Amber Wilkinson
Select another critic »For 56 reviews, this critic has graded:
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53% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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44% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 6.2 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Amber Wilkinson's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 72 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Closure | |
| Lowest review score: | God's Pocket | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 44 out of 56
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Mixed: 11 out of 56
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Negative: 1 out of 56
56
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Amber Wilkinson
Unkovski’s film may be singing from a familiar hymn sheet, but he makes that part of its charm.- Screen Daily
- Posted Apr 2, 2026
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- Amber Wilkinson
Marczak’s film becomes not just a document of a hunt but a psychological portrait of loss and a family’s attempts to come to terms with that.- Screen Daily
- Posted Mar 18, 2026
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- Amber Wilkinson
Sierra’s film not only stands as a love letter to peaceful protest but also to intelligent law enforcement that took the opportunity to de-escalate and resolve the situation without violence. Whether audiences agree that it has ’changed the narrative’ or not, it is a powerful testimony to a community’s ability to take control of their part of the story and give it a happy ending.- Screen Daily
- Posted Mar 13, 2026
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- Amber Wilkinson
[Teng] certainly succeeds in creating an impassioned triple profile of the men who are, if anything, increasingly determined to make a difference for the civilians and medics of Gaza, while viscerally bringing home the extent of the brutal tragedy on the ground.- Screen Daily
- Posted Feb 24, 2026
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- Amber Wilkinson
Throughout the film, three things stand out: the love between Rushdie and Griffiths; the resilience they had in the face of his catastrophic injuries; and the author’s humanistic attitude and sly sense of humour, which have categorically survived intact.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 30, 2026
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- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 30, 2026
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- Amber Wilkinson
The script holds plenty of satire and laugh out loud moments, but Wilson and Huston keep it supple enough to bend protectively around the central love story, while allowing the morality tale element to still have bite.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 29, 2026
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- Amber Wilkinson
Letting yourself be loved is not exactly an original message, but here it’s the comedy that counts and Schlesinger is generous with her script, giving even minor characters their fair share of jokes.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 28, 2026
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- Amber Wilkinson
Throughout, Portman, Ortega and Zeta-Jones bounce the script around like a ping-pong ball, with all three displaying meticulous timing.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 28, 2026
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- Amber Wilkinson
The flimsy narrative just about holds together but the jokes, while plentiful, often feel like rehashes of something the Zucker Brothers did better decades ago.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 28, 2026
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- Amber Wilkinson
Characters longing for connection but simultaneously fearing it provides a strong framework on which Rachel Lambert builds an unpredictable relationship drama that feels both profound and fragile.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 24, 2026
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- Amber Wilkinson
Emma Thompson again proves what a versatile star she is in The Dead Of Winter, not only convincing as a have-a-go heroine unexpectedly trying to save a damsel in distress, but also single-handedly rescuing this film from the worst of its formulaic elements. Indeed, lying beneath the icy surface of director Brian Kirk’s thriller is a lake of gooey warm sentiment that’s deep enough to drown in.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 25, 2025
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- Screen Daily
- Posted May 24, 2025
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- Amber Wilkinson
Klein has a strong grasp on all of the material, and editors Jake Keen and Alexander J Goldstein cut it together it carefully so that the past and the present often meet.- Screen Daily
- Posted Mar 12, 2025
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- Amber Wilkinson
While not seeking to paint all Russians as ‘victims’ and explicitly acknowledging the situation is far worse for Ukranians, Talankin’s footage comes as a reminder of children as the innocent victims of war.- Screen Daily
- Posted Feb 1, 2025
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- Amber Wilkinson
The British director marries Welsh mythology to more modern ideas about processing trauma, using sound to create a strange and unsettling psychological mood piece rather than an out-and-out horror. The result is engagingly enigmatic if slight in terms of plot and light on chills.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 31, 2025
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- Amber Wilkinson
Offering an eye-opening insider perspective that comes as a reminder of what conviction politics looks like when it is maintained even under extreme pressure, as well as being a celebration of feminism, Prime Minister holds appeal for audiences well beyond New Zealand’s shores.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 31, 2025
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- Amber Wilkinson
While director Justin Lin’s thriller-inflected approach is periodically absorbing, the scattered structure and episodic nature of the plot works against him as it slides towards an overly sentimental conclusion.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 31, 2025
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- Amber Wilkinson
A distant lightning storm indicates nature is a force to be reckoned with but in Walker-Silverman’s films the energy of empathetic human nature is shown to be just as powerful.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 29, 2025
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- Amber Wilkinson
A smart if broad comedy that is exposition-heavy in places, it boasts a strong ensemble cast who give it a shot in the arm.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 28, 2025
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- Amber Wilkinson
While audiences will probably expect to laugh, they may be surprised to find themselves shedding a tear or two as well.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 27, 2025
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- Amber Wilkinson
Chernov brings home the sense of violent stalemate so that, even when Andriivka seems within reach, peace still feels a long way off.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 27, 2025
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- Amber Wilkinson
It’s not just the structure of the film that is clever, Sweeney varies his joke delivery, so that there is a mix of one-liners and more slow-burn humour alongside a raft of sight gags.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 26, 2025
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- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 6, 2024
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- Amber Wilkinson
All the micro-motivations and manipulations of life are present, from the desire to be loved and look after others to the urge to tear down a carefully constructed emotional wall.- Screen Daily
- Posted Aug 28, 2024
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- Amber Wilkinson
Non-professional Sangare is magnetic throughout, whether on the saddle or an interview hot seat.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 25, 2024
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- Amber Wilkinson
While Will and Harper’s friendship gives the film its strongly beating heart, the casual reactions of strangers often also prove to be moving.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 27, 2024
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- Amber Wilkinson
Instead of treating the star’s life chronologically, they move between a consideration of his career and his spinal injury advocacy work in the wake of the devastating 1995 horse-riding accident that left him paralysed from the neck down. The result has the engaging feel of a dialogue between the pre- and post-accident Reeve and his family as his views and his life shifted as a consequence.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 26, 2024
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- Amber Wilkinson
Tears may well be shed but it is the actors who are delivering the goods rather than the script.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 23, 2024
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- Amber Wilkinson
McBaine and Moss offer a celebration of the young women attendees alongside a consideration of the everyday sexism many encounter.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 22, 2024
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- Amber Wilkinson
Hvistendahl gives her ensemble time and space to deliver the conflicted emotions they are feeling, a mixture of shock and longing playing out on their faces and in their movements.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 21, 2024
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- Amber Wilkinson
The ending is simultaneously satisfying and slyly subversive, allowing an unravelling of ideas that should lead audiences to think about what they have watched.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 20, 2024
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- Amber Wilkinson
[Boden and Fleck] marry splashes of dry humour to gallons of blood, and feature every musical genre from punk to hip-hop while connecting the stories to a strange green glow in the sky. If the end result never quite achieves the style and bite of the likes of Tarantino’s Pulp Fiction, it is still a lot of fun.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 19, 2024
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- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 18, 2024
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- Amber Wilkinson
While the first half of Rotting In The Sun may be overly self-indulgent, once Silva gets himself out of his system, he gives his skills and Saavedra an opportunity to shine.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 7, 2023
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- Amber Wilkinson
Allen-Miller achieves the Holy Grail of all great rom-coms in making us desperate to see the pair get together for good, while simultaneously not wanting this first flush of romance to end.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 28, 2023
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- Amber Wilkinson
As with a lot of first-time feature filmmakers, Smith shows a tendency to want to throw everything a her film stylistically – including, at one point, the random use of bright yellow subtitles – which makes certain sections feel unnecessarily skittish.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 28, 2023
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- Amber Wilkinson
While Holofcener doesn’t ultimately dispute that it’s nice to be nice, she does suggest that it’s worth remembering constant positivity has its own negatives.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 26, 2023
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- Amber Wilkinson
Oldroyd attacks with a pace that makes his plot twists more shocking and shows an economy that harks back to the golden age of noir.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 24, 2023
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- Amber Wilkinson
Through it all, Connelly and Englert completely sell their conflicted yearning for one another’s love but because this section is a late arrival, the revelations have to come thick and fast..- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 24, 2023
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- Amber Wilkinson
The Pod Generation blends its tech parody with more quirky observations of the anxieties of impending parenthood and, if Barthes doesn’t always sink the satire’s talons in quite as far as she might, the film’s sweet-natured hopefulness and charming central couple should see it win over distributors and audiences.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 23, 2023
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- Amber Wilkinson
This heartfelt if, at times, slightly uneven drama marks the debut fiction feature from documentarian Roger Ross Williams and is a warm and celebratory film.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 21, 2023
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- Amber Wilkinson
The winning performances and Haapasalo’s careful attention to them help to compensate for the sometimes frustratingly fragmented nature of the storytelling.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jul 28, 2022
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- Amber Wilkinson
If Sick of Myself runs out of narrative road towards the end, there’s still a decent quotient of dark humour along the way.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 28, 2022
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- Amber Wilkinson
Comedy is a serious business and it is Earl and Hayward’s deadpan delivery, coupled with Archer’s maintenance of a documentary shooting style in the face of the ridiculous, that ensures the situation generates physical and verbal laughs.- Screen Daily
- Posted Apr 25, 2022
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- Amber Wilkinson
The subject is an important one but would benefit from a shorter running time.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jun 25, 2014
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- Amber Wilkinson
We are encouraged to find these people stupidly brutal or comedic without being given the slightest idea as to why they might be that way.- The Telegraph
- Posted Apr 18, 2014
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- The Telegraph
- Posted Jan 28, 2014
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- Amber Wilkinson
It feels as though it would have been better served as a six-part sitcom, where its sentimentality, broad comedy and fantasy elements wouldn't rub up against each other so badly.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jan 27, 2014
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- Amber Wilkinson
Their improvisation has been honed to the point where the jokes land solidly without losing naturalism.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jan 27, 2014
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- Amber Wilkinson
Johnson and co-writer Mark Heyman may be exploring familiar territory but they do so with a warmth, subtlety and honesty that marks it out.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jan 27, 2014
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- Amber Wilkinson
The film hinges on the bond between dad and daughter and on the expressive face of Fanning, as we see her shift from a sort of nervous adoration of the unpredictable, if loving, Joe, to something more steely and independent.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jan 27, 2014
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- The Telegraph
- Posted Jan 27, 2014
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- Amber Wilkinson
The plot strong-arms the characters into increasingly contrived and overly familiar positions that leave you longing for the more relaxed vibe of Shelton's earlier films.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jan 27, 2014
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- Amber Wilkinson
Forbes has a delicate but unsentimental approach, which gives her film the same infectious energy that blesses and curses Cameron. The end result feels good without feeling superficial.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jan 26, 2014
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- Amber Wilkinson
Despite his free and easy camerawork, which generates some lovely moments between Ian and Sofi, Cahill's narrative jolts along in fits and starts.- The Telegraph
- Posted Jan 26, 2014
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