Alonso Duralde
- 
				
					
						
							
								‘Barbershop: The Next Cut’ Review: Ice Cube Comedy Layers Workplace Sitcom with Social AdvocacyEnsemble piece attempts to balance gags with an examination of the ills of Chicago’s South Side, and mostly pulls it off 
- 
				
					
						
							
								‘Louder Than Bombs’ Review: Jesse Eisenberg Bolsters Joachim Trier’s Powerful English-Language DebutNorwegian filmmaker makes a smooth transition with this wrenching but hopeful tale of a family confronting its secrets 
- 
				
					
						
							
								‘Demolition’ Review: Jake Gyllenhaal Grapples With Delayed Grief in Dark DramedyDespite a third-act skid into sap, this look at a young widower in denial recalls the early, emotionally subversive films of David O. Russell 
- 
				
					
						
							
								‘The Jungle Book’ Review: ‘Babe’ Meets Rudyard Kipling in Mostly Satisfying RemakeThe tigers and the turtles talk in Jon Favreau’s reimagining of the classic Disney cartoon – and the visual trickery satisfies both the eyes and the emotions 
- 
				
					
						
							
								‘Batman v Superman’: Ben Affleck Delivers a Grizzled Batman – and Bruce Wayne as Action Hero“Argo” director’s casting inspired fanboy freakouts, but critic Alonso Duralde calls the star’s take on the Dark Knight a highlight of new movie 
- 
				
					
						
							
								‘Batman v Superman’ Review: Ben Affleck’s Got the Cool Car, But Wonder Woman Steals the ShowThe movie’s only female non-pawn or hostage, Gal Gadot’s Amazon warrior saves this sludgy epic from superhero sameness 
- 
				
					
						
							
								‘The Clan’ Review: Kidnapping Is the Family Business — and Business Is BoomingThis Argentine Oscar entry from the producers of “Wild Tales” (including Pedro Almodóvar) finds bleak comedy in trickle-down Fascism 
- 
				
					
						
							
								‘Midnight Special’ Review: Michael Shannon Fugitive Tale Drives Confidently, Then Takes Fatal Wrong TurnShannon and writer-director Jeff Nichols’ fourth collaboration sets up a fascinating story and then answers its mysteries with a legendarily disastrous third act 
- 
				
					
						
							
								‘The Perfect Match’ Review: Terrence Jenkins’ Bland Affability Fits This Generic Rom-Com All Too WellThe former E! host plays a Lothario who learns to love in yet another formulaic comedy (produced by Queen Latifah) where the supporting players get all the best lines 
- 
				
					
						
							
								‘Hello, My Name Is Doris’ Review: Sally Field Really, Really Tries to Elevate This Sour ComedyThe two-time Oscar winner works hard to create a real character out of this collection of eccentricities, but this shallow, condescending movie constantly undermines her efforts 
- 
				
					
						
							
								’10 Cloverfield Lane’ Review: JJ Abrams’ Thriller Is ‘Twilight Zone’ Meets ‘No Exit’Mary Elizabeth Winstead, John Goodman and John Gallagher, Jr. survive possible doom in a tale that’s three parts Rod Serling, one part Jean-Paul Sartre 
- 
				
					
						
							
								‘Whiskey Tango Foxtrot’ Review: Tina Fey Goes to Kabul in Sharp, Savvy Wartime ComedyReteaming with “30 Rock” collaborator Robert Carlock gives Fey her best big-screen opportunity to date, as a sheltered news producer who finds herself on the front lines 
- 
				
					
						
							
								‘Triple 9’ Review: Kate Winslet and Company Held Hostage by Idiotic Good-Cop-Bad-Cop TaleDon’t let the distinguished cast – which also includes Casey Affleck, Anthony Mackie and Woody Harrelson – fool you into expecting anything but an embarrassment 
- 
				
					
						
							
								‘A War’ Review: Denmark’s Oscar Nominee Explores Combat on the Battlefield and at HomeIn the trenches, on the homefront or facing charges in a courtroom, a soldier and his family find themselves facing heavy demands and ethical dilemmas 
- 
				
					
						
							
								‘How to Be Single’ Review: Dakota Johnson Rom-Com Offers Too Few SurprisesRebel Wilson, Alison Brie and Leslie Mann co-star in a disjointed and intermittently funny comedy that does, at least, avoids some predictable clichés about love and marriage 














