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The Alamo

Description
The roads cross at San Antonio de Bexar at a small, ruined mission called The Alamo, a place where myth meets history and legend meets reality. In 1836, General Sam Houston's rallying cry for Texas independence and organizes a rebel army to liberate Texas from the brutal rule of Mexican dictator General Santa Anna.
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The Alamo
CRITICS OF "The Alamo"
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Hollywood.com
Resource

August 31, 2006

Not even good sets, plenty of historical detail, and Billy Bob Thornton can put life into director John Lee Hancock's slow-moving, poorly acted Texan saga.
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Common Sense Media
Resource

September 09, 2010

Doesn't work despite Thornton's top performance.
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Washington Post

April 09, 2004

Absorbing yet ever-so-slightly jaundiced retelling.
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Cinema em Cena

July 07, 2006

Com exceção das performances de Thornton e Quaid, o filme traz caracterizações estereotipadas e freqüentemente se entrega ao sentimentalismo barato.
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Washington Post

April 09, 2004

With the notable exception of Thornton's Crockett, none of these characters engages you.
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Fat Guys at the Movies
Resource

February 04, 2015

Something was missing from the film. It lacked punch.
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Village Voice

April 13, 2004

It's dull, talky, and sometimes maudlin.
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ColeSmithey.com
Resource

May 05, 2009

This dog of a movie confirms that in 1836 Texas was stolen from Mexico by a bunch of opportunistic bastards whose descendants went on to use similarly underhanded methods to steal the office of the White House in 2000.
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Toronto Star
Resource

April 09, 2004

Although handsomely mounted, and boasting some historically immaculate dressing and impressive battle sequences, it's a movie that ultimately can't convincingly get behind the idea of sacrifice.
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Christianity Today

September 01, 2006

There are great moments, though it's ultimately a lightweight film and certainly not an Oscar contender.
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Ebert & Roeper

April 12, 2004

Thanks to the skills of director and co-screenwriter John Lee Hancock and a deep cast of reliable veterans, this is an authentic and rousing version of the most famous battle in Texas history.
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Seattle Times
Resource

April 09, 2004

It may be history, but it's too meticulous to be believable.
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