Aaron Hillis
Select another critic »For 194 reviews, this critic has graded:
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40% higher than the average critic
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9% same as the average critic
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51% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 7.5 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Aaron Hillis' Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 58 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Take Out | |
| Lowest review score: | Unthinkable: An Airline Captain's Story | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 99 out of 194
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Mixed: 44 out of 194
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Negative: 51 out of 194
194
movie
reviews
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- By Critic Score
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- Premiere
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- Premiere
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- Aaron Hillis
Under the clichéd spell of rock-and-roll promiscuity and pills popped, Seigner shows astonishing range as the detached superstar who still fixates on her ex-boyfriend and has mood swings like a manic-depressive on fast-forward.- Premiere
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- Aaron Hillis
DiG! never delves deep enough to act as a true cautionary tale. It's an amusingly drunken PBS-worthy human-interest doc, unless you're too old or not cool enough to have played in the embarrassing hipster zoo, in which case DiG! may be the closest you'll ever get to the uncaged animals.- Premiere
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- Aaron Hillis
Not even within earshot of a masterpiece, Man on Fire, based on its ratio of production costs to quality alone, may prove to be the worst movie of 2004.- Premiere
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- Aaron Hillis
The real top billing, what audience-goers are obviously shelling out to see, is the computer-generated chaos, and as they should: Digital technology has caught up with our collective imaginations Now More Than Ever.- Premiere
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- Aaron Hillis
Technically, it rewards with nothing less than painterly cinematography and a seamless surge of organic soundscapes, but the story is entirely predicated on a weather metaphor so obvious that even an unplugged Doppler radar could detect it.- Premiere
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- Aaron Hillis
Watching the Vogels mull over art that they don't need to understand only makes their delight more infectious.- Village Voice
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- Aaron Hillis
A conventional but genuinely heartrending exposé of the Indiana boy who grew to be a powerful religious cult leader, director Stanley Nelson's thoroughly researched doc is not a posthumous character assassination, which would be all too easy and unnecessary.- Premiere
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- Aaron Hillis
Fails in what amounts to its only distinct purpose: to smugly push the envelope of depravity farther than anyone else.- Premiere
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- Aaron Hillis
For such a pedestrian exercise in Spielbergian sentiment, the somewhat stale Seabiscuit dunks into some gravy moments; the always dependable William H. Macy is three honks and six rattles of comic relief as the sound effects–happy, kooky radio reporter Tick Tock McGlaughlin, and the racing scenes themselves are spectacular.- Premiere
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- Premiere
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- Aaron Hillis
From Oshima’s later career (after one stroke, he made 1999’s Taboo; after two strokes, it’s unclear whether he’ll direct again), most notable is this bilingual, end-of-WWII tearjerker about forgiveness and understanding between cultures, which could have been dubbed The Man Who Fell to Java.- Village Voice
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- Aaron Hillis
What once was a gifted comic's fluid improvisation is now a doddering old man so embarrassing he's uncomfortable to watch, and the surrogate father-daughter needling he has with Johansson is creepy when you realize Woody the director is shooting her seductively in that skintight bathing suit.- Premiere
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- Aaron Hillis
What On the Run has going for it: solid acting, taut editing, smartly economical dialogue, an elevatingly reverberant score, and a rousing vitality that left me salivating for The Trilogy in full.- Premiere
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- Aaron Hillis
When the secret is finally divulged, it’s such a letdown that it feels unfairly manipulative to have sat through such agonizing tedium.- Premiere
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- Premiere
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- Aaron Hillis
Paprika ain't no kiddie 'toon, even if its thumpin' techno-pop and bubble-gum thrills have the same splashy palette as an episode of "Pokémon" or "Dragon Ball Z."- Premiere
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- Aaron Hillis
This critic found much to digest (pun barely intended), with thoughts of FDA politics and standard practices, the ritualism and sacrifice of our own species, why baby animals are considered protectable innocents (and inversely, grown steaks-to-be just a fact of life), plus, on a meta level, how people's dietary philosophies will inform their reactions to the work.- Premiere
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- Aaron Hillis
Law owns every scene he’s in--which is literally all of them--plus a decent supporting cast and dapper dialogue truly make for a breezy good time.- Premiere
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- Aaron Hillis
A clumsy, dreadfully preposterous and pedestrian thriller that seems to believe loud noises are the same as good frights.- Premiere
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- Aaron Hillis
As a visceral experience, it’s entrancing, especially during Shinji’s fight sequences, when his anxieties are cruelly exacerbated by having his body and mind symbiotically bonded to his father’s combat toy.- Village Voice
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- Aaron Hillis
It's an overall heady conceit about image and invention, clever and fun with compelling lead performances -- especially Reynolds, who finally gets to show some chops in a career littered with Van Wilder–grade junk.- Premiere
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- Aaron Hillis
Best appreciated as a rather amusing farce called The John Malkovich Show, the movie's every scene is anchored, then stolen, by the commanding thespian's Alan act.- Premiere
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- Aaron Hillis
The interpersonal dynamics haven't been scripted out very thoughtfully, so as the final 20 minutes wind down, it becomes increasingly tough for Penn and his talented cast to mine humor from a story that mandates they actually play elimination rounds of poker.- Premiere
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- Aaron Hillis
The Ten has one foot in "Monty Python's Meaning of Life" and another in their "Life of Brian," but ultimately we get the David Letterman School of Comedy: mediocre jokes continually repeated until they sometimes become uncomfortably funny.- Premiere
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- Aaron Hillis
What’s missing here is the amnesiac hook that made "The Bourne Identity" such a sleeper hit.- Premiere
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- Aaron Hillis
So stupendously funny at times that she (Streep) nearly salvages the whole thing.- Premiere
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- Aaron Hillis
Whatever you want to label this quick-paced crowd-pleaser, it is definitely one of the year's must-sees.- Premiere
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- Aaron Hillis
Though Steamboy could have been smarter and more dramatically engineered, this razzle-dazzle ride won't disappoint if you just need to blow off a little you-know-what.- Premiere
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