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  • This Week in Entertainment History: 1/16/16 - 1/22/06
    See what happened this week in entertainment history.
  • Top Ten Movies This Week
    Did you see this week's box office top money maker?
  • At the Movies: American Wedding
    Leaving joy at the altar.
  • At the Movies: Bad Boys II
    "Producer Bruckheimer and director Bay have sunk to a new low for irresponsible, inhuman violence, dragging Will Smith and Martin Lawrence along for a ghastly, deafening display of bloodshed."
  • At the Movies: Swimming Pool
    Rampling is magnificent as Sarah Morton, a dour Englishwoman who writes detective novels with plots that seem to suit her personality.
  • At the Movies: Legally Blonde 2
    All the pieces are in place from the original film, which was a surprise hit in summer 2001: the clothes, the dogs, the giggling sorority girls, and most importantly, Reese Witherspoon.
  • Broadway to Mourn Katharine Hepburn
    The lights on Broadway will dim at 8 p.m. on Tuesday in honor of Katharine Hepburn, who died surrounded by friends and family Sunday at her childhood waterfront home in Old Saybrook. She was 96.
  • At the Movies: Daddy Day Care
    The film is smart enough to know that comedy comes from the unexpected.
  • At the Movies: X2: X-Men United
    X2: X-Men United" is sure to satisfy most fans of the first "X-Men" movie.
  • At the Movies: Identity
    Are you one of those people who saw Hitchcock's "Psycho" and couldn't take a shower for weeks?
  • At the Movies: The Real Cancun
    They might revoke my film critic privileges for saying this, but I have to admit it: I liked "The Real Cancun."
  • At the Movies: City of Ghosts
    Matt Dillon packs plenty of mood, tension, lush scenery and showy character study into "City of Ghosts," his writing-directing debut.
  • At the Movies: People I Know
    Pacino subdues the cacophonous, wild-eyed rant that made him almost a caricature of himself in recent films such as "The Recruit," "Simone" and "Any Given Sunday," and the result is one of his most powerful performances in years.
  • At the Movies: It Runs in the Family
    "It Runs in the Family" sounds like an intriguing opportunity to catch three generations of the Douglas clan on screen.
  • At the Movies: Malibu's Most Wanted
    For a movie that preaches about being yourself, "Malibu's Most Wanted" has a serious identity crisis.
  • At the Movies: Holes
    Viewing a movie about juvenile miscreants endlessly digging holes in the desert sounds as interesting as watching a film called "Paint Drying."
  • At the Movies: A Mighty Wind
    Old folkies never die. They just get mercilessly mocked by Christopher Guest and company.
  • At the Movies: Better Luck Tomorrow
    "Better Luck Tomorrow," is a corrosive, insightful study of the pressure-packed lives of suburban high school students.
  • At the Movies: Ghosts of the Abyss
    James Cameron, it seems, just can't get enough of the Titanic.
  • At the Movies: Anger Management
    "Anger Management" rankles far less than it might have and produces scattered laughs.
  • At the Movies: Stevie
    "Stevie" is actually about two guys named Steve: One is the subject of the documentary, Stevie Fielding; the other the documentarian himself, Steve James.
  • At the Movies: The Guys
    In the numbing days following the Sept. 11 attacks, many New Yorkers walked around in a daze, trying to make sense of the incomprehensible.
  • At the Movies: DysFunKtional Family
    Eddie Griffin substitutes repeated use of vulgarity for standup comedy with structure and substance in "DysFunKtional Family."
  • At the Movies: What a Girl Wants
    What Amanda Bynes should have wanted from "What a Girl Wants" is a better script and she deserves it.
  • At the Movies: Phone Booth
    Guy held captive in a phone booth by a sniper. As a 10-word Hollywood pitch, it sounds like a cool and novel scenario.
  • At the Movies: A Man Without A Past
    "The Man Without A Past" has such a violent, shocking start that some may be surprised at the quieter shock the film ultimately delivers.
  • At the Movies: A Man Apart
    It took Sylvester Stallone three "Rambos" and maybe four of his "Rockys" over a 12-year period before he became painful to watch. Vin Diesel has managed the same with just a few movies in a couple of years.
  • At the Movies: The Good Thief
    Nick Nolte wouldn't have fit in with the smooth gang in "Ocean's Eleven." If he'd shown up looking as haggard as he does in "The Good Thief" George Clooney and Brad Pitt would have given him the boot.
  • At the Movies: Levity
    "Levity," Solomon's first foray into directing, stars Thornton as Manual Jordan, who's just been released from prison after serving more than 20 years.
  • At the Movies: Head of State
    "Head of State" is just the latest in a recent series of white-people-are-so-lame movies, a theme that isn't getting any funnier, no matter how many times it's dragged out.
  • At the Movies: Basic
    "Basic" is basically your basic thriller, only worse. It's a film that tries to disguise its lazy plot and flimsy characters with twists that make no sense, and with a seemingly endless series of false endings.
  • At the Movies: The Core
    The journey-to-the-center-of-the-earth adventure "The Core" isn't quite the pits.
  • Viewer Review: Dreamcatcher
    I'll tell you I was extremely excited after seeing the trailer for this movie, so much in fact I counted down the days for this movie to hit the theatres. It looked like it was going to be another suspensful and mind-shattering scary movie by Stephen King, however I couldn't be more wrong and I soon found out.
  • At the Movies: Assassination Tango
    Robert Duvall's first foray into acting, writing and directing, 1997's "The Apostle" worked out so well that it inspired him to wear all three hats for a second time.
  • And the Oscar Goes To . . .
    The best-picture Academy Award for the flashy musical "Chicago" was one of the only predictable elements of a ceremony that included three key wins for the Holocaust drama "The Pianist."
  • At the Movies: View from the Top
    It's hard to imagine what attracted Gwyneth Paltrow to "View from the Top," a sputtering, underfueled slapstick romance in which she stars as an aspiring international flight attendant.
  • At the Movies: Boat Trip
    Can the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences retroactively revoke Cuba Gooding Jr.'s Oscar?
  • At the Movies: Spun
    "Spun" would seem far more inventive if Darren Aronofsky and Guy Ritchie weren't already making films.
  • At the Movies: Willard
    Thirty-two years after rival rats Ben and Socrates first swarmed over the silver screen, they and their nasty little friends are back, infesting homes and devouring humans in a creepy remake of the horror flick "Willard."
  • At the Movies: The Hunted
    The professionalism on display in every aspect of "The Hunted" is admirable; more so is the way it coheres into a singular vision. It's a lone-wolf movie, lean and hungry.
  • At the Movies: Agent Cody Banks
    The James Bond formula has always been juvenile, so there aren't any points to be won for tossing it indifferently into a teen milieu.
  • At the Movies: Bend It Like Beckham
    You don't have to know who British soccer superstar David Beckham is to enjoy "Bend It Like Beckham."
  • Screen Actors Guild Awards
    And the winners are . . .
  • At the Movies: Nowhere in Africa
    Many films have managed to capture the sweeping horrors of war. Fewer, though, have managed to grasp at the same time its less sweeping effects.
  • At the Movies: Laurel Canyon
    Frances McDormand smolders with vitality and seduces a young rock star with abandon in the wistful drama "Laurel Canyon."
  • At the Movies: Tears of the Sun
    "Tears of the Sun" conjures atrocities out of thin air, asking us to respect the sacrifice of implausible U.S. troops and treating them with a reverence that signifies nothing.
  • At the Movies: Bringing Down the House
    Bringing Down the House starts out amusingly enough, albeit in a "You've Got Mail" sort of way.
  • At the Movies: The Safety of Objects
    "The Safety of Objects" accomplishes something remarkable in its depiction of suburbia: It manages not to sneer at it or judge people for getting trapped in its conventions.
  • At the Movies: Cradle 2 The Grave
    East meets West, hip-hop hangs with kung fu, and the feet and the fists are flying as Jet Li and DMX team up in this high-octane thriller.
  • At the Movies: Old School
    "Old School" is even more remarkable for what it doesn't feature: mean-spirited gross-out humor.
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