The Stop Button

An appreciation of amusements.

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Entries Tagged as 'Nick Nolte'

Q & A (Sidney Lumet, 1990)

April 8th, 2008 No Comments

Sidney Lumet’s awkward examination of political corruption and race in New York City hits some bumps it shouldn’t. One of the major problems–because the film, after all the minor problems, only has two major problems–is the ending. Lumet has a perfectly well-intentioned ending, but he doesn’t quite get it. There’s not enough groundwork for it […]

Hulk (2003, Ang Lee)

March 25th, 2008 No Comments

Hulk had a huge box office drop-off after its opening weekend–wow, almost seventy percent. It’s actually somewhat lucky, because I’d have thought people would have gotten up and walked out of the theater. The Hulk doesn’t show up until about an hour into the movie and doesn’t do anything interesting for another half hour after […]

Lorenzo’s Oil (1992, George Miller)

May 26th, 2006 No Comments

I’m not sure when Lorenzo’s Oil lost me. The opening credits are set in East Africa, the focus is on Lorenzo–for those who don’t know, who don’t remember the previews if not the film, Lorenzo is a kid who gets a rare disease–and the film takes a lyric quality. George Miller was a good, straightforward […]

Everybody Wins (1990, Karel Reisz)

March 6th, 2006 No Comments

What a weird movie. Debra Winger cannot act. Don’t know exactly why Terms of Endearment worked, but she cannot act. She’s really terrible in this one. Arthur Miller adapted his play, which was from 1982–except it was a one act play. Somewhere in the adaptation, Everybody Wins becomes a ludicrous attempt at a thriller. It’s […]

Clean (2004, Olivier Assayas)

August 14th, 2005 No Comments

Clean answers a number of burning questions. Burning to someone, just not me.
1) Olivier Assayas is an excellent director.
2) Olivier Assayas is a terrible writer.
3) Maggie Cheung cannot act in English.
4) Maggie Cheung cannot sing in English.
5) Nick Nolte can survive anything.
I was surprised by numbers 1 and 3. Not so much by the rest.
After […]