A.A. Dowd
Select another critic »For 852 reviews, this critic has graded:
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49% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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48% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 0.8 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
A.A. Dowd 's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 66 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | The Long Day Closes | |
| Lowest review score: | Replicas | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 528 out of 852
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Mixed: 278 out of 852
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Negative: 46 out of 852
852
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- A.A. Dowd
Moonlight lets us see Chiron, to see his silent heartache written across three different faces, and that seems a hell of a lot better than good.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 20, 2016
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- A.A. Dowd
What’s uniquely remarkable about The Long Day Closes, Terence Davies’ 1992 return to his own childhood, is how gloriously disorganized its story feels.- The A.V. Club
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- A.A. Dowd
Lady Bird is something truly special: a coming-of-age comedy so funny, perceptive, and truthful that it makes most other films about adolescence look like little more than lessons in cliché.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Sep 10, 2017
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- A.A. Dowd
Marriage Story, unlike so many other breakup movies, offers venom in drips and drops instead of drowning us in it, because it knows that no matter how far apart Charlie and Nicole drift, the feelings that first brought them together are still there, informing their flawed attempts to move on without destroying each other.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Sep 11, 2019
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- A.A. Dowd
For what it sets out to accomplish, across a brisk 98 minutes, Petzold’s film feels perfectly judged. And it builds to an ending that’s just plain perfect.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jul 22, 2015
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- A.A. Dowd
The Look Of Silence is a powerful gesture of political rebellion, one whose boldest action isn’t damning mass murderers to their faces, but being willing to believe that their stranglehold on country and history could be broken.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jul 15, 2015
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- A.A. Dowd
A small film of big insights, heavy on dialogue but light on speeches, 45 Years often seems closer in spirit to a ghost story: Nothing goes “boo” or rearranges the furniture, but there’s a unmissable sense that we’re watching two people haunted by a specter from another lifetime.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Dec 22, 2015
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- A.A. Dowd
There’s a cumulative power here that transcends any rough patches. Boyhood isn’t perfect, but it’s an astonishing, one-of-a-kind accomplishment—and further proof that Linklater is one of the most daring, ambitious filmmakers working today.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jul 9, 2014
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- A.A. Dowd
In showing us the interest one man takes in everything around him, he’s suggesting that living a life of simplicity and security can be conducive to beautiful expression—even, or perhaps especially, in a place as ordinary as Paterson.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Dec 21, 2016
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- A.A. Dowd
Two Days, One Night is a small miracle of a movie, a drama so purely humane that it makes most attempts at audience uplift look crass and calculated by comparison.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Dec 22, 2014
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- A.A. Dowd
Four films into a sterling career, the director’s made his most beguiling, profoundly human work yet.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Dec 18, 2013
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- A.A. Dowd
Just as swoon-worthy, and essential, as its predecessors, Before Midnight reveals the full scope of Linklater’s ambition. This is not just another stellar follow-up, but the latest entry in what’s shaping up to be a grand experiment — the earnest attempt to depict the life of a relationship onscreen, decade by increasingly tumultuous decade. In the process of justifying its own existence, Before Midnight redeems the very notion of sequels.- The A.V. Club
- Posted May 22, 2013
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- A.A. Dowd
More "Full Metal Jacket" than "Dead Poet’s Society," the film is an epic battle of wills between two fanatical artists, one doing everything in his power to painfully make a master out of the other.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 8, 2014
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- A.A. Dowd
There’s great integrity to showing life as it is really is, warts and all. But sometimes showing it as it should be has value, too.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 5, 2017
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- A.A. Dowd
What Coppola achieved is a psychodrama about the dangers of being locked in your own private world, of slipping on noise-canceling headphones of any variety. Listening and hearing are not the same thing. Confusing one for the other can have dire consequences.- The A.V. Club
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- A.A. Dowd
Fans of early John Carpenter will immediately identify the master’s influence — on the voyeuristic slink of the camera, the synth pulse of Rich Vreeland’s throwback score, and the transformation of “safe,” warmly lit residential environments into landscapes of dread.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 11, 2015
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- A.A. Dowd
Manchester By The Sea sweats the big stuff and the small stuff, and that’s key to its anomalous power: This is a staggering American drama, almost operatic in the heartbreak it chronicles.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Nov 16, 2016
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- A.A. Dowd
Blue Ruin rarely resembles anything but itself. Much of the singularity can be attributed to the film’s atypical hero, surely one of the year’s great characters.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Apr 23, 2014
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- A.A. Dowd
There’s a tragic, moving resonance to the film’s vision of two marginalized characters—one Black, the other a woman, both stripped of everything—finding common ground in their parallel trauma and resistance. It’s there in the scenes between Franciosi and first-time actor Ganambarr, forging empathy and a mutual respect in the fire of survival, without a hint of bathetic sentimentality.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jan 27, 2019
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- A.A. Dowd
If there’s any fault to find in this expertly directed, frequently hilarious study of imploding male ego, it’s that Östlund basically arrives upon a perfect ending — one that brings the movie full circle, both dramatically and visually — and then bypasses it in favor of a more muddled one. But as climactic missteps go, it’s not exactly disastrous.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 23, 2014
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- A.A. Dowd
What’s special about Logan is that it manages to deliver the visceral goods, all the hardcore Wolverine action its fans could desire, while still functioning as a surprisingly thoughtful, even poignant drama—a terrific movie, no “comic-book” qualifier required.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 1, 2017
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- A.A. Dowd
For all the chaos erupting at all times, we never lose track of what’s going on, because it’s been staged not just with diabolical mischief, but also total clarity. What a movie.- The A.V. Club
- Posted May 13, 2015
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- A.A. Dowd
Polley’s fledgling foray into documentary filmmaking is also an investigative mystery, a real-life soap opera, and — most compellingly, perhaps — a searching “interrogation” (the director’s word) of the hows and whys of storytelling itself.- The A.V. Club
- Posted May 8, 2013
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- A.A. Dowd
What the two actors lack in vocal polish they make up for in commitment — and chemistry. La La Land is the third film to romantically pair Gosling and Stone, after "Crazy, Stupid, Love" and "Gangster Squad," and that history of onscreen relationships fortifies their playful rapport:- The A.V. Club
- Posted Dec 7, 2016
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- A.A. Dowd
Part of the movie’s brilliance is in how it questions the very concept of a good deed.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Nov 11, 2021
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- A.A. Dowd
In many respects, Adam and Eve are nocturnal cousins to the angels from Wim Wenders’ "Wings Of Desire": They’re secret observers of history, living records of the past with little control over the future. But Jarmusch has no interest in the kind of guilt and grief Wenders wove through his movie; Only Lovers comes in a hipper, sexier shade of melancholy.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Apr 9, 2014
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- A.A. Dowd
Transit doesn’t just freeze its characters in place. They’re stuck in time, too, on a continuum that connects today’s exiled lost souls to yesterday’s. Because when it comes to people without country fleeing for their lives across the globe, there is no old or new, no then or now, no past or future, just an awful present tense. Transit, meanwhile, looks from this present tense like an early contender for the best movie of 2019. Or wait, is it 1939?- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 1, 2019
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- A.A. Dowd
The plight of this struggling family unit weighs more heavily on the heart with each passing minute, making Stray Dogs the rare marathon-length art film that seems to grow less oppressive the longer it goes on.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Sep 10, 2014
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- A.A. Dowd
Pawlikowski, who doesn’t waste a shot (nor compose one that isn’t a work of art on its lonesome), creates a gripping present tense from the clarity and efficiency of his storytelling: No matter how often he lurches us forward in time, we remain locked into the emotional sphere of his characters.- The A.V. Club
- Posted May 17, 2018
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- A.A. Dowd
The queasy thrill of Sandler’s live-wire performance is the way he keys us right into Howard’s electric joy, putting everything on the line, consequences be damned. It’s a pure shot of the gambler’s high, and Uncut Gems gets us hooked on it, too. By the end, you want to hurl and cheer.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Sep 11, 2019
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