They Call Him the Fixer in a World That’s a Mess
Friday, October 5th, 2007Dark in color, mood and outraged worldview, “Michael Clayton” is a film that speaks to the way we live now.
Dark in color, mood and outraged worldview, “Michael Clayton” is a film that speaks to the way we live now.
Michael Caine has been touting the performance of Heath Ledger in The Dark Knight, guaranteeing he will terrify audiences with his all new Joker. The acting knight described a major Joker scene as just such an example.
In this week’s Ketchup, some Incredible Hulk spoilers surface, the next Terminator appears on track with a new director, and The Karate Kid just got younger.
My Kid Could Paint That’s colorful visuals, sharp editing, and open-ended conclusion makes it a doc you will talk about long after leaving the theater.
While providing several top-notch action scenes, The Kingdom ultimately collapses under the weight of formula and muddled politics.
Uneventful and far too sentimental.
Resident Evil: Extinction is more of the same; its few impressive action sequences unable to compensate for the pedestrian plot.
Death At A Funeral is a rousing British farce, with enough slapstick silliness to overcome its faults.
Good Luck Chuck squanders a decent premise with an excess of gross-out humor and dull, shopworn slapstick.
Lackluster acting and a ridiculous plot make the over-the-top Illegal Tender an unrealistic bust.