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
As the chief avatar for parental distress, Carell is sympathetic if not always entirely convincing: The toughest moments of Beautiful Boy simply seem out of his range as an actor, especially when he takes reportorial zeal one step too far by trying hard drugs himself.- Washington Post
- Posted Oct 17, 2018
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- Ann Hornaday
Like its protagonist, First Man doesn’t go in for theatrics or gratuitous emotion, however justified. It gets the job done, with professionalism, immersive authenticity and unadorned feeling, of which Armstrong himself might just have approved, however apprehensively.- Washington Post
- Posted Oct 9, 2018
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- Ann Hornaday
The pure athletics of Free Solo, which chronicles Honnold’s months-long training regimen as well as his subsequent attempts, would be spectacle enough to create an entertaining film.- Washington Post
- Posted Oct 3, 2018
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- Ann Hornaday
The Old Man and the Gun ambles along with such unhurried, folksy ease that it’s easy to overlook the people — mostly women — Tucker leaves in his wake, victims who may not be physically scarred, but often look as if they will bear unseen injuries into the future nonetheless.- Washington Post
- Posted Oct 3, 2018
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- Ann Hornaday
This is Audiard’s first English-language film, and he evinces sure instincts with both the visual and spoken vernaculars. The Sisters Brothers looks terrific and, propelled by Desplat’s beautiful music, ambles along with pleasing, if routinely episodic, ease until its unexpectedly touching conclusion.- Washington Post
- Posted Sep 28, 2018
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- Ann Hornaday
A well-seasoned, handsomely cured slab of showbiz schmaltz that hits all the right pleasure centers. With equal parts glitz and grit, Cooper has successfully navigated the most perilous shoals of making a classic narrative his own, managing to create one of its best iterations to date.- Washington Post
- Posted Sep 21, 2018
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- Ann Hornaday
Accompanied, appropriately enough, by Bach piano pieces, The Children Act is an unmitigated pleasure to watch and listen to, primarily as a showcase for Thompson’s incomparable gifts as an actress.- Washington Post
- Posted Sep 19, 2018
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- Washington Post
- Posted Sep 19, 2018
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- Ann Hornaday
A film that feels like something conjured out of memory and magic, a poetic, often ecstatic re-creation of childhood that captures its ungovernable pleasures as vividly as its most threatening terrors.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 30, 2018
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- Ann Hornaday
A handsome production that delicately skewers literary-world pretensions and Great Man mythmaking. But primarily, The Wife offers viewers a chance to observe one of the finest — and most criminally underpraised — actresses of her generation working at the very top of her shrewd, subtle, superbly self-controlled game.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 22, 2018
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- Ann Hornaday
The result is a movie that feels both hard-edged and dreamy; punk-rock and lyrical; wised-up and unbearably tender.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 21, 2018
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- Ann Hornaday
If Bowers’s present-day life has slowed down considerably, his memories haven’t, and the subject of Scotty and the Secret History of Hollywood exerts his luridly voyeuristic pull, as he shares name after name of his most shocking exploits.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 16, 2018
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- Ann Hornaday
Like the finest forebears of the rom-com genre — including its urtext, “Four Weddings and a Funeral” — Crazy Rich Asians indulges in the escapist pleasures of aspirational wealth, obscene consumerism and invidious judge-iness.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 14, 2018
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- Ann Hornaday
Accompanied by an expressively lush jazz-blues score by Lee’s regular composer Terence Blanchard, BlacKkKlansman announces from the jump that viewers are in for a lush, sensory treat as Lee plays with the film vernacular he’s manipulated so adroitly and expressively for three decades.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 7, 2018
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- Ann Hornaday
One of the great gifts of Far From the Tree is simple visibility, whereby viewers are given the opportunity to watch people live their lives, share their wisdom and flourish within the loving care of their family and friends.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 1, 2018
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- Ann Hornaday
In Puzzle, Macdonald has finally found a movie that she doesn’t need to steal, because it belongs to her completely.- Washington Post
- Posted Aug 1, 2018
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- Ann Hornaday
Even its most irritating parts don’t fatally damage a whole that works amazingly well, despite its own excesses.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 25, 2018
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- Ann Hornaday
Thanks to Burnham’s exuberant, alert writing and Fisher’s masterful command of vulnerability, anxiety, resilience and steadfast self-belief, Kayla emerges as an icon of her own — just by being herself.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 20, 2018
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- Ann Hornaday
The best films teach you how to watch them within the first few minutes. Blindspotting is no exception. The film gets off to an exhilarating start, with split-screen images of Oakland, Calif., unspooling to the tune of a soaring aria.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 18, 2018
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- Ann Hornaday
Uplift winds up getting the better of “Don’t Worry,” in which Phoenix delivers an impressively committed performance that nonetheless can’t overcome the movie’s worship of Callahan’s most immature, solipsistic and self-dramatizing foibles. A movie that’s supposed to inspire winds up being irritating instead.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 18, 2018
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- Ann Hornaday
This crafty sociological thriller, set amid the pristine townhouses and lawns of a quiet Reykjavik suburb, builds slowly but surely into a film that feels utterly of a piece with a much wider world.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 10, 2018
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- Ann Hornaday
The director tries to infuse Shock and Awe with the taut procedural drama of “All the President’s Men,” “Spotlight” or “The Post.” But he winds up demonstrating just how difficult it is to make shoe-leather journalism entertaining, much less artful.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 10, 2018
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- Ann Hornaday
This is a movie of myriad worthy, even urgently necessary, ideas; when it reaches its climax, it goes completely haywire in a preposterous, increasingly scattershot sci-fi pastiche.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 6, 2018
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- Ann Hornaday
Although Whitney follows a familiar structure, Macdonald infuses it with artful editorial choices, marking the chapters of Houston’s life with brief but vivid montages of the times in which she lived.- Washington Post
- Posted Jul 4, 2018
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- Ann Hornaday
In Damsel, sibling filmmakers David and Nathan Zellner have created the perfect western for the #MeToo era, delightfully twisting and torquing the traditional woman-in-jeopardy narrative to create a clever, comical and uncannily relevant allegory.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 28, 2018
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- Ann Hornaday
As “Guardians” and, later, “Deadpool” doubled down on the snark, “Ant-Man” kept things light, its playfulness made all the more endearing by the boyish, twinkle-eyed persona of its star, Paul Rudd.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 27, 2018
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- Ann Hornaday
The mopey, midwinter atmosphere of Nancy becomes increasingly and oppressively bleak, leavened only by Smith-Cameron’s spot-on portrayal of her character’s trembling, painfully fragile optimism.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 27, 2018
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- Ann Hornaday
This handsomely staged production plays like a soothingly thoughtful balm.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 20, 2018
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- Ann Hornaday
The best way to appreciate this fitfully funny collection of japes and jests is to treat it like any teenage boy in your midst: Focus on the positives and know that even its worst is only a phase.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 14, 2018
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- Ann Hornaday
Benefits from a sensitive, even-tempered tone, as well as terrific supporting performances from Spencer, Ann Dowd (as Alex’s status-obsessed mom) and a scene-stealing Amy Landecker, who plays an ambivalent therapy client of Greg’s.- Washington Post
- Posted Jun 13, 2018
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