Dana Stevens
Select another critic »For 1,386 reviews, this critic has graded:
-
46% higher than the average critic
-
3% same as the average critic
-
51% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 1.2 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Dana Stevens' Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 64 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Killers of the Flower Moon | |
| Lowest review score: | Sorority Boys | |
Score distribution:
-
Positive: 783 out of 1386
-
Mixed: 462 out of 1386
-
Negative: 141 out of 1386
1386
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
-
- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
Buried in the slow, talky, inanities that the two stars exchange are some potentially interesting ideas about female sexual self-assertion and male surrender, but neither the actors nor the filmmakers have any notion about how to explore them.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
The movie version overflows with affection and good intention, but unwittingly turns a bauble of cheerful fakery into something that mostly feels phony.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
Even by the standard of a fourth-in-a-series summer blockbuster, Wolverine, the first X-Men movie directed by Gavin Hood ( Rendition), is remarkably lame.- Slate
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
Succumbs to its blockbuster ambitions and turns into a noisy, bloated mess.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
In a culture apparently defined by lap dancing, ersatz architectural sublimity and the virtual contact of cyberspace, how do we know what is real? The Center of the World, for example, is as phony as can be.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
Shot in smeary video, it sports the static, by-the-book camera work of a daytime soap-opera.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
The delicate magic of, for instance, Hayao Miyazaki's "Spirited Away," which Disney released earlier this fall, is absent from this brainless, mechanical picture.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
Joker is a bad movie, yes: It’s predictable, clichéd, deeply derivative of other, better movies, and overwritten to the point of self-parody. (If a feature-length sendup of Joker was made, it’s hard to imagine in what details it would differ from Joker itself.) The experience of sitting through it is highly unpleasant, but that unpleasantness has less to do with graphic violence — there are only one or two scenes that go hard, gore-wise — than with claustrophobia and boredom.- Slate
- Posted Oct 3, 2019
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
The film's last half-hour -- or do I mean its final two weeks? -- is meant to keep the audience sniffling and sobbing uncontrollably, but the only thing likely to elicit tears is the sight of Mr. Reeves dressed in a white dinner jacket crooning "Time After Time."- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
Even by the standards of the current run of mediocre comic-book movies, this one stands out for its egregious shoddiness.- Slate
- Posted Jun 17, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
The Glass House is hardly insane, just absurd, and the only damage it does is to itself.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
Vacillates between cutesy Disney-style anthropomorphism and "Born Free" exoticism.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
This is bad cinema and bad history. Ms. Bravo is unstinting in her praise for the omelet and her admiration of the chef, but she refuses to admit that she's walking on eggshells.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
Confuses an empty and derivative stylistic bravura with formal cleverness, and a sterile, mechanistic sensationalism with emotional intensity.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
The ending is meant to be clouded with ambiguity, but really it is unequivocally happy because it means the movie is over.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
The movie is bulky and inarticulate, leaving behind a trail of wreckage and incoherence.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
Instead of suspense, there is confusion; instead of intrigue, a lot of inexplicable confrontation among characters whose significance is not so much enigmatic as obscure.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
The director has fallen into the common first-timer's trap of biting off more than he can chew, stitching together an unwieldy, disorganized story out of subplots and flashbacks, without paying enough attention to the basic requirements of character and narrative.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
Jettisoning any ambition toward thrillerhood, Domestic Disturbance becomes a plodding, obvious angry-dad melodrama, ambling toward the final, fatal showdown between parent and usurper.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
What should be a soufflé of gender-bending mischief is more like a bowl of oatmeal.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
To call The Change-Up misogynistic would be to shortchange the equal-opportunity disgust this anal-regressive film demonstrates toward men, babies, old people, and corporeal existence in general.- Slate
- Posted Aug 6, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
It's not so much the nonsensical nature of the plot that rankles; it's the movie's wrongheaded approach to the material.- Slate
- Posted Dec 12, 2010
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
And it's true that this movie's absolute tone-deafness, its complete disconnection from our current economic and geopolitical reality, by moments achieves a perverse Warholian profundity.- Slate
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
The story is so crowded with incident and implication as to be both nonsensical and impossible to act, so the actors, when they are not bursting into fits of temper, smile mysteriously.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
By the end, even the irrepressible Mr. Foxx seems tired and defeated, and we can only hope he perks up in time for his next movie.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
It's instructive to compare Bully with Jean-Pierre Ameris's "Bad Company," which tackles similar themes and manages to be explicit without stooping to cheap salaciousness. It's a genuinely disturbing film. Bully, in contrast, is merely disgusting.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
As five or six bad movies squished together, it almost seems like a bargain.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
What better to do with such a quiet, majestic landscape than to liven it up with the noise and vulgarity of lowest-common-denominator American pop culture?- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
Chandler's script has, by my count, exactly one sort-of-funny line and not a single scene whose comic possibilities are successfully exploited.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
Bad and tasteless. You laugh neither with it nor at it but rather sit counting the minutes while the movie laughs, for no good reason, at itself.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
As the movie dragged on, I thought I heard a mysterious voice, and felt myself powerfully drawn toward the light -- the light of the exit sign. I have returned from the beyond to warn you: this movie is 90 minutes long, and life is too short.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
You might actively root for their collective demise, if you could rouse yourself to care one way or the other. Go gallivanting in Chernobyl and you get what you pay for, nimrods.- Slate
- Posted May 25, 2012
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
Extremely good-looking people tend to be shallow, self-involved and not very bright. Let's call this statement what it is: a form of prejudice, a stereotype. It is, sadly, a stereotype that Down to You does everything in its power to promote.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
So poorly written, badly acted and ineptly directed that it denies you even the modest pleasure of making fun of it.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
Not only is it excruciatingly boring -- but its central premises are so banal and dubious as to border on offensiveness.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
The story is laughably incoherent, which would be less bothersome if the movie were not also so unremittingly pretentious.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
Snow Dogs is, even by the standards of a tradition that includes "Son of Flubber" and "The Shaggy D.A.," remarkably inept.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
Just as the vast, square Imax screen magnifies panda-haunches and steep, jungle-clad gorges, its relentless scale also enlarges a half-baked, mediocre little adventure story into something almost grotesquely bad.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
Sadly Persuasion, not only the worst Austen adaptation but one of the worst movies in recent memory, delivers on all the agony and none of the hope.- Slate
- Posted Jul 13, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
The whole business has a breathless, determined, student-film quality that makes it especially hard to watch. Mr. Cunningham and his cast are clearly trying to do something they feel is important, and there is no pleasure in watching them do it so ineptly.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
A witless, gruesome barrage of jokey violence and lame trans-Atlantic humor, kept moving by the pointless, derivative kineticism of Mr. Yu's hyperactive cuts and splices.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
Both grueling and dull. Imagine (if possible) a Pasolini film without passion or politics, or an Almodóvar movie without beauty or humor, and you have some idea of the glum, numb experience of watching O Fantasma.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
Has nothing on its mind besides the squirming discomfort of its audience, the achievement of which it holds up as a brave political accomplishment.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
Endure the long, slow, unraveling of this movie, which can't even muster the intelligence to be pretentious or the bravado to be amusingly bad.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
Lacks the wit to do anything new and instead recycles tired jokes and attitudes.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
A film that even a rabid lowbrow like Homer Simpson (or, when the mood strikes, this critic) would find beneath his dignity.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
That mystery is certainly hardy enough to withstand the voyeuristic onslaught of this self-aggrandizing, lurid documentary, which leaves the viewer feeling that we’ve been given a tour of Salinger’s septic tank in hip waders without ever getting to knock on his door and say hello.- Slate
- Posted Sep 5, 2013
- Read full review
-
- Slate
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
At the end the picture seems to acknowledge its own ludicrousness, but by then it, like Beans, is beyond rescue.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
A comedy so noxious it seems the product of deliberate malignity. Surely the sour, vapid, miserable world of this movie can't reflect any real human being's notion of what love or humor or good storytelling is-not even a Hollywood screenwriter's.- Slate
- Posted Feb 10, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Dana Stevens
This non-balletic adaptation by the Russian director Andrei Konchalovsky is something gnarled and stunted and wrong, something that should never have been allowed to see the light of day. How's that for a holiday-ad pullquote?- Slate
- Posted Nov 29, 2010
- Read full review