A more daring movie might have strived to really rock the foundation of this central relationship and see what shakes loose as a result.
Read MoreFeels exhausting before the body count even begins.
Read MoreA whirlwind of adult conversation and financial frustration, all very much existing amid the racial politics of a nation in which Donald Trump is the president and a professional sports organization in which most of the players are black and nearly none of the owners are.
Read MoreA few scorchers top a somewhat underwhelming year.
Read MoreAll “what” and no “how” or “why,” “Vice” is the most disappointing movie in I don’t know how long. Man, I cannot believe how bad it is.
Read More“Some things may be interesting,” Hart says in his speech announcing the end to his campaign, “but that doesn’t mean they’re important.” The movie about him approaches something important and refuses to be interesting.
Read MoreExtraordinarily of the moment without underlining and bolding it.
Read MoreFeels like a movie about writers by people who have only glimpsed the practice from afar, understanding little about an author’s mind or the literary community in which the work and the writers exist.
Read MoreIt is possible for good songs to have some clunky lyrics, and “Hearts Beat Loud” mostly rises above moments in which the feeling feels cheap.
Read MoreDoes little more than bob alongside every other title in the human vs. sea genre.
Read MoreThe theme is just too basic and the tone is too stilted for this to work.
Read MoreUltimately overcomes its exhausting, poorly staged comic bits to register as a testament to the resilience of kids and follies of parents.
Read MorePlays like Nicholas Sparks’ innocent kid sister, where the world is defined by piers and acoustic guitars and death’s ever-looming interruption of love.
Read MoreThere are interesting realities just outside the edges of the film, which would rather move the pieces than tip them over.
Read MoreScreams amateur hour, not veteran Oscar winner.
Read MoreThat Jack believes longevity requires strong, original lyricism works better than the movie believing it.
Read MoreLabors inside the sort of buffoonery that “Burn After Reading” achieved with much more cohesive performances and comic richness.
Read MoreIn a more just world the 2017 feminist empowerment anthem would have been Kesha’s “Woman,” and the 2018 installment will be Dessa’s “Fire Drills."
Read MoreAnything intended to land as satire of the entitled only hovers as both familiar and unrefined.
Read MoreThe idea that Graham would deliver a movie that offers a corrective to, say, her small part in the misogynistic “The Hangover,” is more than welcome. Instead, she often settles for bland, cliché and amateur.
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