Alison Willmore
Select another critic »For 389 reviews, this critic has graded:
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40% higher than the average critic
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1% same as the average critic
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59% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 2.5 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Alison Willmore's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 63 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Petite Maman | |
| Lowest review score: | Melania | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 202 out of 389
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Mixed: 143 out of 389
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Negative: 44 out of 389
389
movie
reviews
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- Alison Willmore
There’s a disconcerting shrewdness underneath its patina of tastefulness — it’s too calculating to achieve the transcendent almost-romance it strives for but never inhabits.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 3, 2023
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- Alison Willmore
It’s a film about language in ways that are promising but more often exasperating.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 30, 2025
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- Alison Willmore
Napoleon is not, thank god, a hagiography. But it has the faltering rhythms of a rough draft — it plays as though Scott gave up on trying to carve a good film out of what actually ended up on screen.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 22, 2023
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- Alison Willmore
For all that it has been positioned as the comeback of the rom-com queen, Marry Me isn’t really a return to form for the genre. Instead, it aims to have things both ways, to have the glamour and the buoyant fantasy and to also be more textured in its treatment of its characters and their relationship.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 11, 2022
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- Alison Willmore
The frustrating thing about Fingernails, which is directed by Christos Nikou from a script he wrote with Stavros Raptis and Sam Steiner, is that it’s so disconnected from the physical side of romance even as it has an intensely anatomical phenomenon at its center.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 28, 2023
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- Alison Willmore
The film also comes across like a rough cut that was never looked at as a coherent whole, and some segments that start off as promising become interminable while others feel entirely unnecessary. There's no pressure on or expectation for Tarantino to please anyone other than himself, and the film feels overstuffed with ideas that should have been pruned.- Movieline
- Posted Dec 12, 2012
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- Alison Willmore
It’s warm and inveigling, but what it could use is a little more emotional ugliness.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted May 26, 2023
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- Alison Willmore
There’s a streak of defensiveness to Barbie, as though it’s trying to anticipate and acknowledge any critiques lodged against it before they’re made, which renders it emotionally inert despite the efforts at wackiness.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 18, 2023
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- Alison Willmore
The film’s litany of details about growing up in the Houston area in the ’60s isn’t enveloping — instead, in its drone of vintage sitcom titles and reminiscences about fecklessly riding in the back of a pickup on the freeway to the beach, it feels, for the first time from Linklater, like a lecture about how things were better back then.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Apr 1, 2022
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- Alison Willmore
Pearson, as happy-go-lucky charmer, also brings a burst of much-needed vitality to this droll but overly thought-through film.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 19, 2024
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- Alison Willmore
The artifice of the aesthetic premise overwhelms any of the film’s other intentions.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Dec 26, 2019
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- Alison Willmore
What his vampire drama is missing is precisely the quality that’s given Eggers’ earlier work its unsettling energy, which is that he’s able to render the past as an alien landscape whose inhabitants don’t just look different, but conceive of the universe in ways very different than we might.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Dec 23, 2024
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- Alison Willmore
By framing Mamie’s story entirely in the context of her son’s death, Till keeps us on the outside of her transformation from a woman focused on her own life to one who believes, as she says in a speech at the end, that “what happens to any of us anywhere in the world had better be the business of us all.”- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 17, 2022
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- Alison Willmore
The Woman King is strongest when it immerses itself in the dynamics and the personalities of the Agojie.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 21, 2022
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- Alison Willmore
Malek keeps trying to find the emotional center and dignity of a character who’s pure pulp, and while it’s an admirable effort, it’s also jarringly unsuited to the movie.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Apr 8, 2025
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- Alison Willmore
Thyberg clearly set out to create a hysteria-free look at the industry, taking on the challenge of critiquing structural issues without casting judgments on the idea of having sex on camera. Pleasure succeeds at this, though not without a cost. It’s a clear-eyed treatment of porn wedded to a character study that never comes to life.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted May 13, 2022
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- Alison Willmore
Brie and Franco, in providing nuance and texture to Millie and Tim, may actually have worked against a film that would be better off allowing its characters to be in an unhealthy relationship from the beginning — a choice that would make the ending feel more unsetting rather than just a flubbed allegory.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 30, 2025
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- Alison Willmore
The sheer joy of watching characters in full bridal splendor preparing to plunge into combat can’t be underestimated, but it’s never as satisfying as it should be.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted May 4, 2023
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- Alison Willmore
They’re stories you can find in the book, accompanied by ones from a multitude of other contributors, including Schellenbach, who gets to give her own account of what happened. So why not just read that?- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Apr 21, 2020
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- Alison Willmore
Watching the film is a reminder that the most boundary-pushing comedy isn’t about risqué content but a willingness to get uncomfortable and the confidence to assume audiences will join along in that journey. Joy Ride instead seeks out the warm fuzzies in a way that feels like a surrender.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 18, 2023
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- Alison Willmore
Late in The Iron Claw comes a sequence that departs from everything that’s come before and drops us unabashedly into Kevin’s mind at a time of intense grief. It’s earnest, and corny, and utterly devastating, and it makes you yearn for a film that wasn’t so intent on holding its tragic subjects at a brawny arm’s length.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Dec 20, 2023
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- Alison Willmore
New characters and elements get added, the metaphor becomes overextended, and the idea that this world is meant to be a reflection of one person’s psyche gets lost in a sea.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 12, 2024
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- Alison Willmore
The best parts of What Happens Later are when it lets its characters just be people who still want to find love and find some of its warmth in the embers of this long-ago relationship. It’s too bad there aren’t more of those moments.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 3, 2023
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- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Aug 26, 2022
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- Alison Willmore
There was something undeniably valiant about the way the first one tried, however imperfectly, to bend that long Mouse House tradition of human-acting animals into a means for an examination of racial bias. But in repeating that approach for a story about the banishing of reptiles from the city and the strategic destruction of neighborhoods, Zootopia 2 sets up parallels that strain even more at the seams.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 26, 2025
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- Alison Willmore
Ammonite is Winslet’s movie to shoulder, and she carries it as far as she can.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 20, 2020
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- Alison Willmore
M3gan’s reach is never in danger of exceeding its grasp. It wants only to provide a diverting 100-odd minutes of horror comedy, with a heavy emphasis on the comedy.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jan 6, 2023
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- Alison Willmore
Elio . . . plays like something that was imperfectly assembled from its component parts, as though its creative team couldn’t figure out a way to align its visions of candy-colored intergalactic diplomacy with its emotional themes of empathy and learning to think about what’s going on inside those around us.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 17, 2025
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- Alison Willmore
I cried at the end of Babes, despite thinking that it wasn’t working all that well for most of its run time. Movies can be funny that way, leaving you indifferent for long stretches and then walloping you with an emotional moment that’s even more effective for how you didn’t see it coming.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted May 17, 2024
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- Alison Willmore
The stylistic choices Guadagnino makes throughout Queer are invariably more engaging than the central story itself, no matter what the filmmaker tries unsuccessfully to will it into.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 3, 2024
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- Alison Willmore
The Invisible Man is not as smart as it could have been, but the concept is ingenious even if the execution gets slapdash. And with Moss at the center, it doesn’t matter all that much — she sells what’s approached as B-movie material with the unwavering dedication of someone starring in a prestige biopic.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 26, 2020
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- Alison Willmore
Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings may give us the franchise’s first Asian American superhero, but what may be the most Asian American thing about it is the way it’s caught between the legacy of its forebears and a still-developing sense of self, its protagonist yanked away from that journey and enlisted as the face of the latest representational win, without ever seeming entirely decided on what he’s representing.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 1, 2021
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- Alison Willmore
Luca is so intent on meaning something that it only ever halfway inhabits the delightfully colorful world it lays out. We never get a deeper understanding of the history between the sea monsters and the humans beyond some hints that there has been far more interaction than Luca was raised to believe.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 17, 2021
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- Alison Willmore
The best parts of Problemista, which is a charming film without ever becoming more than semi-successful, bend the world through his perspective with the help of some Michel Gondry–esque DIY Surrealism.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 13, 2024
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- Alison Willmore
It’s the worst movie McQueen’s made, which by wider standards means that it’s still not bad. But Blitz’s admirable intentions consistently outstrip its execution, which is clunky and full of narrative artifices required to keep its angel-faced lead on the run from danger and from the authorities who intend to send him back to the train station.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 14, 2024
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- Alison Willmore
The film wallows in a particular brand of Americana — denim and leather, cornfields and Harley-Davidsons, crumpled packs of cigarettes and boilermakers on the bar at a dive — without being comfortable laying claim to it.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 24, 2024
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- Alison Willmore
The film’s bursts of violence are genuinely bracing — a face bashed in, a skull shattered, and the signature act of animal mutilation performed by a carnival geek, a figure of abject degradation who haunts the film’s ill-fated protagonist. But for a pulpy tale of addiction and desperate lives on the fringes, Nightmare Alley is otherwise depressingly short on actual darkness and discomfort.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Dec 20, 2021
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- Alison Willmore
It’s a movie that makes you long to be able to freeze frames in order to appreciate the loveliness and wit of its details, while at the same time giving you little reason to want to revisit the thing as a whole.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted May 18, 2025
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- Alison Willmore
Despite the verve of the film, there’s no there there — just an exercise in quippy banter and witty violence that works well enough to remind you of better movies.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted May 23, 2025
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- Alison Willmore
The appeal of the cast can’t change the fact that its members are playing incredibly soft targets instead of real characters.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Aug 9, 2022
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- Alison Willmore
Selah and the Spades ends just as it feels like it’s really picking up momentum, which is the major frustration of the film and also, likely, part of the reason it was picked up by Amazon both as a release and the basis for a possible series adaptation.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Apr 20, 2020
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- Alison Willmore
By the time the final act rolls around, Lamb approaches the idea that there’s a price that must be paid with a shrugging diffidence rather than impending doom. It’s such an underwhelming conclusion to a film with such a compelling start.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 9, 2021
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- Alison Willmore
Deep Water, which was written by Zach Helm (of Mr. Magorium’s Wonder Emporium) and Euphoria Svengali Sam Levinson, never creates any sense of internal coherence in its toxic main pair.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 16, 2022
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- Alison Willmore
This is Pitt’s movie, and like its star, it never opens itself up enough to truly take off.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 29, 2025
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- Alison Willmore
Seydoux may exude voluptuous sensuality, and Stewart may be performing a whispery, dystopian take on a sultry librarian, but the film itself has an aloof, clinical quality. What interests it is not the potential of our physical forms for pleasure and revulsion, but their inevitable failure.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 6, 2022
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- Alison Willmore
That it feels like it’s half at war with its title character, bringing her firmly to Earth (until she, like Bond in Moonraker, has to make her way to a high-altitude villain’s lair) and insisting on emotional coherence from her personal history, is its most interesting quality, though it’s maybe not as revolutionary as it first seems.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 10, 2021
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- Alison Willmore
The Blackening gets halfway there, and has the benefit of some gifted performers and some very good ideas. It just never really figures out how to be a movie.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 26, 2023
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- Alison Willmore
Like a lot of movies these days, Fresh feels like it was conceived through its themes first and then written to bolster those ideas, rather than from the perspective of character or story.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 4, 2022
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- Alison Willmore
The King of Staten Island shrinks Davidson down a little too much, to the point where his pathos and humor doesn’t blend with but actively gets obscured by his immaturity.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 10, 2020
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- Alison Willmore
Aja knows what sort of product he is turning out and does it ably, if without much excitement, as though understanding he is filling a hole in a lineup. It’s actually Laurent, who is too classy to be here, who doesn’t entirely grasp the assignment. She keeps overreaching, giving her cutout character shows of realistic emotion that the film she is appearing in can’t support.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted May 12, 2021
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- Alison Willmore
Mulan is a dour drag as a work of art and entertainment, an empty if occasionally impressive-looking spectacle propped up by some incredibly clunky writing.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 4, 2020
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- Alison Willmore
The glee everyone involved obviously felt in getting this improbable flick made is never balanced out by a sense of why anyone would need to actually watch it.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Apr 12, 2024
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- Alison Willmore
The sympathy Roofman extends toward the break room of its big-box stores and the low-ceilinged place of worship where Leigh sings in the choir every Sunday is more moving than its treatment of its protagonist, offering an appreciation that these places could be anywhere and at the same time are highly specific.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 15, 2025
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- Alison Willmore
The film is a dead-on skewering of the high-on-their-own supply megalomania that now afflicts so many members of the techno oligarchy, who unfortunately also control the levers of the world. I found it incredibly unpleasant to watch, in a way that made me think about comedy’s limitations as a critique of power when its targets are already more awful and more ridiculous than any fictional version.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 1, 2025
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- Alison Willmore
It’s a performance that suggests the most interesting stretch of Affleck’s career as an actor is still to come.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 4, 2020
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- Alison Willmore
In fitting with its main character’s desperate aversion to vulnerability, Vengeance squirms away from any satirical or emotional territory that might genuinely hurt.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 29, 2022
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- Alison Willmore
Caught Stealing is an intermittently fun experience that would be a better time if Aronofsky either loosened up a little more or, conversely, maintained a tighter grip on the wheel.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Aug 29, 2025
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- Alison Willmore
That compulsion to reverse engineer serious stakes for a fundamentally frivolous story is Twisters’ most contemporary quality and its most irritating.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 17, 2024
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- Alison Willmore
Magazine Dreams certainly isn’t inept, and Bynum, who wrote as well as directed it, summons a devastatingly spare atmosphere that’s broken up with some arrestingly dreamlike compositions when Killian arrives at a show or competition. But it consists of the same idea, underlined over and over.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Apr 1, 2025
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- Alison Willmore
No genre really makes more sense for this moment than horror — except, maybe, for black comedy, and Aster’s bracingly nasty but centerless new film offers plenty of both.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted May 17, 2025
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- Alison Willmore
It’s easier to think about Frozen II as a product than as a film because a (sometimes stunning-looking) product is all that it feels like.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 20, 2019
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- Alison Willmore
You can occasionally see flashes of the better, sharper movie Bombshell could have been, and while there aren’t many of those moments, there are enough that it can’t be written off entirely.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Dec 12, 2019
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- Alison Willmore
The thrill of the action sequences just underscores the hollowness of the rest of the enterprise. Sure, not all of us spend a lot of time thinking about the Roman Empire, but those who do deserve better than this.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 11, 2024
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- Alison Willmore
Naishuller doesn’t bring the elegant coherence that Leitch and Stahelski do to their fight sequences or manage the same touch of absurdity to lighten up the brutal excesses. What he does have is Bob Odenkirk, and watching Odenkirk join the middle-aged action hero fold is pleasurable enough to make Nobody worth the while, even if it’s an obvious echo of other, better recent films.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 25, 2021
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- Alison Willmore
Those bookending sequences, the start and the finish, are the only ones The History of Sound fully inhabits, while in all the others it plays coy, holding back for no particular reason than that it offers the illusion of sophistication.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 16, 2025
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- Alison Willmore
What’s obvious after a few minutes of Piece by Piece is that the movie isn’t rendered the way it is because of some profound thematic ties between its subject’s life and the plastic construction set, but because the Lego is an attempt to inject something of interest into what is, even by the pre-chewed standards of authorized celeb docs, textureless pablum.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 11, 2024
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- Alison Willmore
For all that Nyad is happy to show its subject’s personality flaws, it has trouble finding her humanity,- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 13, 2023
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- Alison Willmore
Even at a generous running time that matches this season's other giant award candidates, Les Misérables seems like it's in a hurry, skittering from one number to the next without interlude. After Hathaway's early high point, it starts to feel numbing, an unending barrage of musical emoting carrying us through Valjean's adopting of Cosette, the latter's first encounter with Marius, the battle at the barricade and a last hour that can feel like it's a non-stop series of death arias.- Movieline
- Posted Dec 10, 2012
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- Alison Willmore
Master Gardener plays less like a thematic finale and more like the director is trying to exorcise himself of his perpetual idée fixe.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted May 19, 2023
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- Alison Willmore
Despite the obvious effort that went into the making of Maria, there’s so little life. For a movie built around a performance meant to be lauded for its bravery, there’s no sense of anything risked.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Aug 29, 2024
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- Alison Willmore
COVID has proven a difficult subject for fiction, but In the Earth feels as though it sets up an emotional parallel that it doesn’t follow through on, abandoning the virus as a backdrop for a horror story that’s slapdash and never very creepy. It’s another instance of pandemic cinema that feels as if it could use more distance to figure out what it wants to say.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Apr 15, 2021
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- Alison Willmore
It packs the screen with witty details, features some brilliantly directed sequences, sets up downright baroque punchlines, and is anchored by an incredibly game performance by Phoenix. But ditching the genre framework doesn’t make it feel more honest — its self-deflating comedy is, ironically, that of someone afraid of being taken seriously.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Apr 20, 2023
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- Alison Willmore
There’s a bitter irony to the fact that, whether due to access issues or an inability to wrangle what he wanted from his material, in retreading the Manson details, Morris has made something that feels a lot closer to that omnipresent slop than to the work that inspired it.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 7, 2025
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- Alison Willmore
Watching Goodrich isn’t like playing tourist in an upscale world — it’s more like stepping into the head of someone whose sense of normal is wildly different from your own.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 21, 2024
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- Alison Willmore
Heart Eyes is strong enough that the shortcomings that keep it in the realm of the passable instead of the actually good are maddening.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 7, 2025
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- Alison Willmore
Dog feels like it should have been bigger and braver, but by the end, it also feels as if it could have been improved by being much smaller, closing in until it was just a guy and a dog and some of the country’s most beautiful scenery. What else do you really need?- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 17, 2022
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- Alison Willmore
Nothing about the film is especially coherent, including its simultaneous status as a piece of art, a gesture of religious conviction, and a shameless act of commerce. It feels like notes from an artist who’s not sure if he wants to express himself as a worshiper or an object of worship — but who’s prepared to give it a try anyhow, on the biggest screen possible.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 25, 2019
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- Alison Willmore
Saltburn’s seductive imagery outweighs its obvious attempts at provocation. And while it does end up making being rich look pretty sweet, that’s not exactly a revelation worth hanging a whole movie on.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 16, 2023
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- Alison Willmore
If the results are mixed, it’s because the movie devotes more thought to putting distance between itself and Suicide Squad than to imagining what an independent version of the character is actually like.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 5, 2020
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- Alison Willmore
While the movie feels empty and pointless overall, it’s not without its scattered interesting elements.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 16, 2022
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- Alison Willmore
Gaga is wildly watchable in the role, broad but unwinking, an absolute scream, and the movie only really makes sense when it’s about her.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 23, 2021
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- Alison Willmore
Ready or Not 2 moves at a decent clip and is generally entertaining, but there’s something deflatingly lazy about its slate of rich assholes, which is heavy on standard-issue entitled daughters and smug failsons who treat the staff like props.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 20, 2026
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- Alison Willmore
The new movie leans into comedy in ways that veer toward the cutesy — Chris at a speed dating event, Chris at a line-dancing night — but the scenes of the brothers together are great, providing glimpses of the co-dependent boys they were before they grew into trauma-stunted men who regularly commit acts of bloodshed.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 9, 2025
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- Alison Willmore
It’s so devoid of bangers or any remotely memorable tunes that there’s nothing to distract you from the movie’s lack of clear stakes, or meaningful drama, or antagonists with any personality.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 26, 2024
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- Alison Willmore
While Sohn has said Elemental was inspired by his parents, his upbringing in multicultural New York City, and his own mixed marriage, the lack of deeper consideration his film gives to its ideas leads to some ugly reductiveness.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 15, 2023
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- Alison Willmore
It begins as a comedy, takes a turn toward the earnest, and ends with a sort of genial blasphemy. There’s definitely nothing else like it out there, for better and worse, and even if it doesn’t work, there’s something admirable about how at ease the film is with its own erratic rhythms.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jan 12, 2024
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- Alison Willmore
This Is Spinal Tap is a comedy about how the desire to be seen as a rock god collides with the humiliations of actually being human, and the visual of a group of guys in their 70s and 80s unable to move on from the styles of their youthful heyday is as effective a continuing riff on this theme as any. It’s also the only one fully realized by the new film.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 16, 2025
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- Alison Willmore
Dicks: The Musical is never as outrageous as it clearly would like to be . . . But its determination to avoid any trace of self-importance or greater meaning is admirable in its own right — embracing the freedom to just be ridiculous.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 19, 2023
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- Alison Willmore
Waititi hasn’t always been the most precise at mixing pathos and humor (Hunt for the Wilderpeople, yes, Jojo Rabbit, no), and the calibrations in Love and Thunder are all off.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 8, 2022
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- Alison Willmore
As a thriller, The Burnt Orange Heresy is entirely underwhelming, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t worth watching.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Aug 8, 2020
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- Alison Willmore
Evans has assembled a worthy cast and has crammed his film full of what should be fun elements, and yet the final result is weirdly without joy — akin to filling your plate with all your favorite foods at a buffet, only to sit down and realize you have no appetite to eat it.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Apr 25, 2025
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- Alison Willmore
Alpha is more evidence of Ducournau’s genius for evocative imagery and striking compositions, but it also suggests she’d benefit from boundaries to push against.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted May 21, 2025
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- Alison Willmore
The Eyes of Tammy Faye, which was written by Abe Sylvia, is unable to decide if it wants to understand its subject or make fun of her, and ends up never really committing to either.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 17, 2021
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- Alison Willmore
One senses this is a mundane story that’s trying to be something stranger and more buoyant — the film’s off-kilter sensibility keeps threatening to fade away, like it’s stuck at the tail end of a high.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 24, 2024
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- Alison Willmore
Watching the movie summons the distinct sensation of arriving at a party just as the guests are starting to leave.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Apr 2, 2021
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- Alison Willmore
The film plays more like it was made by an AI versed in the existing movies but not quite up to spitting out something coherent itself.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted May 19, 2023
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- Alison Willmore
Wright’s movie, aside from its mess of an ending, is a propulsive and generally fun affair that sends Powell careering around the Eastern Seaboard like the Tom Cruise successor he’s so determined to become, even if he’s not entirely plausible as a guy who’s volcanic with anger.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 14, 2025
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- Alison Willmore
The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare is the 15th feature from Guy Ritchie, and while it’s not very good, it’s also hard to dislike something that has the genial tone of a day-drunk romp.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Apr 18, 2024
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- Alison Willmore
Shyamalan . . . feels caught between the more emotionally considered movies he used to make, and the leaner, meaner ones he’s done more recently. His filmmaking can’t make up for the fact that Old is hovering indecisively between the two halves of his career, unable to commit to either direction.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 23, 2021
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- Alison Willmore
The sequel is a string of callbacks and remember-this moments that ask an awful lot of something whose charms and cultural impact were modest at best — a feature-length effort at congratulating the audience for having shown up for the original film a decade ago.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 16, 2019
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