Ben Croll
Select another critic »For 164 reviews, this critic has graded:
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56% higher than the average critic
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4% same as the average critic
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40% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 6.6 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Ben Croll's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 72 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | The Shape of Water | |
| Lowest review score: | Mektoub, My Love: Intermezzo | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 133 out of 164
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Mixed: 27 out of 164
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Negative: 4 out of 164
164
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Ben Croll
The self-contained “Treasure” ambles along on the strength of a fine, self-contained script and two winning performers, without ever reflecting or commenting on the historical weight it sets out to explore.- TheWrap
- Posted May 9, 2024
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- Ben Croll
Take your seat and bask in the presence of the coolest characters actors working today, but don’t ask for more than a few chuckles. Don’t call it fan service – call it coolness oblige.- TheWrap
- Posted May 15, 2019
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- Ben Croll
Though he finds little room for subtlety and even less interest in complex moral shadings, director Edoardo De Angelis can still ably wring tension from this brave, if foolhardy, mission, spinning his camera around ever-cramped quarters as the two crews, enemies-turned-shipmates, navigate uncharted terrain.- TheWrap
- Posted Aug 30, 2023
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- Ben Croll
You’re grateful for the time spent with a genuine epic of ideas and rueful that such heady themes weren’t more fully explored in a better film.- TheWrap
- Posted Feb 22, 2024
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- Ben Croll
Ghost in the Shall is a technical knockout, a here-and-now valentine to what design wizardry Hollywood can pull off in 2017. At the same time, it does so in service of a tired tale full of repurposed visual tricks, storytelling clichés and big-studio concessions.- TheWrap
- Posted Mar 28, 2017
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- Ben Croll
Without much by way of variance, the film spins on and spins out, jumping from austere interiors in Mexico City to San Francisco and back again, putting forward a cogent political read that does little to flatter those looking for anything more.- TheWrap
- Posted Mar 5, 2026
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- Ben Croll
If this bloody entr’acte, whose title addition works as both noun and verb, has little to offer but a jacked up body count on a bed of fan service, it serves both with panache, charging forward as an almost elemental slasher outing unclouded by conscience, remorse, or delusions of morality.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 8, 2021
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- Ben Croll
What You Gonna Do When the World’s on Fire? is hardly a disappointment, but it does, in places, feel like a missed opportunity.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 15, 2018
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- Ben Croll
An undeniably entertaining watch, Suburbicon stumbles when it tries to recycle effective old ingredients into something new.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 3, 2017
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- Ben Croll
You can only linger so long with such a parade of oddities making ever stranger choices before your eyes grow weary of gawking at a pageant of hideous beauty, and you start checking the clock.- TheWrap
- Posted Feb 17, 2026
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- Ben Croll
The film isn’t a total wash. Seydoux finds ways to move and emote through her Noh mask, and Dumont finds interesting avenues to explore, tracking the uneasy dance between compassion and commodification when dealing with hot-button stories. Only it’s all too much, too long, too repetitive, too one-note, too contemptuous of the very idea of cinematic pleasure to really land.- TheWrap
- Posted Jul 16, 2021
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- Ben Croll
Deception, as a novel and as a film, offers a curio for obsessives, a postcard for archivists, and a not-too-interesting bump in the road for everyone else.- TheWrap
- Posted Aug 31, 2021
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- Ben Croll
Like pouring yourself a warm glass of milk or slipping into a hot bath, the languid and visually sumptuous romance lulls you into a sleepy sense of calm, never asking for more than gentle aesthetic appreciation for its impeccable craft.- TheWrap
- Posted Jul 17, 2021
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- Ben Croll
Dolan shoots in tightly held close-ups, forgoing spatial staging for the immediate pleasures of fabric and light. Whereas similar imagery filled his previous films with energy and life, here it just makes the somber piece feel more claustrophobic and inert.- TheWrap
- Posted May 20, 2016
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- Ben Croll
If, when printed and sent off for posterity, a snapshot like “Coma” offers a small degree of archival value — while answering the question Bonello poses at the start — it might also arrive as a postcard from a time all-too-thankfully gone by.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 15, 2022
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- Ben Croll
Brother and Sister seems more like a retread (and a retreat) than anything that’s come prior, marking a new step forward for the lauded director by taking a disappointing step back.- IndieWire
- Posted May 22, 2022
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- Ben Croll
Mike Leigh’s expansive, exhaustive, and extraordinarily thorough portrait of early 19th-century political activism is, to put it one way, deliberate in pace and tone. To put it bluntly — and in an argot more readily familiar to its cast of working-class characters — the film is bloody well dull.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 1, 2018
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- Ben Croll
It’s all perfectly well-done, and it all recedes into memory the instant you leave the theater.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 12, 2019
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- Ben Croll
For all its stodgy touches, the film itself is like a cast-in-amber relic of the not-so-distant past.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 18, 2019
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- Ben Croll
Unable to neatly reconcile its two narrative premises, the film loses momentum, pushing well past the brisk runtime and zippy pace this kind of material usually depends on. That overextension also affects tone, as Salvadori never quite settles on how sharp the film should be.- IndieWire
- Posted May 12, 2026
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- Ben Croll
Those with buy-in might find themselves won over, as, on its own terms, Marcello Mio offers a heartfelt and even occasionally moving show of artistic trust and collaboration, playing as an unambiguous love note from a filmmaker to his favorite star.- IndieWire
- Posted May 23, 2024
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- Ben Croll
A blood-soaked, bone-crunching hymn to religious devotion and faith, Hacksaw Ridge doesn’t hum Mel Gibson’s favorite themes; it shouts them.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 7, 2016
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- Ben Croll
Feeling simultaneously overstuffed and undercooked, Lorcan Finnegan’s Vivarium tries to ring a warning bell about, well, a lot of things. In the end, though, it works best as a cautionary tale about the pitfalls of filmmakers biting off more than they can chew.- TheWrap
- Posted Mar 26, 2020
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- Ben Croll
Victoria & Abdul is an otherwise benignly toothless, pleasantly glossy affair, but it does force us to confront one tricky question: When treating a subject as fraught as British imperial rule, when does a film’s benign inoffensiveness become offensive in and of itself?- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 16, 2017
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- Ben Croll
This material could make for a powerful work, but Viceroy’s House is certainly not it.- IndieWire
- Posted Jun 13, 2017
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- Ben Croll
Ultimately, “Golda” holds three firm beliefs: That Meir is a leader to admire, that Mirren is an actress to adore, and that all interactions must be reverse engineered to fit this limited scope. It makes for a superficial biopic and blinkered bit of history, but does give the venerable performer a new accent to chew on and the chance to blow some smoke.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 22, 2023
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- Ben Croll
“Mektoub, My Love” is never about anything more than its own style.- IndieWire
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