Amy Nicholson
Select another critic »For 775 reviews, this critic has graded:
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52% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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46% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 2.7 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Amy Nicholson's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 63 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Frankenstein | |
| Lowest review score: | Melania | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 383 out of 775
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Mixed: 325 out of 775
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Negative: 67 out of 775
775
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Amy Nicholson
A Working Man strikes an unsteady balance between solemn and ridiculous.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 28, 2025
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- Amy Nicholson
The new songs are forgettable and the animation is cluttered with every pixel competing to show off. There are too many leaves, too many petals and too many pores on the fully animated dwarfs, who bound into the movie with noses the size of pears.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 19, 2025
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- Amy Nicholson
The unwieldy action rom-com Novocaine makes a convincing argument that its lead, Jack Quaid, can do it all: woo the girl, shoot the goon and tickle the audience. The movie itself has a harder time, screwing its three genres together so awkwardly that it tends to limp.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 14, 2025
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- Amy Nicholson
It’s a pleasure to enjoy something that’s both straight-faced and freewheeling, like a jazz pedagogue who also knows how to get a crowd dancing.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 14, 2025
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- Amy Nicholson
It’s confounding that Johnson ignores the book’s brutal existentialism. But it’s equally fascinating that other parts of the story get their hooks in him. A novel — any piece of art, really — functions like a dream. You grab onto the bits that resonate. It’s why people can leave the same movie with totally different interpretations.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 12, 2025
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- Amy Nicholson
As semi-inessential as Mickey 17 feels in Bong’s canon, I’m at peace that he keeps asking how to give everyone’s life value. He’ll keep repeating the question until we come up with an answer.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 7, 2025
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- Amy Nicholson
Maybe they don’t all deserve to escape punishment. But these otherwise overlooked lives deserve a spotlight.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 4, 2025
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- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 4, 2025
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- Amy Nicholson
The tone is dry and spartan — and funny, too, if you don’t mind snorting at someone whose sons died in a marshmallow-eating competition, or giggling over the sobs of a worker weeping in a cubicle for reasons that go unexplained.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 14, 2025
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- Amy Nicholson
Love Hurts is an action-romance that fizzles like a science-class volcano made of baking soda and cheese. The individual ingredients are fine: two killers on the run from punishment and their personal feelings for each other, played by Oscar winners Ke Huy Quan and Ariana DeBose. But their chemistry is all wrong.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 7, 2025
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- Amy Nicholson
A Valentine’s Day massacre in which PDA leads to public executions, it’s got decent gags, middling scares and a rationale sloppier than two dogs sharing a strand of spaghetti. As date night fare, it’ll do.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 5, 2025
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- Amy Nicholson
It has good style and a handful of fun ideas, but it’s ultimately as superficial as the puff pieces it’s attacking.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 30, 2025
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- Amy Nicholson
Presence is being sold as a ghost story, but it’s more like a family drama disguised under a sheet. The eye holes are the only thing separating it from a thousand other ordinary little films about the injuries people do to those they love. Otherwise, the story doesn’t have enough flesh on its bones to hold our interest.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 23, 2025
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- Amy Nicholson
The film’s most disorienting and wondrous realization, however, is that Shakespearean acting can exist even within “Grand Theft Auto’s” limits.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 19, 2025
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- Amy Nicholson
Lamont trusts his movie is personality-powered. He’s calibrated each performance to fit together like a 12-piece band, and he knows that some jokes are even funnier when whispered. But I’m in the mood to speak up: I’ve missed this type of satisfying junk food. Waiter, bring me another.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 16, 2025
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- Amy Nicholson
Wolf Man is a boring body-horror endurance test that mostly takes place in one home from sundown to sunrise. There’s so much interior creaking and panting, and so little dialogue or plot, that if you closed your eyes, the projectionist could have swapped reels with a different genre of doggy style.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 15, 2025
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- Amy Nicholson
Only Anderson’s part with all its hazy contradictions — neither comic nor tragic, neither pathetic nor heroic, neither subtle nor showy — seems, to transcend. More than the film around her, Anderson earns our respect.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 9, 2025
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- Amy Nicholson
Mike Leigh’s Hard Truths invites you to spend an hour and a half with the most insufferable woman in the world. (If you personally know a worse one, my condolences.) That the unpleasantness turns out to be time well spent is a credit to Leigh’s curiosity about miserable jerks and the joy-sucking traps they set for themselves and others.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 9, 2025
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- Amy Nicholson
Babygirl’s erotic scenes are hot. But really, Reijn is doing her damnedest to get a moral rise out of us. Romy and Samuel have safe words, yet our own national conversation about sexual ethics gets tongue-tied whenever it tries to define right and wrong. Instead, we have Reijn asking uncomfortable questions.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 24, 2024
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- Amy Nicholson
Even as the movie captures Williams’ recklessness, it’s also a convincing sketch of his artistic growth and commitment.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 24, 2024
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- Amy Nicholson
As good as the movie is with its visuals, it’s just as skillful with sound.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 20, 2024
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- Amy Nicholson
This is a guaranteed blockbuster that nobody needed except studio accountants and parents. I’ll accept it on those terms because it’s a good thing when any kid-pleaser gets children in the habit of going to the movie theater.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 19, 2024
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- Amy Nicholson
The Brutalist argues, and proves by its very existence, that the maddening thing about major works of art is that they demand invention and resources and cooperation.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 18, 2024
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- Amy Nicholson
I’ll give Schrader the benefit of the doubt that his dialogue is stilted by design, even though the female characters are particularly prone to clunkers. . . But it’s still irritating to sit through, and once we start questioning everything we see — would young Leonard really order a bran muffin at an ice cream parlor? — it gets harder to hand over our trust when the movie wants to get emotional.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 12, 2024
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- Amy Nicholson
Fehlbaum milks a good amount of tension out of men in headsets barking orders at their desks, although the conceit is harder to pull off once the action moves farther away and news comes in slower and slower.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 12, 2024
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- Amy Nicholson
Oppenheimer is after something that drives right at the heart of what a musical is. To harmonize means to agree. It’s a public display of solidarity — a pact to parrot the same delusions.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 7, 2024
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- Amy Nicholson
I wish Larraín had cut Callas down to size more. He’s too protective of his fellow artist to slosh around in the fury that fueled her art. Callas could sing three octaves, but the film is mostly one note.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 28, 2024
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- Amy Nicholson
Red One is a sour sugarplum of a Christmas treat, a cheerfully cynical action comedy for kids — especially the ones who asked Santa Claus for ninja stars and a Nerf gun.- Washington Post
- Posted Nov 14, 2024
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- Amy Nicholson
Everyone involved knows exactly what movie they’re making — especially Craig Robinson as the hilarious town sheriff.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 12, 2024
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- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 7, 2024
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