Jordan Chodorow reviews movies on a scale of zero to four stars. Find reviews of all the latest releases here, along with a searchable database of all reviews from January 2012 to today.
Showing posts with label Catherine Zeta-Jones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Catherine Zeta-Jones. Show all posts
Sunday, July 21, 2013
Red 2
“Red 2” is yet another sequel that’s better than the original, though in this case not quite enough better to recommend running out and paying movie-theater prices. You won’t be upset, though, if you rent it.
Monday, February 11, 2013
Side Effects

The protean director Steven Soderbergh, whose "sex, lies, and videotape" snuck the Palme D'Or out from under Spike Lee's "Do The Right Thing" at Cannes in 1987 (earning him a permanent soft spot in my heart), has in the subsequent quarter-century given us terrific films as disparate as "King of the Hill," "Out of Sight," "Traffic," and "Ocean's Eleven." For his self-labeled swan song, though, he's chosen a convoluted and supremely silly thriller that, with its one-car crashes, lesbian therapists, and involuntary institutionalizations, ends up bordering on camp.
Wednesday, January 23, 2013
Broken City
Tuesday, December 11, 2012
Lay the Favorite
Complete the following sentences with the correct form of "lie" or "lay." (Answers below.)
1.) The maid has _____ the duvet over the bed each morning for the past six years.
2.) Among them, the three hens _____ all of the eggs consumed on the farm.
3.) The couch potato _____ on the divan all afternoon watching football games.
4.) The curio has _____ on the étagѐre since Theresa brought it back from Bangalore.
5.) The vacationers had no more important plan for the morning than to _____ their blanket on the sand and _____ on it for hours.
Sunday, June 17, 2012
Rock of Ages
Adam Shankman’s “Rock of Ages” keeps the streak alive: No good movie since “Aladdin” has relied for laughs on reaction shots from a monkey. Shankman has assembled a kitchen-sink cast for his affectionate homage to 80s hair metal, of whom approximately one (Mary J. Blige) can actually sing. The rest vary from barely passable (Catherine Zeta-Jones as the mayor’s wife, who’s intent on shutting down Sunset Strip, Tom Cruise as debauched rock god Stacee Jaxx) to unspeakable (Alec Baldwin as the proprietor of the Bourbon Room, Russell Brand as his lieutenant, Paul Giamatti as Jaxx’s venal agent).
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