Barbara VanDenburgh
Select another critic »For 253 reviews, this critic has graded:
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39% higher than the average critic
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4% same as the average critic
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57% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 5.7 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Barbara VanDenburgh's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 60 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Portrait of a Lady on Fire | |
| Lowest review score: | Mothers and Daughters | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 108 out of 253
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Mixed: 127 out of 253
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Negative: 18 out of 253
253
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
It’s a film that gets brilliantly to the truth of how and why we fall in love, and replicates that sensation — and the heartache that follows.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Feb 12, 2020
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
When it reaches its boiling point, Les Misérables absolutely roils.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jan 24, 2020
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
It’s an unnecessarily complicated puzzle-box construction that only serves to cheapen the story and diminish its impact- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jan 3, 2020
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
The writing and editing aren’t up to the task of retrofitting Alcott’s straightforward narrative with a sophisticated chronology and rob it of dramatic tension in the process.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Dec 26, 2019
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
A Hidden Life is less a story than an experience, a spiritual journey made accessible through light and sound. Malick doesn’t transcend cinema. He sanctifies it.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Dec 19, 2019
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Queen & Slim is strongest when it lets the images and the acting do the lion’s share of the talking.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Nov 26, 2019
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
The report is important. Its findings and the attempts to undermine them and the investigators, shouldn’t be forgotten. That The Report tries to keep these lessons in a fickle public’s consciousness is a good thing. If only anything committed to screen here were memorable.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Nov 21, 2019
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
It adds up to a marginally more interesting experience than the first “Frozen,” but this sequel would have benefited from venturing a touch further into the unknown.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Nov 21, 2019
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
It’s behind the wheel with Miles that Ford v Ferrari becomes a well-oiled entertainment machine, a thrill ride with a driver’s-eye view of the world’s most exciting track. Everything that doesn’t work is just a distant speck in the rearview mirror.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Nov 13, 2019
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
All pleasures in Last Christmas are as slight. Like the Christmas shop and its baubles, it’s shiny and attractive and intermittently distracting, but it’s all just so much glitter on cheap plastic. It’s angling hard for holiday cheer, but there’s nothing more joyless than forced whimsy.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Nov 7, 2019
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
First Love might not ultimately mean much, but its wily mix of colorful elements – romance, organized crime, slapstick and ultra-violence – makes for a bracingly weird cinematic experience.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Oct 10, 2019
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Brittany is funny and authentic, but she can also be prickly and stubborn, even hard to like. You know, the way real people are.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Aug 28, 2019
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
The Kitchen requires Scorsese levels of charisma to work, and only McCarthy comes close out of sheer professionalism.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Aug 7, 2019
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Tel Aviv on Fire, like the soap opera that shares its name, doesn't attempt to grapple with the complexities of the conflict. "Is there nothing between bombs and surrender?" it asks, pleading for moderation. Moderation gets you a pleasant-enough comedy. But not much more.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Aug 1, 2019
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Tarantino has always worn his love of cinema on his sleeve, fetishistic and in the form of homage. But here, that love is reverent.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jul 24, 2019
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
While Midsommar is too overwrought to be a masterpiece, it’s also too entertaining in its abject lunacy and assured in its craftsmanship to be considered a sophomore slump. Aster is a filmmaker still defining his voice, and despite the growing pains, Midsommar is an intriguing step in its evolution.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jul 2, 2019
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
The Proposal makes for a fascinating and not-a-little-morbid piece of artistic trolling.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jun 20, 2019
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
“Last Black Man” pulses with undeniable energy and the promise of other, even better films to come. As director Joe Talbot’s first movie, it’s impossible to imagine it will be his last.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jun 13, 2019
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
It’s ironic that a film about bucking formula is itself so formulaic. There’s nothing wrong with such inoffensive pleasantness, but if Late Night wants to advocate setting fire to the system in pursuit of more meaningful art, it should have led the charge.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jun 13, 2019
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
It all has the air of a community theater troupe performing in a Disney parade, overeager in the exaggerated artifice. That's well enough for an amusement park, but on film it's embarrassing.- Arizona Republic
- Posted May 23, 2019
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
How do you make a legend as imposing as Shakespeare flesh? All Is True suggests you can't, if not even Branagh, Dench, McKellen, et al. can bring him down to earth. Maybe it's for the best that the real man is unknowable, that man is simply the work itself.- Arizona Republic
- Posted May 14, 2019
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
It doesn’t just maintain the momentum built in the previous chapters but further ramps up the emotional stakes and physical complexity. It’s like gorging on candy for two hours, only you get to walk away from the theater without a stomachache.- Arizona Republic
- Posted May 14, 2019
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
A cunning civics lesson about religious pluralism that will have civic-minded citizens throwing up the devil horns even if they’re not quite ready to proclaim mocking allegiance to Satan.- Arizona Republic
- Posted May 1, 2019
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Movie-release schedules are set by studios months in advance, and many are the movie that had the misfortune to open at an inopportune time. But Hotel Mumbai is responsible for myriad other poor creative decisions that make a spectacle of misery.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Mar 27, 2019
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
What seems primed to play out like a by-the-numbers social message movie with a classic redemption arc becomes something much more sophisticated, and much more challenging for the viewer. Schoenaerts' performance deserves much of the praise.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Mar 20, 2019
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
For all its thematic and behind-the-scenes innovations, cinematically Captain Marvel feels like a step backward for the MCU. Fresh off the heels of the all-or-nothing bombast of “Avengers: Infinity War,” the righteous representation of “Black Panther” and the giddy lunacy of “Thor: Ragnarok,” Captain Marvel is a retreat into a bland formula.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Mar 5, 2019
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Even if your veins pump with more popcorn butter than blood, Alita: Battle Angel can get a bit too stupid to bear, like watching a pair of 13-year-old boys play a very expensive video game they designed themselves.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Feb 13, 2019
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
The problem isn’t that it pokes fun at romantic comedies, it’s that it itself isn’t a terribly good one.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Feb 13, 2019
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
While it necessarily lacks the joy of discovery the first movie brought, “The Lego Movie 2” is still a breathless romp, landing enough jokes a minute to discourage over-analysis. It’s a good time at the movies, which is all a Lego movie really owes us for the price of admission.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Feb 7, 2019
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Destroyer frequently zombie-shuffles into unintentional hilarity, confusing darkness for depth, ugliness for complexity, convolution for smarts. It is just too self-serious to take seriously.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jan 16, 2019
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
It’s clear from the opening shots that a physically and psychically savaged post-war Poland is impossible ground for love to flower, and it’s a testament to Pawel Pawlikowski’s talent that this fatalism makes us more, not less, invested in the romance.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jan 16, 2019
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Landais certainly brought little cinematic verve to The Aspern Papers, telling the story largely in turgid literary voiceover lifted directly from the original source material.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jan 7, 2019
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
To put it in terms Charlie would dig, “Bumblebee” is like an 80s mixtape that’s all hits, no deep cuts. Nothing here surprises save the perspective. But that’s enough to save it.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Dec 19, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
The House That Jack Built is more than just an epic piece of cinematic trolling; it’s von Trier taking a microscope to his creative process in all its obsessive ugliness, creating a sophisticated meta-commentary on his art and daring the audience not to be entertained by his extreme indulgence in all the predilections for which he’s been roundly criticized.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Dec 18, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
There is the occasional cool visual and clever world-building detail, like jellyfish couture and eye-popping underwater physics, but Aquaman never fully commits to its lunacy.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Dec 18, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
It breathes youthful life into a tired franchise and makes the smartest transition yet of characters from the comics to the big screen with clever animation and thoughtful storytelling.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Dec 13, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
This is not a flat and lifeless biopic in which a creation loses a bit of its wonder in the dissection of its inspiration. “Becoming Astrid” sidesteps that pitfall by focusing on the writer’s painful passage into womanhood, telling an intimate and unhurried story of quiet triumph over pain.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Dec 5, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Green Book is not unthoughtful in its crowd-pleasing. It’s just that such crowd-pleasing feels inappropriately quaint for 2018.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Nov 19, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
The result is too well-meaning and sincere to truly dislike, but too frictionless and manufactured to do right by the complicated scenario.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Nov 16, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Widows works best as a slow-burn thriller, a masterclass of patient reveals and cleverly withheld information (which, as any fan of her knows, are Flynn’s hallmarks). But Widows has more to say, touching on the topics of generational power, the dynamics of race in politics and marriage, the institutional racism present in police violence.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Nov 13, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
A delicately balanced, mature drama, What They Had portrays a family devastated by Alzheimer’s with accuracy, empathy and respect, capturing both the heartache and unexpected tenderness of caring for a loved one coming slowly undone and the familial bonds that are tested and forged in the process.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Oct 25, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Despite its ostensive seriousness, Galveston is a tepid crime drama without talons sharp enough to sink into the audience.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Oct 18, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
What we see onscreen instead is mere competence, handsomely shot but bereft of purpose. One gets the sense that it was remade for no other reason than because more tolerant 21st-century content standards mean you can spill a man’s guts onscreen.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Aug 23, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Perhaps the problem isn’t one of too little ambition, but of too much. The Spy Who Dumped Me is, after all, trying earnestly to be about half a dozen different things: a buddy comedy, a spy drama, a raunch fest, a thrilling action film. It’s just that it doesn't have the focus to do any of those things particularly well.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jul 28, 2018
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- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jul 19, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Hotel Transylvania 3 is a harmless enough excuse for a couple hours of air-conditioned entertainment, which is all some people ask of a kid’s film. But there’s something bleak about its banality.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jul 12, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
The imagery is romantically period, with textured scenes staged in handsomely lit smoke-filled rooms, its newsreels and baseball stadiums suffused with charming Americana. But you can’t root for set design or feel empathy for colored filters. You need human beings for that, and The Catcher Was a Spy keeps its heart under lock and key.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jun 21, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
You’ve heard this song before and can predict all the emotional high notes before they hit, but sometimes that’s all you need from a summer bop.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jun 14, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
It’s a film entirely lacking in pomp, but there’s a certain bravado in its delicate reservation. A tender and spare meditation on family unfurls in the stillness of a sleepy, sun-soaked Spanish summer.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jun 14, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
It’s befuddling that such a barrier-breaking filmmaker would make a biopic about a woman who shares similar daring qualities that’s so … ordinary. To make boring the revelries of 19th century literati is no mean feat, but it is Mary Shelley's chief accomplishment.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jun 7, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
On the whole it’s a remarkably controlled exercise. It’s to the film’s credit that Moll is the center of attention from start to finish, and not even a romantically damaged bad boy can steal the spotlight from her barely contained wildfire of emotions.- Arizona Republic
- Posted May 17, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Yes, it recalls “Turner and Hooch,” a movie Show Dogs references so many times you start to feel nostalgic for it. And when you find yourself longing for “Turner and Hooch,” things are very bleak indeed.- Arizona Republic
- Posted May 17, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Breaking In is a shallow nod to female empowerment, not the embodiment of it.- Arizona Republic
- Posted May 12, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
The case is a gut punch to the American dream, and yet Little Pink House is a tepid viewing experience, in part because it rarely invites us into these homes so we can lament their loss.- Arizona Republic
- Posted May 10, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
For a film that atonally screams praises of the destructive power of punk rock, The House of Tomorrow is disappointingly, if crowd-pleasingly, textbook. The pedestrian narrative still makes for a winsome coming-of-age tale, buoyed as it is by a talented cast and visually striking setting.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Apr 26, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
The ways in which Love After Love is successful at portraying the grief process is also what makes it at times wildly unpleasant to watch.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Apr 19, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Pfeiffer may be stripped of her luminosity, but she is vivid onscreen.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Apr 12, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Beirut is inoffensive in its familiarity, a handsome enough thriller to pass the time. What it’s lacking are stakes.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Apr 11, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Foxtrot is far too interior to be called flashy, but there’s something striking in director Samuel Maoz’s visual confidence, the way he translates his characters’ states of mind into images.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Apr 5, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
For 90 minutes we’re presented with idiot characters who do terrible things to themselves and each other, and in its final gasp the movie tries to retrofit them into heroes.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Mar 22, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
It’s disheartening that it took until 2018 to get a gay version of this adolescent staple from a major studio. But at least it was worth the wait.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Mar 15, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Andrea Pallaoro’s frigid portrait of a woman in crisis is more a calculated exercise in formalism than an achievement in storytelling. His well-composed images of loneliness are cerebrally satisfying but lack emotional heft.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Mar 1, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
The film doesn’t need to make a case for Marina’s basic humanity and smartly avoids clichés of persecution storytelling, instead ceding the floor to Vega’s magnetic presence and soulfulness. She is a marvel, and if one doesn’t come away loving her as Orlando did, it’s no shortcoming of the film.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Feb 22, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
For anyone familiar with the original Peter Rabbit, it’s a little depressing to see its storybook charm reduced to slapstick. You can only see a person get electrocuted so many times before the gag wears thin, and with it the movie’s welcome.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Feb 8, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
That Freak Show is not the joyous gay party it aspires to be is a testament to squandered opportunities. For all the aces up its sleeve, Freak Show never quite lets its freak flag fly.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jan 25, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
The narrative is so diffuse that putting together the pieces is beside the point. You feel no closer to knowing or understanding the Laurents, and their collective unpleasantness gives one little reason to want to. It’s a skilled ratcheting of discomfort – but to what end?- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jan 18, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Paddington 2 is a winsome confection. More than just a movie, it’s a necessary mood corrective, a temporary escape hatch from negativity. The world does indeed feel right in the company of this kind and polite little bear.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jan 11, 2018
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
The title Acts of Violence has less to do with the storyline of the movie it graces and more about what’s perpetrated against the audience watching it.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jan 11, 2018
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- Arizona Republic
- Posted Dec 7, 2017
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Thelma treads the line between the psychological and supernatural, gracefully at first, and then with increasing abandon.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Dec 7, 2017
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
For all its heart and beauty, The Breadwinner sputters a bit to a close. Its themes are undeniable — one walks away feeling angry and empowered. But with the story’s soft focus, one soon forgets why.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Nov 30, 2017
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Instead, the story is largely told from Dahmer’s perspective, and we know too much about where he ends up to feel anything like sympathy for him. It’s still a morbidly fascinating peek behind the blood-stained curtains.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Nov 9, 2017
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Despite its familiarity, A Bad Moms Christmas is a touch better than the first bacchanal.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Nov 2, 2017
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
The Snowman is like if aliens studied humanity and tried to make their own movie in an attempt to communicate with us. This simulacrum contains all the requisite pieces of a movie, but humanity got lost in translation.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Oct 19, 2017
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Goodbye Christopher Robin is an emotionally layered story about failures in parenting that gave rise to one of our most enduring joys.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Oct 12, 2017
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
It’s all joyous silliness, as a My Little Pony movie should be, packed with clean humor and pony puns.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Oct 5, 2017
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
There’s daring in the film’s slow unfurling. The problem, though, isn’t one of patience but of payoff. Woodshock is beautiful but it’s all chassis, a root-dead tree that crumbles beneath the ax.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Sep 28, 2017
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Rebel in the Rye is Hollywood regular Danny Strong’s feature-film directorial debut, and it fumbles for a voice in tracking the life of a writer renowned for his.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Sep 14, 2017
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Crown Heights is soul-shaking only in the abstract. In execution, it’s deathly dull.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Sep 7, 2017
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
For every crisis there’s a line of homespun wisdom, in every failure a universal lesson to impart. The film highlights each symbol, making explicit that which would be stronger left implicit, until Rex’s glass castle becomes an overbearing metaphor.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Aug 10, 2017
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
City of Ghosts isn’t merely about the personal sacrifices of these men, but a testament to the necessity of a free and open press the world over.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jul 27, 2017
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
No, Atomic Blonde isn’t lacking in sex appeal or swagger. But what it is in want of are stakes.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jul 27, 2017
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
In many ways Lady Macbeth is remarkable for what it isn’t. It isn’t a staid period drama. It isn’t romantic. It isn’t predictable. And it certainly isn’t comfortable.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jul 20, 2017
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
At its best, it hits the gut with the free-fall feel of a theme-park ride. But it’s a long and winding path back to the gate, and “Valerian” loses its way many times, however beautifully.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jul 20, 2017
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- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jun 29, 2017
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Despite the seriousness of the subject matter and the characters’ complex emotional journey, the film turns into something of a thriller with twists that, given the context, beleaguer believability.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jun 22, 2017
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
The real power of Beatriz at Dinner is that it isn’t about politics but the human heart. Beatriz and Strutt are not arguing legislation; they’re arguing two visions of the American dream, two visions of the human soul.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jun 15, 2017
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Cars 3 doesn’t have enough velocity to escape that lesser tier. It does, however, offer a course correction for the franchise with a kinetic and emotionally resonant sports film that’s big on character – and blessedly light on Mater.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jun 14, 2017
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
3 Generations feels focus-grouped into existence, like its every development was fine-tuned to be as inoffensively on-message as possible in its treatment of trans issues. That’s good for take-home pamphlets and afterschool specials, but deadly to dramas.- Arizona Republic
- Posted May 11, 2017
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Director Terence Davies dispenses of any gaudy romantic trappings and makes something much more beautiful in A Quiet Passion, a delicate and measured drama that plumbs the depths of the poet’s strange heart and the agony of her intelligence.- Arizona Republic
- Posted May 4, 2017
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Doesn’t plumb the depths of adolescent emotions and high-school politics so much as skims the surface in a psychedelic dinghy.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Apr 27, 2017
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
This cartoonishly violent exercise in cinematic hero worship comes at the audience with chambers loaded and fires off rounds too rapidly to worry about how vapid it all is.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Apr 20, 2017
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
This fully animated reboot embraces the Smurfs Saturday-morning-cartoon roots and creates a sprightly, brightly colored, age-appropriate adventure for young children fresh to the little blue woodland creatures.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Apr 6, 2017
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Ghost in the Shell sidesteps questions of humanity and the effect of technology on the human spirit and opts instead for boilerplate sci-fi spectacle, eschewing existentialism for predictable plot and the glittery trappings of its 21st-century carapace- Arizona Republic
- Posted Mar 30, 2017
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
This isn’t a war movie; it’s an after-the-war movie. But the battle lines are still drawn, and every ragged breath the film takes braces for an explosion.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Mar 9, 2017
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Its real accomplishment is that, with so much money behind it and a true visionary at the helm, it manages to feel so dated.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Feb 17, 2017
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- Arizona Republic
- Posted Feb 4, 2017
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
The laughs don’t add up. There’s no dramatic arc. Jackie doesn’t grow or learn from his downfall, so much as bumble his way out of it to an unsatisfying conclusion.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Feb 2, 2017
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- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jan 19, 2017
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- Barbara VanDenburgh
Ornamented heavily with creative visual pleasures, the film is bogged down, not just by weighty thematic issues — death, divorce, bullying, unfairness — but by professions of its own grandeur.- Arizona Republic
- Posted Jan 5, 2017
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