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| CJ7From crude to cute March 19,
 2008 12:30:56 PM 
|   NO E.T. But cute.
 |  Since the ’80s and E.T. and the Gremlins, gross-out humor, special effects, and sentimentality have combined to seduce younger audiences. Stephen Chow, who showed genuine originality in Kung Fu Hustle (2004), makes a clumsy botch of that formula here. Chow plays a poor laborer who sacrifices all to put his son Dicky (Xu Jiao — a girl) through a private school. Dicky’s not so bright, however, and he’s a target for bullies, so he demands that dad get him an expensive gizmo with which to impress his tormentors. Dad instead gives him a dingy ball he found in the trash — and that turns out to be a space dog lost by a passing UFO, a kind of alien Hello Kitty. Dicky dreams that his new pal will grant his wish for retribution and unearned success. Instead, he has to settle for a fusillade of poops and a lesson in self-sacrifice. Chow lurches from crude to cute with mixed success, never fulfilling the film’s moments of genuine feeling or madcap absurdity. Mandarin | 86 minutes | Kendall Square
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												A copycat cop movie 
												Audrey Tautou goes slumming in Hors de prix 
												The Stones find satisfaction in Martin Scorsese’s Shine a Light 
												Predictable, pointless, and sad 
												The Boston Turkish Film Festival at the MFA 
												Call it American Ugly 
												Borderless realm of love, loss, and reconciliation 
												The Boston Underground Film Festival celebrates both 
												Artfully done soap opera
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 | A copycat cop movieVegetation and goreAs expected, smart supporting charactersAudrey Tautou goes slumming in Hors de prixUbiquitous Abigail Breslin in a mildly diverting adventureA plucky play that takes its eyes off the ballExploring the modern female lifeAn astonishingly unpredictable endingA plot centered around one man's penisPoetic Americana
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