than makes up for its mawkish posing by offering rousing spates of genuine feeling.
20181A woozy, roisterous, exhausting mess, and the off-beat casting of its two leads turns out to be as ill-starred as you might expect.
20190The story's so preposterous that I didn't believe it for a second, despite the best efforts of everyone involved.
20200Its underlying mythology is a hodgepodge of inconsistencies that pose the question: Since when did dumb entertainment have to be this dumb?
20211And forget about any attempt at a plot!
20223Watstein handily directs and edits around his screenplay's sappier elements ... and sustains Off the Hook's buildup with remarkable assuredness for a first-timer.
20234Ice Cube holds the film together with an engaging and warm performance...
20241All this turns out to be neither funny nor provocative - only dull.
20252Whether (Binoche and Magimel) are being charming or angst-ridden, they easily fill their scenes and, fine judges both, never overcook the hysteria.
20261Tom Green just gives them a bad odor.
20272Each story on its own could have been expanded and worked into a compelling single feature, but in its current incarnation, Storytelling never quite gets over its rather lopsided conception.
20284It's obviously struck a responsive chord with many South Koreans, and should work its magic in other parts of the world.
20293It has fun being grown up.
20301This is a great subject for a movie, but Hollywood has squandered the opportunity, using it as a prop for warmed-over melodrama and the kind of choreographed mayhem that director John Woo has built his career on.
20312You're too conscious of the effort it takes to be this spontaneous.
20324Children may not understand everything that happens -- I'm not sure even Miyazaki himself does -- but they will almost certainly be fascinated, and undoubtedly delighted.
20333A distant, even sterile, yet compulsively watchable look at the sordid life of Hogan's Heroes star Bob Crane.
20341This is the type of movie best enjoyed by frat boys and college kids while sucking on the bong and downing one alcoholic beverage after another.
20350The film is a travesty of the genre and even as spoof takes itself too seriously.
20363The long-range appeal of "Minority Report" should transcend any awards it bags.
20372It's haunting.
20383The film starts out as competent but unremarkable ... and gradually grows into something of considerable power.
20391IHOPs don't pile on this much syrup.
20403A pleasant enough comedy that should have found a summer place.
20412Lucas, take notes.
20424The unique tug-of-war with viewer expectations is undeniable, if not a pleasure in its own right.
20432You wouldn't call The Good Girl a date movie (an anti-date movie is more like it), but when it's good, it's good and horrid.
20441This is a particularly toxic little bonbon, palatable to only a chosen and very jaundiced few.
20453Sound the trumpets: For the first time since Desperately Seeking Susan, Madonna doesn't suck as an actress.
20461The truth is that The Truth About Charlie gets increasingly tiresome.
20471Much-anticipated and ultimately lackluster movie.
20480Disturbingly superficial in its approach to the material.
20491Flat, but with a revelatory performance by Michelle Williams.
20501Unless you are in dire need of a Diesel fix, there is no real reason to see it.
20512I'm afraid you won't get through this frankly fantastical by-the-numbers B-flick with just a suspension of disbelief.
20522Every good actor needs to do his or her own Hamlet.
20531The movie gets muted and routine.
20542(Morgan), Judd and Franklin can't save the script, rooted in a novel by Joseph Finder, from some opportunism.
20550Madonna still can't act a lick.
20562"The Mothman Prophecies" is a difficult film to shake from your conscience when night falls.
20571If you're not a prepubescent girl, you'll be laughing at Britney Spears' movie-starring debut whenever it doesn't have you impatiently squinting at your watch.
20583Some actors have so much charisma that you'd be happy to listen to them reading the phone book.
20594Energetic and boldly provocative.
20601Not only does the movie fail to make us part of its reality, it fails the most basic relevancy test as well.
20614The kooky yet shadowy vision Clooney sustains throughout is daring, inventive and impressive.
20622In the end, White Oleander isn't an adaptation of a novel.
20632sympathetically captures the often futile lifestyle of young people in modern Japan.
20641I'd give real money to see the perpetrators of Chicago torn apart by dingoes.
20653Occasionally funny and consistently odd, and it works reasonably well as a star vehicle for Zhao.
20662There's a disturbing 'Great White Hope' undertone to The Other Side of Heaven that subtly undermines its message of Christian love and compassion.
20674Awkward but sincere and, ultimately, it wins you over.
20681The whole damn thing is ripe for the Jerry Springer crowd.
20690A lousy movie that's not merely unwatchable, but also unlistenable.
20701Flounders due to the general sense that no two people working on the production had exactly the same thing in mind.
20712No wonder they're talking about "Talk to Her."
20723With youthful high spirits, Tautou remains captivating throughout Michele's religious and romantic quests, and she is backed by a likable cast.
20731If this is an example of the type of project that Robert Redford's lab is willing to lend its imprimatur to, then perhaps it's time to rethink independent films.
20744A great comedy filmmaker knows great comedy needn't always make us laugh.
20753While this film is not in the least surprising, it is still ultimately very satisfying.
20762Recalls quiet freak-outs like L'Avventura and Repulsion.
20774Remarkably accessible and affecting.
20780Writhing under dialogue like 'You're from two different worlds' and 'Tonight the maid is a lie and this, this is who you are,' this schlock-filled fairy tale hits new depths of unoriginality and predictability.
20792Bourne, Jason Bourne.
20804This cheery, down-to-earth film is warm with the cozy feeling of relaxing around old friends.
20811Plays as hollow catharsis, with lots of tears but very little in the way of insights.
20821Will probably stay in the shadow of its two older, more accessible Qatsi siblings.
20832What would Jesus do if He was a film director?
20841Credibility sinks into a mire of sentiment.
20851Director Brian Levant, who never strays far from his sitcom roots, skates blithely from one implausible situation to another, pausing only to tie up loose ends with more bows than you'll find on a French poodle.
20861It's hard to tell with all the crashing and banging where the salesmanship ends and the movie begins.
20873But it's emotionally engrossing, too, thanks to strong, credible performances from the whole cast.
20881Francophiles will snicker knowingly and you'll want to slap them.
20892The pacing is glacial, the screenplay is stiff as a board, and things heat up only in the movie's final scenes.
20901(Plays) in broad outline as pandering middle-age buddy-comedy.
20911One Hour Photo is an intriguing snapshot of one man and his delusions; it's just too bad it doesn't have more flashes of insight.
20920A one-trick pony whose few T&A bits still can't save itself from being unoriginal, unfunny and unrecommendable.
20933This examination of aquatic life off the shores of the Baja California peninsula of Mexico offers an engrossing way to demonstrate the virtues of the IMAX format.
20940An ungainly, comedy-deficient, B-movie rush job...
20951Will only satisfy those who can't tell the difference between the good, the bad and the ugly.
20964If this movie were a book, it would be a page-turner, you can't wait to see what happens next.
20971'Dragonfly' is a movie about a bus wreck that turns into a film wreck.
20983(Villeneuve) seems to realize intuitively that even morality is reduced to an option by the ultimate mysteries of life and death.
20992Hits one out of the park for the 'they don't make 'em like that anymore' department.
21000Rather, you'll have to wrestle disbelief to the ground and then apply the chloroform-soaked handkerchief.
21011Feel bad for King, who's honestly trying, and Schwartzman, who's shot himself in the foot.
21022It's also clear from the start that The Transporter is running purely on adrenaline, and once the initial high wears off, the film's shortcomings start to shine through.
21031Involving at times, but lapses quite casually into the absurd.
21043For Benigni it wasn't Shakespeare whom he wanted to define his career with but Pinocchio.
21051Starts off with a bang, but then fizzles like a wet stick of dynamite at the very end.
21064Together, Tok and O orchestrate a buoyant, darkly funny dance of death.
21070De Niro looks bored, Murphy recycles Murphy, and you mentally add Showtime to the pile of Hollywood dreck that represents nothing more than the art of the deal.
21083The film's real appeal won't be to Clooney fans or adventure buffs, but to moviegoers who enjoy thinking about compelling questions with no easy answers.
21094Guaranteed to move anyone who ever shook, rattled, or rolled.
21101Unlike his directorial efforts, La Femme Nikita and The Professional, The Transporter lacks Besson's perspective as a storyteller.
21113At about 95 minutes, Treasure Planet maintains a brisk pace as it races through the familiar story.
21120This limp gender-bender-baller from a first-time director and rookie screenwriter steals wholesale from that 1982's Tootsie, forgetting only to retain a single laugh.
21130So stupid, so ill-conceived, so badly drawn, it created whole new levels of ugly.
21141There has been much puzzlement among critics about what the election symbolizes.
21154A masterful film from a master filmmaker, unique in its deceptive grimness, compelling in its fatalist worldview.
21161A great idea becomes a not-great movie.
21174An inspiring and heart-affecting film about the desperate attempts of Vietnamese refugees living in U.S. relocation camps to keep their hopes alive in 1975.
21182Passion, lip-synching, tragedy, and lots of really really high notes.
21191Its over-reliance on genre conventions, character types and formulaic conflict resolutions crushes all the goodwill it otherwise develops.
21201Demme's loose approach kills the suspense.
21212A gorgeous, somnolent show that is splendidly mummified and thoroughly unsurprising.
21222There is no insight into the anguish of Heidi's life -- only a depiction of pain, today's version of Greek tragedy, the talk-show guest decrying her fate.
21232Even if you feel like you've seen this movie a thousand times before, it is kind of enjoyable thanks mainly to Belushi's easy-going likableness.
21243Harsh, effective documentary on life in the Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories.
21253Steers turns in a snappy screenplay that curls at the edges; it's so clever you want to hate it.
21264This is what IMAX was made for: Strap on a pair of 3-D goggles, shut out the real world, and take a vicarious voyage to the last frontier -- space.
21272Though certainly original in form, Altar Boys requires a taste for Swamp Thing-type animation, doubled with a deafening score.
21280But this costly dud is a far cry from either the book or the beloved film.
21291The essential problem in Orange County is that, having created an unusually vivid set of characters worthy of its strong cast, the film flounders when it comes to giving them something to do.
21304...if you're in a mind set for goofy comedy, the troopers will entertain with their gross outs, bawdy comedy and head games.
21313A work of the utmost subtlety and perception, it marks the outstanding feature debut of writer-director Eric Byler, who understands the power of the implicit and the virtues of simplicity and economy.
21324There are just enough twists in the tale to make it far more satisfying than almost any horror film in recent memory.
21331... Hudlin is stuck trying to light a fire with soggy leaves.
21340...a haunting vision, with images that seem more like disturbing hallucinations.
21352This kind of dark comedy requires a delicate, surgical touch.
21362Hopkins.
21371Consists of a plot and jokes done too often by people far more talented than Ali G
21384A breezy, diverting, conventional, well-acted tale of two men locked in an ongoing game of cat-and-cat.
21390The premise is in extremely bad taste, and the film's supposed insights are so poorly thought-out and substance-free that even a high school senior taking his or her first psychology class could dismiss them.
21400Imagine a really bad community theater production of West Side Story without the songs.
21412An ironic speculation on democracy in a culture unaccustomed to it.
21423Smith profiles five extraordinary American homes, and because the owners seem fully aware of the uses and abuses of fame, it's a pleasure to enjoy their eccentricities.
21432It's this memory-as-identity obviation that gives Secret Life its intermittent unease, reaffirming that long-held illusions are indeed reality, and that erasing them recasts the self.
21441With its hints of a greater intelligence lurking somewhere, The Ring makes its stupidity more than obvious.
21452Ja Rule and Kurupt should have gotten to rap.
21461An Afterschool Special without the courage of its convictions.
21471Uneasy mishmash of styles and genres.
21481The period -- swinging London in the time of the mods and the rockers -- gets the once-over once again in Gangster No. 1, but falls apart long before the end.
21491Earnest falls short of its Ideal predecessor largely due to Parker's ill-advised meddling with the timeless source material.
21503Tailored to entertain!
21514In his debut as a film director, Denzel Washington delivers a lean and engaging work.
21523The scope of the Silberstein family is large and we grow attached to their lives, full of strength, warmth and vitality..
21533The tone is balanced, reflective and reasonable.
21542But you'll definitely want the T-shirt.
21553A real story about real people living their lives concerned about the future of an elderly, mentally handicapped family member.
21562Or, you can do something fun tonight.
21570If Shayamalan wanted to tell a story about a man who loses his faith, why didn't he just do it, instead of using bad sci-fi as window dressing?
21584The way Coppola professes his love for movies -- both colorful pop junk and the classics that unequivocally qualify as art -- is giddily entertaining.
21593An intimate, good-humored ethnic comedy like numerous others but cuts deeper than expected.
21603Fans of the animated wildlife adventure show will be in warthog heaven; others need not necessarily apply.
21610The story loses its bite in a last-minute happy ending that's even less plausible than the rest of the picture.
21623It is interesting and fun to see Goodall and her chimpanzees on the bigger-than-life screen.
21632Despite its good nature and some genuinely funny moments, Super Troopers suffers from a bad case of arrested development.
21643Branagh, in his most forceful non-Shakespeare screen performance, grounds even the softest moments in the angry revolt of his wit.
21653A droll, well-acted, character-driven comedy with unexpected deposits of feeling.
21661The screenplay sabotages the movie's strengths at almost every juncture.
21674A beautiful and haunting examination of the stories we tell ourselves to make sense of the mundane horrors of the world.
21681He'd create a movie better than this.
21691My response to the film is best described as lukewarm.
21704Diane Lane shines in Unfaithful.
21711Drags along in a dazed and enervated, drenched-in-the- past numbness.
21724Thurman and Lewis are hilarious throughout.
21731Extreme Oops - oops, ops, no matter how you spell it, it's still a mistake to go see it.
21741An uneven film dealing with too many problems to be taken seriously.
21754Ana is a vivid, vibrant individual and the movie's focus upon her makes it successful and accessible.
21762A few artsy flourishes aside, Narc is as gritty as a movie gets these days.
21772Even if the ride's a little bumpy, with a final lap that's all too suspiciously smooth, you gotta give director Roger Michell, best known for the superfluous Notting Hill, credit for trying.
21784... a polished and relatively sincere piece of escapism.
21792Both stars manage to be funny, but, like the recent I Spy, the star chemistry begs the question of whether random gags add up to a movie.
21804As an entertainment, the movie keeps you diverted and best of all, it lightens your wallet without leaving a sting.
21811Aspires for the piquant but only really achieves a sort of ridiculous sourness.
21824Chicago is, in many ways, an admirable achievement.
21833Fisher has bared his soul and confronted his own shortcomings here in a way...that feels very human and very true to life.
21842A disturbing and frighteningly evocative assembly of imagery and hypnotic music composed by Philip Glass.
21852The warm presence of Zhao Benshan makes the preposterous lying hero into something more than he reasonably should be.
21864A charming yet poignant tale of the irrevocable ties that bind.
21872"My god, I'm behaving like an idiot!"
21881Or some damn thing.
21891Its mysteries are transparently obvious, and it's too slowly paced to be a thriller.
21901Its gross-out gags and colorful set pieces... are of course stultifyingly contrived and too stylized by half.
21914There is a refreshing absence of cynicism in Stuart Little 2--quite a rarity, even in the family film market.
21921Creepy but ultimately unsatisfying thriller.
21934Without resorting to hyperbole, I can state that Kissing Jessica Stein may be the best same-sex romance I have seen.
21944A sensitive and expertly acted crowd-pleaser that isn't above a little broad comedy and a few unabashedly sentimental tears.
21953The experience of watching blobby old-school CGI animation in this superlarge format is just surreal enough to be diverting.
21960...too slow, too boring, and occasionally annoying.
21971This is pretty dicey material.
21981The premise is overshadowed by the uberviolence of the Clericks as this becomes just another kung-fu sci-fi movie with silly action sequences.
21992As is most commonly case with projects such noble and lofty ambitions, the film is less poetic than simply pretentious.
22003Subversive, meditative, clinical and poetic, The Piano Teacher is a daring work of genius.
22013(A) Hollywood sheen bedevils the film from the very beginning...(but) Lohman's moist, deeply emotional eyes shine through this bogus veneer...
22021It doesn't do the original any particular dishonor, but neither does it exude any charm or personality.
22032Beers, who, when she's given the right lines, can charm the paint off the wall ... (but) the script goes wrong at several key junctures.
22044... Blade II is more enjoyable than the original.
22051There's suspension of disbelief and then there's bad screenwriting...this film packs a wallop of the latter.
22061An often-deadly boring, strange reading of a classic whose witty dialogue is treated with a baffling casual approach
22071The problem with concept films is that if the concept is a poor one, there's no saving the movie.
22081Safe Conduct, however ambitious and well-intentioned, fails to hit the entertainment bull's-eye.
22091A film made with as little wit, interest, and professionalism as artistically possible for a slummy Hollywood caper flick.
22102To enjoy this movie's sharp dialogue and delightful performance by Jolie and Burns, you have to gloss over the no sense ending.
22110But here's the real damn: It isn't funny, either.