Arts & Entertainment

Movie Reviews: The Internship, Finding Joy, Much Ado About Nothing, The Purge

Find movie reviews for new shows and showtimes in theaters around Ladue, Frontenac, Olivette and the St. Louis area.

Are you a movie buff? Or maybe you just enjoy the occasional dinner and a movie date? Either way, Patch would be thrilled to have you on board as a movie blogger. All you have to do is shoot a quick email to Ryan Martin at ryan.martin@patch.com.

The Internship

Stephanie Zacharek, The Riverfront Times: "Eager young people can't find jobs; qualified older people can't find jobs. There's nothing funny about that, which is exactly why someone ought to be making comedies about it. The Internship, in which downtrodden old-school salespeople Vince Vaughn and Owen Wilson enter the 21st century and land internships at Google, might have been just the palliative for this sad state of affairs. But when you need cheering up about your inability to pay the rent or your lack of health insurance, do you really want to drop 10 precious shekels (or more) on a movie so desperately unfunny it makes you want to slit your wrists?" More on Riverfront Times --

The Purge

Find out what's happening in Ladue-Frontenacwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Kevin C. Johnson, STLToday.com: "In this barely futuristic thriller, set in 2022, all crime is legal for one night a year as Americans are urged to 'release the beast,' letting hate and violence run wild for 12 hours. Doing so reduces crime the other 364 days of the year, it is reasoned. From 7 p.m. to 7 a.m., all emergency services are suspended, and absolutely anything goes" More on STLToday

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Much Ado About Nothing

A. O. Scott, The New York Times: "Joss Whedon’s adaptation of 'Much Ado About Nothing' — perhaps the liveliest and most purely delightful movie I have seen so far this year — draws out the essential screwball nature of Shakespeare’s comedy. It may be the martini-toned black-and-white cinematography, the soigné Southern California setting, or the combative courtship of Amy Acker’s angular, sharp-tongued Beatrice and Alexis Denisof’s grouchy, hangdog Benedick, but from its very first scenes, Mr. Whedon’s film crackles with a busy, slightly wayward energy that recalls the classic romantic sparring of the studio era." More on The New York Times
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Finding Joy

Find out what's happening in Ladue-Frontenacwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Nicolas Rapold, The New York Times: "A clumsy mixed-nuts comedy, Carlo De Rosa’s 'Finding Joy' suggests Mad Libs with its story of an uptight, failed writer who moves back in with his family. Whether stuffing its graceless hero into a clown suit on a construction site or sending him on a first date with an offbeat neighbor to give a safe-sex talk at a home for the elderly, the film is funny only on paper, if that." More on The New York Times


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