David Denby
Select another critic »For 633 reviews, this critic has graded:
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47% higher than the average critic
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1% same as the average critic
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52% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 0.8 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
David Denby's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 66 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Before the Devil Knows You're Dead | |
| Lowest review score: | Wild Wild West | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 375 out of 633
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Mixed: 212 out of 633
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Negative: 46 out of 633
633
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- David Denby
At its best, the picture is violently exciting; at its worst, banal and monotonous. Yet the relative absence of mighty significances did not prevent the Matricians sitting all around me--mostly men aged about thirty--from remaining utterly still, as if at a High Mass, throughout the movie. [10 November 2003, p. 128]- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
A blood-soaked, hellish experience -- a midnight special for lovers of a violent genre -- yet it has been made with a mixture of ferocity and sweetness which leaves one exhausted but at peace. [27 January 2003, p. 94]- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
The movie’s heart is certainly in the right place--it’s a quietly outraged work--but I wish there were more excitement in it from moment to moment.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Walk Hard runs down quickly, and suffers further from having the wide-eyed and weightless Reilly as its star.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Much of the writing is good, and the acting is superb, but the constant wrangling wore me out at times.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
A film that cannot, in the normal sense of the word, be enjoyed, but it can be endured in a spirit of tempered anticipation -- The movie becomes an anguished demand that the dream be fulfilled. [26 Nov 2001, p. 122]- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
It’s Cluzet’s intense performance that makes this genre piece a heart-wrenching experience.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
A major film without being a great film. It's a strange movie, and a stunningly pessimistic one, and the strangeness and pessimism connect it to other recent American films in ways that suggest that something unhappy in the national mood has crept into the movies.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Even judged by the not excessively demanding standards of middle-aged renovation fantasies, A Good Year isn’t much.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Though the facts in No End in Sight are well known, the movie is still a classic.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Murray’s linking up with Jim Jarmusch is a case of Mr. Cool meeting Mr. Cool, and the result is intriguing and elegant, but not quite satisfying.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Pfeiffer digs into the role and won't let go. The rest of the movie is conventionally earnest.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
A perfect family movie, a perfect date movie, and one of the most eye-ravishing documentaries ever made.- The New Yorker
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- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
The actual robbery that the picture is based on is shrouded in mystery, and the screenwriters, Dick Clement and Ian La Fresnais, have engaged in a fair amount of entertaining invention.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Certainly holds one's attention, but it's a strange and grim experience, ice-cold and borderline pointless. [28 October 2002, p. 119]- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
A very strange, often terrible affair that is nevertheless mesmerizing, in a limited way.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Pop has always drawn energy from the lower floors of respectability; this movie, in which fan-boy cultism reaches new levels of goofy chaos and sexual confusion, draws energy from the subbasement.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Allen can be literal-minded about his thematic polarities, but, in this movie, he has put actors with first-class temperament on the screen, and his writing is both crisp and ambivalent: he works everything out with a stringent thoroughness that still allows room for surprise.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
With the exception of Jake Gyllenhaal, whose shambling self-disgust hits the only genuine note, the movie is a classic of Hollywood miscasting and ambition gone askew.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
The filmmakers register their point, but I don’t think it’s entirely parochial to note that, two decades from now, the American and Japanese children will probably have many choices open to them (including living close to the land), while the Mongolian and Namibian children are more likely to be restricted in their choices to the soil that nurtured them.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Painful to sit through, because you want to see someone like Paul Thomas Anderson take hold of the character and the actress and start again from the beginning. Bob Dolman understands Suzette, but the rest of the movie is composed of ham-handedly obvious scenes. [23 Sept 2002, p. 98]- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
The material has been turned into a trivially narcissistic product for teen-age girls who want to feel indignant about wrongs they are unlikely to suffer.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
There’s a big hole in the middle of the movie: the director, Tom Tykwer, and the screenwriter, Eric Warren Singer, forgot to make their two crusaders human beings.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
An exhausting, morbidly fascinating, and finally thrilling experience.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Juno is a coming-of-age movie made with idiosyncratic charm and not a single false note.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Prince of Persia is meant purely as light entertainment, but the way it draws on layers of junk is depressing.- The New Yorker
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- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
An Altman-influenced movie made without the master's acrid bitterness. The Last Kiss may come out of Italian opera and comedy, but in spirit it's Shakespearean -- objective, impassive, and at peace with a world in which men and women manage to be both ordinary and extraordinary. [5 August 2002, p.80]- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Along with “No End in Sight,” this movie is one of the essential documentaries of the ongoing war.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
She's infuriating, but the movie, for all its morose impassivity, is beautiful and haunting.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Strange and off-putting, and hard-nosed types in the film business will no doubt dismiss it as a nothing. But, even if Bubble hasn't brought down the Bastille, the movie is far from nothing.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
The movie feels not only like a trial but like a trial in absentia. [7 Oct 2002, p. 108]- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
The movie makes it clear that, for all his snarls and outbursts, he is intelligent, candid, and easily wounded; that he is by turns inordinately proud and inordinately ashamed and, above all, intensely curious about himself, as if his own nature were a mystery that had not yet been solved.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Somehow the movie that Rob Marshall has made from Golden's novel is a snooze. How did he and the screenwriter, Robin Swicord, let their subject get away from them?- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Robert Altman, in a benevolent mood, has made a lovely ensemble comedy from Anne Rapp's original screenplay.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
The movie is smart and tightly drawn; it has a throat-gripping urgency and some serious insights, and Scott has a greater command of space and a more explicit way with violence than most thriller directors.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
In brief, Marshall Curry, the young director of Street Fight, has hit the documentary jackpot: the movie will become the inescapable referent for media coverage of the new campaign. And rightly so.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
A raffishly ironic and insinuating movie--and probably the most sheerly enjoyable film of the year so far.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Fish tank may begin as a patch of lower-class chaos, but it turns into a commanding, emotionally satisfying movie, comparable to such youth-in-trouble classics as "The 400 Blows." [18 Jan. 2010, p. 83]- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
The movie’s story is conventional in shape, but it has passages of crazy exhilaration and brilliant invention.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
The Matador teeters between comedy and moral inquiry but doesn't quite make it either way. The movie features a startling performance, however, by Pierce Brosnan.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
The movie that Josée Dayan has made about the Duras-Andréa affair is not a scandal. Unfortunately, it’s not much of anything but a solemn joke. [14 April 2003, p.88]- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Never Let Me Go is in such good taste that we never feel any horror over the idea at the center of it.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
An enormously enjoyable hybrid, a romantic comedy set at the center of a caper movie. But the froth arrives with steel bubbles--the tone is amused and mordantly satirical.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Revved by the stage performances, the cast courses through the material with disciplined exuberance--especially the eight young actors at the center of the drama, many of whom have never appeared in a film before.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
The twin themes of The Hours are the variety of human bonds, especially the bond of love, and the gift that the dying make to the living. The miracle is that such sombre notions fit together as surely and lightly as the dancers in a Balanchine ballet. [23 & 30 December 2002, p. 166]- The New Yorker
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- The New Yorker
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- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
A lyrical throwback to such movies as René Clément's "Forbidden Games" (1952) and other works of the humanist European cinema of a half century ago. [12 April 2003, p. 89]- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
The sigh you will hear across the country in the next few weeks is the sound of a gratified audience: a great movie musical has been made at last.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
The project lacks the variety of sensuous pleasures that a great movie has to provide.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
In serious roles, Weisz can be stiff-backed and righteous, but here, doing comedy, she appears to be a major actress eager to reveal everything she’s been holding inside.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
The movie goes like the wind, but it's more a technological exercise than anything else.- The New Yorker
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- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Even though we can see it coming, this gruff, inarticulate, half-embarrassed love between men, arrived at after many setbacks, is one of the stories that action movies never tire of telling and that many of us, even though we may laugh it off the next day, still find moving. [17 & 24 June 2002, p. 176]- The New Yorker
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- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
One of the gentlest, most charming American movies of the past decade. Its subject is less food as something to cook than food as the binding and unifying element of dinner parties, friendship, and marriage.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Sean Penn’s Into the Wild is certainly visual--it’s entirely too visual, to the point of being cheaply lyrical.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Structurally a mess and unevenly made, but the first forty minutes or so are quite beautiful. [7 July 2003, p. 84]- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Zwick can’t find anything fresh in this deeply pious East-meets-West stuff. The movie comes close to dying between battle scenes. [8 December 2003, p. 139]- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
The movie's conceits are just barely endurable, but the sharpness of Dörrie's eye--for Tokyo's electric night, for Fuji's iconographic landscapes, for cherry blossoms--sustains emotion even when story logic fails.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
The ineluctable downward pull of absolutely everything in this movie is more exasperating than moving. [12 January 2004, p. 86]- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
The filmmakers peddle fear and then try to claim the moral high ground; the treatment is foolish, confused, and borderline irresponsible.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
The movie comes closer to pure happiness than anything else in the theatres at the moment, and it has an intriguing and moving subtext: the Cubans' buried but irrepressible love of things American.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
The movie version of the hit Broadway musical Hairspray is perfectly pleasant--I smiled to myself all the way through it--but it’s not as exhilarating as the show.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Menzel strings his sequences together with great affection and skill, but the movie, an absurdist picaresque, doesn't have much cumulative impact, and perhaps the hero is too much a lightweight to hold an epic together.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
This production, directed by Michael Hoffman, is like a great night at the theatre--the two performing demons go at each other full tilt and produce scenes of Shakespearean affection, chagrin, and rage.- The New Yorker
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- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Defiance, as it turns out, makes insistent emotional demands, and those who respond to it at all, as I did, are likely to go all the way and even come out of it feeling slightly stunned.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
The trouble with Holofcener's scheme is that the center of the movie is dead. Olivia has no drives or hopes or powerful regrets. She has nothing to say, and Aniston does most of her acting with her lower lip.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
The Dark Knight is hardly routine--it has a kicky sadism in scene after scene, which keeps you on edge and sends you out onto the street with post-movie stress disorder.- The New Yorker
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- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
This Franco-Italian-Scottish co-production, directed by Damian Pettigrew, is an extraordinarily controlled piece of film. [14 April 2003, p.88]- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Ewan McGregor’s bright-eyed Ian, following in the footsteps of characters in Allen’s “Crimes and Misdemeanors” and “Match Point,” is a study in guilt-free violence. But Colin Farrell’s Terry is something new. Terry is a decent guy with many weaknesses, and, after the crime is committed, Farrell gives him a piteous self-loathing that is very touching.- The New Yorker
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- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
It captures the city's bitter, wire-taut mood after September 11th, and I hope that Disney -- finds some way to bring this acrid and brilliant little picture to the large audience it deserves. [13 January 2003, p. 90]- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Apatow’s richest, most complicated movie yet--a summing up of his feelings about comedy and its relation to the rest of existence.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Vignettish and offhand, but it’s extremely pleasant, and it suggests what can be done with lightweight equipment and a loose-limbed approach to the right subject. [19 May 2003, p. 94]- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
As a piece of acting, Ganz’s work is not just astounding, it’s actually rather moving. But I have doubts about the way his virtuosity has been put to use.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
We don’t ask for much from this kind of movie, but Knight and Day tramples on our desire for just enough plausibility to release the fun. It makes us feel like fools for wanting to be entertained by froth.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Flags of Our Fathers is an accomplished, stirring, but, all in all, rather strange movie- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Trashy and opportunistic as some of it is, Training Day is the most vital police drama since "The French Connection" or "Serpico."- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
By embracing the Roman pageant so openly, using all the emotional resources of cinema, Gibson has cancelled out the redemptive and transfiguring power of art. [1 March 2004, p. 84]- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
The movie is a technological and publicity triumph, and a calamity in every other way.- The New Yorker
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- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
The plot of Silver City is movieish in the extreme, with filthy abandoned mines subbing for the bars and alleys of urban noir, but it’s no more than mild cheese--“The Big Sleep” or “Chinatown” without the malice, rigorous design, and narrative epiphanies.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Near the end of the journey, chronicling Sunni car bombers in Iraq, he (Baer) talks sorrowfully of Muslims killing Muslims, and he concludes that suicide bombing has lost any coherent political meaning and has taken on an irresistible life of its own as a glamorous cult.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
(Lurie's) a shameless, if skilled, manipulator of easy emotions. (29 Oct 2001, p. 93)- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
With the screenwriters Alice Arlen and Victor Levin, Hunt adapted the story from a 1990 novel by Elinor Lipman, and has turned the material into a fine, tense, unpredictable comedy of mixed-up emotions and sudden illuminations.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
As close as we are likely to come on the screen to the spirit of Greek tragedy (and closer, I think, than Arthur Miller has come on the stage). The crime of child abuse becomes a curse that determines the pattern of events in the next generation. [13 October 2003, p. 112]- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
The Box turns into a kind of sacrilegious Christian fable; it’s haunted by God, but it delivers a vicious doctrine. At the risk of impoliteness, I would suggest that Kelly drop his reliance on religio-mystico-eschatological humbug and embrace, in realistic terms, the fantastic possibilities in ordinary acts of murder, fear, heroism, and death. If he pulls himself together, he could be the next Hitchcock.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
The unexciting look and feel of the movie wouldn’t have bothered me if the filmmakers had penetrated Hanssen’s skull a little.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
A Serious Man, like “Burn After Reading,” is in their bleak, black, belittling mode, and it’s hell to sit through.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
Moreau's nocturnal wanderings are made unbearably poignant by an exquisite Miles Davis jazz score that became famous in its own right.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
A lightweight retelling of Page's life, a sketch, really, which doesn't probe very deeply into Page's bizarre mixture of exhibitionism and piety. But some scenes that might have been borderline exploitation, or just corny…turn out to be ineffably beautiful.- The New Yorker
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- David Denby
The Duplasses' sensitivity, which is genuine, yields too much tepid relationship-speak, and Marisa Tomei, one of the most appealing actresses in Hollywood, is left with little to play.- The New Yorker
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