Beatrice Loayza
Select another critic »For 240 reviews, this critic has graded:
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30% higher than the average critic
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6% same as the average critic
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64% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 4.2 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Beatrice Loayza's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 61 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Dreams | |
| Lowest review score: | Red Notice | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 106 out of 240
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Mixed: 118 out of 240
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Negative: 16 out of 240
240
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Beatrice Loayza
Rotem’s organic approach steers clear of icky idealism, but its conclusions nevertheless feel worn out. Talking helps, sure, but getting people in the same room is too often the stuff of fiction.- The New York Times
- Posted Feb 9, 2023
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- Beatrice Loayza
The film is a portrait of modern labor that moves with the breathless tension of a Safdie brothers’ joint. But instead of gangsters and cocaine, it finds a flurried momentum in one ordinary woman’s everyday obligations.- The New York Times
- Posted Feb 2, 2023
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- Beatrice Loayza
Somewhere in “The Man in the Basement” there is a smart psychodrama sharpened by political urgency, but what we get is a middling think piece that too quickly loses momentum — and peters out by the end.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 26, 2023
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- Beatrice Loayza
The film’s structure may be conventional, and yet its story is unusually rich, and uninterested in easy answers as to why people hurt the ones they love.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 19, 2023
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- Beatrice Loayza
Kitchen Brigade is a white-savior story par excellence, though at least it’s not difficult to swallow — the young people are lovely, and so is the food.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 12, 2023
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- Beatrice Loayza
Written and directed by John Swab, Candy Land is standard grindhouse fare — more serious and less conceptually adventurous than its recent counterparts, Ti West’s “X” and “Pearl” — though not without its fair share of pleasurable nastiness.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 5, 2023
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- Beatrice Loayza
As in a David Lean movie, passion mingles elegantly with repression, and Williams emerges as a kind of romantic figure, a man shocked, then delighted, by the thrill of finding himself.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 28, 2022
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- Beatrice Loayza
The filmmaker Ha Le Diem shot Children of the Mist over the course of three years, integrating herself into Di’s life in a way that complicates the documentary’s otherwise unobtrusive, observational approach.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 16, 2022
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- Beatrice Loayza
Unfolding like a David Fincheresque procedural and doused in gloomy grays and blues, the film, by the writer and director Fernando Guzzoni, may seem provocative to some in the context of #MeToo and its popular mantra to “believe women.”- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 9, 2022
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- Beatrice Loayza
Unlike so many new movies that seem to be algorithmically manufactured to appeal to diverse audiences and tick the boxes of representation, Four Samosas feels organic and true as a slice of Indian American life — even if it’s all fun and games and movie magic.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 1, 2022
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- Beatrice Loayza
The takeaway is the difficulty of collaboration in the face of entrenched beliefs and ways of navigating the world that, ultimately, must be questioned — if not entirely dismantled — if any one of us expects to stick around.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 23, 2022
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- Beatrice Loayza
Perhaps Colombian audiences don’t need the history lesson, but skimping on the context in this case also makes the film’s mawkish impulses more glaring and grating, especially as Trueba shifts his observant domestic drama into something of a political rallying cry — a tepid one, at that.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 16, 2022
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- Beatrice Loayza
The Venezuelan director Lorenzo Vigas’s The Box weaves some of the greatest horrors of modern Mexican life into an unsettlingly cryptic thriller.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 10, 2022
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- Beatrice Loayza
The brutal possibilities of the white supremacist mind-set are nothing to shy away from. Still, the film’s admittedly jarring cruelty does little beyond press down on old bruises, turning the realities of racialized violence into an immersive spectacle with the kind of real-world sadistic allure one might find in a serial-killer movie.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 4, 2022
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- Beatrice Loayza
The film frequently dips into unintentional absurdity, yes, but it also captivates, thanks to the powers of the Gallic film-world heavyweights Benoît Magimel (playing Benjamin) and Catherine Deneuve.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 27, 2022
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- Beatrice Loayza
Limited to a mere pointing out of which kinds of images are empowering to women and which aren’t, the documentary ultimately does a disservice to the art form, feminist or otherwise.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 20, 2022
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- Beatrice Loayza
It’s a well-intentioned gesture of solidarity that tries so desperately to be relatable, it feels alienating.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 13, 2022
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- Beatrice Loayza
The documentary is a cookie-cutter presentation intent on showing viewers how leaders of the anti-abortion movement have managed to advance their goals and consolidate power by mobilizing an evangelical minority.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 12, 2022
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- Beatrice Loayza
The movie, more often than not, has the look and feel of an edgy music video, which wouldn’t necessarily be a problem if it weren’t also oddly boring.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 29, 2022
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- Beatrice Loayza
The centering of Abigail Disney’s voice — we also see her tweets calling out the outrageous salaries of Disney executives — makes the documentary a kind of personal reckoning and an attempt to get through to other wealthy individuals, though one wonders how a film that doubles as a “Capitalism for Dummies” video would make an impact. Instead, the documentary wants, above all, to make sure we know how one particular Disney feels.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 23, 2022
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- Beatrice Loayza
Cregger sets up dozens of clichés and pulls them in genuinely surprising directions, brandishing his touchstones: American horror films of the 80s and 90s in the vein of Wes Craven.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 8, 2022
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- Beatrice Loayza
Fassbinder’s work finds a kind of truth in the artifice of emotionally plumped-up dramas, but Ozon’s often tedious tragicomedy never hits such a stride, trusting that the material will automatically confer greatness; instead, “Peter” comes off like top-shelf fan-fiction.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 1, 2022
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- Beatrice Loayza
Muritiba understands that any portrait of masculinity that fixates too intensely on the cruelties and self-denials of machista culture are futile. Instead, he finds grace in stolen moments of tenderness.- The New York Times
- Posted Aug 25, 2022
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- Beatrice Loayza
“Three Minutes” is more than a documentary about the Holocaust — it is an investigative drama, a meditation on the ethics of moving images and a ghost story about people who might be forgotten should we take those images for granted.- The New York Times
- Posted Aug 18, 2022
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- Beatrice Loayza
We tend to look at the sex lives of sex workers as endlessly fascinating, but in Bliss the line of work is instead part of a larger take on the hurdles of modern romance.- The New York Times
- Posted Aug 5, 2022
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- Beatrice Loayza
Though dressed in shock-value clothing, Medusa is also a straightforward character study, tackling issues like the scourge of Western beauty standards and the difficulties of leaving an abusive relationship along the way- The New York Times
- Posted Jul 28, 2022
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- Beatrice Loayza
My Donkey, My Lover & I is yet another story about a woman who ventures out into the wild and finds herself. But to the writer and director Caroline Vignal’s credit, this low-key romantic French comedy proves friskier and more idiosyncratic than its reliance on this trope of feminist empowerment would suggest.- The New York Times
- Posted Jul 21, 2022
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- Beatrice Loayza
Hadzihalilovic is an expert conjurer of other worlds, and “Earwig” unearths a startlingly seductive array of visual and sonic textures that don’t quite add up to much more than a powerful mood.- The New York Times
- Posted Jul 14, 2022
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- Beatrice Loayza
Despite its gleeful showcasing of beautiful clothes and vibrant midcentury Parisian sights, the film is caught between its fantasies and its principles, landing somewhere more annoyingly clueless — and dull — than it ought to be.- The New York Times
- Posted Jul 14, 2022
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- Beatrice Loayza
Lentzou, with her first feature no less, gets at something much knottier about what it feels like to get older and perceive your parents as full people, in all their flaws and vulnerabilities; the pains and pleasures of adulthood, contrary to expectation, yield just as much, if not more, unpredictability than in youth.- The New York Times
- Posted Jul 7, 2022
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