-
Monthly Archives
-
Categories
- Competitions (1)
- News (1)
- Out Now (16)
- People (10,928)
- Reviews (1,859)
- Action (501)
- Adventure (272)
- Animated (94)
- Asian (99)
- British (312)
- Comedy (681)
- Crime (320)
- Documentary (47)
- Drama (908)
- European (252)
- Family (187)
- Fantasy (210)
- Film Of The Book (1)
- Horror (272)
- Movies (256)
- Musical (62)
- Mystery (157)
- Romance (305)
- Science Fiction (230)
- Thriller (541)
- TV (10)
- War (86)
- Westerns (27)
Meryl Streep
Reviews Featuring Meryl Streep
Funny, fascinating, emotional and at times even shocking definitely a film not to be missed.
The "twist" is predictable, the soundtrack lousy and the acting unnatural at best. A truly awful film.
Not the funniest Farrelly flick, but surely the sweetest.
Beautifully shot, musically marvellous, and nowhere near as good as its often made out to be.
While not superior to the original, this paranoid conspiracy psycho-thriller is still a superior remake.
A bit like those angels wings, its sporadically up-lifting in a way that doesnt quite make sense but more often than that its a maudlin chore with too scant a reward.
Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events
Youll find nothing unfortunate about going to see this dark, fun, horror-for-kiddies.
Just like a real-life postcard, youll view it once, think its nice enough, and then probably forget all about it.
Despite a few too many lightning crashes, Doubt showcases its actors in complex characters that let us decide for ourselves what truth we value the most.
A fantastic big screen adaptation of a fantastic book keeps both kids and adults happy.
Finally, a rom-com that isnt about hot twentysomethings, wasnt made by Judd Apatow or one of his followers, and doesnt talk down to its audience.
Oddly this is simultaneously a brave movie and a toothless biopic. It's certainly lifted by a stellar performance from Meryl Streep that goes beyond mere impersonation.
This entry was written by Movie Gazette, posted on May 1, 2003 at 12:00 am, filed under People. Bookmark the permalink. Follow any comments here with the RSS feed for this post.
Both comments and trackbacks are currently closed.