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A Hole in One

A Hole in One (2004)

May. 02,2004
|
4.9
| Comedy

A gangster makes an employee pose as a doctor to prevent his troubled girlfriend from getting a lobotomy.

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Reviews

Pacionsbo
2004/05/02

Absolutely Fantastic

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Intcatinfo
2004/05/03

A Masterpiece!

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Rosie Searle
2004/05/04

It's the kind of movie you'll want to see a second time with someone who hasn't seen it yet, to remember what it was like to watch it for the first time.

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Staci Frederick
2004/05/05

Blistering performances.

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SONNYK_USA
2004/05/06

Wildly uneven acting and directing seemingly presumes that the movie audience has already had their own 'transorbital' lobotomies before witnessing this cranial-comedic mess!Michelle Williams ("The Baxter") continues as 'indie princess' in another film that's beneath her talents as an actress. Why Hollywood has failed to discover her we'll never know but if she keeps making movies like this one she may never get found.First-time writer-director Richard Ledes fails in both departments and somehow manages to make even the usually reliable 'Meat Loaf' turn in a substandard, way over-the-top performance.Beware this one and fans of the actors should wait for the DVD which probably won't be long in coming ... you've been warned!

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GrcCstn
2004/05/07

The film uses real events, including grainy footage, to flesh out the environment of the main characters, but there are also hypnotic, color-saturated views of breaking waves. All the visual elements work together to pull us forward - the tones and textures are rich and absorbing. At the same time, the story moves ahead in a confusion of scary and strange images contrasted with that hard sheen of normalcy associated with the 50's. We come to know the characters slowly and the film is a continual discovery. Many of the images strike a deep chord, though it may not be immediately apparent why. I would like to compare "A Hole in One" to some of Yeats' best poetry. Over time, the pictures and words come washing back and new meanings may take form alongside the first reading. In a similar way, the film is firmly rooted in its time frame, and yet speaks to a contemporary audience on many levels. The actors' performances do the writing full justice.

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