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Keith David
Reviews Featuring Keith David
A disappointing mishmash of flat jokes, tired ideas and out-of-place violence.
Jaded LA homicided detective Joe Gavilan has seen it all before and is surprised by nothing - which is just how you will feel after viewing this tired old hokum.
Hilarious youd have to be dead not to laugh at this one.
A squandered chance to use biting comedy to get right under the skin of the American political system. Its not completely unfunny, but it is a complete cop-out.
Agent Cody Banks 2: Destination London
Also known as Big Steaming Pile of ****.
Not for Nam-by pambies (Nam, geddit? As in VietNAM, you see? No? Oh, just forget it).
Pretty darn enjoyable, even if its not remotely original.
What is reality coming to?
Deserving of the praise lavished upon it, Crash's excellent cast of unknowns and A-Listers deliver a thought provoking depiction of the racial fabric of modern day America.
Be it a dream or a nightmare, this was one of the must-sees of 2000.
Its a freaky, creepy world for our gal Coraline, and this latest animated masterpiece from the man behind The Nightmare Before Christmas lets us explore it with her.
With all those names in the cast, and a premise full of promise, Death at a Funeral is just THAT much more disappointing because of all that its not.
Good ol' B-movie fun from the classic Eighties duo of Carpenter and Russell.
Princess Mononoke is accessible anime close to its best, A multi-layered, interesting storyline and a measured mix of action, plot and the weird spiritual stuff make it a winner.
This entry was written by Movie Gazette, posted on July 26, 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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