This week at the movies, we've got a guard with insecurity (Paul Blart: Mall Cop, starring Kevin James); pampered pooches (Hotel for Dogs, starring Emma Roberts and Jake T. Austin); a crazed killer (My Bloody Valentine 3D, starring Jensen Ackles and Jaime King); Brooklyn's finest (Notorious, starring Jamal Woolard and Angela Bassett); and wartime heroics (Defiance, starring Daniel Craig and Liev Schreiber). What do the critics have to say?
Everybody loves a good dumb comedy -- as long as it provides ample laughs. However, the critics say Paul Blart: Mall Cop is good for a couple of lowbrow yucks, but it isn't exactly a model of disciplined storytelling. Kevin James likeably plays the title character, a portly, self-important (and sidearm-free) crime fighter in a suburban New Jersey mall who must utilize every shred of his training when a hostage situation arises. The pundits say Paul Blart contains some funny slapstick pratfalls, but its thin premise doesn't generate a headlong comic intensity, and a number of gags simply fall flat. At 29 percent on the Tomatometer, you may want to go shopping somewhere else.
Kevin James, in a dramatic moment from Chopping Mall 2.
Marley and Me, Bolt, Wendy and Lucy, Beverly Hills Chihuahua... dog people must feel like they're in cinematic heaven these days. Hotel for Dogs is the latest pooch-centric flick to hit multiplexes, but critics say its appeal will be limited to little kids and die-hard canine lovers. The film stars Emma Roberts and Jake T. Austin as a pair of orphans who are so in love with man's best friends that they convert an abandoned hotel into a four-star doggie resort, providing posh accommodations for as many strays as they can find. Look, few will go to Hotel for Dogs expecting hyper-realism, but the pundits say this occasionally funny slice of whimsy is predictable and contrived, and the four-legged heroes repeatedly outshine their human counterparts. At 48 percent on the Tomatometer, Hotel for Dogs may not be worth a stay.
"This is one more reason why we need a bailout."
If you're the type of filmgoer that really, really enjoys blood and guts, My Bloody Valentine 3D is here to overload your senses. Critics say this extremely grisly slasher flick, which with a sick sense of humor and three-dimensions-worth of wild kills, might just be a gorehound's nirvana. A loose remake of the 1981 title of the same name, Valentine stars Jensen Ackles as Tom, a coal miner whose mistake costs the lives of some co-workers; now, a decade later, someone donning a miner's mask and wielding a pickaxe is running amok in town, and Tom looks to be a target. The pundits say this is an expertly crafted, pretension-free genre piece that's technologically advanced and features plenty of wicked scares. At 83 percent on the Tomatometer, this is one Bloody good time.
"I can't believe it! That guy didn't even signal!"
The Notorious B.I.G. was one of rap's most compelling figures, with the remarkable ability to spin tales of his wayward past with devastating emotional vulnerability and insight. However, the critics say Notorious, George Tillman Jr.'s biopic of the late hip hop great, succumbs to the kind of clichés that Biggie studiously avoided on his records. First-timer Jamal Woolard stars as the man who would be B.I.G., a small-time Brooklyn hustler who became a huge star before his death in a shooting before his 25th birthday. The critics say Woolard is excellent, capturing the nuances of the character with assurance, but the rest of the film isn't up to its central performance, clicking off the details of Biggie's life without the complexity or depth of his rhymes. At 57 percent on the Tomatometer, Notorious isn't quite "Juicy" enough.
"What a drag... Oh well, let's see if Pizza Hut is open."
Defiance recounts an undeniably important historical tale: that of a group of Eastern European Jews who fought the Nazis in World War II. And although the critics say the film is well-crafted, they also find it lacking in emotional impact. Daniel Craig, Liev Schreiber, and Jamie Bell star as brothers who, on the run from the Germans, establish a community of refugees deep in the Belarusian forest; as food becomes scarce and disease runs rampant, the brothers decide to mount an offensive against the Nazis. The pundits say this is a respectful telling of a fascinating story, but the trouble is, it's overly solemn and clichéd. Defiance currently stands at 54 percent on the Tomatometer. (Check out our interview with director Ed Zwick here)
"So anyway, my agent told me to hold out for $20 million before agreeing to Billy Elliot 2: Feet Afire."
Also opening this week in limited release:
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The German import Cherry Blossoms, the story of an elderly couple making a final journey to Japan, is at 100 percent.
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The Pervert's Guide to Cinema, a documentary in which famed philosopher Slavoj Zizek pontificates on the appeal of the movies, is at 100 percent.
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Chandni Chowk to China, a Bollywood martial arts musical comedy, is at 10 percent.
Recent Daniel Craig Movies:
- 65% -- Quantum of Solace (2008)
- 35% -- Flashbacks of a Fool (2008)
- 42% -- The Golden Compass (2007)
- 19% -- The Invasion (2007)
- 94% -- Casino Royale (2006)
Related Items
| Movie: | Defiance |
| Notorious | |
| Hotel for Dogs | |
| My Bloody Valentine 3D |
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eric w. writes: on Jan 15 2009 04:51 PM This weekend I am going to hear Eastwood tell some thugs to get off his lawn. I am also going to eat some snack food while watching some stoners get chased by the man. (Reply to this) |
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collex writes: on Jan 15 2009 05:15 PM This week, I wanna see either The Wrestler or Revolutiaary Road. If I can't see those two, probably Defiance or Gran Torino. (Reply to this) |
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Tyrant writes: on Jan 15 2009 05:36 PM Mall Cop bad? WHO WOULD HAVE GUESSED! I knew that was coming from the moment it was announced. Going to see Gran Torino this week, can't wait. (Reply to this) |
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jokerboy1991 writes: on Jan 15 2009 05:37 PM In reply to this comment (#2256334) I would say go with The Wrestler (its my fav of the year), but don't be too sad if you end up with Grand Torino and Revolutionary Road because those are both REALLY good. Lucky for me I got a 5 day weekend! So tomorrow I am going to see Defiance because its Edward Zwick and Blood Diamond got mixed reviews and people called that cliche and solemn and I really liked Blood Diamond so I think I will like it. I am also going to see Notorious, while I am not a rap/hip hop fan I have always liked Biggie Smalls and I don't know too much about him so I will see that too, and it helps that EW and Ebert gave it really good reviews though there off at times I think. I am going to see The Reader I think this weekend too. I do kind of want to see My Bloody Valentine, it could be fun but I probably wont see it anytime soon, but I wouldn't mind seeing Jaimie Kind fully fleshed out in 3D! (Reply to this) |
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blattman writes: on Jan 15 2009 06:03 PM That's a shame about Hotel for Dogs. I was really looking forward to that release. Gran Torino will just have to do. (Reply to this) |
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ledawg1138 writes: on Jan 15 2009 06:19 PM You know I'm not fan of rap or whatever you crazy kids call it, but I wanna see "Notorious" for what it is. A bio pic. It's a rental. As for "Paul Blart: Mall Cop", I really like "King of Queens", and Kevin James as a stand up comedian, but his film carrer is... ehhh, terrible. It looks like one of his better films, but that's not saying anything. And did Matt on the Review Revue say "I wanna see Mall Cop" at the end? Or was I imagining that? "My Bloody Valentine 3D" at 83 percent. What... the ... hell!? (Reply to this) |
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niall1 writes: on Jan 15 2009 07:16 PM In reply to this comment (#2256447) NOTORIOUSSSSSSSSS thats the only movie that matters this weekend since revolutionary road and the reader arent playing in my city yet and i saw gran tarino on tues.. and YES JOKERBOY! im glad someone still has some love for roger ebert.. (Reply to this) |
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Tyrant writes: on Jan 15 2009 07:25 PM In reply to this comment (#2256549) I'm surprised by that too, it looks generic, using 3d in an attempt to fool people into thinking it's original... Guess I'll wait to see more reviews. (Reply to this) |
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Robert F. writes: on Jan 15 2009 07:46 PM To paraphrase H. L. Mencken, I don't vote or go to the movies; it only encourages them. I'm annoyed by the fact that the only justification for Valkyrie seems to be that this story has been told four times, but never with Tom Cruise. I saw Dustin Hoffman on www.charlierose.com explain that he wanted to make this movie with Emma Thompson, but so what? These people think that just because they do something, we should pay to see it. I won't. (Reply to this) |
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Sammmy Jankis writes: on Jan 15 2009 07:57 PM In reply to this comment (#2256447) Let me know what you think of The Reader. I just got back from seeing it and was amazed. I think it's one of the years best films. (Reply to this) |
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niall1 writes: on Jan 15 2009 08:02 PM In reply to this comment (#2256628) hahahhahah youre such a loser.. (Reply to this) |
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Adus writes: on Jan 15 2009 08:09 PM Sure, Bloody Valentine has 83 percent, but with only 6 reviews and 4/5 of the positive ones being from horror publications. Not that their opinions don't matter, but I wouldn't be shocked if it fell to rotten quickly this weekend. On the other hand, the one rotten review doesn't look all that reliable either. I expected Mall Cop to do poorly, but part of me hoped it would surprise everyone because I really like Kevin James. Ah well. (Reply to this) |
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rt_hire_me writes: on Jan 15 2009 09:19 PM In reply to this comment (#2256661) I hoped it was good too. I get the impression that a lot of comedies get the low tomatometer, but they end up being great movies. However, since I always seem to wait for the rental on these, my expectations aren't too too high. Someone please do a logarithm to find the pattern that unlocks the mystery to which low tomatometers we can ignore so we don't miss funny comedies that somehow are just made of critic repellant. (Reply to this) |
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Mr. Bo Ziffer writes: on Jan 15 2009 09:48 PM Like Adus mentioned, My Bloody Valentine only has an 83% because there are six reviews on it total. And the five fresh ones are from horror movie sites. It's way too early for RT to be recommending this movie to us. By tomorrow, I expect that number to drop dramatically once some more reviews come in. (Reply to this) |
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UmbrellaLandFood writes: on Jan 15 2009 09:56 PM I agree with the scary clown and i really hate all the corny stuff this writer writes in these reviews. (Reply to this) |
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MizzleBrizzle writes: on Jan 16 2009 07:22 AM I'm going to the early showing of the Wrestler today. Woot! I'm tempted to see Blart because of Ebert's review, but I think I can live with renting that one. As for Valentine, honestly how can you make a pronouncement until less biased reviews come in? (Reply to this) |
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dlo2012 writes: on Jan 16 2009 09:28 AM love the caption that goes with the bloody valentine picture! anyway When I first saw the trailer for mall cop, i knew it would fail at the tomatometer oh well i think kevin james should just stick to TV (Reply to this) |
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Sean M. writes: on Jan 16 2009 12:23 PM I wouldn't see Rev Road in theatres, you may not like it. It ended up being exactly what I thought it would be, basically, I could have saved my money and got in a fight with my wife a few times, recorded it and watched it. DiCaprio and Winslet do a great job in that movie, no doubt, it just wasn't all that interesting. Anyway, this week I will probably see Bloody Valentine because my wife is a horror movie freak and I can't deny it's good reviews. Kinda disappointed that Mall Cop didn't do so well, not that I expected it to. I'll probably still see Notorious anyway, that looks like a it could be good regardless of it's review score (see Taken). (Reply to this) |
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Bane Of Anubis writes: on Jan 16 2009 12:36 PM In reply to this comment (#2256642) Definitely could have been better... RF's character was good, but KW's character came across too much as a prideful simpleton, which provides nothing but Oprah drama (i.e., it seems dramatic on the outside, but when you delve into it, it's kind of hollow). I guess that's the character arc she had to have to make the movie work. That being said, the ending nicely mirror RF's feelings; not sure if that was intentional - it kind of seemed like they weren't sure how to wrap it up. (Reply to this) |
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vitajex writes: on Jan 16 2009 12:51 PM I think the 'The Wrestler' is a little overrated. And I loved all 3 of Aronofsky's first movies. It's not anywhere approaching a bad movie, but it's not great. It just doesn't quite feel 'complete', I guess. And I feel like an echo, but the whole daughter-father 'You were never there for me!' thing was really cliched and underbaked. If you're going to have that kind of thing in a movie, you've gotta make it different or interesting somehow and I don't feel that they did. And the stripper with a heart of gold? Let me just quote Kristen Wiig on 'SNL': "Oh, Gaaaaah!" Although I think Marisa Tomei has Benjamin Button Syndrome cause she looks better in that movie than she did in 10 years ago. (Reply to this) |
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