Eagle Eyeby M. Faust |
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Considerably slicker and more exciting than the generic trailers make it look, Eagle Eye is a nifty thriller with an odd detail that I don’t think a lot of audiences are going to notice: The bad guys win. Or at the very least, they get off unpunished.
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The Lucky Onesby George Sax |
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This Neil Burger-directed effort (he co-wrote the script) gives us two young soldiers home from the war on 30-day leave who hook up with an older reservist who’s back for good in one of those sweet and providential meetings movies rely on. |
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Nights in Rodantheby M. Faust |
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You don’t need to be a major film geek to understand that when a movie’s main stars are an attractive actor and an attractive actress, they are going to Do It. Exactly what “It” involves has to do with your own degree of prurience, but you know they’re not just going to talk about the weather, politics, and the price of cereal. (Or at least that if there’s no Itting, the lack thereof is going to be the major point of the movie.) |