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- Oct 16, 2009
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loved the New York Observer's review of Knight of Cups. I reached that point years ago.
As I have done the past couple years I checked Rotten Tomatoes to see how many people have the top movies of the year on their 'Want to See' list. As usual the early movies are on top except for Dory.
Dr Strange: 17K
10 Cloverfield Lane: 200
Civil War: 67K
Zootopia: 4K
BvS DoJ: 89K (#2)
X-Men: 61K
Zoolander: 27K
Rogue One: 1.3K
Star Trek: 2.4K
Now You See Me: 27K
Dory: 104K (#1)
Deadpool: 74K (#3)
Suicide Squad: 6K
TMNT: 23K
IDR: 27K
Panda: 69K
Bourne: 16K
Warcraft: 14K
Fantastic Beasts: 15K
Critics' Reviews for THE PROGRAM
Rotten Tomatoes: 55% approval rating (39 out of 71 critics like it)
Critics Consensus: Ben Foster's impressive efforts to channel Lance Armstrong are often enough to power The Program past director Stephen Frears' frustrating unwillingness to delve deeper into its real-life story.
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Newark Star-Ledger - For a story about incredibly focused determination - and if nothing else, Lance Armstrong had that - the film remains strangely uninvolved. 2/4
Toronto Star - Foster nails Armstrong, right down to his final, clenched-jaw TV confession to Oprah Winfrey but The Program's glancing narrative feels less secure. 2/4
Blu-ray.com - Not without its heated confrontations, but it feels unnecessary, working to depict the downfall of a man who's beaten them to the punch in terms of addressing his own self-destructive tendencies. C
IGN Movies - The Program is a highly watchable, very enjoyable film, but never truly manages to get to the heart of the issue. 7/10
New York Observer - I had a hard time buying so much concentrated bile, and for me, the film loses an objectivity that might have otherwise scored points for the destructive nature of competition that can wreck a decent man's corrupted psyche. 2/4
Critics' Reviews for TOO LATE
Rotten Tomatoes: 90% approval rating (9 out of 10 critics like it)
Critics Consensus: Has its share of ill-conceived moments and amateurish filmmaking, but as a swing-for-the-fences effort with a smattering of genre charm, it fully earns its inevitable destiny as a midnight movie curio.
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The Film Stage - Undeniably ambitious, Hauck's debut is a fascinating study of genre homage and cinematic technique that wears its heart on its sleeve, even if it's not always aware of that fact. B-
CraveOnline - For his first feature film, writer/director Dennis Hauck makes a really impressive debut. The dialogue evokes classic film and literature gumshoe tales but has its own unique style. 9/10
A.V. Club - Hawkes is predictably adept as Sampson, a ferociously independent, glamorously grizzled private investigator who seems to have stepped straight out of the '70s. B-
Los Angeles Times - A strangely involving, idiosyncratic masterwork that echoes the style of such filmmakers as Quentin Tarantino, Robert Altman and even Welcome to L.A.'s Alan Rudolph, while amusingly honoring classic detective movie tropes.