Benjamin Lee
Select another critic »For 618 reviews, this critic has graded:
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28% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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69% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 12.6 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Benjamin Lee's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 53 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Moonlight | |
| Lowest review score: | The Girl in the Photographs | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 104 out of 618
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Mixed: 470 out of 618
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Negative: 44 out of 618
618
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Benjamin Lee
It all remains refreshingly and unusually old-fashioned. A gentle film aimed at the younger end of young audiences that will also find the approval of those that much older.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 4, 2022
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- Benjamin Lee
This is stupid but it’s also mostly entertaining, thanks to Johnson and a plot that moves fast enough to retain our attention yet without enough, ahem, the originality to ensure it lingers in our minds once the fire has been extinguished.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 10, 2018
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- Benjamin Lee
It’s a calm, crisply made film (one can again see how it matches the Apple aesthetic) but one about heartache and tumult, and I found myself craving something that felt as difficult and stinging as the feelings it was trying to stir up.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 25, 2025
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- Benjamin Lee
It’s watchable enough but let down by a strange lack of interest in presenting Salander as anything but an engine to propel a plot. More female action heroes is by no means a bad thing but forcing Salander into Bond’s shoes feels like a misstep, her intellect and survivalism suited to far more interesting pursuits.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 24, 2018
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- Benjamin Lee
Outside of Savage’s visual verve, there’s really little else to The Boogeyman, its attempt to use its central villain as a metaphor for emotional trauma never working quite as well as it did in last year’s Smile (horror as therapy is getting a tad exhausting in general). It ultimately works best as further proof of his ability as a genre film-maker, sleekly gliding from a laptop to the big screen, better things to surely come.- The Guardian
- Posted May 30, 2023
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- Benjamin Lee
For all of its faults, there’s still plenty here to praise, the result of so much being thrown at the wall is that some of it will stick. Pearce has a sharp creative flair and a head full of ideas but he feels somewhat hemmed in by the constraints of a short running time and a high profile release date.- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 6, 2018
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- Benjamin Lee
The life lessons being taught here about self-acceptance, self-love and self-worth might be a little pat and some of the darker elements could have afforded a tad more darkness, but It Ends with Us leads with heart first, everything else later. It’s a film of huge, sometimes hugely unsubtle, emotion but it has an effectively forceful sweep to it.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 7, 2024
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- Benjamin Lee
This is a broad, frequently cartoonish romp that plays like a less effective mishmash of To Die For and Fargo. The blunt, unashamed crudeness does provide some laughs but the tonal shifts are often uncomfortably handled.- The Guardian
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- Benjamin Lee
There’s ultimately too much in the film’s rushed 94-minute runtime for anything to really breathe.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 27, 2020
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- Benjamin Lee
Frank & Louis is a solidly made drama, but Ben-Adir and Morgan are something special.- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 31, 2026
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- Benjamin Lee
Barnaby’s colonialist take on the formula is far from subtle, and at times a little too bluntly on the nose, but he’s a film-maker with both something to say and the skillset to say it in a distinctive way, offering up an initially engaging alternative to mere guts and shock tactics.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 29, 2020
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- Benjamin Lee
There’s clearly a more nuanced drama to be made from this story but given the scale, there’s still a lot here to praise.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 12, 2018
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- Benjamin Lee
Like Beckett trying to escape his pursuers, it’s a scrappy little film but one worth keeping up with.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 13, 2021
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- Benjamin Lee
Gilroy avoids the ghoulish extremes of Tom Ford’s Nocturnal Animals and offers up a believably pretentious battleground. He’s as invested in crafting a fully fleshed art world as he is in creating a full-on horror film and while the two often blend well, at other times, his concoction is far less effective.- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 28, 2019
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- Benjamin Lee
There’s nothing markedly necessary about universe expander Army of Thieves, niche fan service that gives backstory to a character who we know dies later on, but Schweighöfer, also acting as director, keeps his frothy caper afloat with a light knockabout tone, never insisting the film as anything that it isn’t.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 28, 2021
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- Benjamin Lee
It’s in the film’s queerest moments that things feel most inventive, narratively and visually, as Bratton steps most firmly outside of the hemmed-in army drama formula and finds ways to make his film sit and thrive in the Venn diagram between military machismo and homoeroticism.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 9, 2022
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- Benjamin Lee
It’s when the script leans into the story’s specificities that the film is at its most compelling – when intersectionality causes ruptures within the group, when we see civil rights giants fail to understand the hypocrisy of their homophobic bigotry, how Rustin manages his queerness in public and in private – and these moments help to provide depth to some of the flatness that’s in the more standard-issue scenes.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 12, 2023
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- Benjamin Lee
Premiering as one of the more proudly mainstream offerings at this year’s Toronto film festival, David Oyelowo’s sweet-natured family adventure The Water Man gives us our first look at a commercial conductor in training, aiming to excite and thrill with adventure while making an unashamed appeal to our emotions shortly after, a Spielbergian combination that many have tried and failed to perfect.- The Guardian
- Posted May 7, 2021
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- Benjamin Lee
There’s a rare unpredictability that initially proves alluring, at least until that confusion starts to feel less intentional.- The Guardian
- Posted May 23, 2019
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- Benjamin Lee
All Day and a Night is a weightier alternative to the average Netflix original and while imperfectly realised and scrappily plotted at times, it’s another promising sign that, away from the easy-to-digest content, there’s room on the platform for much much more.- The Guardian
- Posted May 1, 2020
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- Benjamin Lee
Even if some of the late-stage plotting seems sloppy and increasingly preposterous, there’s a callousness to the brutal last act that, together with the far patchier, yet similarly hard-edged First Purge, feels like a definite product of the time we’re in, as war on terror-era torture porn did in the mid-2000s.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 19, 2018
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- Benjamin Lee
While Something from Tiffany’s is unlikely to rise to the higher regions of any genre fan’s best-of list (it’s too frothy to even rise to the middle), there’s something engagingly earnest about its relative lack of meta self-awareness and robust attempts to look and feel like the studio meet-cutes so many of us were raised on.- The Guardian
- Posted Dec 8, 2022
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- Benjamin Lee
Tetris finds its fun in the details of contracts and the specifics of deal-making, realising that even when it’s not on a screen in your hands, it’s all one big game.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 16, 2023
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- Benjamin Lee
While it’s far from the firestarter it could have been, there’s more to this than its release would suggest, an angry, slickly directed thriller that still manages to generate enough of a spark.- The Guardian
- Posted May 28, 2020
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- Benjamin Lee
Captive State is imperfectly constructed, at times frustratingly so, but it’s trying, doggedly, to do something different and given the bland efficiency of so many wide-releasing sci-fi movies, that’s hard to fault.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 14, 2019
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- Benjamin Lee
His to-the-point revenge thriller Silent Night isn’t good enough for us to erupt into the applause Woo has so often deserved, but it’s also not bad enough for us to mourn the film-maker that he once was, a mostly competent exercise that serves less as a victory lap and more as a warm-up.- The Guardian
- Posted Dec 1, 2023
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- Benjamin Lee
Unlike the woozy love at its centre, Summer of 85 doesn’t haunt in the way that it should. It fades when it should burn.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 13, 2020
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- Benjamin Lee
While a dedicated Bening gives her all in a tough, physically demanding role, deserving of at least another nomination if not necessarily a win, it’s Foster who steals the film with a fine reminder of her easy charisma.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 14, 2023
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- Benjamin Lee
The film’s old-fashioned nature is a plus and a minus, delivering us the satisfying beats we’ve come to expect from such a story, yet also giving it a dusty, dated feel, playing like a mid-90s TV movie stumbled upon late at night.- The Guardian
- Posted May 14, 2019
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- Benjamin Lee
There are moments of crushing emotional weight but as the film progresses, they start to carry less power.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 8, 2018
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- Benjamin Lee
Like with his Halloween reinvention, the film is trapped between the serious and the silly, a thinly etched tale of a father dealing with grief and faith jarring next to scenes of a demonic child screaming the C-word while spitting slime. It’s better when it leans into the latter, a schlocky night out at the movies made with more competence than most recent horrors but one that is unlikely to make a believer out of die-hard fans.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 4, 2023
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- Benjamin Lee
It works for the most part because of Ruben and Cash and the spiky chemistry they share.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 1, 2020
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- Benjamin Lee
It’s pure hagiography and taken as that, it’s skillfully assembled, even stylishly so at times, and Kilmer’s insights into his art skirt just the right side of Inside the Actors Studio indulgence but as a portrait of a star known for his rough edges, it’s all far too smooth.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 23, 2021
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- Benjamin Lee
It’s a slight movie at times, unfocused at others, even plodding in parts, and I didn’t leave the cinema entirely convinced that it was the most satisfying way to tell this particular story but I did leave feeling confident in both Jackman’s prowess and Finley’s promise, yet to be fully realised.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 10, 2019
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- Benjamin Lee
Official Secrets is a well-intentioned retelling of a daunting act of courage and as a vehicle for informing more people of who Katharine Gun is, it’s effective, carefully laying out the incremental stakes as well as her noble intentions. Credit for this however lies almost solely with Knightley.- The Guardian
- Posted Feb 1, 2019
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- Benjamin Lee
Khan’s script is one of competency rather than creativity: a sound structure, a propulsive pace and a learned awareness of genre conventions but dialogue that often feels a little first draft, a little placeholder-heavy, zingers not really zinging quite as they should.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 18, 2022
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- Benjamin Lee
Held together by Molina’s typically commanding voiceover, Remarkably Bright Creatures is a simple, heart-first drama of broken people trying to put themselves back together.- The Guardian
- Posted May 8, 2026
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- Benjamin Lee
The Half of It is a strong, warm-hearted and quietly progressive addition to the expanding Netflix teen movie pack which treats its target audience with the respect they deserve.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 30, 2020
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- Benjamin Lee
It’s a film that’s good enough that you want it to be better, a rare genre example of less not proving to be more.- The Guardian
- Posted May 22, 2019
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- Benjamin Lee
It’s refreshing to see a genre film-maker do more than rely on simple tricks and although his knack for dialogue might be questionable, he’s more than capable of constructing a nifty set-piece.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 14, 2019
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- Benjamin Lee
There’s just about enough care and sensitivity in The End We Start From to offset its issues, providing us with an unusual, female-powered alternative within a field of films that are usually heavier on action than words.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 13, 2023
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- Benjamin Lee
Cage is remarkably restrained (bar one unnecessary scream), delicately deconstructing what we’ve come to expect from him. His trademark tics are gone, his voice that much softer, his swagger replaced by an unsureness, an aggressive blare that’s faded into calm.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 12, 2021
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- Benjamin Lee
The film is just a machine, slick but soulless and with parts in need of a touch-up. Not broken exactly, but more, ahem, fractured.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 11, 2019
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- Benjamin Lee
There’s an admirable sense of pluck to the film, as if those involved know very well they’re making something that doesn’t need to exist but they’re making the most of it anyway.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 12, 2021
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- Benjamin Lee
There’s a grubby, late-night appeal to his dialled-up trash aesthetic and The Beekeeper mostly works because of it. Bee prepared for a sequel.- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 11, 2024
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- Benjamin Lee
It’s imperfect, sometimes frustratingly so, but also just about fun enough for yet another tipsy Friday night locked down indoors, its sun-drenched setting proving alluring and yet cruelly out of reach.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 3, 2020
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- Benjamin Lee
There are imperfections here, especially near the end, but it’s the work of someone striving to stand out, to do something that will linger in the memory rather than fade into the over-populated homepage background.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 29, 2021
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- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 9, 2021
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- Benjamin Lee
It works in parts, as a study of the ache and irrationality of grief, asking its characters how much they’re willing to accept and deny in order to see their loved ones again. But the first-time director Thea Hvistendahl’s patience-insisting slow burn can be testing, like watching a block of ice slowly melt, a story told in the smallest of drips, some of which sink in deeper than others.- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 24, 2024
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- Benjamin Lee
The goofier it all gets, the more one starts to warm to it, leaning further away from its initial A-trappings and nestling into a far more likable B-movie mode.- The Guardian
- Posted May 11, 2023
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- Benjamin Lee
Born to be Blue is a curious mixture of fact and fiction, cliche and originality, style and emotion – it never truly soars but by throwing the ingredients of Baker’s life together and producing something different, it’s never less than intriguing.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 18, 2015
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- Benjamin Lee
Gal Gadot leads the streamer’s latest ambitious franchise-starter that delivers just about enough dumb summer fun to have us curious for more.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 10, 2023
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- Benjamin Lee
It’s a breeze of a watch and with the bar for studio comedy being so very low right now, it’s at least mildly inventive and likably goofy, enough to warrant a cautious recommendation (premium rental price: no, next time you’re on a plane: sure).- The Guardian
- Posted Feb 11, 2021
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- Benjamin Lee
We’re in safe, formulaic territory here, think Calendar Girls with less nudity and more harmonising, and it’s the film’s strict adherence to the rules of the subgenre that proves to be both a blessing and a curse. It works for the most part because, when done well, there’s something irresistible about the formula ... But there are also times when Military Wives starts to creak.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 13, 2019
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- Benjamin Lee
Evil Dead Rise is a decent little splatter movie which contains just about enough to justify the franchise resurrection although perhaps not quite enough to demand that much more of it. For all of its gristle, we’re left very little to chew on.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 20, 2023
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- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 2, 2022
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- Benjamin Lee
The script does a solid job of making it an accessible world to those not already steeped in it although Goldstein and Daley, writing alongside Michael Gilio, are less effective with the film’s many attempts at comedy.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 28, 2023
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- Benjamin Lee
There’s a slicker, more coherent and ultimately more thematically audacious film to be made from the disparate elements that make up In the Shadow of the Moon but what we have is a lovable mess nonetheless. Its ambitions are easy to criticise but hard not to admire, a mad little movie with big ideas on its mind.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 26, 2019
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- Benjamin Lee
It’s an earnest rather then energetic retelling but Stanfield’s stare is indelible.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 24, 2017
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- Benjamin Lee
There’s nothing particularly remarkable about Father of the Bride 2022 (was there ever really going to be?) but it’s a far better, and smoother, film than one would expect from the outset, a streaming premiere made with such confidence that it surely deserved a big-screen run.- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 16, 2022
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- Benjamin Lee
The streak of perversity at Intrusion’s centre nudges it above the norm, briefly waking us up before we sleepily click on something else.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 23, 2021
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- Benjamin Lee
Gere’s commitment to the role almost makes up for the film’s flaws.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 16, 2016
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- Benjamin Lee
With a touch of Training Day, a smidgen of Eagle Eye, a dash of Eye in the Sky, a pinch of Ex Machina and an extra generous serving of all the Terminator films, Outside the Wire is losing every available award for originality, yet another Netflix creation born from its algorithmic cauldron, but taken on very basic low-stakes terms, it’s a competent enough January time-filler.- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 14, 2021
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- Benjamin Lee
It’s slick in one moment and a little too scrappy the next but Ritchie’s puppyish insistence that you have as much as fun as his stars is hard to resist. The film’s bizarrely reticent rollout might have already killed any chance of further operations but there have been far, far worse franchise-starters in recent years.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 2, 2023
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- Benjamin Lee
In just under two hours with a plate filled a little too high, not everything here quite works as well as Byrne, but Bronstein clearly hasn’t made something to be liked, she’s made something to be experienced. I can’t say I’ll forget that experience easily.- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 25, 2025
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- Benjamin Lee
The film’s strange scrappy indefinability is both its blessing and curse. We’re left with pieces, interesting on their own and sometimes together, but not quite enough to complete the puzzle.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 14, 2021
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- Benjamin Lee
Sighs at incongruously dumb behaviour and groans at the family soap are eventually drowned out by audible gasps at some of the wild twists, the kind that might not make much sense on reflection but do deliver cattle-prod shocks along the way.- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 19, 2023
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- Benjamin Lee
There’s a whiff of familiarity haunting almost every scene and while it would have been rewarding to see Cooke and O’Conner take a few chances or add some more emotional depth, it’s a satisfying enough watch, best viewed with little investment and low expectations.- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 25, 2020
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- Benjamin Lee
Ritchie mostly moves his mixed bag of pieces around the board with flair, showcasing his well-rehearsed knack for gnarly violence and chaos, giving us a sinewy B-movie that warrants a watch on a screen bigger than the one in our homes, another welcome shot of adrenaline for us and for the industry. I’m craving my next dose already.- The Guardian
- Posted May 6, 2021
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- Benjamin Lee
Ballad of a Small Player ends up a little too slight, a sketchy look at a familiarly doomed character.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 8, 2025
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- Benjamin Lee
The three leads are so strong that one wishes Netflix had granted them a whole series to live in, their everyday lives worthy of a deeper dive. Ibiza is a fun, far-fetched frippery but I’d rather see what happened to them if they’d stayed at home.- The Guardian
- Posted May 24, 2018
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