Barry Hertz
Select another critic »For 1,058 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: | Unplanned | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 719 out of 1058
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Mixed: 201 out of 1058
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Negative: 138 out of 1058
1058
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Barry Hertz
Exceptionally overlong, crammed with miscast performers putting in half the effort they should, and so overly pleased with its various (and rather middling) twists that it leaps from “clever” to “pompous” in one fell swoop, Wake Up Dead Man represents a hard and rough fall from grace.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Nov 26, 2025
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- Barry Hertz
Edgerton doesn’t allow pity or easy sympathy to seep in. Things are hard, things fall apart. And sometimes it all comes together. It’s a living.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Nov 19, 2025
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- Barry Hertz
The star’s eager-to-please persona and overgrown puppy-dog physicality keeps the film from falling into complete shtick. It is all the more remarkable a feat given that Phillip is a complete cipher of a character.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Nov 18, 2025
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- Barry Hertz
Presented with every opportunity to say or do something remotely new or compelling, Wright, typically a talented stylist, elects to shrug his shoulders, delivering a wafer-thin confection that is aggressively disinterested in both ideas and action.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Nov 12, 2025
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Nov 11, 2025
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- Barry Hertz
There are multiple endings of various potency, secondary characters who bizarrely drop out of the proceedings, and a fundamental misunderstanding of the real-life tension that drove so much of the trial’s backroom machinations, with the most fascinating element of the central Goring-Kelley relationship reduced to a quick line of end-credit text.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Nov 6, 2025
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- Barry Hertz
This is Sweeney’s show, and when she’s not framed in its dead centre, the movie’s blood cannot help but drip down the drain. The star deserves whatever awards might be coming her way. Don’t make her put up a fight.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Nov 6, 2025
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- Barry Hertz
Audrey is the best kind of inscrutable hero, as precise in her obsession as she is enigmatic in every other aspect of her life. For moviegoers starving for something new who, like Audrey, have nearly given up the ghost, Measures for a Funeral is a symphony, full and rich.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Nov 5, 2025
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- Barry Hertz
In a more controlled and less punishing film, Lawrence’s deeply committed performance would be the discussion of the year. Yet she has tossed herself to the wolves here, the star provided no care or cover by her director. What is the point in going so raw, so feral, if the result is so scattered, so interminable, so irredeemably silly?- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Nov 4, 2025
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- Barry Hertz
The lack of genuine slaughter in Badlands isn’t the film’s only problem. While it flips the franchise’s history by making the Yautja a hero instead of a villain . . . there is not nearly enough tension or world-building on display to become invested in this particular game of kill-or-be-killed.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Nov 4, 2025
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- Barry Hertz
The entire experiment feels limited, constrained by both unfettered admiration and nostalgia for a time that Linklater never experienced firsthand. It is a movie of limits, whereas Godard knew none.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 30, 2025
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- Barry Hertz
As is the case with much of Reichardt’s work, The Mastermind is a genre movie that zeroes in on a formula only to meticulously scrawl over it in jet-black ink.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 23, 2025
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- Barry Hertz
The film never catches fire, but White and Strong do their very best to give it a spark.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 23, 2025
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- Barry Hertz
The script, which has a “story by” credit from Stuckmann’s wife and fellow genre enthusiast Samantha Elizabeth, jumps all over the place in tone, from wild to solemn, with no real resting place in between.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 22, 2025
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- Barry Hertz
A House of Dynamite doesn’t so much self-destruct as fail to even ignite a spark.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 21, 2025
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- Barry Hertz
A miracle of a movie that could only exist due to everything going so very wrong.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 21, 2025
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- Barry Hertz
Whereas Jang’s original film was driven by a funky visual inventiveness that embraced wacky comedy over repellent and snide creepiness, Lanthimos’s version merely doubles down on the filmmakers’ most annoying tendencies: obvious observations about power dynamics, ostensibly outrageous acts of violence that underline a juvenile affinity for shock humour, and an overall contemptuous view of humanity that is played for easy, repetitive yuks.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 20, 2025
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- Barry Hertz
Bronstein infuses every moment of If I Had Legs... with a jagged kind of intensity, stringing together scenes with an adrenalized propulsion that makes a story of a mother struggling against a world pitted against her feel both singular and universal.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 15, 2025
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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
Moondi’s film feels of a piece with his previous work – films in which relationships are tested and almost pulverized – while also pushing into new, more emotionally complex territory.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 13, 2025
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- Barry Hertz
If Frankenstein is enough to shake the director of his creature comforts and push him to explore something new, then so be it. But don’t expect everyone else to devote themselves to such an exquisite corpse.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 13, 2025
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- Barry Hertz
Ares is a mostly disposable and thoroughly dumb product of lazy franchise fetishism from filmmakers who could not seem to care less about what story they are trying to tell. But as a two-hour visual screensaver to a thunderous and hypnotic Nine Inch Nails soundtrack, Ares rules.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 8, 2025
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- Barry Hertz
While there are several moments in the film, including two extended monologues, that remind audiences just how ferociously committed a performer Daniel can be, so much of Anemone feels a few dozen workshops away from being camera-ready.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 2, 2025
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- Barry Hertz
Safdie recognizes that The Smashing Machine is a single-purpose invention, one built to run on the blood, sweat and sometimes even the tears of Dwayne Johnson. Consider the act of watching the movie a double dose of cinematic benevolence: rewarding yourself, and saving the star from his own worst Hollywood instincts. Two birds, one Rock.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Oct 2, 2025
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- Barry Hertz
Thoughtful yet incendiary, romantic yet skeptical, patently absurd yet at the same time brandishing a mirror that so clearly and unforgivingly reflects our own cracked reality, Anderson’s film arrives with the kind of casual, confident brilliance that feels deceptively effortless.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Sep 22, 2025
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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
While Lawrence keeps the momentum steady – just like his contest’s most able-bodied walkers – and ensures that every few minutes delivers some kind of violent jolt, there’s just not enough meat to this particular roadkill story to keep one cinematic foot in front of the other.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Sep 11, 2025
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- Barry Hertz
This is a remake built on equal parts care and admiration, a love letter to all the sickos out there. It’s nothing to simply wash your hands of. Or flush away.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Aug 27, 2025
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- Barry Hertz
The Roses is not nearly acrimonious, or funny, enough to justify its peculiar existence. If DeVito’s original was the cinematic equivalent of going through the divorce from hell, this new break-up feels more like a trial separation.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Aug 25, 2025
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- Barry Hertz
As nice as it is to see New York play itself or watch Ahmed and Worthington run circles around each other, the entire caper is rendered unsolvable by one big, meatheaded twist that undermines everything that came before.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
- Posted Aug 20, 2025
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