April Wolfe
Select another critic »For 186 reviews, this critic has graded:
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63% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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34% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 2.1 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
April Wolfe's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 68 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Manchester by the Sea | |
| Lowest review score: | Life Itself | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 111 out of 186
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Mixed: 60 out of 186
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Negative: 15 out of 186
186
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- April Wolfe
This film is in dire need of some atmosphere and a rewrite to make the twists work.- Village Voice
- Posted Oct 27, 2016
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- April Wolfe
I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House is the very best of gothic horror, that which needles at your insecure core and whispers in your ear what you already suspected: You will never be all right.- Village Voice
- Posted Oct 25, 2016
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- April Wolfe
A slow approach requires careful atmosphere-building, and these days West is actually stronger at writing funny dialogue than he is at creating atmosphere.- Village Voice
- Posted Oct 22, 2016
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- April Wolfe
There might be a good story somewhere deep inside this tangled narrative, but Dekker seems more focused on creating a succession of "scary" images than he is on that.- Village Voice
- Posted Oct 13, 2016
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- April Wolfe
Certain Women is a kind, loving, and deeply moving portrait of bighearted small-town people.- Village Voice
- Posted Oct 13, 2016
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- April Wolfe
Even if his film's plot is predictable, the younger Scott is returning the ensemble thriller to its roots with something far more important than an airtight story: compelling, well-drawn characters and the talented actors to play them.- Village Voice
- Posted Sep 1, 2016
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- April Wolfe
The sense of authenticity that marks The Light Between Oceans at its best has everything to do with the acting — and if all Cianfrance ever gives us is that, it's worth the price of his lagging third act.- Village Voice
- Posted Aug 31, 2016
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- April Wolfe
Both actors occasionally hit stumbling blocks with the wordy script and Tanne's direction, neither of which allows quite enough room for the characters to think and feel onscreen.- Village Voice
- Posted Aug 23, 2016
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- April Wolfe
Throughout the film, the wrong characters are in focus, inexplicable close-ups abound, and Rapkin’s got the camera on rails, moving and panning for seemingly no reason.- Village Voice
- Posted Aug 18, 2016
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- April Wolfe
In Chad Hartigan's lighthearted drama Morris From America, there are a whopping two African-American characters. The difference between this film and most others, however, is that these two are fully yet subtly drawn. They interact in ways that feel genuine, the actors portraying a heartfelt father-son relationship and the director fighting the urge to get either too preachy or mushy.- Village Voice
- Posted Aug 17, 2016
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- Village Voice
- Posted Aug 11, 2016
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- April Wolfe
[Winocour] elevates the action hero beyond his physical assets, drilling through his psyche to offer a rare and welcome lens into a type of man usually reduced to stoicism or sulking, hiding behind a rubber mask.- Village Voice
- Posted Aug 9, 2016
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- April Wolfe
This isn’t torture-porn dystopia; it’s a singular, honest, heartfelt portrait of sisterly devotion at the end of the world- Village Voice
- Posted Jul 28, 2016
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- April Wolfe
An excellent, hilarious 15-minute verbal sparring match between Marcus and the school’s dean (Tracy Letts) is both an overindulgence — so many of the characters need fleshing out — but also a welcome burst of laughter in a self-serious picture.- Village Voice
- Posted Jul 28, 2016
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- April Wolfe
The art of physical comedy is alive and well with Saunders and Lumley, who precisely calculate each well-timed tumble.- Village Voice
- Posted Jul 19, 2016
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- April Wolfe
When Sandberg isn’t spinning his wheels in the why, he’s capable of doling out a steady diet of scares.- Village Voice
- Posted Jul 19, 2016
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- April Wolfe
Despite worthy performances from the entire cast, this movie’s a prime example of a director admiring some great movies but only having a cursory, superficial understanding of what it was that made them work.- Village Voice
- Posted Jul 14, 2016
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- April Wolfe
Unfortunately, as he performs the acting equivalent of triple backflips, Cranston isn't given much of a safety net from the script or direction.- Village Voice
- Posted Jul 12, 2016
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- April Wolfe
Where "Ida" takes a drearier, more realistic approach to the story, The Innocents, despite its dark focus on a group of women living in fear of getting repeatedly raped by their allies, actually has a mightier finish, something of a crescendo to cut through the quiet grief.- Village Voice
- Posted Jun 29, 2016
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- April Wolfe
One of the most sincere and funny portraits of family life to come along in a while.- Village Voice
- Posted Jun 23, 2016
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- April Wolfe
Whether or not you connect with Refn's brand of over-the-top violence, you can't deny that his attention to color, texture, and music is nearly unmatched by other directors working today.- Village Voice
- Posted Jun 21, 2016
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- April Wolfe
Every character gets to learn a lesson, and while the humor is nothing new, the situations are.- Village Voice
- Posted Jun 15, 2016
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- April Wolfe
The strongest aspect of Therapy for a Vampire is its exquisite visual homage to the vamp films of old, and also the screwballs.- Village Voice
- Posted Jun 9, 2016
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- April Wolfe
It’s so gorgeous you can sometimes forget the train wreck of a story. But only sometimes.- Village Voice
- Posted May 25, 2016
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- April Wolfe
The complexity of feminism for young girls today is displayed with rare hilarity and insight.- Village Voice
- Posted May 19, 2016
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- April Wolfe
Maggie's Plan is a fun light comedy with memorable characters, from a writer-director who lives up to her lineage (Arthur Miller's her dad), but it relies heavily on Gerwig's predictable charm and sometimes seems more Woody Allen than Rebecca Miller.- Village Voice
- Posted May 18, 2016
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- April Wolfe
In The Trust, the stylish new heist film from Alex and Benjamin Brewer, we get a brief, satisfying, darkly comic peek at everyday Vegas life as lived by low-level LVPD officers. Then the film quickly loses focus and forgets the quirky characters that make the city — and the story — special.- Village Voice
- Posted May 10, 2016
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- April Wolfe
If Charlie were just unlikable, it all might be palatable and even fun. But his behavior draws more of an eye-roll than a laugh or a snarl, despite Robinson's confident, believable performance.- Village Voice
- Posted May 5, 2016
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- April Wolfe
Key and Peele have a special kind of magic they’ve brought to their first feature, but it’s also a crazy-simple formula: Keep saving that damn cat.- Village Voice
- Posted May 5, 2016
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- April Wolfe
Tale of Tales is the most faithful and creatively rendered fairytale onscreen to date, bizarrely satisfying and totally worth a patient, focused viewing.- Village Voice
- Posted Apr 21, 2016
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