Chuck Bowen
Select another critic »For 830 reviews, this critic has graded:
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43% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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55% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 3.1 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Chuck Bowen's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 62 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Basket Case | |
| Lowest review score: | The Eyes of My Mother | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 531 out of 830
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Mixed: 150 out of 830
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Negative: 149 out of 830
830
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Chuck Bowen
Raymond De Felitta’s film offers a sampler course of formulas, which creates a strangely unfulfilling tension.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jul 15, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
It masterfully sustains a sense of “wrongness” that will be felt even by those unfamiliar with Argentina’s history.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jul 10, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
Marc Maron’s commanding aura of regret gives the film, despite its missed opportunities, an emotional center.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jul 8, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
The film ably plumbs the fears of a well-meaning man who tries his best to play by the rules of middle-aged courtship.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jun 24, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
The anthology justifies Mick Garris’s passion for horror, though he ironically proves to be one of his project’s liabilities.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jun 18, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
In the end, the film feels like a sketch that’s been offered in place of a portrait.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jun 17, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
Martin Scorsese culls various images together to offer a startlingly intense vision of America as place that, to paraphrase Bob Dylan, essentially believes in nothing, following one demoralizing crisis after another.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jun 14, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
The documentary proves that the history and mythology of American jazz is as intoxicating as the music itself.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jun 10, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
Despite a few undeniably intense and lurid moments, the film lacks the pulsating fury of a significant genre work.- Slant Magazine
- Posted May 30, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
Beautiful loneliness, as the film suggestively reveals, is a texture that Frank knows all too well.- Slant Magazine
- Posted May 28, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
Eddie Alcazar’s film is a purposefully inscrutable, wandering, disconnected, symbolic, and highly precious mood bath.- Slant Magazine
- Posted May 14, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
The film goes down easy because it saves the self-improvement clichés for the homestretch.- Slant Magazine
- Posted May 14, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
The filmmakers are interested in world building only as a pretext for maintaining a tone of non-contemplative ennui.- Slant Magazine
- Posted May 13, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
The film seeks to elevate genre clichés by slowing down the speed with which they’re typically offered.- Slant Magazine
- Posted May 7, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
The film is often quite moving in spite of its evasions, suggesting a real-life Charlotte’s Web, but one wonders what an artist with a bit more distance might’ve made of such rich material.- Slant Magazine
- Posted May 6, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
The film essentially indulges in the same act of willful distractedness as Ted Bundy’s admirers.- Slant Magazine
- Posted May 1, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
Unlike many [M. Night] Shyamalan films, which seem constructed out of Mad Libs, Come to Daddy retains an emotional consistency.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Apr 30, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
Appearing to recognize the flimsiness of her material, Roxanne Benjamin overcompensates with insistent direction.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Apr 25, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
The film celebrates the thingness of things, as well as the assuring clarity and lucidity that can arise from devotion to knowledge.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Apr 23, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
While the film offers an appealingly nostalgic trance-out, it’s often short on detail, especially in terms of Stephen Herchen’s struggle to create the instant film technology, which director Willem Baptist reduces to exchanges of jargon in atmospheric laboratories.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Apr 17, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
Nia DaCosta indulges one of rural quasi-thriller’s most tiresome gambits: humorlessness as a mark of high seriousness.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Apr 15, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
Forget Dog Day Afternoon, as the film doesn’t even clear the bar set by F. Gary Gray’s tense and exciting The Negotiator.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Apr 9, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
The film’s refusal to commit to its passing fancies is a highly intentional and eventually tiresome declaration of Qui Sheng’s arthouse bona fides.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Apr 2, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
Where Bonnie and Clyde is gloriously tragic, The Highwaymen is blunt and anti-climactically savage, fulfilling as well as somewhat critiquing former Texas Ranger Frank Hamer’s bloodlust.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Mar 27, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
It conspicuously tries to distance itself from the revenge film’s propensity toward florid excess.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Mar 25, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
Every moment in Jones’s film is so precisely textured that it becomes fantastical.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Mar 24, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
Like most biopics, The Dirt crams so many events into its narrative as to compromise the sense that these are real characters in the here and now.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Mar 23, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
With his latest, S. Craig Zahler doubles down on the best and worst elements of the pulp film.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Mar 21, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
It would appear that some of Buddy’s humans have indeed written off their fellow people. Does this matter? Honigmann’s film doesn’t plumb this potentially resonant question, as it’s hesitant to look a gift dog in the mou- Slant Magazine
- Posted Mar 19, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
J.C. Chandor turns an intensely physical narrative into another of his inadvertently generic studies of procedure.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Mar 15, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
The Eyes of Orson Welles honors the central paradox of Welles: that he was a joyful poet of alienation who was, like most of us, both victim and victimizer.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Mar 14, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
The film quickly settles into a holding pattern of repetitive porno-movie hijinks and increasingly listless murder scenes.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Mar 12, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
Throughout, J.K. Simmons invents the film with a primordial physicality of loneliness and self-loathing.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Mar 3, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
The film gradually becomes something more than a mixtape of horror gimmicks as it homes in on a frightening real-world subtext.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Feb 25, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
The film largely plays its scenario with a straight and gooey face, coaxing its actors to indulge their worst tendencies.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Feb 20, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
The documentary shines a piercing light on the sorts of people that our governments would too often rather forget.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Feb 20, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
The documentary illuminates how art and artists live together in a symbiotic existence, each giving as well as taking.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Feb 14, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
Steven Soderbergh’s film considers modern media as a vehicle for revising white patriarchal capitalism.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Feb 5, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
With its silvery sheen and sexy lure of celebrity actors being naughty, the film recalls the decadent, self-consciously chic art it parodies.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 31, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
If the film is mildly disappointing, it’s because it doesn’t go far enough. It confidently prepares us for a frenzy that never quite materializes.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 30, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
The film’s horniness and amorality, a slap in the face of fanatically cautious contemporary mores, might’ve been more shocking if it weren’t placed so firmly in quotation marks.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 24, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
The Brazilian animated feature offers relief from the impersonal assault of contemporary pop culture.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 20, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
Manolo Caro's film uses its characters as rigid markers of cowardice, lust, and entitlement.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 10, 2019
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- Chuck Bowen
Vice is as noisy as the media landscape that writer-director Adam McKay holds in contempt.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Dec 17, 2018
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- Chuck Bowen
Bridey Elliott avoids the smug pitfalls of narratives concerned with privileged people drinking themselves into a stupor.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Dec 4, 2018
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- Chuck Bowen
Sebastián Silva never indulges platitude, and so the qualified hope of the film’s ending isn’t merely affirming but also miraculous.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Dec 3, 2018
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- Chuck Bowen
The film is determinedly unclassifiable, blurring genres with a fervor that grows tedious.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Nov 21, 2018
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- Chuck Bowen
It offers a profound glimpse of one of the greatest and most influential voices in modern music.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Nov 19, 2018
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- Chuck Bowen
At its best, Stan & Ollie shows how the private and personal dimensions of art are achingly inseparable.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Nov 14, 2018
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- Chuck Bowen
At times, Cameron Yates appears to be too protective of his subjects, which somewhat neuters the drama of the narrative.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Nov 7, 2018
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- Chuck Bowen
Morgan Neville understands Orson Welles's art to pivot on an ongoing quest to bring about self-destruction so as to contrive to transcend it.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Oct 30, 2018
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- Chuck Bowen
The Other Side of the Wind isn't a novelty item, but a work of anguished art that's worthy of its creator.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Oct 30, 2018
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- Chuck Bowen
The film understands that money is a defining element of art-making, whether or not we wish to admit it.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Oct 19, 2018
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- Chuck Bowen
The absence here of a joke is meant to be hilarious, or to at least congratulate the audience for willfully submitting to a denial of pleasure. Every element of the film is studiously, painstakingly random.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Oct 10, 2018
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- Chuck Bowen
Rudy Valdez has no distance from the material, which works simultaneously in the film's favor and, largely, its disfavor.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Oct 9, 2018
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- Chuck Bowen
In Barbara, the process of filmmaking is shown to be a nesting series of shells that allow one to be simultaneously freed and lost.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Oct 8, 2018
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- Chuck Bowen
For every haunting sequence in The Happy Prince, there’s five that redundantly wallow in Oscar Wilde’s misery, which is Rupert Everett’s point, but it becomes wearisome.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Oct 3, 2018
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- Chuck Bowen
The documentary nurtures our sympathy for Steve Rubell and Ian Schrager without shortchanging their hypocrisies.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Oct 2, 2018
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- Chuck Bowen
Hold the Dark's ludicrous seriousness comes to feel like a mask for what's essentially a genre story of murder and mayhem.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 26, 2018
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- Chuck Bowen
Like many films tackling socially inflammatory material, Monsters and Men is constrained by its politics.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 24, 2018
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- Chuck Bowen
Assassination Nation carelessly affirms the idea that all women should be able to fight back at will, and if they don’t, it’s on them.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 24, 2018
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- Chuck Bowen
Sasha Waters Freyer forges a poignant portrait of an artist attempting to transcend the limitations of his art by refusing to see the process through.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 17, 2018
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- Chuck Bowen
Nicole Holofcener's The Land of Steady Habits often suggests the film that American Beauty might have been if the latter had been pruned of its smug hysteria.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 13, 2018
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- Chuck Bowen
Panos Cosmatos's film is a profoundly violent and weirdly moving poem of male alienation.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 10, 2018
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- Chuck Bowen
As always with Frederick Wiseman, it’s the quotidian gestures that haunt one in Monrovia, Indiana.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 8, 2018
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- Chuck Bowen
With Blaze, a fractured story of country music singer-songwriter Blaze Foley, director Ethan Hawke admirably battles the clichés of the musical biopic.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 6, 2018
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- Chuck Bowen
A story of a poet, Hotel by the River comes to resemble a poetry collection itself, abounding in emotional currents and grace notes that are bracingly allowed to hang, free of reductive explication.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 5, 2018
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- Chuck Bowen
The film's epic canvas invigorates Robert Greene, who fuses a procedural documentary, in the key of Frederick Wiseman’s films, with tableaux that wouldn’t be out of place in a horror western.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 5, 2018
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- Chuck Bowen
Like Happy Hour, Asako I & II is a parable of the grace — and, yes, happiness — that spring from resignation.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 2, 2018
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- Chuck Bowen
In Shoplifters, Kore-eda dramatizes the insidious and relativistic ordinariness of poverty.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 30, 2018
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- Chuck Bowen
Hélène Cattet and Bruno Forzani get so lost in their catalogue of fetishes that they lose grasp of the snap and tension that drive even a mediocre heist narrative.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 28, 2018
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- Chuck Bowen
If Hannah Emily Anderson's performance was as fully imagined as Brittany Allen's, then What Keeps You Alive might have attained the emotional dimensions of a robust psychodrama.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 20, 2018
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