Catherine Bray
Select another critic »For 100 reviews, this critic has graded:
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55% higher than the average critic
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11% same as the average critic
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34% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 1.1 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Catherine Bray's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 65 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Anselm | |
| Lowest review score: | Madame Web | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 43 out of 100
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Mixed: 57 out of 100
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Negative: 0 out of 100
100
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Catherine Bray
If you think The Ballad of Judas Priest, from co-directors and Priest fans Tom Morello and Sam Dunn, is going to be anything other than an ode to everything that’s great about the British headbangers, you’ve got another thing coming.- Variety
- Posted Feb 20, 2026
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- Catherine Bray
Written and directed by Kirk Jones (“Waking Ned Devine”), the film wrestles enthusiastically and mostly successfully with the potential pitfalls of making a funny yet respectful project about a condition that sometimes lends itself to laughter, even as it wreaks havoc with Davidson’s life in serious ways.- Variety
- Posted Jan 20, 2026
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- Catherine Bray
It always feels as if the people making this movie are having fun, and while that’s never a guarantee that the audience will too, it’s certainly the case here.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 18, 2025
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- Catherine Bray
This is a fascinating and neatly realised horror riff on the 2020s’ most popular genre.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 20, 2025
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- Catherine Bray
This is an all too rare romcom that delivers on every level. If you’re looking for well-drawn characters caught up in an outlandish situation that generates plenty of laughter and sentiment, look no further. Oh, and it’s sexy too. What more could you want?- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 1, 2025
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- Catherine Bray
Some films prioritize a strident political cause, others set out to terrify or thrill. This touching and simple story from Japanese filmmaker Hiroshi Okuyama, premiering in Un Certain Regard at Cannes, is a gentler affair, with modest ambitions that it realizes effectively.- Variety
- Posted Sep 8, 2025
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- Catherine Bray
It uses its supernatural premise to explore some very human behaviour.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 20, 2025
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- Catherine Bray
A Useful Ghost is an entertaining and moving – if also somewhat sprawling – fable of love and loss that isn’t quite like anything you’ve seen before.- Variety
- Posted May 29, 2025
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- Catherine Bray
A funny but also melancholy piece of work. It’s more interested in maintaining a consistent and sincere emotional connection than in wild virtuoso showboating.- The Guardian
- Posted May 28, 2025
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- Catherine Bray
So, is it all just high-concept pornography? Well, yes and no. The majority of the runtime consists of sex scenes, but they are punctuated with slogans which flash onscreen during and after the action, almost like demonstration placards at a march in support of sexual and political liberation.- Variety
- Posted Feb 27, 2025
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- Catherine Bray
As fun as the boys are, this is Barrera’s show. She is tremendous, and seemingly having a tremendous amount of fun.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 27, 2024
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- Catherine Bray
This film is a necessary howl of rage, one that argues cogently — via the simple expedient of capturing life as it is lived — that to ignore what it happening in Afghanistan is to condemn half the population of the country to oppression under a dictatorship that is both political and personal.- Variety
- Posted Nov 21, 2024
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- Catherine Bray
There are a couple of not-quite holes exactly, but slightly threadbare patches. More importantly, the narrative isn’t really the point; this is first and foremost a tense portrait of a toxic relationship, and a brutally compelling one at that.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 11, 2024
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- Catherine Bray
The film has so much energy that its overall tone is fundamentally invigorating; this is the cinema of euphoric nihilism, and it’s a welcome return to form for Moreau.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 15, 2024
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- Catherine Bray
It’s not for everyone, but for gorehounds this film delivers and then some.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 10, 2024
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- Catherine Bray
McAvoy is the most compelling reason to see this one. The original may be darker, but it didn’t have McAvoy.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 13, 2024
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- Catherine Bray
If we’re nitpicking it’s fair to say that neither of the couple’s interior lives are as fully fleshed out as would be permitted in a novel, but maybe they don’t have to be: they function as avatars for romantic hopes and dreams as much as anything, delivering all the vicarious pleasure and pain that we’re looking for when we tuck into a good romance- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 28, 2024
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- Catherine Bray
From a horror fan’s point of view, this is an absolutely fascinating experiment with form.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 11, 2024
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- Catherine Bray
Kill’s objectives are achieved with an energy and enthusiasm that make it a tasty piece of action cinema which doesn’t pull its punches; it’s finger-cracking good.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 5, 2024
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- Catherine Bray
The Nature of Love refreshingly centers the female adulterer’s experience, in a richly comic mode.- Variety
- Posted Jun 25, 2024
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- Catherine Bray
Audiences hoping for lashings of graphic violence may be disappointed that not all of these problems involve gallons of blood – this is a relatively gore-free thriller – instead, it’s all aboard and anchors aweigh for some larky tension between likable characters who find themselves plunged into a nightmare scenario.- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 20, 2024
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- Variety
- Posted Jun 5, 2024
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- Catherine Bray
Sharp, funny and strongest when it stands on its own two perfectly manicured feet, this snappy musical successfully updates the original Mean Girls template for a fresh audience.- Empire
- Posted Jan 10, 2024
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- Catherine Bray
You’re never left in any doubt that The Sacrifice Game is made by film-makers with affection and respect for horror movies – but it might not be the type of horror movie you thought it was at first sight.- The Guardian
- Posted Dec 6, 2023
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- Catherine Bray
Scott's take on Napoleon is distinctively deadpan: a funny, idiosyncratic close-up of the man, rather than a broader, all-encompassing account.- Empire
- Posted Nov 14, 2023
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- Catherine Bray
Directed with verve and enthusiasm by 37-year-old former bank employee Lokesh Kanagaraj, who moved into directing after winning a short film competition, the influence of the likes of Quentin Tarantino on all of this is very much evident.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 10, 2023
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- Catherine Bray
They say you can’t teach an old dog new tricks, but maybe they’re wrong: on this evidence, Guy Ritchie can absolutely learn how to make a Paul Greengrass film, delivering a handsome slice of serious war drama.- Empire
- Posted Jun 7, 2023
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- Catherine Bray
More a portrait of Kiefer’s work than a standard biographical study of Kiefer himself, “Anselm” is a very particular study of a singular man’s soul, told through images of his oeuvre, augmented by sensational use of archive rendered in 3D.- Variety
- Posted May 26, 2023
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- Catherine Bray
The film is intriguingly anthropological in its take on America as a subject, viewed less through the prism of what American might signify as a nation, than how America might feel as an experience — there’s a sense of disintegration and incipient violence seeping through everything, which occasionally explodes to entertaining effect, but there’s clearly deep affection there too.- Variety
- Posted May 23, 2023
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- Catherine Bray
It’s the unique rhythm of the way that this film is written and cut that elevates it beyond a standard millennial malaise movie.- Variety
- Posted May 22, 2023
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