Benjamin Lee
Select another critic »For 618 reviews, this critic has graded:
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29% higher than the average critic
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2% 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
While the shifts in genre, plot and location do prove intriguing for much of the film, they ultimately result in a feeling of mild dissatisfaction, the whole never quite the sum of its parts.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 13, 2018
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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
It’s a pulpy slab of exploitation masquerading as an important treatise on the struggles faced by the working class in rural America, thumping us in the face with its shallow viewpoint until we beg for mercy. Or at least the credits.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 12, 2018
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- Benjamin Lee
None of it rings remotely true and his insistence on playing out so many scenes at such a high level can make it an excruciating watch.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 12, 2018
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- Benjamin Lee
There are good intentions and good performances here, but they’re squandered in a movie that isn’t quite sure what it should be and how far it should go.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 12, 2018
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- Benjamin Lee
Kidman fearlessly commits to the filth of it all, whether it’s drunkenly fighting off her daughter’s sleazy boyfriend or jerking off a bed-ridden informant, but her radical transformation and some timeframe trickery can’t mask a plot that feels rather empty.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 11, 2018
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- Benjamin Lee
It’s a film entirely devoid of subtlety yet one that also fails to provide the grand emotion it yearns to deliver, despite the use of a sledgehammer.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 10, 2018
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- Benjamin Lee
It’s a heartbreaking, troubling film about men whose lives were cruelly deprioritised and whose families remain ever altered as a result. It ends on a note of melancholy but the burning anger also remains, the final scenes tinged with a painful awareness of wounds that may never heal.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 10, 2018
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- Benjamin Lee
Sometimes the shagginess of the film can make it feel a bit slight and at times it does work better as a concentrated character study, but it’s such a joy to spend this time with McCarthy, drunkenly scheming and grumbling, that it’s hard to complain.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 10, 2018
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- Benjamin Lee
It’s everything and nothing, a familiar regurgitation of a formula with precious little to add.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 10, 2018
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- Benjamin Lee
It’s a film with love at its root, both familial and romantic, and Jenkins fills so much of it with a radiating warmth.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 9, 2018
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- Benjamin Lee
There are so many characters at play here and McQueen and Flynn’s script manages to let them all breathe, giving each actor small defining moments and given the exceptional cast involved, it makes for a richly rewarding experience.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 9, 2018
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- Benjamin Lee
There are some effectively nasty kills (this is no PG-13 reboot) and Green’s visual eye often results in some impressive imagery but both the look of the film and the script feel confused. Green can’t seem to decide whether he wants it to be gritty and lo-fi or slick and cinematic and so ends up awkwardly between the two, anything resembling an atmosphere sorely missing.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 9, 2018
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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
There’s an authenticity underpinning the portrayal of events in The Front Runner that lifts it above the less-than-groundbreaking set-up.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 8, 2018
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- Benjamin Lee
There’s definite fun to be had here and franchise fans will surely appreciate both Black’s nods to the past and his plan for the future but there’s something forgettable about its freneticism, and I struggle to imagine in 31 years if it will be thought of at all.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 7, 2018
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- Benjamin Lee
The pair share an easy, spiky chemistry and Reeves in particular shows himself to be surprisingly skilled at delivering such bile-filled dialogue.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 30, 2018
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- Benjamin Lee
It’s an undemanding watch, easily digestible while on in the background, but even easier to forget.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 2, 2018
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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
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
Clumsy attempts at comedy are weaved in to try and alleviate the remarkable grimness but all it really does it add to an uneven tone.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 3, 2018
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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 lifeless direction, the unrefined script, the underwhelming cameos, the distinct lack of fizz – there’s a slapdash nature to the assembly of Ocean’s 8 that makes it feel like the result of a rushed, often careless process. It’s made watchable thanks to the cast but star power alone cannot mask creative inadequacy. Stealing a diamond necklace is bad but wasting an opportunity like this is unforgivable.- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 5, 2018
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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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- Benjamin Lee
Life of the Party’s predictable and lethargic box-ticking of scenes (accidentally getting high – check; dance off – check), gives it the unremarkable stench of something you’ve half-watched on cable before.- The Guardian
- Posted May 10, 2018
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- Benjamin Lee
Watching a couple bicker about the specifics of their relationship can be illuminating when done right, but here it becomes a chore, the problems they encounter feeling contrived and silly.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 25, 2018
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- Benjamin Lee
Even though the script might let her down, Schumer does still manage to sell a smattering of the comic moments (the opening scene has a promising knockabout tone), but when she reaches the more dramatic elements, she struggles to convince.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 18, 2018
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- Benjamin Lee
The director, Jeff Wadlow, has a puppyish eagerness to impress, shock and entertain and as silly as the film might get, it’s never dull.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 11, 2018
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- Benjamin Lee
It might drift out of the memory just as easily as it drifted in, but there’s a goofy likability to Pacific Rim: Uprising, a primal thrill to be had, and a confident slickness behind it that means, despite a nearly two-hour running time, it doesn’t outstay its welcome.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 20, 2018
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- Benjamin Lee
There’s something to be admired about a film that can gracefully defy simple genre categorization but Submergence feels like a clumsy melange, a confused adaptation made by people who don’t seem quite sure what they have on their hands.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 9, 2018
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