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Review: Big Mommas: Like Father, Like Son
Reviews
Mr. Brooks
A film with a split-personality
By
BRETT MICHEL
|
May 30, 2007
MR. BROOKS
2.0
Stars
VIDEO: Watch the trailer for
Mr. Brooks
.
The press notes for Bruce A. Evans’s thriller begin with a quote from Robert Louis Stevenson’s
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
. If any film could be said to suffer from multiple-personality disorder, this would be the one(s), given the numerous plot lines (enough for a
Pirates of the Caribbean
sequel) and schizoid tonal shifts. Kevin Costner gives a fine performance as Earl Brooks, devoted Christian patriarch, philanthropist, and his community’s “man of the year.” If only his family and friends could see and hear Marshall (William Hurt), who’s clearly enjoying himself as our hero’s imaginary Dark Side, urging the good Mr. Brooks to “kill!” during long conversations. Comedian Dane Cook plays a voyeuristic photographer who gets a lead on the Thumbprint Killer and winds up trying to blackmail him. Demi Moore is hilariously awful as a trust-fund police detective who’s tracking Brooks, but why does she bother when there’s a killer on every ridiculous corner of the screen?
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[
02/17
]
Festival Ballet Providence presents UP CLOSE ON HOPE
@ Black Box Theater
[
02/17
]
"Dana Levin: A Classical Realist In the 21st Century," an exhibit of paintings
@ Bert Gallery
[
02/17
]
Mary Poppins
@ Providence Performing Arts Center
ARTICLES BY BRETT MICHEL
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Made for a modest budget of $17 million — and feeling like it (who needs convincing explosions in an action movie?), Dante Lam's latest still gets the job done from a run-and-gun standpoint.
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| January 10, 2012
Many a teleplay for The Twilight Zone threatened atomic Armageddon, and though Frontier(s) director Xavier Gens nukes New York in the opening shots of his latest thriller, he finds more inspiration in the horrors of human nature as seen in the old TV show's episode "The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street."
REVIEW: MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE – GHOST PROTOCOL
| December 20, 2011
Impossible Missions Force agent Ethan Hunt (Tom Cruise) returns to the screen in dramatic fashion as new teammate Jane (Paula Patton) and the returning Benji (Simon Pegg) break him out of a Russian prison.
See all articles by:
BRETT MICHEL
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