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Mark Ruffalo
Reviews Featuring Mark Ruffalo
Sex and desire come to a bloody head in this elliptical thriller. Stylish, clever, and full of insight into the darker side of both male and female sexuality - but when a film like this runs twenty or so minutes too long, just don't advertise the fact by calling it 'In the Cut'.
A film about death and its impact on others that is refreshingly unsentimental, and with an ending that might leave you feeling either exhilarated or depressed (or even both) depending upon how you interpret it.
World War II at its most boring.
Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
An inventive headtrip cum melancholic romance which sticks in the mind.
Likeable but uninspiring, itll be most memorable for exposing Jennifer Garners potential as a rom-com lead so expect to be sick of the sight of her within five years!
Even Cruises dodgy barnet cant take away from the fact that this is the best thriller of 2004.
This nuanced portrait of marital ennui and infidelity is a welcome throwback to the Golden Age of the seventies.
Not quite a kids' movie, but not exactly for adults either, this little boy and his monster friends are surprisingly melancholy, interspersed with some subtle humor, in a film that's interesting but lacks some inexplicable spark.
Another Scorsese classic, its not the horror film it was touted as, but thats OK, because its just plain good.
Date Night doesnt break any new ground, it doesnt offer any sort of existential treatise on life, and it doesnt succumb to crude humorit simply is funny.
A far better superhero mash-up than it's constituent parts would suggest, Joss Whedon's The Avengers has surprisingly well-executed plot and action and comes across as entertaining and pretty funny.
This entry was written by Movie Gazette, posted on October 28, 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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