Bolt Disney's latest toon is a starry dog story
With his blazing white coat and pig-pink ears, to say nothing of the zigzag of lightning cut into his flank, the eponymous canine lead of...
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By ELLA TAYLOR
Published: November 20, 2008
Holiday Feast, Extra Stuffing Desplechin's A Christmas Tale is the gift this season needs
Arnaud Desplechin is a cinema maximalist: A Christmas Tale feels like all 12 days of seasonal merriment, and then some. This comic, ultimately...
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By J. HOBERMAN
Published: November 20, 2008
Being Jean-Claude Van Damme The Mussels From Brussels gets emotional in JCVD
Shown in the market last May at Cannes, Jean-Claude Van Damme's JCVD garnered a surprise critical cult. Audiences, midnight or otherwise, may...
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By J. HOBERMAN
Published: November 20, 2008
Quantum of Solace More lead than gold, Bond's latest gets the finger
Those of us who adored Casino Royale, the 2006 reboot of the haggard, self-parodic James Bond franchise, had some trouble trying to decide where...
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By Robert Wilonsky
Published: November 13, 2008
Ive Loved You So Long A chick flick about child murder. Mom would love it.
I've Loved You So Long
Kristin Scott Thomas has gotten so locked into playing tragic victims or frigid grandes dames that few remember the...
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By ELLA TAYLOR
Published: November 13, 2008
Synecdoche, New York Art imitates life imitating art in Charlie Kaufman's latest
If you traveled the length of John Malkovich's medulla oblongata, hung a sharp left at the desk where Beckett's Krapp recorded his last tape and...
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By SCOTT FOUNDAS
Published: November 06, 2008
The Other Sister Anne Hathaway makes a compelling bad girl in Jonathan Demmes pedestrian family drama
Those who believe that Jonathan Demme went all soft with Philadelphia and never recovered may not be reassured by his latest movie, an ensemble...
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By ELLA TAYLOR
Published: November 06, 2008
Charlie Kaufman Embraces Synecdoche
There will be no more polarizing film released in 2008 than Synecdoche, New York, the directorial debut of Oscar-winning screenwriter and...
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By Robert Wilonsky
Published: October 30, 2008
Changeling Angelina Jolie takes on a serial killer and the system in Clint Eastwood's latest
On a double bill with L.A. Confidential, Chinatown or just about any film made after 1970 about institutional corruption in Los Angeles, Clint...
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By ELLA TAYLOR
Published: October 23, 2008
Pride and Glory New York cop drama holds the audience hostage
Pride and Glory doesn't make any effort to disguise precisely what it is: a barely-held-together string of vignettes lifted from every cop movie...
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By Robert Wilonsky
Published: October 23, 2008
W. Reminds Us of What We'd Rather Forget Oliver Stone assigns motive to Dubya's m.o., but at this point, who cares?
W. may be less frenzied than the usual Oliver Stone sensory bombardment, but in revisiting the early '00s by way of the late '60s, this...
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J. HOBERMAN
Published: October 16, 2008
Choke Palahniuk adaptation needs the Heimlich
There's a whole lotta fucking going on in Choke, Clark Gregg's adaptation of Chuck Palahniuk's first-person novel about a sex addict named Victor...
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By Robert Wilonsky
Published: September 25, 2008
Miracle at Santa Anna No matter the runtime and budget, Spike Lee's World War II drama is an epic bore
On some level, you've got to hand it to Spike Lee. There is probably less than a handful of directors working in Hollywood today who could put...
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By SCOTT FOUNDAS
Published: September 25, 2008
Your Friends & Neighbors Racial tension, above and below the surface, in Neil LaBute's Lakeview Terrace
Earlier this year, when I found myself assigned to jury duty on a drug-related trial at the Los Angeles Superior Court, our jury foreman turned...
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By SCOTT FOUNDAS
Published: September 18, 2008
Ricky Gervais Sees Dead People And they bring him to life in Ghost Town
It takes a good while for Ricky Gervais to warm up in Ghost Town; it takes even longer for the audience to warm to Ricky Gervais. During the...
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By Robert Wilonsky
Published: September 18, 2008
Intolerable Cruelty Remarkably consistent, the Coens make another mockery with Burn After Reading
Masters of the carefully crafted cheap shot, Joel and Ethan Coen have built a career on flippancy. Given their refusal to take anything...
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By J. HOBERMAN
Published: September 11, 2008
Oh, Canada Midway through the Toronto film fest, and things are looking bleak
If this year's Toronto International Film Festival had a subtitle, it could be "When Good Directors Go Bad." At least that's what it has felt...
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By SCOTT FOUNDAS
Published: September 11, 2008