 | | 1. Return To Me | | | Starring: David Duchovny Minnie Driver Director: Bonnie Hunt | | Format: DVD Release Date: 4/15/2008 |  | Return to Me - DVD Review By: Robert Strohmeyer - filmcritic.com DVD Reviews Published on: 3/27/2009 5:36 PM | |
Lets cut to the chase; the Weekly World News could have given us a better story about a man and a woman united by a heart transplant. Its not for lack of talent, either, that this flick stumbles. If anything, Return to Me hosts almost as overqualified a cast as Brian De Palmas lame duck blockbuster, Mission to Mars. The real problem here seems to be lack of directorial focus. After a career of feature film supporting roles, television walk-ons and cartoon voiceovers, Bonnie Hunt somehow convinced MGM to let her sit in the folding chair. The result is a charming romantic comedy tragically bogged down by the uncomfortable avoidance of its central plot point. read the full review | |
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 | | 16. X-Files I Want To Believe | | | Starring: David Duchovny Gillian Anderson Director: Chris Carter | | Format: DVD Release Date: 9/15/2009 | | Video Reviews Available: 1 |  | The X-Files: I Want to Believe - DVD Review By: Chris Barsanti - filmcritic.com DVD Reviews Published on: 11/21/2008 4:31 PM | |
Apparently the lamentable last season or two of The X-Files and the 1998 mega-episode film Fight the Future wasn't insult enough to the show's legacy as a groundbreaking, mythopoetic phenomenon. No, yet another film had to be made, some six years after the series ground to a halt, in order to further degrade one's memory of the once-respected pop-culture totem. read the full review | |
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 | | 32. Trust the Man | | | Starring: Billy Crudup Julianne Moore Director: Bart Freundlich | | Format: DVD Release Date: 4/10/2007 | User Rating: 5 |  | Trust the Man - DVD By: Anne Gilbert - filmcritic.com DVD Reviews Published on: 1/26/2007 9:37 PM | |
Something has made Bart Freundlich step away from torrid family melodrama, and thank goodness for it. The writer-director's Trust the Man is a grown-up and intelligent version of a romantic comedy, and for all that it is fluffy and simple entertainment, it's also very good. Julianne Moore, who has kept her talent for comedy a secret, plays Rebecca, a successful (if neurotic) actress who spends much of her time spurning advances from her bored, sex-addicted stay-at-home husband, Tom (David Duchovny). read the full review | |
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