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
Central Park is at first discomforting, then enraging, then illuminating.- The New Yorker
- Posted Dec 3, 2012
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- David Denby
The film is perceptive and shrewd about such matters as the awkwardness of two kinds of aristocracy and power brought face to face. But "Hyde Park" never catches fire.- The New Yorker
- Posted Dec 3, 2012
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- David Denby
Pretty much a miscalculation from beginning to end. [26 Nov. 2012, p.87]- The New Yorker
Posted Nov 26, 2012 -
- David Denby
Life of Pi, at its best, celebrates the idiosyncratic wonders and dangers of raw, ravaging nature, and Lee wrings more than enough meaning from the excitement of that spectacle; we need nothing higher. [26 Nov.2012, p.86]- The New Yorker
Posted Nov 26, 2012 -
- David Denby
We get tired of watching Whip fail, and we're caught between dismayed pity and a longing to see him punished. Only a great actor could have pulled off this balancing act. [12 Nov. 2012, p.94]- The New Yorker
Posted Nov 7, 2012 -
- David Denby
It would be lovely to announce that the new Bond movie is scintillating, or at least rambunctiously exciting, but Skyfall, in the recent mode of Christopher Nolan's "Batman" films, is a gloomy, dark action thriller, and almost completely without the cynical playfulness that drew us to the series in the first place. [12 Nov. 2012, p.94]- The New Yorker
Posted Nov 7, 2012 -
- David Denby
The scenes of the musicians rehearsing or talking about music, with the actors playing parts of Opus 131 themselves (the longer stretches are played by the Brentano Quartet), are fascinating and moving for anyone who loves this music; the rest of the movie is conventional.- The New Yorker
- Posted Oct 27, 2012
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- David Denby
Seven Psychopaths is the kind of movie that can lift someone who's had a crappy day out of a funk. It's an unstable mess filled with lunatic invention and bizarre nonsense, and some of it is so spontaneous that it's elating. [22 Oct. 2012, p.88]- The New Yorker
Posted Oct 19, 2012 -
- David Denby
Holy Motors is full of larks and jolts, but the movie is so self-referential that it's mainly aroused by itself. The audience, though eager to be pleased, is left unsatisfied. [22 Oct. 2012, p.88]- The New Yorker
Posted Oct 19, 2012 -
- David Denby
The intricate baseball knowledge that gets passed back and forth among the characters in Trouble with the Curve is much more interesting than the moral simplicities that the movie offers. [8 Oct. 2012, p.87]- The New Yorker
Posted Oct 7, 2012 -
- David Denby
The movie is messily ineffective. Daniels likes charged, discordant scenes, with sudden explosions of violence. He shoves the camera in people's faces, and he can't convincingly stage a scene with more than two people in it. [8 Oct. 2012, p.86]- The New Yorker
Posted Oct 7, 2012 -
- The New Yorker
Posted Oct 7, 2012 -
- David Denby
This documentary film, about the deconstruction of a great American city, is surprisingly lyrical and often very moving.- The New Yorker
- Posted Sep 26, 2012
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- David Denby
Ayer should have dropped the movie-within-a-movie, which is confusing in an unproductive way -- we share the men's point of view without it. [24 Sept. 2012, p. 98]- The New Yorker
Posted Sep 19, 2012 -
- David Denby
Part thriller, part character study, Arbitrage is Nicholas Jarecki's first feature, and it moves swiftly and confidently, with many details that feel exactly right. [24 Sept. 2012, p.98]- The New Yorker
Posted Sep 19, 2012 -
- David Denby
The two characters are ciphers, and the script, which Sachs co-wrote with Mauricio Zacharias, is by turns underwritten or banal.- The New Yorker
- Posted Sep 4, 2012
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- David Denby
Compliance is a small movie, but it provides insight into large and frightening events, like the voluntary participation of civilians in the terrible crimes of the last century.- The New Yorker
- Posted Aug 20, 2012
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- David Denby
Cronenberg has made an eccentric and beautiful-looking movie - a languid, deadpan, conceptualist joke.- The New Yorker
- Posted Aug 20, 2012
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- David Denby
A clear failure, yet Lee is getting at things that mystify him, and I was touched by parts of the movie. [13 & 20 Aug. 2012, p.97]- The New Yorker
Posted Aug 6, 2012 -
- David Denby
The new movie continues the "Bourne" tradition of exciting, reality-based thrillers, but when the series lost its star it lost most of is soul. [13 & 20 Aug. 2012, p.96]- The New Yorker
Posted Aug 6, 2012 -
- David Denby
If the rest of the movie had been on Travolta's level of sly knowingness, it might have been a hip classic, rather than what it is -- a summertime debauch. [23 July 2012, p. 81]- The New Yorker
Posted Jul 19, 2012 -
- David Denby
It's hard not to see Beasts as an expression of post-affluent America. And here's the surprise: the grinding Great Recession may never offer up a movie as happy, or as inspired by poetry and dream, as this one. [23 July 2012, p.80]- The New Yorker
Posted Jul 19, 2012 -
- David Denby
To Rome with Love is light and fast, with some of the sharpest dialogue and acting that he's put on the screen in years. [2 July 2012, p.84]- The New Yorker
Posted Jul 1, 2012 -
- David Denby
Abe is blustery and self-pitying, but, with Solondz's new tender mercies fully engaged, Gelber makes you feel close to a guy for whom nothing was ever meant to go right.- The New Yorker
- Posted Jun 11, 2012
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- David Denby
Scott may always have had an eye on the box office, but from "Alien" and "Thelma & Louise" on, he has made women into heroines. In that regard, he's still ahead of the curve. Rapace's scene is a classic of its kind; it tops John Hurt's notorious misfortunes in "Alien."- The New Yorker
- Posted Jun 11, 2012
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- David Denby
The Dictator, like its predecessors, is short (eighty-three minutes), but it runs down fast, and the lewd jokes pile up. [28 May 2012, p. 76]- The New Yorker
Posted May 26, 2012 -
- David Denby
The plot becomes disastrously condescending: the black man, who's crude, sexy, and a great dancer, liberates the frozen white man. The handsome Omar Sy jumps all over the place, and he's blunt and grating. Francois Cluzet acts with his eyebrows, his nose, his forehead. It's an admirable performance, but the movie is an embarrassment. [28 May 2012, p.78]- The New Yorker
Posted May 23, 2012 -
- David Denby
Judi Dench is especially good; playing a vulnerable character, for a change, she allows her habitual toughness to give way to uncertainty, fear, and moments of gathering resolve, and she delivers one of her most wide-ranging and moving performances. [7 May 2012, p. 81]- The New Yorker
Posted Apr 30, 2012 -
- David Denby
It's a seize-the-day movie, even though the day is a long time coming. [7 May 2012, p.80]- The New Yorker
Posted Apr 30, 2012 -
- David Denby
If you were to watch Lockout a few months from now, at home alone, it wouldn't produce more than a shrug. Movies this bad need to be revered in public places. Go see it in a mall, and try to sneak a beer or two in with you.- The New Yorker
- Posted Apr 23, 2012
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