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Mindhunters
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All reviews for Mindhunters

    TheWorkingDeadTheWorkingDead Renny Harlin's Crimes Against H ...
    by TheWorkingDead in TheWorkingDead Blog
    disliked it.
    Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
    "[Spoiler warning! I normally try to avoid giving away too much information about a movie, but this weeks "film", Mindhunters, requires I spend a bit of time going into detail about the ending. If your at all interested in this movie, and want to be surprised by the climax, I advise you to skip this entire post. Actually, I'd advise you to skip this movie altogether.] Those of you who are regular readers of this blog(I'm sure those people exist) may remember during my post on Nightmare on Elm Street that I expressed distaste for Finnish filmmaker Renny Harlin. His films usually start out promisingly enough, but devolve continuously until they resemble made-for-basic-cable cheapies and sub-Bruckheimer action drivel. I'm maybe being too harsh on the man, and somewhere in his oeuvre he may have a few good films, but everything I've seen leads me to believe that isn't the case. The one film of his I do actively enjoy, Nightmare 4, is still only the 4th or 5th best in ... " [More]
    MovieBabeMovieBabe Kontroll - Mindhunters
    by MovieBabe in MovieBabe Blog
    hasn't rated it.
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    "By Tricia Olszewski There’s a gripping story about the dark side coming to a theater near you, but it’s not the one that takes place in a galaxy far, far away. Though, at times, it may certainly seem to: Kontroll, the debut of Hungarian-American writer-director Nimród Antal, is set entirely underground, in the Budapest subway system. If spending 106 minutes on a foreign Red Line doesn’t sound all that entertaining to you, rest assured that Antal makes his vision of the public transit everyone loves to hate a universe that’s compellingly odd, aggressive, and lonely—and often even fun. A clipboard-mounted disclaimer read by a metro agent at the beginning of Kontroll emphasizes that Antal’s story is in no way reflective of the actual Budapest Transport Limited and that the fictional events about to take place are products of the director’s imagination, created as he indulged his interest in “the struggle between good and evil.&r ... " [More]
 
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