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| REVIEWS |
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| TOTAL REVIEWS: 0 |
AVERAGE RATING = N/A |
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| No Reviews Found |
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| EXTERNAL REVIEWS |
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Great Movie Review (November 21, 2005) |
| MovieJungle has a great review of Matador check it out! |
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Delightful Movie! (October 4, 2005) |
| Mind-bogglingly elaborate yet undeniably cute, five years in the making yet utterly timeless, "Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit" finally comes to the big screen, and it's a complete delight.
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Hollywood Reporter: "A rousing finale" (May 9, 2005) |
Below is the start of a review from The Hollywood Reporter, at the end is a link to the full review.
The final episode of George Lucas' cinematic epic "Star Wars" ends the six-movie series on such a high note that one feels like yelling out, "Rewind!" Yes, rewind through more than 13 hours of bravery, treachery, new worlds, odd creatures and human frailty. The first two episodes of Lucas' second trilogy -- "The Phantom Menace" (1999) and "Attack of the Clones" (2002) -- caused more than a few fans of the original trilogy to wonder whether this prequel was worth it. The answer is a qualified yes. It did take a lot of weighty exposition, stiffly played scenes and less-than-magical creatures to get to "Star Wars: Episode III -- Revenge of the Sith." But what a ride Lucas and Company have in store!
Click here for the full review. |
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Hollywood Reporter: 90% of all audiences will enjoy (November 12, 2004) |
Michael Rechtshaffen of the The
Hollywood Reporter gives his two cents about
the new movie Kinsey.
TORONTO -- Calling the shots for the first time since 1998's acclaimed "Gods
and Monsters" (for which he took home a best adapted screenplay Oscar),
writer and director Bill Condon pays glowing tribute to Alfred Kinsey, the biologist-turned-sexologist
whose groundbreaking 1948 publication, "Sexual Behavior in the Human Male," generated
seismic ripples of controversy throughout post-War America and beyond.
"Kinsey" boasts exceptional lead performances (by a never-better Liam
Neeson and Laura Linney) and lovely writing by Condon, who also received an Oscar
nomination
for his "Chicago" screenplay...
Click
here for the full review |
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Reel.com: 3.5/4 (November 12, 2004) |
Reel.com has posted this review for Kinsey, follow the link below for the
full review.
Kinsey is one of those rare films that reaches its fullest potential, but
still that's not quite enough to make it a four-star selection. Both the legacy
of Alfred Kinsey and his work are far more interesting than his life. It's
almost the reverse of John Forbes Nash, the subject of A Beautiful Mind. Few
of us could comprehend his work, but his life was extraordinary.
Kinsey's life
was extraordinary, but it wasn't as innately dramatic as Nash's struggle
with schizophrenia. Raised in a Victorian home, with a stern father
(an Oscar-bound John Lithgow) who believed a sexualized society would lead
to the downfall of civilization, young Kinsey rebelled, first simply by not
following
in his father's footsteps, and later by pioneering research in the area of
human sexual behavior, which flew in the face of everything his father literally
held
sacred...
Click
here for the full review. |
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L.A. Weekly: The Other Dr. Strangelove (November 12, 2004) |
Ella Taylor from L.A. Weekly has posted her review and you can catch it here.
WHEN IT COMES TO SEX, America has long been queasily stranded between prudery
and prurience, and never more so than now, when our cultural hall monitors
are finger-wagging fundamentalists and our champions of sexual freedom are
porn-site operators. Even as AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases force
us to spend more time talking about sex or watching it than actually doing
it, we remain obsessed, often in unsavory ways — and I’m not just
talking about smut. On the evidence of last week’s election, more people
are taking an inordinate interest in what gay men and women do in the privacy
of their own bedrooms. And only the other day I heard a concerned mother, no
doubt one of the many such who voted Bush into his second term, wax plaintive
on NPR about the irresponsibility of sex education in high schools, where advice
on contraception is afforded equal time with abstinence counseling...
Click here for the full review. |
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