Clayton Dillard
Select another critic »For 315 reviews, this critic has graded:
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29% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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68% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 9.3 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Clayton Dillard's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 56 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb | |
| Lowest review score: | Nothing Bad Can Happen | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 157 out of 315
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Mixed: 59 out of 315
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Negative: 99 out of 315
315
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Clayton Dillard
Mike Figgis’s anthem of aspiration and struggle leaves no doubt about Francis Ford Coppola’s beliefs.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 6, 2025
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- Clayton Dillard
Samuel Van Grinsven’s Went Up the Hill is characterized by a starkly precise aesthetic and withholding approach to the ghost story.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 11, 2025
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- Clayton Dillard
The overriding suspense here is largely created by watching truth become negotiable, and through the small, plausible distortions of the truth that people come up with when survival instincts kick in.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 11, 2025
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- Clayton Dillard
Petty humiliations accumulate into a quietly blistering indictment of a culture that’s conditioned immigrants to hustle, wait endlessly, and smile through it all, as if their sanity weren’t constantly under strain.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jul 29, 2025
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- Clayton Dillard
The film adopts a diaristic, epistolary form that flattens its emotional topography.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jul 7, 2025
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- Clayton Dillard
The film’s microcosm of dysfunction is convincing for how it depicts an ongoing, even never-ending, struggle to define oneself.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jun 8, 2025
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- Clayton Dillard
Dogman seems outwardly enamored with cosmic possibilities of meaning, but Luc Besson’s script remains earthbound and unimaginative.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Mar 26, 2024
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- Clayton Dillard
It’s Argento who consistently makes the most compelling and incisive on-screen presence throughout Simone Scafidi’s documentary.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 29, 2024
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- Clayton Dillard
How to Have Sex winds up delivering on the promise of its title, as this is a truly instructive film about sexual politics, though a remarkable one for largely leaving emotions unresolved and relationships feeling messy.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 17, 2024
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- Clayton Dillard
This 1970 psychological thriller was Paul Vecchiali’s self-conscious attempt during the waning years of the Nouvelle Vague to take the movement’s genre-defying sensibilities in a new direction.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Nov 14, 2023
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- Clayton Dillard
With its determination to retrace the largely forgotten steps of a feminist trailblazer, The Disappearance of Shere Hite is an essential work of archival savvy, blending popular and academic conversations with ease and precision.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Nov 14, 2023
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- Clayton Dillard
The film understands how atrocity is perpetuated, fanning a maddening sense of injustice.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 16, 2023
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- Clayton Dillard
That Feña suffers so that other trans people won’t have to may be edifying to some, but it also reduces Mutt to an Afterschool Special.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 14, 2023
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- Clayton Dillard
The cinematography looks striking enough throughout the various set pieces, but little happens in them to elevate Heart of Stone past its hackneyed foundation.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 10, 2023
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- Clayton Dillard
The film can never quite decide to what extent it wants to be either a light-hearted raunchy comedy or a darker comedic assessment of contemporary life.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jul 7, 2023
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- Clayton Dillard
Sarah Vos creates a nearly mockumentary effect that neither fully lampoons nor endorses contemporary standards for the art world’s political correctness but lands at a decidedly more ambivalent point.- Slant Magazine
- Posted May 21, 2023
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- Clayton Dillard
Jamie Sisley’s film looks at its serious subject matter through a maudlin lens.- Slant Magazine
- Posted May 15, 2023
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- Clayton Dillard
There’s an emptiness to Helena Wittmann’s Human Flowers of Flesh that no amount of striking cinematography, thematic suggestion, and allusions to Jean Painlevé can disguise.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Apr 10, 2023
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- Clayton Dillard
The film unfolds at an excessive remove from its subject matter, and it becomes less an incisive thesis about the pope than an occasion for Gianfranco Rosi to flex his stylistic muscles.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Mar 27, 2023
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- Clayton Dillard
The Origin of Evil recalls Ruben Östlund’s Triangle of Sadness for how its prolonged, soft-peddled skewering of the wealthy seems convinced of its Buñuelian irreverence.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Feb 26, 2023
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- Clayton Dillard
Part of what makes The Worst Ones tick with a pace close to that of a thriller is its self-reflexive relationship to genre and knack for referentiality.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Feb 26, 2023
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- Clayton Dillard
Nina Menkes’s documentary comes dangerously close to inhabiting its own title.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Nov 30, 2022
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- Clayton Dillard
To say that the film grows tedious quickly would suggest that it wasn’t already trite from frame one.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Nov 9, 2022
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- Clayton Dillard
Stock story beats of generational dispute run throughout Utama, existing mainly to show off the widescreen possibilities of the Scope frame.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Oct 30, 2022
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- Clayton Dillard
Last Flight Home is an anguished therapy session disguised as a meditation on life and death.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Oct 10, 2022
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- Clayton Dillard
The film relies on wide shots of distant mountains to stand in for a fruitful interrogation of what it means to occupy the open terrain of the U.S.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jul 26, 2022
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- Clayton Dillard
Sergei Loznitsa continues to mine the archives for what amount to living documents of a past that, as is all too clear, reverberate into the present with devastating force.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Mar 28, 2022
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- Clayton Dillard
The film neglects to find a conceptual framework for its prolonged consideration of Charlotte Gainsbourg’s eventual revelation: “I have always loved you, but it’s much clearer to me now.”- Slant Magazine
- Posted Mar 15, 2022
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- Clayton Dillard
The film drops any interest in the blurring of fact and fiction as it settles into a rote account of a contemporary oil rig catastrophe.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Feb 23, 2022
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- Clayton Dillard
The film comes to feel like a parody of a possession flick rather than a straightforward replication of the genre’s tropes.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 17, 2022
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- Clayton Dillard
The issue of racism sits nestled under both this sequence and the field of anthropology as a whole, giving Expedition Content a nakedly ontological dimension that interrogates how images are produced and who produces them.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 5, 2022
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- Clayton Dillard
The film settles much too comfortably into the well-trodden footsteps of other works.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 12, 2020
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- Clayton Dillard
Alison McAlpine's documentary lacks urgency beyond its persistent pondering of the sky's eternal mysteries.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 13, 2018
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- Clayton Dillard
Despite the film's bleak premise, writer-director Radu Jude finds dark humor within the certainty of death.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jul 18, 2018
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- Clayton Dillard
The pleasure of Denis Côté's film radiates not so much from its storytelling as it does from the meditative force of its formal construction. Read our review.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jul 6, 2018
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- Clayton Dillard
It adheres too rigidly to news-cycle replications of barbaric governmental acts, and without putting them into greater perspective.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jul 3, 2018
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- Clayton Dillard
The film is enlivened by an acute grasp of the impossibilities that abused Indonesian women face in a society predicated on their continued physical and emotional subjugation to men.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jun 18, 2018
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- Clayton Dillard
The film seems to think that the mere recognition of Gabriel as a narcissist sufficiently complicates the character's sense of entitlement.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jun 12, 2018
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- Clayton Dillard
On the Seventh Day brings a certain levity to wrenching matters of daily survival by thoroughly humanizing its characters, thus preventing them from feeling as if they're being written as stand-ins for thematic ideas.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jun 4, 2018
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- Clayton Dillard
The film's screenplay is impressive for how crucial plot points emerge as backdrops to the explicit purpose of a scene.- Slant Magazine
- Posted May 21, 2018
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- Clayton Dillard
As two-handers go, the film has a moderately compelling pair of performances at its center, with Claudio Rissi’s take on a fun-loving road warrior providing an amusing, if obvious, counterpoint to Paulina García’s reserved homebody.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Apr 27, 2018
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- Clayton Dillard
While many documentaries about notable figures feel the unfortunate need to legitimate their subjects with hyperbolic praise from recognizable sources, the film immediately runs the gamut in a manner that would be worthy of a mockumentary were it not completely serious.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Apr 26, 2018
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- Clayton Dillard
The film tends to literalize its theme of unfulfilled desire by having characters explicitly lament their lost pasts.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 25, 2018
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- Clayton Dillard
The film curiously steers toward surmising Hedy Lamarr's psychological state as it pertained to love and pleasure.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Nov 19, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
Writer-director Attila Till is content to indulge a complication-free mix of bloodshed and pathos.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Oct 15, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
Agnès Varda and JR's film develops into something approaching a manifesto for the possibility of shared happiness.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 19, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
Elvira Lind's film is closer to an advertisement for Bobbi Jene Smith than a film about the contemporary dancer.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 18, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
The Future Perfect has the texture of a novella that keeps reworking the same idea in successively intricate ways.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 13, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
Inherent to director Theo Anthony's misappropriation of the essay form is a conflicting account of precisely which history his documentary seeks to investigate.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 11, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
Whereas the more grounded scenes of Death Note anchor a startlingly bloody fantasy of power run amok, the scenes that fixate on super powers and code-busting seldom manage to rise above the realm of serviceable YA fiction.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 21, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
Justin Chon fumbles the take on how his characters' anger fits into the greater landscape of a L.A. during the aftermath of the Rodney King beating.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 13, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
Bertrand Bonello constructs a clear-eyed sense of how technology keeps getting closer and closer to replacing human consciousness.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 6, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
The film’s rhythmic editing contextualizes Ferguson’s streets for their relevance to a black populace’s want for stability and peace.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 6, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
A routinely assembled mélange of provocative material consistently undone by its maker's perplexing need to foist himself into the center of every conversation.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jul 30, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
The divide between meaningful journalism and ethical filmmaking seldom seems as wide as it does in The Wrong Light.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jul 10, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
The House's limp comedic pieces are only sporadically enlivened by a game cast.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jun 30, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
It too quickly opts out of its Scenes from a Marriage-like potential for what amounts to an augmented take on The Straight Story.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jun 26, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
Bertrand Tavernier's exquisite documentary consistently avoids mere hagiography by looking to the films themselves.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jun 19, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
The documentary mistakes its access to quotidian behaviors as evidence of the need for comprehensive educational and financial reform.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jun 5, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
Andrzej Wajda's film is a lean, unwavering look at the effects of artistic idealism in the face of fascist doctrine.- Slant Magazine
- Posted May 14, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
The film hovers between being a straight-up biopic of Zweig and a diagnosis of neoliberalism's recent ceding to neofascist policy and nationalistic fervor.- Slant Magazine
- Posted May 7, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
The choice of low-grade, handheld digital images further reduces the film to the clichés of revisionist literary filmmaking.- Slant Magazine
- Posted May 1, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
The film is intended to be placed at the altar of Julian Schnabel, an artist so singular that words simply fail.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Apr 29, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
The film ascribes to a conventionally contrapuntal take on the lives of those who spend all day surrounded by death.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Apr 23, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
Mimosas confounds its surface narrative with intimations of more layered meanings to come through a jockeying of story threads.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Apr 10, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
Few documentarians give themselves to their work as literally as Joanna Arnow.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Apr 3, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
The primary pleasure of the film resides in its awareness of the impossibilities of unity, whether physical or cultural, within a rapidly transforming global milieu.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Mar 31, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
The film’s depiction of friendship seldom pushes past insights predicated on a fundamental tension between characters.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Mar 19, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
Canners plays a bit too infatuated with its subjects and for reasons not wholly clear by the film's end.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Mar 6, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
The Institute seems constantly on the verge of dipping into spoof, though of what exactly is difficult to say.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Mar 2, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
The film wants to have its flesh and eat it too, but even more damning is how little meat is on its bones to begin with.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Feb 19, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
So Yong Kim's film ultimately manages a convincing articulation of friendship between women.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Feb 13, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
The film rolls political commentary into the template of a “lost highway” horror film by forgoing ironic distancing.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Feb 4, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
The film makes no concessions about its dissatisfaction with the whole rotten lot of so-called western democracy.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 30, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
Mehrdad Oskouei avoids sentimentalizing the girls or tritely lamenting their stolen innocence.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 17, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
Celia Rowlson-Hall's Ma has had its subtext dragged kicking and screaming to the surface.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 9, 2017
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- Clayton Dillard
It predictably lurches toward acts of extreme violence with little interest other than the instant titillation such moments afford.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Dec 23, 2016
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- Clayton Dillard
The film’s nagging representational problem stems from its reductive sense of place and portraiture of emotional displacement, which gradually phases out the possibility of thornier revelations.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Dec 11, 2016
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- Clayton Dillard
For a film that warns against believing in a mirage, Burn Country seems all too comfortable perpetuating one.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Dec 4, 2016
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- Clayton Dillard
It believes that the avenue to proving humanity is through banalizing gestures of quotidian significance.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Nov 27, 2016
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- Clayton Dillard
Sam Pollard's documentary teeters on reaching a higher plane of meaning simply through the efficiency of its information.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Nov 27, 2016
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- Clayton Dillard
The film plays like it's been methodically configured to snuff out an even marginal indulgence of its characters' emotions.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Nov 20, 2016
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- Clayton Dillard
The entirety of the film seems increasingly constructed around ill-begotten attempts at dark humor.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Nov 14, 2016
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- Clayton Dillard
A deliberately offbeat characterization of mental illness, Hunter Gatherer is ultimately a failed act of empathy.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Nov 14, 2016
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- Clayton Dillard
Writer-director Anna Muylaert writes themes into excellent, controlled first acts that turn capricious by the third.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Oct 28, 2016
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- Clayton Dillard
Its strength lies in taking a thematic approach to Lumet's work, which prevents a chronological rattling off of one title after another.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Oct 24, 2016
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- Clayton Dillard
There's a fundamental lack of dramatic exigency in writer-director Puk Grasten's storytelling.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Oct 2, 2016
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- Clayton Dillard
Its enervated address of both mental-health treatment and gun laws receives few constructive articulations beyond a single scene.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Oct 2, 2016
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- Clayton Dillard
The film is further confirmation of Mia Hansen-Løve’s delicately devastating ear and touch as a filmmaker.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 23, 2016
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- Clayton Dillard
Any perceptive dialogue or contemporary socio-political subtext is pummeled by Jonás Cuarón’s preference for empty genre thrills.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 22, 2016
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- Clayton Dillard
Fire at Sea initiates a narrative that probes the fundamental gap between wanting to help and actually being able to do so.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 22, 2016
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- Clayton Dillard
Elite Zexer weaves an impressively terse narrative of distinctly motivated characters, but the film’s core remains somewhat shapeless due to the routine dramatization.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 20, 2016
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- Clayton Dillard
It provides materials for discussion without directing the viewer toward a particular solution or easy answer.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 11, 2016
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- Clayton Dillard
Robert Kenner's stylistic choices amplify the film's fetishistic fascination with the nuclear weaponry itself.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 11, 2016
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- Clayton Dillard
The Apostate finds humor in unusual images or situations, few resounding with lasting impact.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 8, 2016
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- Clayton Dillard
Christian Carion's film shamelessly wrings excitement from the recreation of violent ideological conflict.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 1, 2016
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- Clayton Dillard
It insists that it's in moments of small talk, between life's larger events, that one finds vitality.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 26, 2016
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- Clayton Dillard
The film appears to have been devised to pander to the presumptions of Western, liberal viewers.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 22, 2016
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- Clayton Dillard
Lars Kraume's tinkering with the historical record would be more welcome were he also shifting away from the standard biopic template.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 15, 2016
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- Clayton Dillard
Tracy Droz Tragos's documentary examines its titular subject with a compassionate eye for regional detail.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 8, 2016
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