
Margaret Cho returns to the concert stage with a "killer" one-woman show filmed live at the Warner Theatre in Washington D.C., Assassin features a fresh dose of Margaret's ground-breaking and controversial brand of humor.... (Full plot summary below)
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Margaret Cho returns to the concert stage with a "killer" one-woman show filmed live at the Warner Theatre in Washington D.C., Assassin features a fresh dose of Margaret's ground-breaking and controversial brand of humor.
Leave your thoughts about Margaret Cho: Assassin.
| Entertainment WeeklyOwen GleibermanEven those who may agree with Cho's agenda are never allowed to forget that it is an agenda. |
| Reel.comTimothy KnightThe misses ultimately far outnumber the hits. |
| VarietyDennis HarveyInspiration is running thin in comedian Margaret Cho's fourth concert film, a routine stand-up set that compares poorly to her oft-hilarious first two. |
| Los Angeles TimesKevin ThomasShe has something to say to everyone, and one can only hope that she is preaching to more than her choir of devoted fans. |
| New York TimesJeannette CatsoulisThough specializing in confrontational, caustic and often raunchy humor, Ms. Cho has a relaxed and playful stage presence. |
| TV Guide MagazineKen FoxFrom the proposed constitutional amendment banning gay marriage and the president's opposition to the morning-after pill to his pandering to fundamentalist family groups, Cho has all things Bush-related in her crosshairs, and she's taking no prisoners. |
| TheMovieChicks.comCherryl Dawson and Leigh Ann PaloneNot as personal as some of her previous tours, focusing instead on social commentary about today's headlines, but she still manages to get in some great lines. |
| Flick FilosopherMaryAnn JohansonWe're told she's 'controversial,' but honestly, all she does is lob obvious cheap shots that do nothing but sanction her audience's status quo. Where's the controversy in that? |
| Boston GlobeJanice PageAssassin is funnier and less awkward than her last concert film, 2004's ''CHO Revolution," but nowhere near as consistently gut busting as 2002's ''Notorious C.H.O." or (first and still best) 2000's ''I'm the One That I Want." |
| Film Journal InternationalDavid NohI saw Cho perform much of this material live [...] and found it bracingly hilarious. The movie she has made of it is an entirely different matter. |