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James Cromwell
Reviews Featuring James Cromwell
This is a decent action film that provides good solid entertainment plus a great big bomb explosion, but it doesnt have the depth of either its predecessors or the Clancy novels.
This is a workmanlike slasher film with a fair amount of blood and guts, a creepy killer, some atmosphere, and decent use of its location, but without that something special to make it really stand out.
A film carefully calculated to please an English audience, with its combination of patriotism, sport, cheek and absurdity. Not just a good laugh, but also a snapshot of our times.
This crowd-pleasing tale of android revolution and evolution is as sleek, efficient and dynamic as a robot - and, but for the presence of Will Smith, just as soulless.
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.
Performances go a long way to raise this presidential portrait up into something entertaining, but theres not really anything all that memorable except some great performances by James Brolin, Richard Dreyfuss, and James Cromwell.
Not the film it couldve been, Surrogates brings some intriguing ideas and performances, but is ultimately a bit too convoluted and messy when it tries to be a hybrid of too many genres.
The Artist is a talkie life-lesson with some of the best dialogue ever heard on screen. A must see for all fans of Dawson's Creek. Honest.
This entry was written by Movie Gazette, posted on February 5, 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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