David Edelstein
Select another critic »For 2,169 reviews, this critic has graded:
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47% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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51% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 0.9 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
David Edelstein's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 65 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | First Cow | |
| Lowest review score: | Funny Games (2008) | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,257 out of 2169
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Mixed: 709 out of 2169
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Negative: 203 out of 2169
2169
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- David Edelstein
Only the generic title disappoints. Leo Rockas, who turned Lady Susan’s epistles into an Austen-esque novel, suggests Flirtation and Forbearance or Coquetry and Caution. But by any title this is a treat.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted May 5, 2016
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- David Edelstein
The best way to think of Captain America: Civil War is as a toy box in which the sheer quantity of toys partly makes up for the lack of anything new. But the big takeaway is worrisome. Marvel has created a universe teeming with superheroes who simply don’t have enough to do. They’re all suited up with nowhere to go.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted May 2, 2016
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- David Edelstein
In my frequent role as “laugh accountant” for mainstream comedies, I’d estimate two-thirds of it works, and when it’s good it’s sooooo good — good enough to make you want to see Jordan Peele and Keegan-Michael Key and director Peter Atencio and co-writer Alex Rubens do it again and go farther out.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Apr 30, 2016
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- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Apr 20, 2016
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- David Edelstein
The film is a triumph of technology and safe “family” storytelling. It’s dazzling — almost no one will dislike it.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Apr 15, 2016
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- David Edelstein
If you’ve seen Linklater’s other films, you know that time for him isn’t just a factor, it’s a character, a player.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Apr 8, 2016
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- David Edelstein
In truth, I’m not sure the movie jells — even the title, from an album by The Smiths, seems oblique. But I loved it anyway.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Apr 7, 2016
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- David Edelstein
This is probably Cheadle’s most electrified performance since the one that made him a star, as the incorrigibly homicidal Mouse in "Devil in a Blue Dress."- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 24, 2016
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- David Edelstein
There’s enough going on to keep you watching — and, as I said, to keep fanboys wowed by the scale of the production and pretension. But most people will leave feeling drained and depressed, wondering how a studio can get away with withholding so much.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 23, 2016
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- David Edelstein
Nichols’s mythic aspirations are still a puzzle to me; I’m not sure he has connected all the dots in his psyche yet, or that he fully brings off his finale. But I love watching his movies.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 18, 2016
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- David Edelstein
There’s an extended shot in Trey Edward Shults’s remarkable debut feature, Krisha, that’s a showstopper of bad vibes, a psycho-symphony that bumps the film to a different — more ominous — level of reality.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 18, 2016
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- David Edelstein
10 Cloverfield Lane does what it needs to do: make you sit and squirm and want very badly to know. It has the appeal of suspense radio plays from the '30s and '40s and even a touch of Orson Welles’s most infamous Mercury Theater broadcast.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 14, 2016
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- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 14, 2016
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- David Edelstein
Creative Control is the most elegant vision imaginable of a world in the process of losing its moorings.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 10, 2016
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- David Edelstein
What saves this big-budget cartoon behemoth is its modest, old-fashioned storytelling.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 5, 2016
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- David Edelstein
He has told the story of humanity’s fall from grace so many times that you wonder if his wand is starting to sputter.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 4, 2016
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- David Edelstein
It’s not so much bad as dismayingly bland. It’s WTF for all the wrong reasons.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 3, 2016
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- David Edelstein
Given the movie’s bloody stew of greed and sadism, its unbalanced frames and ear-scraping soundscape, its moral tidiness can bring a smile to your otherwise appalled face.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 25, 2016
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- David Edelstein
Lindholm finds a unique balance between social and individual responsibility. There’s plenty of blame to go around.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 20, 2016
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- David Edelstein
It’s another in a long, honorable line of films that chart the poisonous effects of colonialism on indigenous populations and their ecosystems, but with an unusually invigorating perspective, like a reverse-angle "Heart of Darkness."- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 19, 2016
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- David Edelstein
To my taste, the movie finally feels rather one-dimensional, basic. But there’s no disputing its awful power.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 17, 2016
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- David Edelstein
How bad is Zoolander 2? It’s "Batman and Robin" bad. It’s so bad that it makes you feel sorry for the scores (literally) of celebrities who show up in cameos, even the ones (Anna Wintour, Tommy Hilfiger, Susan Sarandon, Ariana Grande, Kimye ...) who actively resist your sympathy, whom you maybe want to see taken down a peg.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 12, 2016
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- David Edelstein
Deadpool is a send-up of Marvel movies but in no way a takedown of them. It’s not subversive — it’s meant to elasticize and enhance the superhero genre, to flatter the audience for being hip enough to get all of those in-jokes.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 11, 2016
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- David Edelstein
The best thing about the movie is that you don’t have to invest a lot of time into seeing Austen’s prose manhandled. You can enjoy the film — well, parts of it — as a middling stock production with flurries of gore to break the monotony.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 8, 2016
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- David Edelstein
Their amalgamations can be feats of genius, like their stoner-gumshoe farrago "The Big Lebowski." Or they can pretty much lie there, like much of their new, star-packed comedy, Hail, Caesar!, which is nothing but movie fodder.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 5, 2016
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- David Edelstein
The power of Little Men is in how the characters resist the melodramatic flow (which is, come to think of it, how Chekhov works, too).- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jan 30, 2016
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- David Edelstein
The battle scenes are loud and jangly and dissonant enough to unnerve you — they work. But I’d like to see a congressional committee grill Bay and screenwriter Chuck Hogan about what’s going on half the time.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jan 14, 2016
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- David Edelstein
The movie doesn’t expand in your mind — it shrinks along with its protagonist, its conclusion a reductio ad absurdum.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jan 8, 2016
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- David Edelstein
Once the surprise of seeing something so miserable depicted with such wit and poetry wears off, you’re left with a nagging ugh, as well as the feeling that this emotional/psychological syndrome isn’t nearly as universal as Kaufman thinks it is.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jan 2, 2016
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- David Edelstein
The movie has momentously disturbing ideas but a fine grain, its images suitable for framing — or hiding away in the attic.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jan 2, 2016
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- David Edelstein
You wonder what he has up his sleeve in The Hateful Eight, but gorgeous as that sleeve might be, what’s up it is crap. The movie is a lot of gore over a lot of nothing. I hope that won’t be Tarantino’s epitaph.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Dec 23, 2015
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- David Edelstein
The movie has already blown away advance-sale records, and when you go (which, of course, you will) I bet you’ll have fun — I did, mostly. But it’s the fun of seeing something fairly successfully redone, with the promise of more of the same to come.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Dec 16, 2015
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- David Edelstein
I think The Revenant is, on the whole, pain without gain, but it’s certainly a tour de force — literally, a feat of strength.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Dec 11, 2015
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- David Edelstein
I don’t think Russell has ever directed a scene as phony as the one in Joy’s office where she shows her abiding beneficence to a sweet young African-American couple. Equilibrium makes Russell a dull boy.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Dec 11, 2015
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- David Edelstein
Bitches, it’s always a good month in America for an antigun movie. The newest, Spike Lee’s Chi-Raq, might be the best ever. It’s sexy, brash, and potent — a powerful weapon in its own right.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Dec 4, 2015
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- David Edelstein
The unexpected element is a series of letters (some never before heard) Joplin wrote to her family back home in Port Arthur, Texas, read by Chan Marshall (a.k.a. Cat Power) in a voice that captures the cadences of Joplin’s speech without being an imitation. The letters are heartbreaking in their own way.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 30, 2015
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- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 30, 2015
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- David Edelstein
I can’t decide if Kurzel’s Macbeth is worse than the geriatric Maurice Evans–Judith Anderson version I was forced to endure in high school, but it’s certainly less lively than the two terrible gangster updates, Joe Macbeth and Men of Respect.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 30, 2015
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- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 30, 2015
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- David Edelstein
What Hooper can’t manage is to put us inside his characters’ heads — where we should be in a story that makes every surface suspect.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 29, 2015
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- David Edelstein
Movies don’t always have to be “how things are.” When they’re as warm and rousing as Creed, they can be “how we want to make things.”- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 26, 2015
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- David Edelstein
Even a second-rate farce like Man Up can be a jolly pick-me-up. Its momentum alone made me very happy.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 23, 2015
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- David Edelstein
Haynes has calibrated the film so precisely to Blanchett’s talents that he couldn’t have rendered her better with animation.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 20, 2015
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- David Edelstein
The final film adaptation of Suzanne Collins’s dystopian Hunger Games YA novels, Mockingjay — Part 2, is a potent antiwar saga: bleak, savage, and very modern in the depiction of an unholy union between political manipulation and showbiz.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 20, 2015
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- David Edelstein
Entertainment wears its contempt too arrogantly, fulsome in its emptiness.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 16, 2015
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- David Edelstein
The new James Bond movie Spectre makes a satisfying final chapter to the four-film saga of Daniel Craig’s 007, even if that saga turns out to be less than the sum of its parts.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 5, 2015
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- David Edelstein
This tight, relatively low-key, step-by-step procedural has a stronger impact than any horror movie.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 5, 2015
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- David Edelstein
Brooklyn doesn’t quite capture Brooklyn, but its ambivalence about being Irish is gloriously epic.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 4, 2015
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- David Edelstein
Our Brand is Crisis hits a lot of clunky notes and the end is unforgivably cornball, but it’s still one of the liveliest political black comedies I’ve seen in a while. The pacing is lickety-split, the talk is boisterous, and the cast is all aces.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 2, 2015
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- David Edelstein
The movie improves on Koppelman’s ungainly novel but is generally dreary and light on insight. Director Adam Salky steers clear of the usual addiction-movie clichés, but he doesn’t have anything to replace them with, so it’s as if all the connective tissue is gone.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 23, 2015
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- David Edelstein
The air of mourning might have worked as a counterpoint to the silliness if Mitch Glazer’s script had smart gags, but as one-liner after one-liner misses its mark, you begin to feel sorry for Murray, who’s really too old to be playing a guy who has a little daughter (not granddaughter) and likes to get kinky with Kate Hudson as a raucous, Dolly Parton–style hooker-businesswoman.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 23, 2015
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- David Edelstein
Anderson says that as a child she dreamed of making something that had never been made before, and, with the help of some gifted artists and editors and camera-people, she has done it again — with bells on. The only thing that would make it more pleasurable would be Anderson narrating it in person.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 21, 2015
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- David Edelstein
Fukunaga’s hurtling camera and taut cutting keep Beasts of No Nation only just this side of hallucinatory, and Elba is the kind of titanic actor to kick it to a near-mythic level.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 19, 2015
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- David Edelstein
The most engrossing part of Truth is the gradual, grueling retreat from the story, first by its participants and then by the network that broadcast it.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 19, 2015
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- David Edelstein
Room is astonishing: It transmutes a lurid, true-crime situation into a fairy tale in which fairy tales are a source of survival.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 16, 2015
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- David Edelstein
The first act is a thing of beauty and the second, good enough. Shame about that third act, though, and the ending that retroactively diminishes everything that preceded it.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 9, 2015
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- David Edelstein
Experimenter is busily, thrillingly reflective. Its artificiality makes it seem even more alive, more in the present tense.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 8, 2015
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- David Edelstein
It’s Rylance who keeps Bridge of Spies standing. He gives a teeny, witty, fabulously non-emotive performance, every line musical and slightly ironic — the irony being his forthright refusal to deceive in a world founded on lies.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 4, 2015
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- David Edelstein
The Martian is shot, designed, computer-generated, and scripted on a level that makes most films of its ilk look slipshod. Scott and writer Drew Goddard aren’t trying to make an “important” sci-fi movie like Interstellar. They aim lower but blow past their marks.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 2, 2015
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- David Edelstein
The problem — not fatal — with The Walk is that the narrative wire droops between the movie’s opening and final sequences.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 1, 2015
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- David Edelstein
The Keeping Room is slow and rather arty, with a chamber-music (plus harmonica and fiddle) score and cinematography that shrouds the faces in shadow. But it’s a fine piece of storytelling and earns its look and feel.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 26, 2015
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- David Edelstein
Unlike the '70s Italian cannibal movies, The Green Inferno doesn’t have a mondo vibe. It’s artfully made and acted with skill.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 25, 2015
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- David Edelstein
Bahrani’s casting of Dern is genius. She’s such a profoundly unaffected actress that you instantly buy her aversion to her son’s lucre. She has a moral and aesthetic problem with that tacky mansion on the waterway. She wouldn’t fit in there.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 25, 2015
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- David Edelstein
This is another moderately interesting but shallow biopic with an actor going for broke — to win, not to draw.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 18, 2015
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- David Edelstein
What keeps Sicario from cynicism is the nature and depth of Villeneuve’s gaze, not childishly wide-eyed but capable still of feeling pain. He’s a terrific director. You know that if his heroine, Alice, gets out of Cartel-land alive, she might spend a few months in an asylum, but she’ll be back, hell-bent on seizing the foreground.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 18, 2015
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- David Edelstein
Johnny Depp makes a valiant stab at the part, but even with his hair thinned and lightened and his face hardened, Depp remains Depp: I never forgot I was watching a big star doing an impersonation. It’s as if the spirit of a psychopath like Bulger resists the camera. Or maybe the movie isn’t imaginative enough to penetrate his shell.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 18, 2015
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- David Edelstein
M. Night Shyamalan has come up with an unoriginal faux-doc horror picture that actually works like a demonic charm.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 11, 2015
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- David Edelstein
Sleeping With Other People is a rare American non-homogenized rom-com, and it’s delightful even when you’re not sure what you’re watching.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 11, 2015
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- David Edelstein
Moverman is attempting something hugely ambitious with Time Out of Mind: a socially conscious, existential-displacement art movie. I think it would have worked better with a little less rigor and a little more intimacy.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 9, 2015
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- David Edelstein
American Ultra is undemanding late-summer studio fare — ultraforgettable. But I’ll remember the faces of Eisenberg and Stewart, who are easy to ridicule but, whatever the pundits say, very much movie stars.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 7, 2015
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- David Edelstein
Little here is new, but the archival footage is well chosen, the interviewees are illuminating, and Gibney, as usual, potently synthesizes what’s out there.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 7, 2015
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- David Edelstein
Grandma marks a new era in gay cinema — one’s that confident and mature enough to acknowledge regret.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Aug 21, 2015
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- David Edelstein
Meru is a packed 90 minutes. And I guess it is inspiring, in the sense that if human beings can endure this kind of risk and punishment, they could colonize Mars or breed a super-race to carry our species to the ends of the galaxy. All the familiar critical adjectives (harrowing, etc.) sound especially lame in this context. The movie is sick.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Aug 20, 2015
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- David Edelstein
Straight Outta Compton is among the most potent rags-to-riches showbiz movies ever made.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Aug 15, 2015
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- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Aug 14, 2015
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- David Edelstein
The movie is broad and mean and for a while very funny, but even when it goes sour — when the world slaps them in the face for their sins — it doesn’t lose its momentum.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Aug 7, 2015
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- David Edelstein
Mistress America is hit-and-miss. It’s not as burdened by blame as other Baumbach films — Gerwig leavens him. But it’s labored.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Aug 7, 2015
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- David Edelstein
At times the movie’s small canvas feels momentous. They’ve found the inner tensions in people’s presentations of themselves in a way that’s positively Wallace-like.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 31, 2015
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- David Edelstein
Stevan Riley’s Listen to Me Marlon is the greatest, most searching documentary of an actor ever put on film, and it’s no coincidence that it’s about film’s greatest and most searching actor.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 30, 2015
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- David Edelstein
The best reason to see Mission: Impossible — Rogue Nation is Rebecca Ferguson, a Swedish-born actress passing easily as a British spy named Ilsa.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 30, 2015
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- David Edelstein
I veered between being awed and appalled, though mostly the latter. The trouble with Gyllenhaal is that he shows little range, not from role to role but within roles.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 24, 2015
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- David Edelstein
A haunting, morbidly romantic melodrama with obvious links to "Vertigo," but from a reverse angle.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 24, 2015
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- David Edelstein
It’s our sense of adventure that matters in the end. We must cultivate confusion and dare to be disoriented.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 20, 2015
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- David Edelstein
Ant-Man isn’t much more than pleasant (Peyton Reed directs limply), but anything Marvel that doesn’t feel Marvel-ish makes me smile.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 17, 2015
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- David Edelstein
Woody Allen’s philosophical thriller Irrational Man is irrationally entertaining. It shouldn’t work. It’s laughably plotted and sketchily written. Intellectually, it’s jejune — or at least high in jejunosity. But if you can manage to keep your eye-rolling in check, you might find yourself getting into it.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 17, 2015
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- David Edelstein
If you’re an Amy Schumer, you’ll be ecstatic to see her strut her stuff on the big screen in the mostly (about four-fifths) delightful sex comedy Trainwreck — and maybe a tad disappointed when the playbook turns out not to be entirely hers.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 16, 2015
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- David Edelstein
The even-tempered, exceedingly rational “El Doctor” seems more laudable than Eastwood and Bronson combined, especially in light of the Mexican government’s notorious ineptitude and corruption.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 13, 2015
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- David Edelstein
I like the movie, though. It forced me to rethink the way sexual desire saturates everything, along with extreme vulnerability of children.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 13, 2015
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- David Edelstein
What’s extraordinary about Tangerine is that it’s everything an entertaining, old-fashioned, mainstream Hollywood comedy should be but no longer is. That nowadays you have to get this kind of stuff via Sundance from directors using iPhones is a drag — the wrong kind.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 9, 2015
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- David Edelstein
Alternately thrilling and devastating, throwing you back and forth until the devastation takes over and you spend the last hour watching the most supernaturally gifted vocalist of her generation chase and find oblivion.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 2, 2015
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- David Edelstein
It doesn’t jell, though, and the movie’s philosophical message is especially grating.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 2, 2015
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- David Edelstein
It’s sort of like "Pitch Perfect 2," only with better music and dancing and less trumped-up conflict.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 2, 2015
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- David Edelstein
I can’t help thinking the movie’s amorphousness would have worked better with a more definite actor — someone who didn’t disappear so fully into the scene. Eden has a remarkable orbit, but it spins around a void.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 22, 2015
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- David Edelstein
Dante’s newest movie, Burying the Ex, doesn’t make the leap to satire. It has a lame-pun title, a zombie premise that might have seemed fresh two decades ago, and the sexual politics of an unusually backward adolescent male horror nerd. For all that, it’s a lot of fun, and Dante’s heart is palpably in it.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 22, 2015
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- David Edelstein
The actors manage to show crack comic timing while looking as if they’re groping along blindly — a high compliment for psychodrama.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 22, 2015
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- David Edelstein
This teeming, tear-duct-draining, exhaustingly inventive, surreal animated comedy is going to be a new pop-culture touchstone. In all kinds of ways it’s a mind-opener.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 17, 2015
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- David Edelstein
The climactic interaction between Rachel and the film that Greg has made for her is so ecstatically weird that it gets points for its audacity. It’s almost inspired. But the coda — an ode to Greg’s self-sacrifice — is unforgivable, a testament to the ego - and power-trip that is the movie’s ultimate reason for being.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 12, 2015
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- David Edelstein
Whatever else you say about Jurassic World, its amazing special effects — not just hurtling dinosaurs but flying killer pterodactyls — make it one of the most rousing people-running-away-from-stuff movies ever made. At its best, it’s good enough to take your mind off its worst, which is saying a lot.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 12, 2015
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- David Edelstein
This is the rare “profile” documentary that is also a transcendent work of art. It raises questions we’ll be trying to answer for as long as there is art.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 11, 2015
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- David Edelstein
Should you ever be tempted to wax nostalgic for an age in which wars were fought according to the laws of cause and effect and for reasons that may confidently be labeled “rational,” pick up Vera Brittain’s World War I memoir Testament of Youth or steel yourself for James Kent’s mournful, very fine new film starring Alicia Vikander as Brittain.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 8, 2015
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