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Gary Oldman
Reviews Featuring Gary Oldman
An outstandingly touching film, genuine, yet with plenty of tension and drama. This one will appeal to a wider audience than just Besson fans, and is well worth taking the time to see.
This is not a bad film, indeed it is well above average, but it fails to reach the heights of the other two in the series. Still well worth watching.
Not only an important film that raises some significant questions, but an interesting one that holds audience attention throughout.
Mediocre remake of a mediocre TV show.
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
A visually exhilarating but virtually unfathomable hundred-mile-an-hour bare-back hippogriff ride. Baffled? You will be!
In his best, and darkest, outing to date, the masked avenger's personal 'issues' reflect those of the world in the wake of 9/11.
A visually-stunning mess.
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire
Theres really no good reason for this film to have been made, and even with a couple of mild screams, theres also no really good reason to see it.
This sequel to Batman Begins is better than its predecessor, and Ledgers Joker will go down as one of the best screen villains of all time.
Dark, scary, and fantastic visually, this revamp of the quintessential Christmas story sticks close to its source and delivers the intended allegory on the inevitable cost of greed.
Absolutely nothing memorable, Planet 51 is still a mildly entertaining kids flick that's not too dumbed down for adults.
A post-Apocalytpic Western that's just not as good as many others out there.
This hugely entertaining thriller excels thanks to lashings of black humour, style and action and a supporting cast hardly rivalled in terms of acting (not star quality) in recent times. Definitely to be ranked up there with its movie cousins, Reservoir Dogs and Pulp Fiction.
If you want to see lovely attention to detail and a wonderfully grim portrayal of the Seventies then go see this. But for entertainment and an intriuiging plot you should probably stay away.
Certainly a great action spectacle but this time it's a slightly flawed cinematic event from Christopher Nolan.
This entry was written by Movie Gazette, posted on May 9, 2003 at 12:00 am, filed under People. Bookmark the permalink. Follow any comments here with the RSS feed for this post.
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