Nicholas Reese Art

Nicholas Reese Art rode to fame as a child actor, on the back of two major Hollywood roles in the mid-2000s. Art took his initial big-screen bow in the muckraking drama Syriana (2005), as Riley Woodma...
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  • Knight and Day Review
    By: Brian Salisbury June 24, 2010 4:47am EST
    Knight and Day is generic and insultingly stupid. Don't waste your time or money on this one.
  • Elegy Review
    By: Pete Hammond August 08, 2008 3:53pm EST
    Elegy is intelligent, brilliantly written and richly erotic--a motion picture that aims high and succeeds as first-rate adult entertainment.
  • The Wild Review
    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.
  • Big Momma's House 2 Review
    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.
  • Syriana Review
    By: Brian Marder December 09, 2005 3:53am EST
    Syriana, which will stir and incite audiences, is important and galvanizing. Still, it feels a bit like bumper-to-bumper Traffic, and at the end of the day, how hard do you really want to work for a movie?
  • Thunderbirds Review
    By: Betsy Bozdech July 30, 2004 6:02am EST
    Cool ships and a delightful, pink-clad bombshell can't mask the fact that these Thunderbirds are not go.
  • The Notebook Review
    By: Kit Bowen June 25, 2004 9:16am EST
    If not for some inspired moments of breathtaking beauty and heartfelt performances, The Notebook would just be one of those tired love stories that you quickly forget.
  • The Whole Ten Yards Review
    By: Guylaine Cadorette April 09, 2004 9:47am EST
    Although stars Matthew Perry, Bruce Willis and Amanda Peet shine in this sequel, The Whole Ten Yards fails to go the distance and, just like the title's dubious twist on the common expression, no one seems to know what it means.
  • American Wedding Review
    By: Guylaine Cadorette August 01, 2003 7:21am EST
    Jesse Dylan's American Wedding, the third installment in the American Pie series, is too much of a good thing. Four years and two movies later, the characters and storyline have lost their freshness, but it's not a total loss; there are still some hearty laughs to be had.