Writing for the New York Times, A.O. Scott said the film "looks and sounds like a movie without quite being one. It's more like a Pinterest page or a piece of fan art, the record of an enthusiasm that is, to the outside observer, indistinguishable from confusion."[5] Peter Travers of Rolling Stone called it "a botch job for the ages" and said it "appears to be adapting the Cliff’s Notes version of the book instead of
punishment and crime
IN the HALL
[this post was cowritten by encounters ltd]
and now back to the show