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  • At the Movies: Old School
    "Old School" is even more remarkable for what it doesn't feature: mean-spirited gross-out humor.
  • At the Movies: The Life of David Gale
    Things don't get much more black and white than Alan Parker's vision of Texas in "The Life of David Gale."
  • At the Movies: Daredevil
    "Daredevil" is a dispassionate affair, buffed to a sheen throughout.
  • At the Movies: All the Real Girls
    There's always been a spark to Zooey Deschanel, a natural screen charm that draws the eye to her and doesn't let go.
  • At the Movies: Gerry
    It seemed like a good idea, at least on paper: Matt Damon and Casey Affleck, co-starring in a film directed by Gus Van Sant, with a script that's totally improvised.
  • At the Movies: Shanghai Knights
    There's this to say about "Shanghai Knights": Cast and crew tried with enormous enthusiasm to put on a good show.
  • At the Movies: Deliver Us from Eva
    Ultimately, "Deliver Us from Eva" has a measure of warmhearted affability. Hardwick really believes in the redemptive power of romantic love, and he turns what could be an acid comedy into a relatively breezy trifle.
  • At the Movies: Lost in La Mancha
    "Lost in La Mancha" is as fascinating as it is disheartening, and it makes you wonder how any movie ever gets made at all.
  • At the Movies: How to Lose a Guy In 10 Days
    For a romantic comedy, "How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days" is surprisingly tolerable.
  • At the Movies: Final Destination 2
    Parents keep your children off the highways: What "Final Destination" did for the fear of flying, "Final Destination 2" does for the fear of driving.
  • At the Movies: Guru
    Some advice for your spiritual well-being: Avoid "The Guru."
  • At the Movies: Biker Boyz
    Biker Boyz" looks like "The Fast and the Furious" on two wheels instead of four, with its growling engines, Cuisinart-style editing and bootylicious women in skintight clothes.
  • On Video: Darkness Falls
    "Darkness Falls," the new horror flick featuring special effects by Oscar-winning craftsman Stan Winston, is supposed to be dark and scary and make us all jump out of our seats.
  • Golden Globe Winners
    The ballots are in and the winners have been announced, get the full list of Golden Globe Award winners here!
  • At the Movies: A Guy Thing
    Casting Jason Lee as the lead in a romantic comedy would be a great idea. After "A Guy Thing" it still would.
  • At the Movies: National Security
    "National Security," starring Martin Lawrence and Steve Zahn, is about a black guy and a white guy who ... um ... does it really matter?
  • At the Movies: City of God
    Young boys run through the streets of the City of God housing project with guns in their hands but no shoes on their feet.
  • 'Lord of the Rings' Tops People's Choice
    "The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring" proved a crowd-pleaser at the 29th Annual People's Choice Awards.
  • At the Movies: Just Married
    You don't need to go to a theater to see "Just Married," because you've already seen it.
  • At the Movies: Confessions of a Dangerous Mind
    It's hard not to walk into "Confessions of a Dangerous Mind" with the giddy expectations of a bachelorette on "The Dating Game."
  • At the Movies: Love Liza
    Wilson Joel (Philip Seymour Hoffman) is having a rough time of it.
  • At the Movies: Pinocchio
    Roberto Benigni spends a lot of time talking with his back to the camera in "Pinocchio," the better to obscure his lips, the movement of which has no relation to the sound attributed to them.
  • At the Movies: Nicholas Nickleby
    What film can you take your 10-year-old to, as well as your grandmother?
  • At the Movies: Catch Me If You Can
    Steven Spielberg's "Catch Me If You Can" is slick and stylish the year's most flat-out fun movie, and one of its best.
  • At the Movies: Chicago
    The path from stage to screen was arduous and the director could hardly be greener, but the Broadway-spawned "Chicago" is every inch a movie.
  • At the Movies: 25th Hour
    Spike Lee accomplishes a couple of remarkable things with "25th Hour."
  • At the Movies: Narc
    Amid the spectacle and sentimentality that overwhelm the multiplexes every holiday season, "Narc" arrives like a piece of cold steel smacked against your unsuspecting temple.
  • At the Movies: The Pianist
    Adrien Brody's long, slender fingers make him an apt choice to play the title role in "The Pianist" but what one really takes away from the performance are his ceaselessly haunted eyes.
  • At the Movies: Max
    John Cusack brings an edgy vitality to "Max," the story of a German-Jewish art dealer who befriends a sniveling, nail-biting, deeply confused misfit struggling to become an artist.
  • At the Movies: The Hours
    I walked out of "The Hours" appreciating what I'd seen, but feeling a little cold.
  • On Video: Two Weeks Notice
    How could Hugh Grant and Sandra Bullock — two masters of dry wit and physical comedy — end up in such a flat movie?
  • At the Movies: Gangs of New York
    There are two ways to approach Martin Scorsese's "Gangs of New York": Go in hoping for a masterpiece given the talent involved and the film's scale, or enter skeptically considering its delayed release and the director's bickering with Miramax.
  • At the Movies: Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
    It looks alike, it sounds alike, it lasts as long. Yet "The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers" is a lesser fantasy world than last year's "The Fellowship of the Ring."
  • At the Movies: The Hot Chick
    You have to hand it to Rob Schneider. In his films, no joke is too lame, no plot too preposterous, no cliche too overdone. He just dives in with gusto.
  • On Video: Maid in Manhattan
    Jennifer Lopez has entered the rarefied stratosphere that Madonna occupies, making it hard to ignore the fact that when we see her on screen now, we're watching Jennifer Lopez, multimedia empire.
  • At the Movies: Star Trek: Nemesis
    If "Star Trek: Nemesis" is "a generation's final journey," as it's billed, Capt. Jean-Luc Picard and crew are going out with a whimper in the dark.
  • On Video: Evelyn
    This holiday season, you can watch Pierce Brosnan save the world as James Bond in "Die Another Day." Or, you can see him do something much more difficult: try to raise three small kids on his own.
  • At the Movies: Equilibrium
    Emotions are prohibited in the futuristic society of "Equilibrium."
  • At the Movies: About Schmidt
    At age 66, Warren Schmidt gets a crash course in self-discovery in "About Schmidt."
  • At the Movies: Analyze That
    As reheated leftovers go, "Analyze That" will provide a handful of broad, cheap laughs for those who relished the original and just want a second session of De Niro mocking De Niro and Crystal being Crystal.
  • At the Movies: Adaptation
    This is what happens when the writer of "Being John Malkovich," Charlie Kaufman gets stumped.
  • At the Movies: Rabbit-Proof Fence
    Three elements make the movie — a story of deep love and loss, an electric child actor in Everlyn Sampi, and an Australian landscape so harsh it makes the American Southwest look like a suburban park.
  • At the Movies: Adam Sandler's Eight Crazy Nights
    After wowing critics and alienating some of his fans with the whimsical, ambitious "Punch-Drunk Love," Adam Sandler must feel that the world needs him to return to his grubby roots.
  • At the Movies: Extreme Ops
    The movie should have been called "YYY" as in, why was it made? Why would any actor want to appear in it? And why would anyone want to see it?
  • At the Movies: Wes Craven Presents: They
    Some movies are high-concept, most are low-concept. "Wes Craven Presents: They" is all concept and no execution.
  • At the Movies: Solaris
    After three big hits, Steven Soderbergh is in danger of reverting to being a filmmaker churning out interesting, unusual movies that no one wants to see.
  • At the Movies: Die Another Day
    Perhaps it's time to say goodbye to Mr. Bond.
  • At the Movies: Talk To Her
    Pedro Almodovar's "Talk To Her" begins with a curtain going up, but there couldn't be a less stagey movie than the Academy Award winner's latest film.
  • At the Movies: The Quiet American
    "The Quiet American" is the first film that Michael Caine shot after winning his second Academy Award in March 2000 for "The Cider House Rules."
  • On Video: Standing in the Shadows of Motown
    You've heard of Marvin Gaye, the Supremes, Smokey Robinson and the Miracles and the Temptations. But you probably haven't heard of the Funk Brothers.
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