89% Zombieland
Wickedly funny and featuring plenty of gore, Zombieland is proof that the zombie subgenre is far from dead.
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88% Inglourious Basterds
A classic Tarantino genre-blending thrill ride, Inglourious Basterds is violent, unrestrained, and thoroughly entertaining,
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85% Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs
Quirky humor, plucky characters and solid slapstick make this family comedy a frenetically tasty time at the movies.
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83% Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
Dark, thrilling, and occasionally quite funny, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince is also visually stunning and emotionally satisfying.
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82% Whip It
While made from overly familiar ingredients, Drew Barrymore's directorial debut has enough charm, energy, and good-natured humor to transcend its many cliches.
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81% Michael Jackson's This Is It
While it may not be the definitive concert film (or the insightful backstage look) some will hope for, Michael Jackson's This Is It packs more than enough entertainment value to live up to its ambitious title.
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78% The Hangover
With a clever script and hilarious interplay among the cast, The Hangover nails just the right tone of raunchy humor, and the non-stop laughs overshadow any flaw.
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76% The Informant!
A charismatic turn by star Matt Damon and a consistently ironic tone boost this quietly funny satire about a corporate whistle-blower.
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75% Capitalism: A Love Story
Love him or hate him, Capitalism captures Michael Moore in his muckraking element -- with all the Moore-centric showmanship that entails.
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75% Julie & Julia
Boosted by Meryl Streep's charismatic performance as Julia Child, Julie and Julia is a light, but fairly entertaining culinary comedy.
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72% The Blind Side
It might strike some viewers as a little too pat, but The Blind Side has the benefit of strong source material and a strong performance from Sandra Bullock.
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70% Where the Wild Things Are
Some may find its dark tone and slender narrative off-putting, but Spike Jonze's heartfelt adaptation of the classic children's book is as beautiful as it is uncompromising.
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59% Pirate Radio
It lacks genuine rock & roll raunch, but Richard Curtis' ode to the offshore radio stations of 1960s Britain has enough laughs and great tunes to stay smoothly afloat.
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56% The Invention of Lying
It doesn't quite follow through on its promise, and relies too heavily on shopworn romantic comedy tropes, but The Invention of Lying is uncommonly sly and funny.
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56% Disney's A Christmas Carol
Robert Zemeckis' 3-D animated take on the Dickens classic tries hard, but its dazzling special effects distract from an array of fine performances from Jim Carrey and Gary Oldman.
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56% 9
Although its story is perhaps too familiar and less complex than some might wish, 9 is visually spectacular, and director Shane Acker's attention to detail succeeds in drawing viewers into the film's universe.
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54% The Men Who Stare at Goats
Though The Men Who Stare at Goats is a mostly entertaining, farcical glimpse of men at war, some may find its satire and dark humor less than edgy.
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48% Astro Boy
While it isn't terribly original, and it seems to have a political agenda that may rankle some viewers, Astro Boy boasts enough visual thrills to please its target demographic.
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47% The Box
Imaginative but often preposterous, The Box features some thrills but largely feels too piecemeal.
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45% Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs
The third Ice Age film has some excellent animation, but its story is tired and monotonous.
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45% Shorts
Shorts has imagination and energy, but most viewers beyond elementary school will likely tire of the kiddie humor and sensory overload.
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45% Saw VI
It won't earn the franchise many new fans, but Saw VI is a surprising step up for what has become an intricately grisly annual tradition.
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39% Surrogates
Though it sports a slick look and feel, Surrogates fails to capitalize on a promising premise, relying instead on mindless action and a poor script.
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38% The Time Traveler's Wife
Though it may satisfy fans of the novel, The Time Traveler's Wife's plot contrivances and illogical narrative hamper its big screen effectiveness.
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38% Cirque du Freak: The Vampire's Assistant
This overstuffed, scattershot vampire flick suffers from poor characterization and an unwieldy mix of scares and chuckles.
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37% 2012
Roland Emmerich's 2012 provides plenty of visual thrills, but lacks a strong enough script to support its massive scope and inflated length.
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29% The Twilight Saga: New Moon
The Twilight Saga's second installment may satisfy hardcore fans of the series, but outsiders are likely to be turned off by its slow pace, relentlessly downcast tone, and excessive length.
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29% The Final Destination
With little of the ingenuity of previous installments, The Final Destination is predictable, disposable horror fare.
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24% G-Force
G-Force features manic action, but fails to come up with interesting characters or an inspired plot.
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23% Law Abiding Citizen
Unnecessarily violent and unflinchingly absurd, Law Abiding Citizen is plagued by subpar acting and a story that defies reason.
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21% Halloween II
Zombie shows flashes of vision in the follow-up to his Halloween reboot, but they're smothered by mountains of gore and hackneyed, brutal violence.
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20% Amelia
Amelia takes the compelling raw materials of its subject’s life and does little with them, conventionally ticking off Earhart's accomplishments without exploring the soul of the woman.
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18% Planet 51
Planet 51 squanders an interesting premise with an overly familiar storyline, stock characters, and humor that alternates between curious and potentially offensive.
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18% The Fourth Kind
While it boasts a handful of shocks, The Fourth Kind is hokey and clumsy and makes its close encounters seem eerily mundane.
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12% Couples Retreat
Despite a talented cast and some reliably pleasant interplay between Jon Favreau and Vince Vaughn, Couples Retreat leaves viewers stranded in an arid, mirthless comedy.
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11% The Stepfather
This tepid remake of the 1987 cult classic lacks the tension and satirical undercurrents of the original.
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6% All About Steve
All About Steve is an oddly creepy, sour film, featuring a heroine so desperate and peculiar that audiences may be more likely to pity than root for her.
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100% The Maid
Catalina Saavedra's devastating performance would be reason enough to see The Maid, but Sebastian Silva's empathetic direction and finely tuned script only add to the movie's pleasing heft.
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100% Rembrandt's J'accuse
J'Accuse is an essayistic documentary in which Greenaway's fierce criticism of today's visual illiteracy is argued by means of a forensic search of Rembrandt's Nightwatch.
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100% La Danse: The Paris Opera Ballet
In Wiseman’s 38th film John Davey’s camera roams the vast Palais Garnier, an opulent 19th century pile of a building: from its crystal chandelier-laden corridors to its labyrinthine underground chambers, from its light-filled rehearsal studios to its luxurious theater replete with 2,200 scarlet velvet seats and Marc Chagall ceiling.
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95% Under the Sea 3D
Viewers of UNDER THE SEA 3D will get the best look at ocean life that they can get without snorkels or scuba gear.
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95% Good Hair
Funny, informative, and occasionally sad, Good Hair is a provocative look at the complex relationship between African Americans and their hair.
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94% An Education
Though the latter part of the film may not appeal to all, An Education is a charming coming-of-age tale powered by the strength of relative newcomer Carey Mulligan's standout performance.
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93% The Wedding Song
Two young women find that their differences bring them closer during a difficult time in this drama from writer-director Karin Albou.
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91% Fantastic Mr. Fox
Fantastic Mr. Fox is a delightfully funny feast for the eyes with multi-generational appeal -- and it shows Wes Anderson has a knack for animation.
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91% Precious: Based on the Novel PUSH by Sapphire
Precious is a grim yet ultimately triumphant film about abuse and inner-city life, largely bolstered by exceptional performances from its cast.
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90% The Messenger
A dark but timely subject is handled deftly by writer/directer Owen Moverman and superbly acted by Woody Harrleson and Ben Foster.
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90% The Sun
August 15, 1945: a shocked Japan hears the voice of divine leader Emperor Hirohito for the first time, as he implores his people to cease all military activity, initiating a formal end to WWII and the beginning of a new period of American Occupation, led by Gen.
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89% Defamation
What is anti-Semitism today, two generations after the Holocaust? In his continuing exploration of modern Israeli life, director Yoav Shamir (Checkpoint, 5 Days, Flipping Out) travels the world in search of the most modern manifestations of the “oldest hatred", and comes up with some startling answers.
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89% Night and Day
Anthology is thrilled to present the New York Theatrical Premiere Run of NIGHT AND DAY by gifted Korean auteur Hong Sang-soo, who has established himself as world cinema’s poet of male narcissism, desire, and neurosis.
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88% The House of the Devil
Though its underlying themes are familiar, House of the Devil effectively sheds the loud and gory cliches of contemporary horror to deliver a tense, slowly building throwback to the fright flicks of decades past.
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87% Space Station
As astoundingly beautiful as it is technically dazzling, Space Station 3D is the first-ever IMAX 3D space film.
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87% Red Cliff
Featuring some impressively grand battlefield action, John Woo returns to Asia and returns to form in the process for this lavish and slick historical epic.
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87% Skin
Sophie Okonedo, Sam Neill, and Alice Krige do wonderful work in Skin, delivering performances whose strength is underlined by the incredible real-life events upon which the movie is based.
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86% A Serious Man
Blending dark humor with profoundly personal themes, the Coen brothers deliver what might be their most mature -- if not their best -- film to date.
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84% Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call New Orleans
Befitting its unorthodox origins, this Bad Lieutenant benefits from Werner Herzog's typically fearless direction and a delightfully unhinged Nicolas Cage in the title role.
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84% Black Dynamite
A loving and meticulous send-up of 1970s blaxsploitation movies, Black Dynamite is funny enough for the frat house and clever enough for film buffs.
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83% Endgame
It is 1985, and apartheid has begun its descent. But while South Africa is in turmoil, men--including future president Thabo Mbeki--secretly meet a continent away in England to discuss the future of the country.
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83% Bright Star
Jane Campion's direction is as refined as her screenplay, and she gets the most out of her cast -- especially Abbie Cornish -- in this understated period drama.
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83% Four Seasons Lodge
New York Times journalist Andrew Jacobs directs this documentary about a summer colony of Holocaust survivors.
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83% Paranormal Activity
Using its low-budget effects and mockumentary method to great result, Paranormal Activity turns a simple haunted house story into 90 minutes of relentless suspense.
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81% Broken Embraces
Pedro Almodovar's fourth film with Penélope Cruz isn't his finest work, but he brings his signature visual brilliance to this noirish tale, and the cast turns in some first-class performances.
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77% Collapse
Americans generally like to hear good news. They like to believe that a new President will right old wrongs, that clean energy will replace dirty oil, and that fresh thinking will set the economy straight.
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77% The Good Soldier
“The Good Soldier” follows the journeys of five combat veterans from different generations of American wars as they sign up, go into battle, and eventually change their minds about what it means to be a good soldier.
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73% Act of God
This documentary from MANUFACTURED LANDSCAPES director Jennifer Baichwal examines the effects of lightning strikes beyond just the physical.
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72% That Evening Sun
An aging farmer fights to keep the home that is rightfully his after fleeing from a nursing home and discovering that his son has leased the family farm to his old nemesis.
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71% Killing Kasztner
To an even greater degree than Oskar Schindler, Dr. Israel Kasztner played a key role in saving the lives of well over 1,000 Jews from the Holocaust (1,600 in Kasztner's case; 1,200 in Schindler's). However, a fascinating and deeply sad irony lies buried in the differences between the men's stories: Schindler was a Nazi party member who manipulated the Gestapo to save the said individuals, and he died a veritable hero.
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69% (Untitled)
This satire on the art world is at times both clever and shallow, but its top-notch cast generates plenty of goodwill.
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67% William Kunstler: Disturbing the Universe
During the second half of the 20th century, William Kunstler was one of the most admired attorneys in America--and one of the most hated.
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67% Storm
Hannah Maynard, prosecutor at the International Criminal Tribunal in The Hague, is leading a trial against a former commander of the Yugoslavian National Army who is accused of the deportation and later killing of dozens of Bosnian-Muslim civilians.
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65% Coco Before Chanel
Though it doesn't quite capture the complexity of its subject's life, Coco Avant Chanel remains a fascinating, appropriately lovely tribute.
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64% Dare
In high school, what kind of person did you dare to be: risk-taking and lustful, melancholy and confused or simply safe and over-achieving?
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64% The End of Poverty?
Global poverty did not just happen. It began with military conquest, slavery and colonization that resulted in the seizure of land, minerals and forced labor.
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58% Food Beware: The French Organic Revolution
For the first time ever, our children are growing up less healthy than their parents. As the rate of cancer and childhood obesity climbs ever upward each year, we must ask ourselves, why is this happening?
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57% The Hand of Fatima
Anthology is thrilled to present the US Theatrical Premiere Run of THE HAND OF FATIMA, a double portrait of a rock critic and his favorite band.
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56% Mammoth
Mammoth revolves around successful New York couple Leo (Gael Garcia Bernal) and Ellen (Michelle Williams). Leo is the creator of a booming website, and has stumbled into a world of money and big decisions.
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55% The Little Traitor
Based on the novel Panther in the Basement by the world renowned author, Amos Oz, Little Traitor takes place in 1947 Palestine, just a few months before Israel becomes a state.
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55% Missing Person
Premiering at the 2009 Sundance Film Festival, THE MISSING PERSON is a present-day film noir where there isn’t necessarily a bad guy or good guy but more of an internal fight of good and evil.
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50% Uncertainty
UNCERTAINTY, from directors Scott McGehee and David Siegel (THE DEEP END), thrusts Bobby Thompson and Kate Montero (Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Lynn Collins) into two alternate realities on the same steamy summer day in New York City.
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48% Antichrist
Gruesome, explicit and highly controversial; Lars Von Triers arthouse-horror, though beautifully shot, is no easy ride.
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47% Ong Bak 2
It suffers from comparisons to its predecessor -- not to mention Tony Jaa's less-than-nimble direction -- but Ong Bak 2 has all the extravagant violence and playful style that fans of the original will expect.
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45% Turning Green
After his mother died and his father decided he didn’t want him, James and his little brother were shipped to Ireland from America.
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42% Ten9Eight: Shoot for the Moon
This is the compelling question behind award-winning filmmaker Mary Mazzio’s newest project Ten9Eight, a thought provoking film which tells the inspirational stories of several inner city teens (of differing race, religion and ethnicity) from Harlem to Compton and all points in between, as they compete in an annual business plan competition run by the Network for Teaching Entrepreneurship (NFTE).
The film includes students such as:
Rodney Walker, age 19, Founder of Forever Life Music and Video Productions: Rodney was put into the foster care system at the age of 5 and ended up homeless on the streets of Chicago.
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42% New York, I Love You
Like many anthologies, New York, I Love You has problems of consistency, but it isn't without its moments.
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33% Love Hurts
The new romantic comedy Love Hurts stars an electric cast, including Richard E. Grant, Carrie-Anne Moss, Johnny Pacar, Jenna Elfman, Janeane Garofalo and Camryn Manheim.
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30% Women in Trouble
From acclaimed writer-director Sebastian Gutierrez comes an outrageous, genre-bending, multi-layered comedy about one day in the lives of ten seemingly disparate women - including a porn star, a flight attendant, a psychiatrist, a masseuse, a bartender and a pair of call girls -- all with one thing in common: trouble.
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29% The Canyon
Young newlyweds Nick and Lori decide to spend their honeymoon frolicking in the wild and wide expanse of the Grand Canyon, a longtime dream destination for the groom.
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27% Splinterheads
For Justin Frost (newcomer Thomas Middleditch in a breakthrough role), a typical day is rolling out of bed at one, practicing improvised karate, and mowing grass for his best friend’s landscaping business.
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26% Motherhood
Despite Uma Thurman's comic skills, Motherhood's contrived set-ups and cliched jokes keep this comedy from delivering laughs -- or insights into modern parenting.
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25% Staten Island
Ethan Hawke reteams with his ASSAULT ON PRECINCT 13 screenwriter James DeMonaco for the latter's directing debut with this independent drama focusing on three New Yorkers (Hawke, Vincent D'Onofrio, and Seymour Cassel) whose lives intersect in the shadow of the Big Apple.
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23% Oh My God
Hugh Jackman, Ringo Starr, Seal, and a number of other celebrities and regular people offer their views on God in this documentary.
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22% The Boondock Saints II: All Saints Day
This sequel to the cult favorite The Boondock Saints is more of the same -- unoriginal, absurd, violent, over-the-top, and occasionally mean-spirited.
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17% How To Seduce Difficult Women
Before the Game…before players, pimps, and pickup artists, where was the art of seduction truly born?
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16% Gentlemen Broncos
Unselfconsciously juvenile and overwhelmingly quirky, Gentlemen Broncos offers a lot of potty humor but isn't terribly funny.
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15% Stan Helsing
The monster movie genre gets spoofed with this Stone Village Pictures and Essential Entertainment production written and directed by Bo Zenga, producer of the first film in the SCARY MOVIE franchise.
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13% Labor Day
LABOR DAY dramatically reveals the largely unknown story of how one union, thousands of activists, and a commitment to change turned Election Day into Labor Day.
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Eulogy for a Vampire
Aremote rural monastery inhabited by the monks of the mysterious Order of Pathicus is the site of a heinous murder, committed by a young novice, Anthony, upon another young novice, Florian, when his affections and sexual desires are not reciprocated.
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Jump
September 10, 1928: An accident occurs at the Tyrolean Zillertal that leads to a spectacular circumstantial evidence lawsuit that causes a stir far beyond the Austrian borders.
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Teenage Dirtbag
TEENAGE DIRTBAG intelligently tells the story of a popular high school cheerleader (Noa Hegesh) who is harassed by a delinquent classmate (Scott Michael Foster) until they are both placed in the same creative writing class.
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The Ministers
EMPIRE director Franc. Reyes reunites with star John Leguizamo and a gritty New York City setting for this crime thriller.
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All the Best
A wannabe car expert Prem Chopra (Ajay Devgn) with his beautiful wife Jhanvi (Bipasha Basu) running his ancestral gym, a claiming-to-be-married upcoming rock band singer Veer Kapoor (Fardeen Khan) who’s living on his brother’s pocket money and Veer’s ravishing girlfriend Vidya (Mugdha Godse). Just when everything is going great guns in their lives, enters the upcoming singer’s millionaire step brother Dharam Kapoor (Sanjay Dutt) bringing with him stumbling madness and generating hilariously awkward situations in just everyone’s life around.
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You Cannot Start Without Me: Valery Gergiev - Maestro
YOU CANNOT START WITHOUT ME - Valery Gergiev - Maestro, directed by Academy Award winner Allan Miller, offers viewers an intimate look into the demanding life of Valery Gergiev, widely acclaimed as one of the leading conductors of our time.
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Adela
To celebrate her 80th birthday, Adela wants nothing more than a meal with her children and family.
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My Dear Enemy
Heui-Su shows up unexpectedly at the betting haunt of her former boyfriend and demands that he pay up the 3.5 million won (about $2,600) that he owes her from more than a year ago.
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One Fast Move or I'm Gone: Kerouac's Big Sur
He was called the vibrant new voice of his generation -- the avatar of the Beat movement. In 1957, on the heels of the triumphant debut of his groundbreaking novel, On The Road, Jack Kerouac was a literary rock star, lionized by his fans and devotees.
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Creating Karma
CREATING KARMA, a film about an uptight corporate climber who becomes a poet after losing her job and moving in with her wacky new-age therapist sister, is a narrative comedy feature by first time screen director Jill Wisoff.
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21 and a Wake-Up
21 AND A WAKEUP is the first American motion picture about the Vietnam War ever allowed by the communist government in Hanoi to film on the real locations where the war took place.
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The Fall
Tony Jakubiak is careening through life as a hip, black sheep under-achiever.
The polar opposite of his square, over-achieving D.A. older brother Frank, who is on his way to becoming the youngest Governor in history.
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Mr. Sadman
1990, Baghdad: Mounir, an impressionable and sheltered Saddam Hussein body-double, is blissfully unaware of the impending events that vow to unravel his life.
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The New Year Parade
Fact merges with fiction in writer-director Tom Quinn's deeply personal tale of two teenagers struggling to make sense of their complicated family life after their mother and father decide to separate.
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Writing and Keeping Silent: The Poet Friederike
For several years, Carmen Tartarotti quietly and unobtrusively accompanied the renowned Austrian poet Friederike Mayröcker, at home and in her studios, living and writing, contemplating and reading.
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The Halfmoon Files
Mall Singh’s crackling words are heard as he spoke into the phonographic funnel on December 11, 1916 in the city of Wünsdorf, near Berlin.
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