Michelle Burke

Ohio native Michelle Burke is best known for her roles in director Richard Linklater's 1993 cult favorite Dazed and Confused, and as Connie Conehead, daughter to Beldar (Dan Aykroyd) and Prymaat Coneh...
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  • Walking Tall Review
    By: Guylaine Cadorette April 02, 2004 7:49am EST
    Walking Tall could have used more intelligent storytelling and less wrestlemania; it reeks of SmackDown!, but it never fully exploits its champ, The Rock
  • Mona Lisa Smile Review
    By: Guylaine Cadorette December 18, 2003 12:55pm EST
    Mona Lisa Smile's lesson of the day--that the '50s were an oppressive decade for women--is delivered in an unoriginal manner through such shallow and unlikable characters that its message lacks an emotional punch.
  • Sinbad: Legend of the Seven Seas Review
    By: Kit Bowen July 14, 2003 12:28pm EST
    Although Sinbad: Legend of the Seven Seas may not necessarily have that certain Pixar cleverness for adults, it provides more than enough good old-fashioned entertainment for the family.
  • Hulk Review
    By: Guylaine Cadorette June 30, 2003 7:04am EST
    Although Ang Lee successfully brings the green giant from the pages of Marvel Comics to life on the big screen, The Hulk loses itself in a heavy-handed story, and the characters' inner turmoil will make your own head hurt.
  • Evelyn Review
    By: Maya Gaddie December 16, 2002 9:10am EST
    This is a feel-good film if ever there was one. Bring your tissue for this heart-wrenching pic--you know what is going to happen, but you'll want to see the ending anyway.
  • White Oleander Review
    By: Kit Bowen October 11, 2002 6:00am EST
    We hate to use the term "chick flick," but White Oleander completely fits the bill. You'll enjoy this one more if you watch it on your big-screen TV with your own daughter when it hits Lifetime--and it surely will.
  • Death to Smoochy Review
    By: Kit Bowen March 29, 2002 5:28am EST
    As a skewed look at the darker side of children's television, Smoochy delivers enough laughs to keep its head above water--barely.
  • 'The Mexican' Gets More Than '15 Minutes'
    By: Hollywood.com Staff July 31, 2001 12:30pm EST
    Hollywood's advance radar system fizzled this weekend as "15 Minutes" failed to oust "The Mexican" from first place. Although insiders were right in predicting a sharp second week drop for DreamWorks' R-rated drama "The Mexican," they were wrong about it losing top honors. "Mexican" held on to first place with a less sexy estimated $12.13 million (-40%) at 2,959 theaters (+8 theaters; $4,100 per theater). Its cume is approximately $38.3 million. "Mexican" reportedly only cost about $40 million s
  • 'Mexican' Easily Stands Off 'Hannibal'
    By: Hollywood.com Staff July 31, 2001 7:53am EST
    Strong openings for "The Mexican" and "See Spot Run" sent "Hannibal" south of the box office border after three weeks in first place. DreamWorks' R-rated drama "The Mexican" kicked off to a record-setting estimated $20.3 million at 2,951 theaters ($6,879 per theater). Its powerful box office punch proved audiences cared more about Brad Pitt and Julia Roberts' superstar luster than the film's lackluster reviews. "The Mexican" had the highest per-theater average for any film playing in wide releas
  • 'Exit' Wounds 'Enemy'
    By: Hollywood.com Staff July 23, 2001 9:52am EST
    "Exit Wounds" entered theaters in first place despite industry research suggesting more moviegoers wanted to see "Enemy at the Gates." "Exit," from Warner Bros. in association with Village Roadshow Pictures and NPV Entertainment, is a Silver Pictures production teaming up Steven Seagal and DMX. The R-rated action film topped the chart with a record-setting estimated $19.03 million at 2,830 theaters ($6,723 per theater). Directed by Andrez Bartkowiak, "Exit" was produced by Joel Silver and Dan Cr