It won’t convince Crank: High Voltage’s naysayers, but for those on the film’s insane wavelength, it’s a worthy DVD package.
The film is a pure narcotized rush of blistering action, odious stereotypes, and shock-for-shock’s-sake nastiness.
Director Catherine Jeffs lucked out when she scored Amy Adams and Emily Blunt to co-star in her mildly pleasing dramedy Sunshine Cleaning.
“Family Man” is the third episode of Fear Itself but should have been the first.
Is the film dirty enough for Redman to not clean his act up?
Dirty is clumsier and less earnest than Crash, but it’s every bit as totalitarian.
Iny, miny, mino, mo. Who’s the next motherfucker to go?
Bennett Miller’s film has an axe to grind against its subject, the quite horrible but quite gifted writer Truman Capote.
Don’t be surprised to spend the majority of the film checking your watch.
Rules of Attraction is less a film than a queasy collection of vignettes that both mourn and mock teen anomie.