Review of A Walk Among the Tombstones (2014) by Richard Corliss for TIME Magazine — 18 Sep 2014
The cluttered climax, in a Mother Bates cellar, explains little of the killers’ psychology; for that you have to read the book. But it does let Neeson assert his primacy as the cinema’s most graven, grieving, grievous senior citizen — a figure who doesn’t so much star in his films as haunt them.
This ghost of a movie star is never more at home than when walking among the tombstones.
You can read the full review where it was originally posted online.
This review of A Walk Among the Tombstones (2014) was written by Richard Corliss and published by TIME Magazine on 18 Sep 2014.
A Walk Among the Tombstones has generally received mixed reviews.
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