For 830 reviews, this critic has graded:
  • 43% higher than the average critic
  • 2% same as the average critic
  • 55% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 3.2 points lower than other critics. (0-100 point scale)

Chuck Bowen's Scores

  • Movies
  • TV
Average review score: 62
Highest review score: 100 Basket Case
Lowest review score: 0 The Eyes of My Mother
Score distribution:
830 movie reviews
    • 85 Metascore
    • 63 Chuck Bowen
    Throughout the film, one often feels the plot machinations working against Park Chan-wook’s poetry, though in a few cases poetry wins out.
    • 76 Metascore
    • 63 Chuck Bowen
    One may wonder if Night School's most revealing material has been left on the cutting room floor, so as to offer the sort of uplift that inadvertently marginalizes the very inequalities that drive the film.
    • 73 Metascore
    • 63 Chuck Bowen
    Álex de la Iglesia has a real flair for wild action sequences that remain exhilaratingly coherent and sensical.
    • 68 Metascore
    • 63 Chuck Bowen
    Andrew Becker and Daniel Mehrer get close to their subjects only to retreat when things get truly dangerous.
    • 51 Metascore
    • 63 Chuck Bowen
    Unlike Malcom & Marie, Daniel Brühl’s feature-length directorial debut proves to be authentically self-castigating.
    • 62 Metascore
    • 63 Chuck Bowen
    It fails to go deep enough, suggesting an appetizer offered as an opening to an ultimately unserved meal.
    • 81 Metascore
    • 63 Chuck Bowen
    Ultimately, Anders Thomas Jensen cannot reconcile the fact that a mature story of men in crisis doesn’t coherently mesh with suspense scenes in which his protagonist viscerally annihilates a violent gang.
    • 63 Metascore
    • 63 Chuck Bowen
    For Paul Schrader, even a film called Master Gardener ultimately pivots on a man having to take out the macho trash.
    • 70 Metascore
    • 63 Chuck Bowen
    As preachy and repetitive as The Little Prince can be, it offers enough moments of poetry to keep it flirting with greatness, or at least goodness.
    • 64 Metascore
    • 63 Chuck Bowen
    In the film's best scenes, Jeff Grace displays a delicate understanding of various modes of male fragility.
    • 68 Metascore
    • 63 Chuck Bowen
    Lydia Tenaglia's direction is occasionally flashy and cluttered, but her empathy for Tower is evocative and poignant.
    • 61 Metascore
    • 63 Chuck Bowen
    Robertson’s sense of having witnessed friends and collaborators get washed away by bitterness and addiction was more fulsomely evoked by The Last Waltz.
    • 58 Metascore
    • 63 Chuck Bowen
    Throughout Alex and Benjamin Brewer's film, Nicolas Cage holds the screen with his distinct timing and expressive force of being.
    • 68 Metascore
    • 63 Chuck Bowen
    Oz Perkins exhibits a committed understanding of the cinematic value of silence and of vastly underpopulated compositions.
    • tbd Metascore
    • 63 Chuck Bowen
    The filmmakers never really answer inevitable questions: What's the point of these fussy allusions?
    • 49 Metascore
    • 63 Chuck Bowen
    With The Sacrament, director Ti West has bitten off more of a premise than his classically modest barebones approach to horror movies can presently chew.
    • 65 Metascore
    • 63 Chuck Bowen
    It's the rare urgent-issue movie that refuses to pummel you with the importance of its subject matter, which in this case involves the shameful, potential extinction of a culture.
    • 62 Metascore
    • 63 Chuck Bowen
    The film doesn't add up to much, but it's a diverting tour of Takashi Miike's anything-goes, splatter-paint sensibility.
    • 68 Metascore
    • 63 Chuck Bowen
    Ironically, Clint Eastwood is as condescending of Jewell as the bureaucrats he despises.
    • 37 Metascore
    • 63 Chuck Bowen
    The film goes down easy because it saves the self-improvement clichés for the homestretch.
    • tbd Metascore
    • 63 Chuck Bowen
    D.W. Young navigates his varying moods with an ease that's particularly impressive for a director making his feature debut, but he never capitalizes on his ability to coax down our guard.
    • 55 Metascore
    • 63 Chuck Bowen
    What distinguishes Stray Bullets from so many other low-budget crime films is Jack Fessenden's sense of quietness.
    • 42 Metascore
    • 63 Chuck Bowen
    A confident and exciting genre film, and that's certainly not nothing, but it has a slight impersonality that marks it as either a calling card or a work for hire.
    • 52 Metascore
    • 63 Chuck Bowen
    It has a bouncy sense of lunacy, wearing its derivative junkiness on its sleeve with surprising lightness of authority.
    • 60 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Cleopatra is, disappointingly, neither a visionary masterpiece nor a fascinating catastrophe, but something altogether more banal: an unusually intimate epic that falls very flat.
    • 41 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The big disappointment of the film is that Melissa McCarthy’s performance is all Jekyll and no Hyde.
    • 77 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Mike Flanagan is an un-ironic humanist, which is rare in the horror genre. And this admirable quality trips the filmmaker up in the second half of Gerald's Game, which pivots on Jessie learning to stand up to diseased masculinity.
    • 52 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Rarely do the filmmakers show people mutually affecting one another in cycles of pain and control, rather than blaming phantom figures.
    • 53 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Sam Hoffman respects his characters and evinces curiosity about their lives—and these qualities aren't to be taken for granted. But he isn't willing to disrupt his familiar and tightly structured plot.
    • 51 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Graham Swon undermines our expectations of horror-movie conceits, attempting to tap the primordial manna of oral storytelling.
    • 62 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Brian Crano is as skittish as his protagonists are about the particular contours of their dilemma. To put it bluntly, Permission is a sex film without the sex.
    • 65 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    It suggests that Kris Swanberg has taken notes on what a film concerned with pregnancy should include without actually making it.
    • 50 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Like many films early in a director's career, it plays more as a sketchbook of intended future endeavors than as a cohesive and fully realized vision in its own right.
    • 37 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Heist is competently staged, but Scott Mann maintains audience interest with the preponderance of dissonant absurdities.
    • 51 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Gregg Araki's film suggests a hothouse melodrama that's been drained of the hothouse, the melodrama, and any other discernably dramatic stakes.
    • 61 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Sputnik’s third act is a rush of formulaic action meant, perhaps, to compensate for the interminably repetitive and impersonal second act, which is mostly concerned with reinforcing a set of foregone conclusions.
    • 53 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Director Max Winkler truly seems to believe that he’s cutting to the heart of the boulevard of broken dreams.
    • 67 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    There is, of course, Gene Wilder as Wonka, the reason most people think they like this movie, and he’s a wonderful actor quite capable of hitting Dahl’s ambivalences (and he has a lovely entrance), but Stuart’s clunky stop-and-start pace and sketchy tone give him nowhere to go.
    • 80 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film’s details collectively grow absurd and pompous.
    • 46 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Bart Freundlich alternates somewhat arbitrarily between his various plots, leaving a lot of loose ends in the process.
    • 46 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    It's perched uneasily on a fence separating a rote comic sketch film from something weirder, stranger, and less engaged with offering reassuring domestic homilies.
    • 67 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    For liberals, The Final Year might become a kind of metaphorical marriage video that’s watched by divorcees who yearn of that initial hint of paradise.
    • 68 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    After a while, it's hard to escape the fact that the audience is watching a potential monster movie in which most of the fun stuff — i.e. the monster—has been pared away.
    • 61 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Vice is as noisy as the media landscape that writer-director Adam McKay holds in contempt.
    • 67 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Director Chuck Workman's simply compiles Welles's greatest moments, offering little in the way of an authorial point of view.
    • 36 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film has the plot of an intensely lurid thriller, but Atom Egoyan can't bring himself to face that and actively tend to the story; instead, he trades in barely coherent, high-brow euphemisms.
    • 72 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Sweet Virginia doesn’t have much of a point, as its characters are reductive variables in an inevitable equation of carnage.
    • 71 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Kristoffer Borgli is unduly proud of himself for concocting his unlikable protagonists, and he marinates in their repulsive self-absorption.
    • 65 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Director Annie Silverstein tries to enrich the tropes of her class-conscious buddy scenario by canceling them out.
    • 54 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Director Richard Franklin and screenwriter Tom Holland can’t seem to figure out if Psycho II should resemble a film from the 1950s or the 1980s, so they split the difference, and the result is a bland, meandering movie with no real look or tone at all.
    • 56 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Writer-director David Michôd's film renders existential crises of American entitlement dull and tedious.
    • 69 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Frédéric Mermoud's film makes an elaborate pretense of honoring the traditions of the observational procedural.
    • 51 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    This remake proffers the sort of cinematic nowhere place that's all too common of an increasingly corporate, globalized cinema.
    • tbd Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Sion Sono, allergic to subtlety, is terrified that we won't notice his detonation of Nikkatsu's sexploitation traditions.
    • 74 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Nia DaCosta indulges one of rural quasi-thriller’s most tiresome gambits: humorlessness as a mark of high seriousness.
    • 63 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Adam Pesce never condescends to any of his subjects, but good intentions alone don't make for a captivating movie.
    • 66 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The premise of Michael Winterbottom's series has devolved from moderately diverting to actively stifling.
    • 44 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Sadly, Douglas Tirola's documentary doesn't follow its subjects' advice regarding the refinement of technique.
    • 58 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Director Daniel Barber uses a bleak and unresolved portion of American history to justify indulging typical genre-film nihilism.
    • 63 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Manolo Caro's film uses its characters as rigid markers of cowardice, lust, and entitlement.
    • 51 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The director diligently keeps her heroine's ego in check, and that's awfully principled of her, but her audience may feel as if they've inadvertently booked a trip with no destination.
    • 68 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Like its protagonist, Philippe Falardeau's film gets lost in a haze of incidental cacophony.
    • 63 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Some will find the film compelling, but underneath the riddles it's basically a self-important proclamation of "who the hell knows?"
    • 52 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film ultimately leaves you feeling as if you're stuck watching your cousin's boring slideshow of his trip to Palookaville.
    • 50 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film is in love with the tropes it ridicules, and it doesn't take long for that love to dwarf any possibility of critique.
    • 72 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    There's considerable talent on display in Exhibition, but it's the kind of thing people mean when they use the term "art film" as a pejorative.
    • 40 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    A sexily chaotic parody of entitlement becomes just another tale of a white dude learning that there are worse things in life than essentially having no problems.
    • 66 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Richard Turner is a charismatic subject who demands more than a conventionally entertaining documentary.
    • 53 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The Program is flashier and more self-conscious than many biopics, but it's ultimately just as hollow.
    • 59 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film is taken with comfy gags that celebrate these men's ownership of pop culture, filtering them through a lens of unrevealing caricature.
    • 76 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Pass Over spins African-American hardship into existential myth, suggesting along the way such plays as Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot and Jean-Paul Sartre's No Exit.
    • 66 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Heroin is to Landline what abortion is to Robespierre's Obvious Child: a dangerous little variable planted to strategically unsettle the pervading cutesiness.
    • 54 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    John Lee Hancock’s The Little Things blends two modes of the serial killer film, both of which have been shepherded by David Fincher.
    • 62 Metascore
    • 50 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.
    • 42 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Director Roberto Andò takes the form of a classical whodunit and bludgeons it with naïve indignation and sanctimony.
    • 34 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film is impersonal and populated with wisps of characters who spend most of the running time wandering around in the dark yelling at one another.
    • 77 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film interprets itself, offering an essay on rape and gender fluidity that locks us out of the cognitive process of digesting it.
    • 36 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Harley Davidson and the Marlboro Man is one passable joke stretched out over 98 minutes with nothing in the way of a real movie to support it.
    • 49 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The filmmakers exhibit no interest in watching the story's central wolves wiggle out of the trap they've potentially set for themselves.
    • 46 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film is a collection of old-fogey clichés, with a narrative that mixes a career retrospective with a road trip.
    • 61 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The filmmakers allow their characters to learn the usual humanist lessons, in the process eliding the ramifications of their scenario.
    • 60 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Writer-director Bernard Rose effectively conjoures an atompshere of poetic stoned-1960s British rebellion, a feeling of woozy, intoxicating possibility that will not-so-eventually be squashed.
    • 54 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film is one long funereal slog in which the main character discovers something about herself that's almost immediately apparent.
    • 56 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    As a sampler course of what it means to court the Michelin honor, Three Stars is enjoyable, but it's simply a collision of details that never entirely converge into a meaningful whole.
    • 53 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    After a dangerous, even personal, first half, Deep Water becomes crude in all the wrong ways.
    • 44 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film is ultimately tethered to the strictures of a procedural thriller, as it's rife with functional dialogue and plotting as well as forgettable aesthetics, which cumulatively reduce the existential calisthenics to filler.
    • 28 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The premise might make sense, if only hypocritically, but the film abandons this already flimsy parody of macho pride disastrously at the last minute.
    • 70 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    It bridges the cautionary elements of a horror film with the wish-fulfilling platitudes of a touristy romance.
    • 65 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film's notion of a caste system is crudely reductive in the manner of a routine future-shock thriller.
    • 33 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film is just another fantasy of living only the good portions of the life of an artist.
    • 61 Metascore
    • 50 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.
    • 61 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The filmmakers are interested in world building only as a pretext for maintaining a tone of non-contemplative ennui.
    • 69 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Made with considerable reverence, but it doesn't quite manage to tow a tricky tonal line that's required when working with such sensitive and complicated material.
    • 60 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Writer-director Neasa Hardiman’s film is undone by earnestness.
    • 87 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The Shape of Water has been made with a level of craftsmanship that should be the envy of most filmmakers, but the impudent, unruly streak that so often gives Guillermo del Toro’s films their pulse has been airbrushed away.
    • 62 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    It lacks the fire and eccentricity that we want from our stories of adventurers driven by obsessions that could be seen as egotistical or just plain bonkers.
    • 63 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film lacks the manic fly-by-night invention of, say, Who Framed Roger Rabbit, or even the ripe erotic ambiguity of something like Avatar.
    • 61 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Lilting doesn't have any momentum or any sense of ambiguity, once the setup has been established.
    • 57 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    There are a few effectively disquieting sequences early on, but the film never recovers from director Kevin Macdonald's indifferent staging of a pivotal moment.
    • 73 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film is content as it is to run clever one-liners and 19th-century pop-cultural references into the same comedic whirlpool.
    • 67 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Like many films tackling socially inflammatory material, Monsters and Men is constrained by its politics.
    • 54 Metascore
    • 50 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.
    • 64 Metascore
    • 50 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.
    • 45 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    One misses the prismatic structure of the 15:17 to Paris book, which fuses multiple points of view and which is reduced by Dorothy Blyskal's script to cut-and-pasted bromides.
    • 76 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The legacy of Syd Fields's screenwriting manual hangs over 10 Cloverfield Lane, as it does all of Abrams's productions, which never even accidentally casts a whiff of subtext or authorial personality.
    • tbd Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    One can't help but sense that underneath the complicated art-house game-playing of Isaki Lacuesta's The Double Steps resides a theme that's sentimental and old-hat.
    • 65 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film shows no interest in the inner workings of a relationship that’s defined by unusual circumstances.
    • tbd Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The filmmaker's failure of empathy for those who strive to outlaw medicinal marijuana turns the protestors into hissable puritanical bad guys.
    • 49 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Vincenzo Natali emphasizes technically impressive shots in the service of predictable, boring expository beats, at the expense of elaborating on his main character's growing feelings of isolation and torment.
    • 52 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film ultimately doesn't live up to this early potential, as Keanu Reeves loses his way in the third act with too many false climaxes.
    • 47 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Too much of Noma is composed of gorgeous pillow shots, which grow static and fussy, appearing to exist almost apart from the subject matter.
    • 69 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Lee Cronin serves up considerable gore with monotonous, po-faced earnestness.
    • 55 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    A one-joke movie--a good joke, yes, but Brandon Cronenberg's agenda clouds the clarity that's needed to fully deliver the punchline.
    • 57 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    There's ultimately little in the way of authentically resonant drama underneath the film's self-conscious busy-ness.
    • 51 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Peninsula feels like the work of an artist who misunderstood his past triumph, squandering his talent for the sake of a pandering, halfhearted encore.
    • 56 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Like most of Paolo Sorrentino’s films, Loro is closer to a stylistic orgy than an existential rumination on Italy’s heritage.
    • 66 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    As is typically the case with Joe Wright's films, one is left both exhilarated and exhausted, wishing that he had been more interested in the material at the center of his house of flourishes.
    • 54 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Evil Eye is a feast of timidly undeveloped raw material.
    • 54 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The source material, which is convoluted even by Shakespeare's narratively dexterous standards, is admittedly a tough nut for a filmmaker to crack.
    • 54 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Director Kiah Roache-Turner's film is an excitingly efficient and ultraviolent zomedy.
    • 49 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    It makes an occasionally spirited pretense of injecting the tensions of the United States's educational system into a familiar zombie-siege scenario.
    • 46 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    David Koepp is a fatally un-obsessive craftsman, one who’s fashioned a horror film that resembles a tasteful coffee table book.
    • 35 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    A middling genre movie, but it's oddly likable for its conflicted, unresolved tension.
    • 73 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Jake Meginsky's documentary is insular, precious, and too pleased with its unwillingness to reach out to the unconverted.
    • 61 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film fails to lift off from this sturdy aesthetic launching pad; it never allows the characters, however stock, to evolve in their respective dealings with one another, which is the primary source of tension and escalation for a thriller set in a confined place.
    • 66 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The Dardennes maintain a distance from Ahmed as a way of celebrating their refusal to reduce him to any easy psychological bullet points.
    • 55 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film is ultimately stultifying because the disconnection between the various characters is so immediately accepted as such a foregone conclusion that nothing ever seems to be at stake, and the heavily horizontal imagery, though accomplished and evocative, if fussy, only evokes two states of mind: loneliness and disconnection.
    • 41 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film is a trim farce with no blood flowing under its skin, as it’s all construction, setup, and payoff.
    • 60 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film's aesthetic is striking, but feels almost intangibly derivative, most obviously suggesting an austere cover of Repulsion.
    • 38 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film occasionally and promisingly suggests an obsessive and free-associative paean to regret.
    • 75 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film blends the Bard with National Geographic, failing to make a case for the inexplicability of their union.
    • 55 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    52 Pick-Up loses its sense of social texture in the last third when everyone begins to die by decree of formulaic three-act screenwriting, and its indifference to the plight of Harry’s wife (Ann-Margret) is unseemly, but the film is an often nightmarish gem awaiting rediscovery.
    • 48 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Jay Baruchel's Goon: Last of the Enforcers faces an uphill climb that's inherent to retreads, as it's almost impossible for the film to honor its predecessor without lapsing into contrived and preordained formula.
    • 42 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Franck Khalfoun's Amityville: The Awakening is an elegant entry in a lame series of horror films.
    • 67 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    In one fashion, Robert Schwentke proves to be too complicit with his protagonist, regarding evil and human banality as stimulation.
    • 42 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Even the director’s most rabid fans will find Cronenberg’s debut to be a tough sit.
    • 35 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    31
    It collapses into repetition and unintended self-parody, as it's devoid of the subtext and empathetic audacity.
    • 72 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film is at its most moving in those rare moments when it’s capturing the nourishing bonding ritual among a deaf family.
    • 70 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Guillermo del Toro's remake of Nightmare Alley is less a living and breathing movie than a fossilized riff on the idea of a movie, particularly the American noir.
    • 42 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    A blunt satire of the dehumanization inherent in social media that also gets off on said detachment.
    • 58 Metascore
    • 50 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.
    • 49 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Rodrigo García’s film is fastidious, tidy, and lifeless, with every obligatory gesture in its place.
    • 68 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film introduces a promising romantic pentagon, only to let it float away unfulfilled into studiously benign coming-of-age clouds.
    • 51 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The Peter Landesman film's overt politics are minimal, aside from defaulting to the myth of John F. Kennedy as a martyr for...something.
    • 39 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Christophe Gans’s telling of Beauty and the Beast abounds in impersonal and unsatisfying sumptuousness.
    • 81 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Denis Villeneuve’s film is designed to reward the audience for recognizing references in the midst of an action pursuit, and, after an hour or so of the clipped and earnest signifying, one may find themselves nostalgic for Ridley Scott’s unforced indifference to the issue.
    • 45 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Craig William Macneill's film is a sporadically frightening slow burn with a fatally overlong fuse.
    • 47 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Timidity and perhaps fear, of visual confinement, of lingering emotional engagement, closes Nacho Vigalondo's most promising windows.
    • 71 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Vahid Jalilvand's film is so worked out that you know that every nuance is pointed and intentional.
    • 75 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Under the Tree boasts the lurid determinism of many acclaimed European films that spit-shine genre-film tropes with chilly compositions and fashionable hopelessness.
    • 52 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Pang Ho-cheung can't help but humanize Vulgaria's characters, which is a kiss of death for what's meant to be a farce of escalating obscenity.
    • 65 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    In the Fade is executed with precision, particularly the third act, in which the film morphs into a tense yet unconvincing revenge thriller.
    • 63 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Once it gets its nominal plot and character development out of the way, Bad Posture turns out to be pleasantly surprising.
    • 70 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film quickly settles into a holding pattern of repetitive porno-movie hijinks and increasingly listless murder scenes.
    • 69 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    In Morris’s best films, such as The B-Side: Elsa Dorfman’s Portrait Photography, there’s a sense that the director is truly simpatico with his subjects. In My Psychedelic Love Story, though, Morris lets a fading never-quite-legend blather her way into a trap.
    • 66 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The main character is a collection of insecurities that have been calculatedly assembled so as to teach children the usual lessons about bravery, loyalty, and self-sufficiency.
    • 68 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The actors play off one another beautifully, but the film bottoms out just as it's getting warmed up.
    • 44 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film's characters are stock types without enough satirical texture to fulfill their function in the narrative.
    • 59 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The Dead ultimately doesn't have much of a pulse, as it fails to transcend the banality of its inevitable theme.
    • 32 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film is ultimately devoted to formula, as Nick Simon discards his jumbled meta-media conceit at around the halfway mark.
    • 73 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film is most tragic and humorous when hints of the outside world break through the suffocatingly cheerful façade of the Villages.
    • 53 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Kevin Macdonald’s film never captures the spectrum of a life lived in unimaginable extremis.
    • 51 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The actors have the showmanship to chew the lurid, shopworn material up to bits, savoring it like a Royale with cheese.
    • 57 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    France indecisively utilizes a news personality’s crocodile tears as a symbol of the bad faith that pervades news discourse.
    • 53 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Only Michel Shannon’s off-kilter timing brings The Quarry to sporadic life.
    • 43 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    It could have used far more of King's mordant humor, which might have imbued the metaphorical autumnal proceedings with a much-needed jolt of pop anarchy, or even pathos.
    • 36 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Standoff isn’t quite inspired, but it coasts on unexpected modesty of professionalism.
    • 49 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    As the film proceeds, the appeal of its nostalgia wears thin and you may notice that there isn't much beyond the window dressing.
    • 53 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    There's satiric potential here, but Eli Roth's sense of humor abandons him when his hero isn't about to get down with the get down.
    • 77 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    One can chart the very moment that Victoria's existence slips out of the routine into the nightmarish, and there's no escape by temporal omission.
    • 51 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    A mediocre, quasi-diverting B movie.
    • 61 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The filmmakers don’t examine the psychological terror, the bitterness, and lust that gave rise to many of the works they cherish.
    • 65 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film savors its obviousness and cruelty as badges of honor, reducing itself to a technical polemic.
    • 63 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Initially colorful, the script’s lurid and overripe dialogue eventually grinds the film to a halt.
    • 64 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Quentin Dupieux imbues a trite genre scenario with a Kafkaesque brand of comic existentialism.
    • 40 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Its openly mercenary ethos initially scan as a bracing lack of pretense in a market crammed to the gills with insidious faux-sentimentality, but its overstuffed relentlessness proves almost equally tedious.
    • 44 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film simplifies Winston Churchill's legacy for the dubious purposes of narrative momentum and emotional lift.
    • 46 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film doesn’t quite cut to the heart of the socially nurtured fantasies that splinter men from women.
    • 62 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film is ironically gripped by the sort of ideological "vagueness" that Krk Marx dismisses throughout.
    • 50 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Society never entirely decides whether it’s a plot-centric horror-mystery or an imagistic fantasy; the film’s self-conscious emptiness drains the incestuous conceit of its shock value, defanging a nervy gross-out.
    • 54 Metascore
    • 50 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.
    • 58 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Hello Lonesome isn't really that much of a movie, but it has something that a number of more polished pictures in the same vein don't: human decency. Sadly, that's noteworthy.
    • 50 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    It evinces a qualified kind of courage in its anonymous convictions, parodying a world that barely ever existed by barely existing itself.
    • 39 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    In the end, it feels unavoidably dull, as there isn't much thematic ambiguity to be found in the assertion that humans deserve life that's defined by more than indentured servitude.
    • 57 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Chad Archibald doesn't quite land Bite's transition over from claustrophobic character study into full-blown monster movie.
    • 28 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The film belongs to a long tradition of horror films that offensively suggest that all atheists might as well hang a Welcome sign up for the devil.
    • 73 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    The pacing is so humorless and funereal that it squelches the possibility of heat or conflict arising between the characters.
    • 44 Metascore
    • 50 Chuck Bowen
    Salt and Fire is a doodle, suggesting an assemblage of ecological riffs and fantasias that Werner Herzog may have entertained while making Into the Inferno.
    • 31 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Yoav Factor can't decide whether he wants to play his broad scenario as an exaggerated farce or as a heartwarming testament to blood ties.
    • 61 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Throughout the film, Lucas Belvaux sidelines the emotional textures that might complicate all his sermonizing.
    • 37 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Brian Smrz never contrasts the film’s violence with stillness, allowing the audience to enjoy a sense of foreboding escalation.
    • 52 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    It reveals itself to be a profoundly cynical movie posing as a work of idealism, and it's all the more insidious because it's otherwise so bland and forgettable.
    • 49 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    The key to good, or at least effective, agitprop (and Oliver Stone and Michael Moore know this) is that, yes, it must simplify matters, but it necessitates canny presentation so that it may truly get into viewers' blood streams and rile them.
    • 31 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    With the filmmakers unwilling to explore a kinky, psychosexual bond between a man and his demonic lady ghost-boat, Mary comes to feel as if lacks a through line, collapsing into a series of disconnected horror-movie beats.
    • 63 Metascore
    • 38 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.
    • 41 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    The film is a collection of consciously quirky indie tropes in place of any meaningful narrative, and you can practically see the notebook the filmmakers may have written in during a brainstorming session in a college screenwriting seminar.
    • 52 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    The film essentially indulges in the same act of willful distractedness as Ted Bundy’s admirers.
    • 36 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Writer-director Evan Spiliotopoulos barely capitalizes on the luridly sacrilegious implications of the film’s premise.
    • 48 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    The film covers "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre" by way of Rob Zombie, Quentin Tarantino, and Ti West.
    • 36 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Like Better Luck Tomorrow, it tries to cut cool-movie poses under the pretense of providing an alternative racial viewpoint to typical genre tropes.
    • 76 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    A Monster Calls is both governed and straitjacketed by director J.A. Bayona’s competent impersonality.
    • 65 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    In the film, Joshua Marston leaches the narrative of nearly all the social texture that infused and empowered “Heretics,” the 2005 episode of the This American Life podcast that inspired this biopic.
    • 51 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    As a character, Catherine Weldon suffers the same fate as Sitting Bull, having been reduced to a signifier of the filmmakers' retroactive political correctness.
    • 63 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    The only truly graspable notion the film can be said to put forth is one of increasingly tedious sci-fi-romantic genre busy-ness.
    • 63 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Julia Hart drains the crime film genre of its macho bluster without replacing it with anything.
    • 37 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Deon Taylor seems uncomfortable with the escalating relentlessness of a siege film, eventually splitting Traffik off into a variety of other tangents and genres, diluting the potent subtext at the film's center.
    • 56 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Benicio Del Toro's performance is showy, a great actor's parade of indulgences that occasionally sets the deranged camp tone that should have been the narrative's starting point.
    • 31 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    After a promising entrapment scene that offers some casually eerie narrative details, the film collapses, lurching awkwardly between a variety of tones and intentions.
    • 64 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    With no vividly drawn humans on display, the action feels like rootless war play.
    • 73 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    The film sanctimoniously suggests that ignorance or distrust of the news is nothing new, but rather the bedrock of America’s formation.
    • 40 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    The film may take the notion of implication over illustration a bit too far.
    • 34 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    By the end, audiences will most likely feel as if they've been locked out of the drama that's presumably unfolding right in front of them.
    • 38 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    The film insufficiently connects the book's prophecy with its present-day, real-world forms of realization.
    • 32 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    A sluggish, obvious fusion of a disease-of-the-week tearjerker with a comedic family crime romp that abounds in stiflingly over-emphasized Boston-crime-movie details.
    • 46 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Every scene is virtually self-contained, and so Capone feels as if it’s starting all over again from frame to frame.
    • 58 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Raymond De Felitta’s film offers a sampler course of formulas, which creates a strangely unfulfilling tension.
    • 45 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Flower is a sentimental work of faux nihilism, pandering to children who’re just discovering alienation.
    • 65 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Director Laura Archibald's approach is fatally safe, often turning poets into self-congratulatory windbags.
    • 71 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Jim Mickle plays the scenario deadly straight and unintentionally exposes all of its attendant absurdities, leaving the cast stranded.
    • 25 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    The film is dispiriting because there's virtually no sign of Dario Argento in it, nor of any novel motivation to mount yet another version of an oft-told tale.
    • tbd Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Phillip Montgomery's film is ironically as undeveloped and busy as the sensational media it criticizes.
    • tbd Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    It joins its American cousin in the scrapheap of family dramedies that no one watches, unless by default out of boredom on TBS or TNT.
    • tbd Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Throughout, it’s difficult to sort the contrivances that writer-director Jason William Lee is parodying from those he’s indulging.
    • tbd Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Time and again, the filmmaker cuts the money shot meant to theoretically cap a sequence.
    • 22 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    The imagery fails to express either the characters' or the filmmakers' obsessions or synchronicities.
    • 50 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Terry Gilliam has imposed a mix tape of his greatest hits, whose greatness was debatable to begin with, on a whiff of a story that might've flourished under the maxim "less is more."
    • 64 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    The film offers chaos by the yard with no real stakes or emotional reverberations.
    • 30 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Daniel Augusto relies on familiar tropes pertaining to the sexy, rebellious rock-star artist who does things his own way.
    • 83 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Rose Glass utilizes a provocative scenario for a vague and deadly serious art exercise.
    • 32 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    The film too often suggests an Under Siege that’s been pointlessly larded with critters from Jumanji.
    • 34 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    The problem with the film isn't the contrivance of its premise, it's that writer-director Jessica Goldberg doesn't know it's contrived.
    • 57 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    The film’s masterful prologue writes a check that the remainder of this very long, very indulgent film labors mightily to cash.
    • 43 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Bits of editorializing dialogue throughout James Franco's In Dubious Battle suggest the resonant film that might’ve been.
    • 65 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Scott Cooper's film moves at a funereal pace, implicitly celebrating its sluggishness as a mark of integrity.
    • 36 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Like District 9, the film is a genre outing with big ideas that’s more committed to the power of arsenals and pyrotechnics.
    • 59 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    It ultimately offers little more than another opportunity for famous actors to indulge their fetishistic, inadvertently condescending impressions of "everyday" people.
    • 46 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Vincenzo Natali’s film divests itself of stakes in the name of total meaninglessness.
    • 39 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    The film ultimately boils down to people bludgeoning one another in unimaginative close-ups.
    • 50 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    The film misses the opportunity for a suspenseful interweaving of sports spectatorship and its characters’ high-stakes gambits.
    • 57 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    The film's mixture of sensationalism and self-conscious artiness is experimentally disingenuous at best.
    • 59 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Self-absorption is Janicza Bravo’s focus, though—as in other smug and mock-ironic comedies—it’s a topic that’s less examined than indulged.
    • 42 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Atom Egoyan is a much better director when he drops the art-film fanciness and wrestles directly with his inner voyeuristic weirdo.
    • 57 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    The film is shrilly, luridly, dully, and unremittingly ugly, preaching to a choir that it also demonizes.
    • 56 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    The film occasionally benefits from the weird energy shared between Michael Shannon and Imogen Poots.
    • 42 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    With his Deception, Arnaud Desplechin renders one of a great author’s slighter works titanic by comparison.
    • 42 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Jon Watts does nothing with the scarily funny notion of a respectable professional who suddenly refuses to shuck a party costume.
    • 41 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Time and again, the film shortchanges the human elements of its stories for drug stats that can be Googled in a matter of seconds.
    • 59 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Gilles Paquet-Brenner's film is ultimately a genre item that operates on alternately prestigious and campy autopilot.
    • 62 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Dorota Kobiela and Hugh Welchman's film is driven by an off-putting and oxymoronic fusion of reverence and egotism.
    • 36 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Ricky Gervais's film hopscotches through a variety of premises, looking for jokes that never arrive.
    • 61 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    The sex in Nymphomaniac is inhuman, mechanical, boring, and predictably viewed through the (male) scrim of someone who characterizes women solely as withholders.
    • 33 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Though far more elegant in execution than most Rob Zombie-imitating films, Jackals smugly wears its violent tediousness as a badge of honor.
    • 40 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Paranormal Activity 4 sadly continues the series' downslide, most drearily with a mid-film twist that enables the filmmakers to go about essentially remaking the second entry.
    • 31 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    The setup is so familiar that frustration sets in before the title has barely faded from view.
    • 45 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Frontloaded with a surprising amount of plot, the film takes forever to get going, but it's the filmmakers' hypocrisy that really grates.
    • 51 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    An almost offensively "tasteful" dud that remains irritatingly on the surface, more alive to the set design than the characters' motivations.
    • 53 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Viewed charitably, Logan Marshall-Green’s sketchy protagonist and vague atmosphere are meant to achieve the effect of a parable.
    • 24 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    A few trite race and religion jokes goose up what's mostly a sentimental story of a dysfunctional family suddenly and magically learning to function again.
    • 36 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    The filmmakers attempt to acknowledge the pain of warfare within the framework of a redemptive story that lends it an unforgivably patronizing sense of closure.
    • 42 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Jamie Dornan is a stiff whom Jon Hamm immediately upstages, and this dynamic underscores why the film is so tedious and unsatisfying.
    • 54 Metascore
    • 38 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.
    • 81 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Maybe Battle Royale's ultimate punchline is its inexplicable ability to fool some people into taking it seriously.
    • 31 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    The film is so clichéd and scattershot as to make Copycat look like Peeping Tom by comparison.
    • 54 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Down the Shore suggests what might happen if TBS and Bruce Springsteen were to collaborate on a sitcom set in hell.
    • 54 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    The film seeks to elevate genre clichés by slowing down the speed with which they’re typically offered.
    • 47 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Mark Pellington's Nostalgia is less a living, breathing film than a presentation of sentiments revolving around a pat question: Are the objects of our lives merely detritus, or are they vital to our identities?
    • 53 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Appearing to recognize the flimsiness of her material, Roxanne Benjamin overcompensates with insistent direction.
    • 37 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    It relies less on in-camera stunts than editing that renders vague gibberish of the altercations.
    • 39 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Writer-director Jacob Gentry's film has the emotional fatuousness of uncertain softcore erotica.
    • 50 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    The film comes to concern a selfless martyr before morphing, most absurdly, into a disease-of-the-week tearjerker.
    • 66 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    Skinamarink is confidently made, and certain upside-down images are especially creepy, but its spell is broken by its sheer, ungodly slowness, which springs from a paucity of ideas.
    • 62 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    The film utilizes a trendy issue as window dressing for a tedious and delusional exploitation film-slash-museum piece.
    • 70 Metascore
    • 38 Chuck Bowen
    The film is determinedly unclassifiable, blurring genres with a fervor that grows tedious.

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