Andrew Crump
Select another critic »For 365 reviews, this critic has graded:
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70% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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27% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 6.1 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Andrew Crump's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 72 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Hale County This Morning, This Evening | |
| Lowest review score: | The Last Days of American Crime | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 281 out of 365
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Mixed: 63 out of 365
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Negative: 21 out of 365
365
movie
reviews
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- Andrew Crump
The blunt examination of COVID ideologies is ingenious, though difficult to fully unpack without giving away the third act, but it’s the filmmaking’s ruthlessness that’ll catch in your mind.- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 13, 2023
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- Andrew Crump
Maya Forbes has crafted a zippy comedy about a charismatic charlatan and the disastrous impact his fakery has on the rubes gullible enough to fall for his schtick.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 18, 2018
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- Andrew Crump
The first third of Alien: Covenant is suitably gripping. The final third is wreathed in tension reminiscent of the film’s 1979 progenitor, Alien. The second third sandwiched in between these bookends is equally interminable and dumb, a garbage-level studio-prompted exercise in origin narrative, built to demystify intellectual property where mystification is a key factor in its success.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jun 1, 2017
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- Andrew Crump
Intimately, quietly, painfully, In the Fade reckons with supremacist beliefs, centering that process on Katja, and on Kruger, who breathes life and humanity into a film that intentionally lacks in both. Akin’s movie is worth seeking out on its own merits, and his subject matter is urgent, but Kruger makes them both feel essential.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 4, 2018
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- Andrew Crump
Bully. Coward. Victim. The Story of Roy Cohn isn’t really about justice, per se, but about peeling back the layers on the man.- The Playlist
- Posted Jun 17, 2020
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- Andrew Crump
Tthe best elements of Don’t Leave Home – its foreboding tone, its photography, and Roddy Sr.’s soulful, remorseful performance as Burke – override its head-scratching missteps.- The Playlist
- Posted Mar 16, 2018
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- Andrew Crump
Kramer’s filmmaking is vibrant, vital, easy to swallow while retaining astounding verbal density; you may wish for subtitles and a notepad to follow along with the near-constant back-and-forth between her characters. But that’s a feature, not a bug.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Nov 2, 2022
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- Andrew Crump
Agnes should excite viewers who like their demonic possession films and nun content fresh; there are nuns, and there is demonic possession, but there’s also Reece’s stubborn commitment to picking a niche and sticking with his aesthetic, which can be summed up as “characters kibitzing in dingy spaces.”- The Playlist
- Posted Dec 23, 2021
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- Andrew Crump
Don’t mistake Come to Daddy as anything less than unbridled, of course, but for such a staunchly bonkers movie, composure rules Timpson’s aesthetic. He maintains an impressive control over a narrative that, at face value, appears to be constantly spiraling out of control, but that’s part of his design.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Mar 26, 2020
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- Andrew Crump
That Cold Storage hews closer to comedy doesn’t lessen the unnerving sensation of watching its horror unfold. Funny as the film is, the speed with which a biological agent can spread—when the powers that be find the very notion laughable—still makes one squirm in their seat.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Feb 12, 2026
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- Andrew Crump
The Beach House plays an adept slow burn game. Brown fleshes his characters out nicely, giving them all ballast without worrying about whether we’d want to sit down for shellfish with them.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jul 7, 2020
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- Andrew Crump
There isn’t an action movie out there in 2017 that’s quite like it (for better or for worse), no action movie either as crazy or as committed to its craziness.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 31, 2017
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- Andrew Crump
Greenland isn’t some self-insistently timely movie and it probably isn’t the movie we “need” right now. But it’s the movie we have, and its honest to goodness but unintended genre resonance makes it easy to embrace.- The Playlist
- Posted Dec 16, 2020
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- Andrew Crump
The atmosphere that Franz and Fiala maintain isn’t a replacement for thoughtful writing, and their visual inventions are undone by the secrets that inspire them.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Feb 11, 2020
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- Andrew Crump
Where Grabbers is a raucous gem, Unwelcome is subdued, more polished but sadder.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Mar 10, 2023
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- The Playlist
- Posted Nov 22, 2021
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- Andrew Crump
The Limehouse Golem has costumes, and drama and an abundance of severed appendages, splattered gore and artfully dismembered bodies, and maybe that’s all any horror fan can ask for. Still: There’s nothing wrong with hoping for more.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Sep 15, 2017
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- Andrew Crump
With In the Earth, Wheatley hits a brick wall, but he hits it hard enough that whether one sees the film as successful or not, the effort remains admirable.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Feb 3, 2021
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- Andrew Crump
Garai’s array of filmmaking techniques are impressive and haunting, breathing an unsettling melancholy into her script.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jul 23, 2020
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- Andrew Crump
Even at their breeziest, Crano’s punchlines cost exorbitant amounts of discomfort.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Feb 8, 2018
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- Andrew Crump
Dunham’s filmmaking remains disciplined throughout, building pressure within that’s eventually released in explosive violence. That’s what the title promises, after all. But that promise doesn’t blunt the jolting effect of The Standoff at Sparrow Creek’s storytelling or the gutpunches dealt in its climax.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 23, 2019
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- Andrew Crump
More studio comedies should take chances on their principal cast members the way I Want You Back does. Even if little else here worked, at least Day and Slate do.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Feb 11, 2022
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- Andrew Crump
Does the experience improve under the influence? Possibly. Then again, Yuasa’s work is effectively intoxicating on its own merits, squiggly and colorful, animation off-kilter enough to send you on a cinematic trip so long as you let it wash over you.- Paste Magazine
- Posted May 9, 2018
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- Andrew Crump
Like the best “food porn” movies, Ramen Shop is an expression of authentic passion, the kind fostered by abiding connections not simply to food but to the people, places and times food recalls.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Mar 26, 2019
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- Andrew Crump
The Rental has De Palma vibes with Fincher’s cool, but lacks the former’s exploitative pleasures and the latter’s cinematic expertise. It is, however, satisfyingly composed in terms of approach, giving the audience flashes of brutality to come or shooting it from a distance, heightening the shock and lending bloodshed sharp flinching power.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jul 22, 2020
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- Andrew Crump
If The Year of Spectacular Men makes any kind of statement, it’s that Madelyn and Zoey ought to work together more often. Put simply, they’re amazing, lively, sharp, snarky with a side of cheer—for the time being The Year of Spectacular Men feels like their gift to us, an unexpected blend of comedic tones and a perfectly bittersweet summertime respite.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jun 21, 2018
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- Andrew Crump
There’s a way to find the humor in life with mental illness. The Year Between, with exceptions, isn’t it.- The Playlist
- Posted Mar 2, 2023
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- Andrew Crump
Lingua Franca has a lived-in sensibility facilitated by Sandoval’s empathy and understanding of what Olivia’s going through. It’s the film’s best quality: a firsthand knowledge driving an earnest request to be seen and respected, as an American and as a woman. Olivia isn’t asking for much. There’s no reason to deny her.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 27, 2020
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- Andrew Crump
It’s an honest to goodness real movie with a mind of its own; practical FX work and creature design help, too, as essential to what distinguishes The Wretched from its influences as the Pierce brothers’ writing.- Paste Magazine
- Posted May 7, 2020
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- Andrew Crump
Wheaton is the film’s first exceptional element. The second is Stevenson’s restraint.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Sep 17, 2020
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- Andrew Crump
It’s impossible to watch Bruckner’s adaptation without comparing it to Barker’s. Barker tapped into the darkest locus of human desire and expressed it on screen as shocking carnal violence. Bruckner sands down that perverted, forbidden lust into an accessible blueprint: Setup, kill, exposition, repeat.- The Playlist
- Posted Oct 4, 2022
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- Andrew Crump
Kingsman: The Secret Service may lack the sophistication of its peers, but damned if it doesn’t know how to have a good time.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Oct 2, 2017
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- Andrew Crump
Like many of the bright suggestions The Pod Generation offers, it would have been better left trimmed from the story, not because the outcomes and repercussions of the tech shouldn’t be explored but because there isn’t room to explore them all in under two hours.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 10, 2023
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- Andrew Crump
All the components for bite are here, from unflattering character portraits to hideous amorality, but The Commune never clamps down quite as hard as you’d like it to. Your time won’t be wasted with the movie, but it won’t send you out of the theater scarred, either.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jun 1, 2017
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- Paste Magazine
- Posted Oct 18, 2022
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- Andrew Crump
There’s some surprisingly compelling footage, played over the end credits, of real life Juggalos providing testimonials about what their community means to them, and in that a message about understanding the misunderstood.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Apr 19, 2019
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- Andrew Crump
If Aporia’s airiness gives the story a bit of distance from the world we’re living in right now, the film nonetheless does what good science fiction is supposed to, forcing viewers to bring the future conundrums it raises to their present.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 14, 2023
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- Andrew Crump
A remarkable real-life, low-artifice spy thriller becomes unremarkable fiction.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Feb 1, 2023
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- Andrew Crump
There are problems with Mrs. Hyde that have nothing whatsoever to do with Bozon’s puzzling creative choices, though for perspective’s sake, the problems are dwarfed by the choices.- Paste Magazine
- Posted May 2, 2018
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- Andrew Crump
What Tokyo Pop never allows is overcooked drama where the couple has to decide if they’re really in love, or if they’re just trying to hit it big. The film is genuine. It devoutly avoids putting on airs.- Paste Magazine
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- Andrew Crump
Little Joe could use a trim for better deployment of plot and unnerving atmosphere. No matter. Little Joe is a quirkily rattling movie, an off-kilter tonic during the year-end onslaught of movies proclaimed “important” by their studios, and what the film lacks in structure it makes up for in its eerie, cold singularity.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Dec 12, 2019
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- Andrew Crump
There’s a good movie baked into Being the Ricardos’ 131 minutes. It’s about 90 minutes long, maybe a little less. The remaining 41 minutes comprise an Aaron Sorkin movie, and like too much cream in a beautifully fried donut, they weigh down the total package with needless fat: Talking heads, flashbacks and archival footage.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Dec 9, 2021
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- Andrew Crump
It’s a really well-made genre movie, the product of a smart, obviously skilled filmmaker with a good sense of economy.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jul 20, 2017
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- Andrew Crump
It’s an odd sort of travelogue Leon and Kirby curate here, but Italian Studies’ drifting, artsy peculiarities make 70 minutes fly by with a palliative affection—for Alina, for New York and for all the intersecting stories contained within its bounds.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 12, 2022
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- Andrew Crump
It’s an endurance test where viewers pit their tolerance for naked displays of ugly masculinity against Bravo’s assured directorial chops. It’s also the best, or maybe most vital, presentation of whiteness in theaters in 2017, or for that matter the last half decade or so of pop culture.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 18, 2017
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- Andrew Crump
There’s solace to take in the realization that in another director’s hands, The Silent Twins would have been completely standardized, absent the redeeming artistic value invested in the film by Smoczynska’s presence. But the film doesn’t capitalize on her vision.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Sep 15, 2022
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- Andrew Crump
The worst choice Mary Harron makes in Dalíland is relying on convention to make an end-stage portrait of an unconventional figure.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jun 8, 2023
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- Andrew Crump
If Elfman’s destination is grim, the journey she takes to get there is palliative.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Nov 7, 2022
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- Andrew Crump
Happily, the narrative moves ahead quickly, the better to demonstrate new, inventive methods of reducing murder-happy billionaires to sloppy carcasses in between beats where Weaving and Newton get to play off of one another.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 13, 2026
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- Andrew Crump
As an exercise in suspense and genre mimesis, Burial is exceptional. But Parker slacks on the details that function as musculature for the film’s core entertainment.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Sep 6, 2022
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- Andrew Crump
As Wildling’s center, Powley keeps our attention in her orbit, and Böhm constructs a universe around her that’s worthy of her talent (if at times too murkily filmed for its own good). But the movie loses its thread 15 minutes or so into its running time.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Apr 11, 2018
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- Andrew Crump
Ruskin’s examination of the social and political elements that enabled the Strangler, and which held people like McLaughlin in contempt for attempting to serve the public good, is bold. In his next film, he should apply that same boldness toward an aesthetic purpose, too.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Mar 16, 2023
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- Andrew Crump
Gilroy isn’t a drudge, of course, and Washington is Washington. If nothing else, the film rides on his mesmerizing performance and on Gilroy’s talent for character study. But after Nightcrawler, seeing Roman J. Israel, Esq. coast on craft rather than on transgression is nothing short of a letdown.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Dec 21, 2017
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- Andrew Crump
The film’s cute, zingy, candy-coated tone is seductive enough, and both Hildebrand and Shipp are compelling in their roles. You will, in short, be entertained. But if Tragedy Girls’ subject matter is odious, its tacit, but perhaps accidental, endorsement of the very thing it means to send up is jaw-dropping.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Nov 7, 2017
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- Andrew Crump
First-time feature helmer Grabinski firmly steers his script away from sticking in one mode or another: It’s neither purely scary, nor purely tense, nor purely hilarious, but instead most or all of these at once, producing a uniquely unnerving tone where shortness of breath in one moment instantaneously gives way to cackles in the next.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Mar 18, 2021
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- The Playlist
- Posted Jun 2, 2017
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- Andrew Crump
The pleasures found in The High Note are many and often minor; Ganatra builds the film on casual chemistry between Johnson and Ross, with Harrison Jr., fresh off of his 2019 one-two punch of “Luce” and “Waves,” popping up as Johnson’s alternative foil.- The Playlist
- Posted May 26, 2020
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- Andrew Crump
Life for today’s young’uns is frankly terrifying, even if they aren’t literally living inside a horror film, with overarching threats to their future dotted by day-to-day micro-threats. In its unassuming way as real-world fantasy, Weston Razooli’s Riddle of Fire is sensitive to these plights, and casually rejects didactic allegory about them.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Mar 25, 2024
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- Andrew Crump
Happy Death Day 2U makes deliberate moves away from horror, adding both science fiction and comedy to muddle the original mixture for better and also worse. For better: The film is even more of a gas than its predecessor. For worse: It’s not as much of a horror movie.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Feb 21, 2019
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- Andrew Crump
Wannabe shock comedies toe boundaries of decorum but don’t have the stones to cross them, which in a way is more off-putting than the alternative. For Hvam, Christensen, and Klown Forever, boundaries aren’t a problem, only substance, but if you’re looking for a moral or a message, then you’re looking at the wrong film.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 7, 2016
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- Andrew Crump
As is, the film balances its talkative side with its gory side nicely. Wanting more isn’t the worst feeling a film can leave you with.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Apr 5, 2024
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- Andrew Crump
As delightful as relentless CGI monster mayhem is—and there’s plenty to go round as The House with a Clock in Its Walls rolls through its final act—it’s the lovely character work that makes the story memorable. Roth and his cast pack a surplus of exuberance into a children’s fantasy mold that’s by now grown musty.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Sep 26, 2018
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- Andrew Crump
It’s more that the specific combination of jidaigeki period piece, highland character study, and frontier justice that’s new, making Tornado a harrowing, blustery, violent amalgamation of an idiosyncratic spirit.- The A.V. Club
- Posted May 29, 2025
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- Andrew Crump
The problem dogging the film from the start is the absence of insight. Nothing that Wein and Lister-Jones have to say about facing the past, making peace with yourself and with the people who psychologically and emotionally scarred you over the course of your life, or even their most central concern, death, turns out to be worth hearing.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jul 20, 2021
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- Andrew Crump
The Strange Ones is a solid movie on first watch that becomes a seriously good movie on second watch. Maybe that’s a poor framework for an endorsement, but the film is more than the shock of its climax.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 4, 2018
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- Andrew Crump
The Commuter isn’t a tough puzzle to solve, and it veers closely to being obvious at times. But easy, unsubtle, unabashedly masculine action films don’t need nuance as long as they’re this much of a goofy pleasure to watch.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 14, 2018
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- Andrew Crump
Mosquito State is a profoundly annoying film. Believe it or not, this is meant as the highest compliment.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 31, 2021
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- Andrew Crump
Healy’s good; Schilling’s superb. Together, they make a hell of a team, he the wide-eyed schlemiel, she the hysterical but thoroughly capable victim who would naturally rather not be a victim in the first place.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jun 1, 2017
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- Andrew Crump
Arterton’s at a peak in her career here, repurposing bits and pieces of her work in Their Finest for a film with much more intentional sentiment.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jul 30, 2020
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- Andrew Crump
Lee’s making finely tuned action here; organizing history lessons isn’t his job. But the ferocity of Hunt’s combined action and momentum let him bristle over past atrocities even if those atrocities aren’t his focal point.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Dec 6, 2022
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- Andrew Crump
Daddario’s work is a ferocious joy to watch, particularly in light of how well We Summon the Darkness holds back on secrets.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Apr 9, 2020
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- Andrew Crump
In Search of Fellini isn’t a sophisticated movie. Instead, it’s a joyful movie, and the lack of refinement, whether embodied by the overuse of Fellini clips or the lack of juicy material for Bello and Rajskub to sink their teeth into, shows without stymying the movie’s intentions as a love note to its namesake.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Sep 28, 2017
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- Andrew Crump
Butcher’s Crossing is a gorgeous travelog. It’s also a warning about what happens when people fail to tread lightly in the natural world, both as a consequence of nature and themselves.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 17, 2022
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- Andrew Crump
Maybe if the film gave us the relief of a satisfying ending, the grimness, the ickiness, wouldn’t be so pronounced. But it doesn’t.- The Playlist
- Posted Aug 24, 2017
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- Andrew Crump
Godard Mon Amour captures the complications and the controversy, but Hazanavicius struggles to drum up meaningful insights into what makes Godard Godard.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Apr 18, 2018
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- Andrew Crump
In her recent roles, like Lamb and the imminent You Will Not Be Alone, Rapace has expressed boundless terror and awe in the pursuit of existential questions about being human. In Black Crab, she reminds us with steely resolve that she’s incredibly capable at performing toughness, too.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Mar 21, 2022
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- Andrew Crump
Most of Best Sellers’ problems have to do with structure instead of performance, so there’s not much that Plaza and Caine can do. They’re stymied by the writing and constricted by the direction.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Sep 17, 2021
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