Anthony Lane
Select another critic »For 1,119 reviews, this critic has graded:
-
30% higher than the average critic
-
2% same as the average critic
-
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:
-
Positive: 614 out of 1119
-
Mixed: 443 out of 1119
-
Negative: 62 out of 1119
1119
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
-
- 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
- Read full review
-
- Anthony Lane
This mania is what Marvel followers have hungered for, and it would be fruitless to deny their delight. As Loki says to a crowd of earthlings, "It is the unspoken truth of humanity that you crave subjugation." We do, Master, we do.- The New Yorker
- Posted May 4, 2012
- Read full review
-
- Anthony Lane
Still, it is a writer's privilege to trim and tailor at will, and everybody loves a duel. It would take the dullest of curmudgeons not to enjoy the surge of this saga, accurate or not, and the excesses of what already feels like a distant age. [30 Sept. 2013, p.84]- The New Yorker
Posted Sep 27, 2013 -
- Anthony Lane
Get Low is deftly played, and it rarely mislays its ambling charm, but what a forbidding fable it could have been if the truth about Felix Bush, rather than emerging into sunlight, had slunk back into the woods.- The New Yorker
- Read full review
-
- Anthony Lane
Headhunters is admirably swift in style, and dangerously silly in what it begs us to swallow, but at its heart is a consummate depiction of a permanent type - the proud and prickly male, thrown back on his desperate wits. Small may not be beautiful, but it lives.- The New Yorker
- Posted May 4, 2012
- Read full review
-
- Anthony Lane
Solondz will never be meek and mild, and there are spasms of shame and awkwardness here that will make even devoted viewers wince as sharply as ever. But the movie, his best to date, and a sequel of sorts to "Happiness," feels drenched in an unfamiliar sadness.- The New Yorker
- Read full review
-
- Anthony Lane
There are passages of gravity and grace here that few other directors could unfurl. [27 Jan. 2014, p. 78]- The New Yorker
Posted Jan 22, 2014 -
- Anthony Lane
What matters most about The Homesman, which Jones co-wrote and directed, is how willingly, and movingly, he cedes the stage to Hilary Swank, as Clint Eastwood did in “Million Dollar Baby.”- The New Yorker
- Posted Nov 10, 2014
- Read full review
-
- Anthony Lane
If Roll Red Roll feels raw and pressing, six and a half years after the event, that’s because it is set on one of the world’s most contested borders: the place where online justice meets, and chafes against, the due process of the law. Expect worse battles to come.- The New Yorker
- Posted Mar 25, 2019
- Read full review
-
- 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
- Read full review
-
- Anthony Lane
It bears renewed witness to King’s eloquence, which is no less astounding in casual exchanges than on grand occasions.- The New Yorker
- Posted Jan 29, 2021
- Read full review
-
- Anthony Lane
One of the year’s more luscious releases, offering not just the sleekest car chase but the most romantic of rainstorms.- The New Yorker
- Read full review
-
- Anthony Lane
Here is the territory that "Twilight" never dared to enter. It was so busy with crushes, covens, werewolves, and all the other moth-eaten trappings of the genre that it forgot to ask, Why do vampires not die of boredom? Is time not the sharpest stake in the heart? [14 April 2014, p.86]- The New Yorker
Posted Apr 12, 2014 -
- Anthony Lane
Yet Joe, directed by David Gordon Green, succeeds. Although Green's resume has been as up and down as that of his leading man, his eye for decay has rarely blurred; and now, you sense, he has come to the right place. [14 April 2014, p.87]- The New Yorker
Posted Apr 12, 2014 -
- Anthony Lane
Best of all, we get to witness Fassbender at full tilt — to revel in that gaunt, El Greco mug of his, which, for all its handsomeness, betrays no sunny side, whether here or amid the shenanigans of “X-Men.”- The New Yorker
- Posted Aug 18, 2014
- Read full review
-
- Anthony Lane
The Worst Person in the World strikes me as believable, beautiful, roving, annoying, and frequently good for a laugh. Like most of Trier’s work, it also takes you aback with its sadness, which hangs around, after the story is over, like the smoke from a snuffed candle.- The New Yorker
- Posted Feb 7, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Anthony Lane
What could be a plain tale -- and is in danger of becoming a sappy one -- grows surprisingly inward and dense. [25 Nov. 2013, p.135]- The New Yorker
Posted Nov 22, 2013 -
- Anthony Lane
With its somersaulting trucks, drafts of quaffable blood, and skies full of digitized ravens, Bekmambetov's movie has every intention of whacking "The Matrix" at its own game.- The New Yorker
- Read full review
-
- Anthony Lane
Love Is Strange, however, is not about gay marriage. It is about a marriage that happens to be gay. If the film grows slightly boring, even that can be construed as an advance.- The New Yorker
- Posted Aug 18, 2014
- Read full review
-
- Anthony Lane
Zootopia, like its heroine, is zesty, bright, and breakneck, with chase scenes and well-tuned gags where you half expect songs to be.- The New Yorker
- Posted Mar 7, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Anthony Lane
John Crowley’s film is high on its own briskness, and its glances at Irish backstreet life land it securely in the terrain that was mapped out by Stephen Frears’s “The Snapper” and “The Van.” [5 April 2004, p. 89]- The New Yorker
-
- Anthony Lane
That is what I admire in While We’re Young; it shows a director not so much mooning over the past, with regret for faded powers, as probing his own obsessions and the limits of his style.- The New Yorker
- Posted Mar 23, 2015
- Read full review
-
- Anthony Lane
Inspiring though Marley is, however, it tends to deploy his music purely as an illustration of his life. Not once, as far as I could tell, do we watch a song being played straight through from beginning to end. [23 April 2012, p.82]- The New Yorker
Posted Apr 16, 2012 -
- Anthony Lane
What fleshes out the movie, and lends it such an extraordinary pulse of life, is the want of words.- The New Yorker
- Posted Jun 15, 2015
- Read full review
-
- Anthony Lane
Foxtrot leads us a sorry dance, with irreproachable skill, but sometimes you long for it to break step, to quicken, and to breathe.- The New Yorker
- Posted Mar 5, 2018
- Read full review
-
- Anthony Lane
The unholy clash of pageantry and squalor is finely framed; warriors in silvery helmets, shot from high above, and gleaming in the murk, resemble a nest of wood lice.- The New Yorker
- Posted Oct 7, 2019
- Read full review
-
- Anthony Lane
The whole enterprise goes far beyond pastiche, wreathing its characters in a film-intoxicated world.- The New Yorker
- Read full review
-
- 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
- Read full review
-
- Anthony Lane
She (Cotillard) is the center of attention throughout, yet what matters is her willingness to conspire in the Dardennes’ plea for justice.- The New Yorker
- Posted Dec 30, 2014
- Read full review
-
- Anthony Lane
This is typical Suleiman, as anyone who saw his no less wondrous work "Divine Intervention" (2002), can testify.- The New Yorker
- Posted Jan 10, 2011
- Read full review