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Review: Pom Wonderful Presents: The Greatest Movie Ever Sold
Reviews
Gracie
A familiar girl-power tale
By
BROOKE HOLGERSON
|
May 30, 2007
GRACIE
1.5
Stars
VIDEO: Watch the trailer for
Gracie
.
“Inspired by” the life of actress Elizabeth Shue (the film is directed by her husband, Davis Guggenheim, and Shue plays a small role),
Gracie
treads territory familiar to anyone who’s seen a sports movie in the past 10 years. Carly Schroeder’s Gracie is the only daughter in a soccer-obsessed family who are trying to get over a tragedy. She thinks she can win the love of her taciturn dad (Dermot Mulroney, looking suitably rough around the edges) by trying out for the boys’ soccer team (it’s 1978, and there is no girls team) and weathering the increasingly hostile abuse of the male players. It’s a familiar girl-power tale, and Guggenheim does nothing to reinvent it, hitting each expected mark with rote predictability. He has as much passion for the movie as Gracie is supposed to feel for soccer; you’re left to wonder why either bothered.
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With Snakes on a Plane and World Trade Center opening on the same day, this summer won’t be offering the usual escapist fare.
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Topics
:
Reviews
,
Elisabeth Shue
,
Davis Guggenheim
,
Dermot Mulroney
|
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ARTICLES BY BROOKE HOLGERSON
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| January 20, 2009
If you find the sight of a grown man rolling around the mall on a Segway hilarious, this is the movie for you.
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| September 17, 2008
The prolific Tyler Perry is at it again, offering subpar entertainment to audiences so starved for sustenance they’ll eat his cheese.
THE ROCKER
| August 20, 2008
Rainn Wilson of The Office gets promoted to the big screen with this anemic comedy directed by The Full Monty helmer Peter Cattaneo.
KIT KITTREDGE: AN AMERICAN GIRL
| July 01, 2008
Although her film has as much visual flair as an after-school special, director Patricia Rozema gives an appealing attention to period detail, and Breslin is sweet in her first starring role.
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| May 21, 2008
Trier captures the moment when the recklessness of youth gives way to adult responsibilities, and the way childhood friendships can fall apart when different paths are taken.
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BROOKE HOLGERSON
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