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
At its best The First Purge functions like a much-reduced Purge movie retread. It’s not that it’s bad, really. It’s that we’ve seen this before.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jul 5, 2018
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- Andrew Crump
Golja and Gossett’s joint appeal—his rascally charm, her coltish earnestness—gives The Cuban soul, shining light through the gloom of brain decline and the horrors of an ambivalent healthcare system. Who needs validation when you have heart?- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 6, 2020
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- Andrew Crump
Don’t confuse Becky for a smart movie. It won’t teach audiences anything valuable, or even new, about the disease of white supremacist ideology. It won’t leave folks holding hands in solidarity against racism and prejudice at a time when solidarity is like oxygen. It will, however, provide a brief burst of catharsis through the brutal slaughter of white supremacist ideologues, for whatever that catharsis is worth.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Sep 1, 2020
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- Andrew Crump
Together, McCoy and Williams make The Owners stand out. Newness is a big ask for movies visiting territory this familiar. Two outstanding central performances, however, make a much more reasonable expectation.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Oct 8, 2020
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- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jun 13, 2019
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- Andrew Crump
Gray and his leads ably demonstrate how quotidian encounters and minute actions speak volumes. What’s missing is space for those little details to fully speak.- The Playlist
- Posted Aug 2, 2024
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- Andrew Crump
Anybody could direct this kind of story, and many already have. But There’s Something Wrong with the Children is right in Benjamin’s wheelhouse, and her skill with this familiar set-up is a major boon.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 17, 2023
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- Andrew Crump
Slowly, agonizingly, over the course of two-and-a-half hours, the house collapses in a stream of Star Wars free association. At best, The Rise of Skywalker solidifies Ridley and Driver as movie stars. At worst, it ends this narrative not with a bang but with a recycled image from a better movie. If that isn’t proof that Disney considers this property more product than art, nothing is.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Dec 18, 2019
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- Andrew Crump
This isn’t a movie in search of a greater meaning. It just needs to be entertaining. But it does both, and better still, it bothers to be creative.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jun 24, 2019
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- Andrew Crump
The Mauritanian plays by the numbers, hitting courtroom conspiracy drama beats dutifully but without any urgency. From the start, everyone on every side of the court is running out of time, and hitting their heads on brick walls of government silence, which, though drawn from real life, remains a well-worn genre cliché played too heavily by Macdonald’s direction.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Feb 12, 2021
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- Andrew Crump
Consider The Forever Purge as the “well, well, well, if it isn’t the consequences of my own actions” meme as a horror film.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jul 2, 2021
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- Andrew Crump
Comprising hardcore and doom metal, à la Isis, Electric Wizard, and Doomriders, Bliss is more metal than most of the metal records released in the last five years. The substance beneath the slaughter is a happy bonus, and a reminder that even the ugliest horror movies can have more going on under the hood than one might think.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Oct 8, 2019
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- Andrew Crump
As mired as it is in identity confusion, cheeseball sentimentality and jaundiced camera filters, The Tender Bar could’ve been something if it had a purpose.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 7, 2022
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- Andrew Crump
To the Erwins’ credit, they make an effort at taking their movie somewhere interesting and, at least for a Jesus-y football picture, new.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Dec 23, 2021
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- Andrew Crump
What makes Body at Brighton Rock such good fun is understanding where Wendy is coming from, and connecting to the very specific engine that’s fueling her fear. The movie’s truth doesn’t disappoint, because the truth is that nature plays tricks on the mind.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Apr 25, 2019
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- Andrew Crump
It’s less a story and more a fragile white male provocation, and it’s repulsive.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Feb 5, 2021
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- Andrew Crump
In place of new, at least, we get to see Butler in his element as a man of compassion first and blazing guns second.- The Playlist
- Posted May 25, 2023
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- Andrew Crump
Think of the film as an extended cousin of Too Many Cooks, where parody gives way to weirdness, which gives way to surrealism, which gives way to genuine horror by the end. Bonkers as the combination sounds, and it is unimpeachably bonkers, the effect of their marriage is hypnotic.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 15, 2020
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- Andrew Crump
Charlie’s Angels talks a good talk, but struggles to back up the talk with the drama necessary to make it worthwhile. At least Stewart, Scott, and Balinska are having a good time, but they’re so switched on, and Charlie’s Angels is so switched off, that it sometimes feels like they’re in a totally different movie than the one Banks is making. You may end up wishing that you were in that movie with them.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Nov 14, 2019
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- Andrew Crump
As Greed’s concentration vacillates, it dilutes both Coogan’s portrait of McCreadie and the impact of its own contempt.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Apr 9, 2020
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- Andrew Crump
If nothing else, think of it as a hilariously repugnant curio, the kind of transgressive art you’ll be unable to unpack because you’ll be too busy chugging ginger ale to bother.- The Playlist
- Posted Jul 20, 2017
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- Andrew Crump
Residue is about colonization, and through the creative choices he makes, Gerima suggests that colonization stories don’t actually have to be about the colonizers themselves. Instead, he maintains a personal touch over the picture and the narrative, about a homecoming that goes slowly awry over the course of a 90 minute duration.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Oct 7, 2020
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- Andrew Crump
Baghead is moody and atmospheric enough (if low on scares) for about the first hour.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Apr 8, 2024
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- Andrew Crump
Kids vs. Aliens is a harmless trifle. A filmmaker with this many years under their belt should have more to show for themselves than that.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 19, 2023
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- Andrew Crump
It’s possible to fuse pulp with prestige while still saying smart things about the seismic political shifts required for creeps like the Proud Boys to skitter from the rocks they live under and infest society’s better elements. The Wrath of Becky makes no such effort. It’s built to thrill and made for chuckles, offset by Seann William Scott’s looming menace.- Paste Magazine
- Posted May 23, 2023
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- Andrew Crump
Either Ritchie didn’t bring his typical slickness for the ride, or he’s chopped up Operation Fortune: Ruse de Guerre intentionally to take the piss out of the genre. The effect at least feels more like comfort than boredom.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Mar 3, 2023
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- Andrew Crump
The writer/director demonstrates a rare storytelling economy in his feature debut, leaving no trace of fat on Homebound’s bones and letting only the most essential elements shine.- Paste Magazine
- Posted May 12, 2022
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- Andrew Crump
Wolf Man grasps the sobriety of how easily men are acculturated to violence by other men, but loosens its hold around the start of its final act: the insularity of its world becomes a crutch rather than an asset, and the plot reassigns the task of solving male abandon to its female characters.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 15, 2025
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- Andrew Crump
Everyone has off days, or in his case off years. But Summering extends those off years into Ponsoldt’s most puzzling effort so far, a genre jumble roping together a kid-detective novel, a ghost story, a hokey “do you know where your children are” PSA and a coming-of-age dramedy.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 12, 2022
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- Andrew Crump
Rich filmmaking, from assured camerawork to tactile set decoration, is the film’s basis. But richer exploration of theme and spiritual belief is its design. Things Heard & Seen isn’t elevated. It’s just mature, wonderfully made, and, whether dead or alive, human.- The Playlist
- Posted Apr 29, 2021
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