Daniel Schindel
Select another critic »For 107 reviews, this critic has graded:
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19% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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79% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 9.2 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Daniel Schindel's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 56 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Kate Plays Christine | |
| Lowest review score: | Southbound | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 40 out of 107
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Mixed: 58 out of 107
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Negative: 9 out of 107
107
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Daniel Schindel
Hits a decent count of guffaws and chortles, enough to make for a solid rental or something you settle on while channel surfing on an idle afternoon.- The Film Stage
- Posted Feb 10, 2016
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- Daniel Schindel
The movie shifts gears with each section.... This hodgepodge encourages some variety in the world-building, but, to the littlest detail, it’s derivative — and, worse, not scary.- The Film Stage
- Posted Feb 4, 2016
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- Daniel Schindel
The most frustrating aspect of The Lovers and the Despot is its refusal to do more than simply recite its tale, ignoring the interesting concepts lurking within it.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jan 31, 2016
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- Daniel Schindel
[Stillman's] dry sense and cutting sensibility are suited to the meaner edge this story has in comparison with the rest of Austen’s oeuvre.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jan 31, 2016
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- Daniel Schindel
Little Men could have been so much more if its perspective leaned towards the opposite direction.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jan 30, 2016
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- Daniel Schindel
As an exploration of identity as it is felt, projected, and interpreted, this is masterful.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jan 30, 2016
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- Daniel Schindel
Taking a straightforward approach isn’t necessarily a negative, but the sedate camerawork and editing make the movie’s progression staid. Even the musical moments are invigorating due to the music itself, and not by how it’s presented.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jan 24, 2016
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- Daniel Schindel
American Animals is a legitimately exciting, funny, suspenseful, and at one point deeply upsetting crime film, ably demonstrating a command of genre trappings in service of a narrative about people warped by those very clichés.- The Film Stage
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- Daniel Schindel
As a thinkpiece generator, it is absolutely spectacular – by every other metric, it’s a failure.- The Film Stage
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- Daniel Schindel
This doc may actually benefit more from a viewing outside any contemporary hype vortex.- The Film Stage
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- Daniel Schindel
Director Tim Wardle lays a lot on the strength of the events he’s covering, and they are indeed compelling enough on their own to hold your interest. The flipside of this is that the film has little power outside of a first viewing.- The Film Stage
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- Daniel Schindel
Shirkers finds the emotional grounding and even universality in a very strange story.- The Film Stage
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- Daniel Schindel
There is undeniable craft here, and an impossible-to-ignore signal that everyone involved in the project deserves attention going forward. What does work is strong, sometimes powerful.- The Film Stage
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- Daniel Schindel
This may be Iannucci’s weakest-written film, but it’s by far his best-directed one.- The Film Stage
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- Daniel Schindel
It is vital to bring stories like this to wider attention, but it cannot be said for certain whether the movie does so at the cost of furthering Marish’s suffering and thus also exploiting her.- The Film Stage
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- Daniel Schindel
Leave No Trace’s acute sense of place and how people relate to it makes for great, emotion-laden naturalism.- The Film Stage
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- Daniel Schindel
Even if the conceit is faulty, that doesn’t mean it’s impossible for this film to rework this material into an intelligent riff on the play. Unfortunately, it still doesn’t.- The Film Stage
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