Barry Hertz
Select another critic »For 1,051 reviews, this critic has graded:
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54% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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43% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 1.2 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Barry Hertz's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 67 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | American Honey | |
| Lowest review score: | Passengers | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 713 out of 1051
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Mixed: 200 out of 1051
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Negative: 138 out of 1051
1051
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Barry Hertz
This is meticulous, beautiful filmmaking that is rich in meaning and fat with detail. Surrender to Park’s smoky, dangerous romance – vengeance can wait.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 24, 2022
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- Barry Hertz
Grimy, slick and genuinely frightening in true horror-movie fashion, Reeves’ new film reassembles the best elements of Batman lore into one overwhelming and epic-length package. Almost everything here works – not despite our current overload of Batman culture, but because of it.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Feb 28, 2022
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- Barry Hertz
As intense and rigorous and thoroughly impressive a work Maestro is, the triple-threat Cooper cannot quite summon the nerve, or verve, to go completely off-book.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Nov 30, 2023
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- Barry Hertz
Ritchie pulls together an impressively determined thriller that sticks. Ideal for both a certain generation of viewer who gets excited when hearing the line, “We’ve got eight weeks of recon” and for those who will watch absolutely anything starring Statham (hi!), Wrath of Man is the best, bloodiest surprise of the year so far.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted May 6, 2021
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- Barry Hertz
This is not a film to easily swoon over, but mournfully contemplate.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Sep 18, 2025
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- Barry Hertz
It is both eager to distinguish itself from the series’ shaggiest shenanigans but also happy to embrace them whenever it feels things threaten to get too heavy. The result is an overlong and conceptually loopy thing – but when it works, which let’s say is, oh, I dunno, 83 per cent of the time, it offers one helluva view … to kill!- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Sep 29, 2021
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- Barry Hertz
The film is neither a stern lecture nor cheap entertainment, with Domont instead threading the needle somewhere in-between to create a tense guessing game of just how far she will push her characters.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Sep 28, 2023
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- Barry Hertz
As with every summer – even this supremely strange one – there are a ton of horror movies coming down the pike. But no matter how scary the new Conjuring or how disgusting the new Saw may be, I can guarantee that you won’t see as soul-shaking a film this season as The Amusement Park.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Jun 4, 2021
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- Barry Hertz
While there is an early sense in Joynt’s film that it is simply fun to ape the environs of bygone television eras, the re-enactments ultimately work on a narrative level, too. There are intersecting layers to Joynt’s film whose thematic and contextual conversations with one another would be lost were he to simply line one conventional talking head up after another.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Dec 7, 2022
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- Barry Hertz
The fact that The Royal Hotel keeps its audience as captive as its leads until that final moment is an impressive and ultimately incendiary feat.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 5, 2023
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- Barry Hertz
If Olson and his game cast weren’t so determined to shade their characters with delicate, sometimes tremendous layers of humanity, Bone Cage’s fatalism might be impossible to digest.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Jul 12, 2021
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- Barry Hertz
F9 is a welcome blast of fizzy action glee. You won’t come out of it a better or smarter person – quite possibly dumber! – but you will leave satisfied that your summer movie season wasn’t a completely life- and joy-less bore.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Jun 24, 2021
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- Barry Hertz
Like her first film, 2016′s fine-young cannibals tale Raw, Ducournau is tracing taboos to sketch a messy but compelling treatise on life’s endless growing pains. Ride or die.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Sep 28, 2021
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- Barry Hertz
A bold, raw, bordering-on-manic mashup of Eyes Wide Shut, Ivans XTC and HBO’s Entourage, the new thriller-cum-satire The Beta Test is here to test your limits.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Nov 4, 2021
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- Barry Hertz
The dramatic set-up courtesy of director and co-writer Clint Bentley (whose family has a long history on the track) isn’t exactly novel, but the film’s acute sense of place and specificity of profession lends Jockey an authenticity that is irresistible.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Mar 1, 2022
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- Barry Hertz
Take three hours out of your life, and enjoy one of the most fulfilling cinematic rides of the year.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Nov 22, 2021
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- Barry Hertz
The dialogue is to the point without being eye-rolling, the action is meaty and mostly CGI-free (the highlight is a night-vision firefight) and the performances are committed, even touching.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted May 24, 2023
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- Barry Hertz
When Lee puts Washington in just the right scene, with just the right power dynamics and just the right nerve-rattling dialogue, the result is a thing of high art. Forget the film’s initial low points – just keep aiming toward the top. And keep watching King David’s throne.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Aug 13, 2025
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- Barry Hertz
Soderbergh, once again acting as his own cinematographer under the alias Peter Andrews (and editor, with the nom de plume Mary Ann Bernard), finds his own way of keeping the camera swirling and twirling, electrifying lengthy, densely composed monologues that require some visual energy to keep them from landing with a cinematic thud.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Apr 14, 2026
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- Barry Hertz
It is all fairly silly and sometimes wildly uneven stuff, with Ansari’s rather dark socioeconomic themes often colliding uneasily with a barrage of lighthearted zingers. But the laughs rarely let up, with Ansari committed to ensuring that barely a minute passes by without a wry observation or sharp gag.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 15, 2025
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- Barry Hertz
Director Christopher Landon injects the entire affair with so much stylistic verve and narrative propulsion that, like the best kind of first date, it whips by almost too quickly.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Apr 10, 2025
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- Barry Hertz
It is respectful and smooth filmmaking that never loses sight of its one and only goal: keeping its audience hooked.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Apr 10, 2025
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- Barry Hertz
Mourning her only child, her marriage, and very likely her fortune as the betrayed and sidelined Laura, Cruz goes scorched-earth, incinerating any performer sharing her space.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Dec 19, 2023
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- Barry Hertz
Finally, by tethering his story’s uneasiness to the rock that is Bautista, Shyamalan delivers a star vehicle built for two. It isn’t quite right to say that the director and his star deserve each other – more like they need one another. Just as we do. To the end of the world, fellas.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Feb 2, 2023
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- Barry Hertz
You will leave the film as hungry for Simpson’s food as you will be full from his emotional journey.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 18, 2024
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- Barry Hertz
There is a delicate touch deployed here, and not only with Julie, but those surrounding her. Depression, Koppleman seems to be saying, is not a one-person battle. It can swallow everyone in a victim’s orbit.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 27, 2021
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- Barry Hertz
I can sympathize with the skeptics who take one look at Jackass’s cultural durability and shake their heads in disgust over the state of the world. But, as ever, there is a subversive method to Knoxville’s madness: an obsessive, and impressive, drive to tease the forever-blurry lines between comedy and pain.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Feb 3, 2022
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- Barry Hertz
She Came to Me is overstuffed to be sure, but in an admirable way that underlines Miller’s fierce desire to enchant and entertain an audience looking for stories about people, not intellectual property.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 4, 2023
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- Barry Hertz
Whereas Michael Mann gave Heat the perfect narrative offramp, Crime 101 tends to circle the block toward the end.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
Posted Feb 11, 2026 -
- Barry Hertz
Moreno avoids putting too fine a point on just why he’s playing around with such matters of multiplicity. His film is both a provocation and a shrug – make of it what you will.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 23, 2023
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