Daniel Fienberg
Select another critic »For 149 reviews, this critic has graded:
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26% higher than the average critic
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6% same as the average critic
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68% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 0.8 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Daniel Fienberg's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 65 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | All That Breathes | |
| Lowest review score: | The Master of Disguise | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 88 out of 149
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Mixed: 53 out of 149
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Negative: 8 out of 149
149
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Daniel Fienberg
Especially in the first hour, it’s a richly satisfying tribute to an unimpeachable cinematic legend who, one could easily argue, has become even more beloved than the iconic directors he collaborated with or the movie stars whose legends his themes and cues helped burnish.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 1, 2024
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- Daniel Fienberg
TWST is set up like a concert film, but instead it’s a combination of two nonfiction categories — the tone poem and the city symphony — that are used as fallback catch-all classifications for critics and scholars. Ujica blends them with archival rigor and effective whimsy to create a movie that’s dreamy and clear-eyed at once.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 8, 2024
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- Daniel Fienberg
On an intellectual and reporting level, Separated is sturdy and persuasive. Morris is angry, and if you’re watching this movie, chances are good that after 90ish minutes, you’ll be angry, too. What Separated needs, though, is a little touch of the old Errol Morris.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 17, 2024
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- Daniel Fienberg
The Taliban wanted a 90-minute commercial and Nash’at wanted 90 minutes of truth, and what they both got was a portrait of the complicated cost of access — more vital in its universal applicability to documentary filmmaking than its immediacy as a documentary.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 3, 2024
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- Daniel Fienberg
It would be difficult to convince anybody without a pre-existing interest that this constitutes compelling storytelling on any level.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 11, 2024
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- Daniel Fienberg
Don’t sell Songs of Earth short, mind you, as an exclusively visual experience. Its sound design and score are every bit as immersive, and that may hold the actual key to best experiencing Olin’s film.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 10, 2024
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- Daniel Fienberg
Jim Henson Idea Man is a very conventional movie that dedicates its time to proving how unconventional Jim Henson was.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 18, 2024
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- Daniel Fienberg
Its topic is unquestionably a crucial issue for our age and its approach to that topic both has journalistic rigor and represents a thoroughly admirable depiction of journalistic rigor at a moment at which we put too little value on such things.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 9, 2024
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- Daniel Fienberg
It’s surely not without emotionally satisfying moments and it does a persuasive job of emphasizing the importance of Reading Rainbow and of star LeVar Burton, but the documentary is slight in its artistic and thematic ambition.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 1, 2024
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- Daniel Fienberg
There’s just a lot of media landscape stuff that Rather either can’t or doesn’t want to do justice — which returns me to my initial point that if you come from a perspective of youth this will be illuminating, but if you lived through it you’ll hardly get anything fresh at all.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 23, 2024
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- Daniel Fienberg
By the time the mainstream world came to embrace MoviePass, we all already knew it was doomed, and I wish the documentary had illustrated what the alternative might have been.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 3, 2024
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- Daniel Fienberg
The Contestant is a missed opportunity. It’s a documentary about voyeurism that, in the absence of freshly delivered insight, just reintroduces and rehashes the voyeuristic impulse it’s largely condemning.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 21, 2024
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- Daniel Fienberg
These are problems that exist only around the fringes of a film that is, at its center, a sturdy and focused thing. Like so many of my favorite documentaries in general and sports documentaries specifically, Copa 71 exposes an obscured chapter in history and thrusts its heroes into a well-deserved spotlight.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 14, 2024
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- Daniel Fienberg
Unfortunately, the exhaustive repetition of the most familiar parts of her narrative — plus an over-reliance on poorly utilized footage from an ethically compromised earlier documentary project — left me more irritated than moved by Stormy, however persuasive I found its main character.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 14, 2024
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- Daniel Fienberg
I had quibbles about the consistency of the documentary’s narrative approach — but not its bracing message about the challenges of political idealism and the wide-ranging consequences of democracy in peril.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 13, 2024
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- Daniel Fienberg
There’s a great deal of beauty in Porcelain War and there’s a potent artistry behind it, but I’ve never watched a documentary with so many running visual metaphors and so little faith that the audience will be able to grasp them. It’s a bit stunning and a bit insulting all at once.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 29, 2024
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- Daniel Fienberg
It’s a documentary about the fight, one that takes the necessity of the fight as a given. That’s amply inspiring- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 27, 2024
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- Daniel Fienberg
It’s a reminder that you don’t need sensationalism to deliver something that’s honest and emotionally resonant.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 27, 2024
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- Daniel Fienberg
Angela Patton and Natalie Rae’s Daughters targets viewers squarely and simultaneously in the head and the heart, succeeding much more effectively at the latter, presumably with the hope that the former will follow.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 26, 2024
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- Daniel Fienberg
The film is very invested in proving the validity of the social relationships created in virtual space. To me, that’s the easy part. Video games can absolutely be nourishing and substantive and healthy. And I’m not even sure Ibelin confirms that in a smart way.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 23, 2024
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- Daniel Fienberg
Girls State, like its predecessor, benefits from strong casting and ample access to the pint-sized political proceedings.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 22, 2024
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- Daniel Fienberg
A celebration of art, resilience and the mutability of the human spirit, Matthew Heineman‘s American Symphony never feels like it’s quite the documentary that its director originally intended it to be. Nor does it tell the story that featured star Jon Batiste presumably hoped for it to chronicle. But it’s all the more joyful and emotionally resonant for those deviations.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 22, 2023
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- Daniel Fienberg
All of the friends and acolytes singing Brooks’ praises are great, but it’s possible that Defending My Life would have been more satisfying had it just been Brooks, Reiner and some fantastic clips. As it is, the doc might leave you yearning for additional depth.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 13, 2023
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- Daniel Fienberg
Even if you’re not necessarily a fan and Perry’s control feels suffocating at times, that doesn’t stop Maxine’s Baby from being a frequently fascinating look at a unique figure.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 10, 2023
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- Daniel Fienberg
A documentary dork’s delight, Jennifer Tiexiera and Camilla Hall’s Subject is one of those films about which my biggest lament is that it could have been five times as long — with the caveat that while I would be down for a 10-part series on documentary ethics, this 96-minute intro will be a thoroughly effective conversation starter.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 6, 2023
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- Daniel Fienberg
Maybe Korem’s primary objective is simply to make you think more about Milli Vanilli than you ever have before. In that, it’s a total success. It’s more of a failure when it comes to trying to answer some of those big questions and engage in direct accountability, and I don’t know if I buy most of its cultural conclusions- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 26, 2023
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- Daniel Fienberg
That the documentary United States vs. Reality Winner achieves its primary goals makes it a fairly successful film. That it achieves those goals while relying tediously on almost all of the genre’s most overused formal devices, offering shockingly little variation from countless other docs you’ve seen on similar subjects, makes it a so-so film.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 11, 2023
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- Daniel Fienberg
By the end of Sly, the star proves to be a good enough explainer of his legacy that the documentary finds effective insight and poignancy — despite however much he’s an overly protective custodian of that legacy, and however hesitant Zimny is to shake him off of his preferred course.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 18, 2023
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- Daniel Fienberg
Cornwell died in 2020 and it’s a treasure to have this last opportunity to glimpse into the mind of a master raconteur, to hear his erudite explanations for his thematic fascinations and to watch him tiptoe around which personal tales he’s comfortable rehashing and which are better left in forms previously written.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 11, 2023
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- Daniel Fienberg
I don’t think Meeropol’s formal choices always match the story she wants to capture, and After the Bite runs out of energy well before the end of its 90-minute running time. But I mostly enjoyed the idea of a more muted version of Jaws that suggests that if we have a contemporary shark attack problem, the solution is going to require more than a bigger boat.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 27, 2023
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