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Alan Arkin

Stand Up Guys

score: 
A+
Director: 
Fisher Stevens
Cast: 
Al Pacino, Christopher Walken, Alan Arkin, Julianna Margulies, Katheryn Winnick
Running Time: 
95
Rated: 
R
Author(s): 

Argo

score: 
A+
Director: 
Ben Affleck
Cast: 
Ben Affleck, Alan Arkin, John Goodman, Bryan Cranston
Running Time: 
120
Rated: 
R
Author(s): 

Thin Ice

score: 
B
Director: 
Jill Sprecher
Cast: 
Greg Kinnear, Billy Crudup, Alan Arkin
Running Time: 
93
Rated: 
R
Author(s): 

City Island

score: 
C-
Director: 
Raymond de Felitta
Cast: 
Andy Garcia, Julianna Margulies, Emily Mortimer, Alan Arkin
Running Time: 
103
Rated: 
PG-13
Author(s): 
It was good. And then it went off-track. And then it got good again. And then it lost me. Over and over it seemed like City Island didn’t know what it wanted to accomplish. Was it a movie about a hilarious, dysfunctional family? Was it a lesson in communicating with the ones you love? It could have been both, but I never quite figured it out where it was trying to land.

Marley & Me

score: 
B+
Director: 
David Frankel
Cast: 
Owen Wilson, Jennifer Aniston, Eric Dane, Alan Arkin
Running Time: 
120
Rated: 
PG
Author(s): 
Much like any other dog, Marley is a canine on a mission: A mission to ruin lives and breed evil. Well, at least in the minds of John and Jenny Gorgan that is. From the rambunctious behavior to the acts of public indecency, Marley is easily one of the worst dogs to ever be allowed indoors. But as time flies by, and the overly active pup begins to age, his rowdy antics grow on his adoptive family, making for one of the most touching and relatable films of 2008.

Get Smart

score: 
B
Director: 
Peter Segal
Cast: 
Steve Carell, Anne Hathaway, Dwayne Johnson, Alan Arkin, Masi Oka
Running Time: 
110
Rated: 
PG-13
Over the last several years, funny-man Steve Carell has attempted to escape the realm of television and enter the world of theatrical film. However, with such flops as Evan Almighty and Dan in Real Life, Carell has been forced to rely on his regular stint on the small screen as Michael Scott on NBC's 'The Office.' Luckily, the man of awkward humility is showing no signs of slowing down as he attempts to bring the infamous Maxwell Smart to the big screen in Warner Bros. adaptation of the 1960's television show, 'Get Smart.'

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