Anthony Lane
Select another critic »For 1,119 reviews, this critic has graded:
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30% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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68% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 1.4 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Anthony Lane's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 64 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Amour | |
| Lowest review score: | The Da Vinci Code | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 614 out of 1119
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Mixed: 443 out of 1119
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Negative: 62 out of 1119
1119
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Anthony Lane
The film that results is at once panicky and abstruse, and we are left with little more than the delirious shine of McConaughey’s eyes and the preacherly rapture in his voice.- The New Yorker
- Posted Jan 30, 2017
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- Anthony Lane
In short, we are watching an old-fashioned exploitation flick — part of a depleted and degrading genre that not even M. Night Shyamalan, the writer and director of Split, can redeem.- The New Yorker
- Posted Jan 23, 2017
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- Anthony Lane
What follows, in the final half hour of the movie, is an astounding chamber piece, worthy of Strindberg, with the husband, the wife, and her aggressor stuck in a dance of doubt and death. With every shot, our sympathies flicker and tilt.- The New Yorker
- Posted Jan 23, 2017
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- Anthony Lane
Dave’s dread of his brother hooks The Ardennes onto a long chain of fraternal crime dramas, from “The Public Enemy” (1931) and “On the Waterfront” (1954) to “We Own the Night” (2007). Pront can hardly be blamed if his actors lack the sinew of Cagney or Brando.- The New Yorker
- Posted Jan 9, 2017
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- Anthony Lane
Layer by layer, this dumbfounding movie devises its magical recipe, and dares us to resist it: ketchup, mustard, two slices of pickle, and hold the irony. Delicious.- The New Yorker
- Posted Jan 9, 2017
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- Anthony Lane
Where “Paterson” is tranquil to the point of inertia, Neruda, with its jumpy shifts of scene, its doses of casual surrealism, and its mashing of high politics against low farce, struck me as more of a poem. It reminds us that movies, by their very nature, owe far more to poetry than they ever will to the novel. The story is only the start.- The New Yorker
- Posted Dec 26, 2016
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- Anthony Lane
This movie has almost no bite but plenty of moseying charm, and what it does get right is the idea of poets as perpetual magpies.- The New Yorker
- Posted Dec 26, 2016
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- Anthony Lane
Almodóvar - whose penchant for narrative complexity grows ever deeper - latches on to the idea of personal history as a puzzle that refuses to be solved.- The New Yorker
- Posted Dec 12, 2016
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- Anthony Lane
The movie belongs wholeheartedly to Bening, and to the age, come and gone, that she enshrines.- The New Yorker
- Posted Dec 12, 2016
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- Anthony Lane
Catch the film on the largest screen you can find, with a sound system to match, even if that means journeying all day. Have a drink beforehand. And, whatever you do, don’t wait for a DVD or a download.- The New Yorker
- Posted Dec 5, 2016
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- Anthony Lane
Allied is written by Steven Knight and directed by Robert Zemeckis, who seems uncertain whether to treat the tale as a wrenching saga of split loyalties or as a glamorous jaunt. Having gathered all the ingredients for derring-do, he forgets to turn up the heat, and the derring never does.- The New Yorker
- Posted Nov 28, 2016
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- Anthony Lane
I happen to find the result intrusive, presumptuous, and often absurd, but, for anyone who thinks that all formality is a front, and that the only point of a façade is that it should crack, Jackie delivers a gratifying thrill.- The New Yorker
- Posted Nov 28, 2016
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- Anthony Lane
As is proved by documentary footage at the end, Garth Davis’s film is based on a true story; though wrenching, there is barely enough of it to fill the dramatic space, and the second half is a slow and muted affair after the Dickensian punch of the first.- The New Yorker
- Posted Nov 21, 2016
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- Anthony Lane
In all, the movie is a cunning and peppy surprise, dulled only by the news that no less than four sequels await. Will the spell not wear off before then?- The New Yorker
- Posted Nov 21, 2016
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- Anthony Lane
Even if you love the film, as I do, all the lurching, stop-and-go exchanges of these unquiet souls may leave you with a craving for “The Philadelphia Story,” or something equally streamlined.- The New Yorker
- Posted Nov 21, 2016
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- Anthony Lane
That stance of hers will outrage many viewers, as Verhoeven intends it to, but the question of whether Elle is pernicious nonsense or an excruciating black comedy is brushed aside in Huppert’s demonstration of sangfroid. This, she shows us, is how to stand up for yourself in style. She’s the best.- The New Yorker
- Posted Nov 14, 2016
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- Anthony Lane
I felt sorry for Gyllenhaal, berated in both his personae for being weak, and for Adams, strapped and laced into a role that scarcely lets her breathe.- The New Yorker
- Posted Nov 14, 2016
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- Anthony Lane
It may be weaker in the resolution than in the setup, but that is an inbuilt hazard of science fiction, and what lingers, days after you leave the cinema, is neither the wizardry nor the climax but the zephyr of emotional intensity that blows through the film.- The New Yorker
- Posted Nov 7, 2016
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- Anthony Lane
The quiet joke of the film is that you could scarcely meet two less revolutionary souls.- The New Yorker
- Posted Oct 31, 2016
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- Anthony Lane
The result, though corny at times, treads close to madness and majesty alike, and nobody but Gibson could have made it.- The New Yorker
- Posted Oct 31, 2016
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- Anthony Lane
How far the story of Christine Chubbuck ripples outward, registering the cultural stresses of its time (and ours), I’m not sure. As an eyewitness report of a lonely soul on the rack, however, the movie is hard to beat.- The New Yorker
- Posted Oct 17, 2016
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- Anthony Lane
Park has conjured up not only his smartest but also his most stirring film to date. And the least icky.- The New Yorker
- Posted Oct 17, 2016
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- Anthony Lane
Precisely thirty-six times more interesting than “The Girl on the Train.” Where the conceit of that movie feels timid, cooked up, and culturally thin, Anvari’s is nourished by a near-traumatic sense of history, and, in terms of feminist pluck, Rashidi’s presence, in the leading role, is both gutsier and more plausible than the combined efforts of all the main performers in Taylor’s film.- The New Yorker
- Posted Oct 10, 2016
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- Anthony Lane
Does it matter that the plot is so full of holes that you could use it to drain spaghetti?- The New Yorker
- Posted Oct 10, 2016
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- Anthony Lane
In short, Peter Berg has done it again. You come out shaken with excitement, but with a touch of shame, too, at being so easily thrilled.- The New Yorker
- Posted Oct 3, 2016
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- Anthony Lane
Arnold’s very strength — the mashup of grime and epiphany — is in danger of becoming a shtick. Then, there’s the length: an elasticated plot doesn’t really suit a director who is at her best in specific locations, where people get stuck like flies.- The New Yorker
- Posted Oct 3, 2016
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- Anthony Lane
Neel’s cast is terrific, from Schnetzer and Flaherty, with their soft and soulful — and thus punchable — faces, to Jake Picking, who plays the leader of the frat pack, and whose Popeye arms and buggy unblinking eyes make him both a monster and, if you stand aside from the melee, a bad joke.- The New Yorker
- Posted Sep 26, 2016
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- Anthony Lane
Traces of real history are hard to spot in Fuqua’s Western, but there isn’t much evidence of a real Western, either. You sense that an entire genre, far from being revitalized, is being plundered for handy tips.- The New Yorker
- Posted Sep 26, 2016
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- Anthony Lane
Maguire has the nerve to give her heroine a big speech on the “integrity” of proper journalism — this after Bridget Jones’s Baby has made fun of foreigners’ names, and arranged for her to put the wrong Asian guest in front of the cameras. (Do all Asians look alike to her? Is that the joke?) So reliably does she embarrass herself at every public event that the film, trudging by on automatic, becomes an embarrassment, too.- The New Yorker
- Posted Sep 19, 2016
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- Anthony Lane
As “Eight Days a Week” springs from color to black-and-white, and as frenzied action is intercut with stills, we get a delicious sense of doubleness. The Beatles now belong to an honored past, stuck there like an obelisk, and yet here they are, alive—busting out all over, time and time again. Yeah, yeah, yeah.- The New Yorker
- Posted Sep 19, 2016
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