An expensively manufactured vase that writer-director Emerald Fennell forgot to fill.
Read MoreGood year!
Read MoreOverlooks most of the moments it needs to examine.
Read MoreA healthy dose of laughs and characters you root for can overcome even a handful of ill-considered gags.
Read MoreA deeply unpleasant and quite ridiculous game of hopscotch among devastating kidnapping thriller, nasty family drama, and empty serial killer nonsense.
Read MorePeople who love movies about love should hate this.
Read MoreMaintains its predecessors’ recognition of individual innovation and group achievement while finding new ways to be erotic.
Read MoreEssentially “Lobster Stuffed with Tacos: The Movie.”
Read MoreBests the recent lame “Scream” efforts while keeping you on your toes enough and laughing here and there.
Read MoreExcels at tugging one strand of a rug and yanking the entire thing out from under two people who thought they could handle anything.
Read MoreHewson is so terrific that she holds the movie together until delivering the sort of great song that can make a weak album or a so-so movie feel worthwhile.
Read MoreThe performers are no match for the premise.
Read MoreTiresome in all the ways it should kick ass.
Read MoreA person able to like a movie like this won’t especially mind the flaws, as they’ll be too busy swooning for a love story that taps into the essence of partnership.
Read MoreConsider the lousy animation and awkward performances and highly questionable narrative (woman abandons ambitions for man, learns he’s plenty interested in her even without a voice, gets her voice back but still has no personality) and ask what, to the tune of “Under the Sea,” the hell is this?
Read MoreFor a story that half-heartedly attempts to advocate for the courage to take risks, “Your Place or Mine” is so incredibly safe and underwhelming by design.
Read MoreMostly just undemanding, amusing stupidity, which used to be taken as a mild compliment back when comedy was actually a genre of movie that got made.
Read MoreSilly but too serious, kinda exciting and pretty familiar.
Read MoreWherever the line exists between breathless entertainment and strained contrivance, “Missing” spends a decent amount of time on both sides.
Read MoreDoesn’t exactly work up a sweat in the ideas department.
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