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By:
Kit Bowen
April 14, 2006 6:02am EST
In a cross between Finding Nemo and Madagascar, with a little Lion King thrown in for good measure, Disney’s The Wild is just plain old tired derivativeness. Maybe we should chalk this one up to bad timing.
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By:
Brian Marder
February 17, 2006 9:22am EST
Date Movie is as crude, tasteless and cheap as a movie the Farrelly brothers might’ve made during adolescence. And since the year has only just begun, let’s tack on 2005 and proclaim this the worst movie of the last year and a quarter… Oh, what the hell—the last decade.
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By:
Brian Marder
January 27, 2006 9:34am EST
Big Momma's House 2 is precisely what you'd expect from a sequel whose title no longer has any affiliation with the current "story": a few harmless, lowbrow laughs, all of which are forever indebted to the formulas of crap past.
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By:
WENN.com Source
January 12, 2006 7:16am EST
Sharon Stone is in love again—with retired Los Angeles Lakers basketball star Rick Fox.
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By:
Mike Szymanski
October 21, 2005 1:57pm EST
As one of the best noir crime thrillers since L.A. Confidential, Kiss Kiss Bang Bang is also going to make you laugh and laugh.
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By:
Kit Bowen
September 30, 2005 7:34am EST
Granted, it's a sports movie about golf. But with winning performances, fancy camerawork and a classic root-for-the-little-guy scenario, The Greatest Game Ever Played tees off with the best of them.
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By:
Jennifer Simonovic
September 16, 2005 5:05am EST
Just Like Heaven is sweet enough for some but it's going to be "just like hell" for boyfriends who are dragged kicking and screaming to this boring chick flick.
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By:
Kit Bowen
June 24, 2005 6:14am EST
Watching Nicole Kidman fly around on a broom is one thing, but if you're looking for a little renewed magic, Bewitched unfortunately isn't it.
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By:
WENN.com Source
December 30, 2004 10:57am EST
A Look Back at the Headlines of 2004
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By:
Matthew Reynolds
December 23, 2004 6:34am EST
Ranked on the lower end of television cartoon adaptations, goodwill toward the show or Cosby himself only gets you so far with Fat Albert. Older audiences may be surprised at just how blatant the message-driven quality of the show is, while younger audiences may be asking what the fuss is all about.