Ann Hornaday
Select another critic »For 2,056 reviews, this critic has graded:
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49% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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49% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 0.7 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Ann Hornaday's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 66 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | The Tragedy of Macbeth | |
| Lowest review score: | Orphan | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,363 out of 2056
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Mixed: 375 out of 2056
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Negative: 318 out of 2056
2056
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Ann Hornaday
For a movie drenched in foreboding in menace, there’s very little narrative tension in “Eddington,” a problem Aster solves with an intrusive sound design and dissonant, clanging piano chords.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 17, 2025
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- Ann Hornaday
Brax’s knuckles may be perpetually bared, but his heart’s always in the right place, which “The Accountant 2” spares nothing to remind us, even while the mayhem escalates into sheer outlandishness.- Washington Post
- Posted Apr 23, 2025
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- Ann Hornaday
If "Road House” were more fun, if it didn’t trot out its fight sequences with such workmanlike regularity, it might have attained the kitschy greatness of its predecessor. But it doesn’t aspire to much more than mining the intellectual property catalogue for a quick-and-dirty cash grab.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 22, 2024
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- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 21, 2024
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- Ann Hornaday
In one scene, I could have sworn I saw a QR code peeking out from a character’s spiral notebook. But maybe it was just the props trying to escape from a crass, obnoxious, woefully misbegotten movie. To which hapless viewers can only respond: Take us with you.- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 7, 2024
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- Ann Hornaday
We don't need another hero, but when it comes to the man at its center, Napoleon could have used a lot more oomph.- Washington Post
- Posted Nov 21, 2023
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- Ann Hornaday
Less intriguingly convoluted than concussed into lifelessness, “Marlowe” is the cinematic equivalent of a word salad: It parrots all the right lines while striking all the right poses, without saying much of anything at all.- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 15, 2023
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- Ann Hornaday
In “Quantumania,” sprightly pacing and lighthearted humor have succumbed to the turgid seriousness that plagues so much of the comic book canon.- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 14, 2023
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- Ann Hornaday
Mawkish, obvious and manipulative, “The Son” is, quite simply, a disappointment, from its pat setup to its equally false — and, quite frankly, cruel — resolution.- Washington Post
- Posted Jan 18, 2023
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- Ann Hornaday
Darren Aronofsky’s adaptation of Samuel D. Hunter’s play is a murky-looking, claustrophobic exercise in emotionalism at its most trite and ostentatiously maudlin.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 20, 2022
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- Ann Hornaday
Like so many recent films — “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood,” “Belfast,” “The Fabelmans,” “Empire of Light” — Babylon wants to pay tribute to the medium that brings us all together in the dark. But it also doesn’t miss an opportunity to alienate the audience at every turn.- Washington Post
- Posted Dec 20, 2022
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- Ann Hornaday
A pulpy grindhouse B-picture tricked out in art house pretensions, counting on the siren call of sex and violence to fleece the rubes. Choose your own adventure. And maybe bring a barf bag.- Washington Post
- Posted Nov 22, 2022
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- Ann Hornaday
Reductive, ghoulish and surpassingly boring, “Blonde” might have invented a new cinematic genre: necro-fiction.- Washington Post
- Posted Sep 28, 2022
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- Ann Hornaday
A movie that’s not a disaster, but not particularly distinguished; a movie that, in the end, will wind up being as forgettable as its own bizarre publicity.- Washington Post
- Posted Sep 20, 2022
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- Ann Hornaday
What should be a cinematic journey into amazement and otherworldly adventure instead becomes a tedious, word-heavy slog — all the more disappointing considering the director in charge is George Miller.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 24, 2022
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- Ann Hornaday
What starts out as a slick, streamlined delivery system for mayhem, carnage and quippery finally finds its inner Agatha Christie. For all its supercool posturing, casual cruelty and lurid overcompensation, “Bullet Train” was a cozy all along.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 2, 2022
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- Ann Hornaday
With Elvis, Luhrmann matches Presley’s drive and instinctive charisma and raises him for sheer nerve, simultaneously hewing to the hoariest conventions of Hollywood rise-and-fall biopics and seeking to gleefully subvert them at every turn.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 22, 2022
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- Ann Hornaday
With its outré images and pulsating shots of human viscera, Crimes of the Future is clearly meant to shock, as well as reference very real anxieties about technology, genetics and environmental degradation. But as the convoluted plot wears on, Cronenberg’s transgressive kink looks more and more played out.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 1, 2022
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- Ann Hornaday
Welcome to “The Batman,” yet another lugubrious, laboriously grim slog masquerading as a fun comic book movie.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 1, 2022
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- Ann Hornaday
It’s a movie that’s all too happy simply to go through the motions when its star is clearly capable of busting bigger, more interesting moves. Luckily, there are other films in the sea. This is one that Lopez should have left at the altar.- Washington Post
- Posted Feb 10, 2022
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- Ann Hornaday
The Electrical Life of Louis Wain tells its story with sympathy, but too many quirks and try-hard flourishes. In the welter and spin of tics, voice-overs, set pieces, images, flashbacks and dream states, the man himself gets as lost as a kitten in the rain.- Washington Post
- Posted Oct 20, 2021
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- Ann Hornaday
With Titane, Ducournau joins the crowded realm of elevated horror, to increasingly outlandish and alienating effect.- Washington Post
- Posted Sep 29, 2021
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- Ann Hornaday
For audiences who prefer their movies to be as weird and even off-putting as possible, Annette comes fully wrapped as a pretentious, arty, occasionally breathtaking, ultimately misbegotten midsummer gift.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 3, 2021
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- Ann Hornaday
The Woman in the Window is the kind of film that could go places, but sadly never manages to get out the door.- Washington Post
- Posted May 13, 2021
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- Ann Hornaday
In Those Who Wish Me Dead, Jolie demonstrates her career-long fascination with action derring-do and physical punishment, to diminishing effect. In this pulpy, borderline laughable genre picture, not even her hair is believable.- Washington Post
- Posted May 11, 2021
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- Ann Hornaday
Unfortunately, The Columnist doesn’t live up to its initial promise: What might have been a trenchant cultural critique couched within poisonously playful genre exercise becomes an indulgence in undifferentiated rage for its own graphic sake.- Washington Post
- Posted May 4, 2021
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- Ann Hornaday
Full of incident, heartbreak, secrets and betrayal, The Affair and its choppy formal structure don’t do justice to an enormously appealing cast.- Washington Post
- Posted Mar 2, 2021
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- Ann Hornaday
Vanessa Kirby delivers a bravura performance in Pieces of a Woman. In fact, her performance is so commanding, uncompromising and far-ranging that it often threatens to swallow this otherwise uneven and frustratingly thin movie with one voracious gulp.- Washington Post
- Posted Jan 8, 2021
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- Ann Hornaday
Bad Hair is a good idea buried within a scattershot, ultimately mediocre movie.- Washington Post
- Posted Oct 21, 2020
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- Ann Hornaday
Rebecca is nice to look at, inoffensive, competently executed and utterly unnecessary when once, it was so much more.- Washington Post
- Posted Oct 20, 2020
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