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{“Brave” reviews are in: What do critics think?|Here’s what some of them had to say: “Youngsters with a taste for adventure will no doubt overlook the movie’s workmanlike outlines and applaud its spirited, self-reliant heroine, who proves to be as appealingly unruly as her tumble of Titian curls,” explains Ann Hornaday, Washington Post|”Brave” is easy to like but hard to love, a feel-good fable with the latest bells and whistles,” Joe Williams of the St|”The Pixar name used to mean something|And it never quite meant pleasantly safe, safely forgettable movies like this,” writes Stephen Whitty of the Newark Star-Ledger|This is the first time a Pixar production has featured a female lead character|The reviews are in for the animated film, which stars Merida, a fearless princess, voiced by Kelly McDonald|The film, directed by Mark Andrews, has scored a high 70 percent “Fresh” rating from critics on Rottentomatoes.com|”‘Brave’ isn’t a bull’s-eye, but it’s close enough,” writes Tom Long of the Detroit News|
It is an approach Democratic Sen. Richard Blumenthal said he supports. “Looking forward, I think that the approach has to be to condition our future aid on specific steps toward the rule of law and return to democracy,” Blumenthal said. But critics of the administration’s strategy believe the White House’s options are limited. Arizona Sen. John McCain said the Obama administration has lost credibility. “We have to comply with the law,” said McCain. “And this administration did not do that after threatening to do so.” Meanwhile, the president returns from his vacation Sunday evening. And increasingly there are concerns the lines of communication between Egypt’s military leaders and U.S. officials are breaking down.
“Substance abuse is a disease, which unfortunately doesn’t go away over night,” she wrote at the time

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