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
The movie is painstakingly well made and murderously hard to sit through.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted May 20, 2019
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- David Edelstein
At her best — which is more often than you can imagine — Hogg convinces you that incoherence is the only honest way to tell a story with any emotional complexity. She spoils you for the overshapers, the spoon-feeders.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted May 15, 2019
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- David Edelstein
The movie should by rights be a “Wow!” But it feels bloated, self-conscious, and pretentious, with long waits between its few dazzling fights. Evidently, it’s hard to build on a premise that’s basically so vacuous and dumb.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted May 14, 2019
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- David Edelstein
A social worker’s take on a lost soul can be valuable, but in a drama it’s too orienting. You want to see how a person could surrender herself — her self — to something so diabolical, which demands a higher level of insanity than the filmmakers can muster.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted May 11, 2019
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- David Edelstein
I generally like Rogen a lot but this performance is bad — worse than it even seems because of the drain it is on the movie.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted May 4, 2019
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- David Edelstein
JT LeRoy isn’t a bad movie, and with these actresses it’s certainly worth seeing. It’s a passion project for Knoop, who co-wrote the script (songs by her brother, long divorced from Albert, all over the soundtrack) and has been promoting the film.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Apr 27, 2019
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- David Edelstein
Even at three-plus hours, the gargantuan Avengers: Endgame is light on its feet and more freely inventive than it needed to be. Given the year-long wait, its audience — Pavlovian dogs, myself (woof!) included — would have salivated over less. It’s better than Avengers: Infinity War, which was better than Avengers: Age of Ultron; and it is, for a change, conclusive.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Apr 23, 2019
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- David Edelstein
Dogman doesn’t have the scale of a major work, but it tugs you in and roughs you up — in a good way! It haunts you long after it ends.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Apr 13, 2019
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- David Edelstein
So Shazam! feels blessedly old-fashioned, which isn’t to say it’s perfect — or even very good. It’s certainly fun when the juvenile actors are front and center, before the CGI moves in for the last half-hour and change.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Apr 6, 2019
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- David Edelstein
I can’t tell if Korine is a true dramatist or a simpleminded provocateur who lives to mess with our heads. Both, probably. To him, the joke is that it’s all movie fodder. Moondog is an existential hero for a weightless universe.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 29, 2019
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- David Edelstein
The opening of Diane is simple but packed, like the movie: The more mundane the details, the more redolent it is of time going by too fast. Someone I know called it the most depressing film she’d ever seen. I found it one of the most exhilarating, but I admit that the exhilaration is hard-won and slightly perverse.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 29, 2019
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- David Edelstein
I’ll see anything Zahler does because I was weaned on the same junk he was and find his mix of amateurism and genre smarts appealing. That’s not a sign of my integrity — a man’s gotta watch what a man’s gotta watch — but of my fundamental laziness and corruption. I hate that I can settle for Dragged Across Concrete.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 24, 2019
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- David Edelstein
Some of the supporting actors register, especially Michael Mando as the unpretentious but quick-witted chief engineer. But the only surprise is Skarsgård. He has played wife-beaters, vampires, rapists, and mute would-be detectives, but who’d have thought he’d make a credible nerd?- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 18, 2019
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- David Edelstein
The Mustang brought the sensation back of having to slow down and breathe with a horse and in the process leave yourself behind. Any movie that makes leaving oneself behind so tactile and enticing is a horse of a different color.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 18, 2019
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- David Edelstein
As a horror buff, I hate to admit it, but Peele’s attachment to creaky genre tropes is already starting to hold him back. The good news is that he’s more than halfway to creating his own syntax, his own means for illuminating the sunken places of the world. I have a feeling there will be miraculous excavations to come.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 16, 2019
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- David Edelstein
The best reason to see the movie is Larson, who showed how terrific she could be in "Short Term 12" and "Room" as women whose ways of fighting back were frustratingly earthbound.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 6, 2019
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- David Edelstein
Gloria Bell is best when it’s least definite, when the conversations are full of awkward holes and the relationships are in flux.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 5, 2019
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- David Edelstein
Mapplethorpe doesn’t linger long enough to have a present tense. It hits its marks and breezes on. It’s not inept — there are few bad scenes. It doesn’t risk enough to be bad.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 1, 2019
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- David Edelstein
Woman at War takes its tone not from von Trier but deadpan pranksters like the Finnish Aki Kaurismaki, whose absurdities have an undercurrent of tragedy. Erlingsson has a magnetic heroine in Geirharðsdóttir, who’s lithe and athletic without being a show off, and underplays as a good soldier would.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 1, 2019
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- David Edelstein
The cancer-buddy movie Paddleton (which premieres today on Netflix) is embarrassingly bad until 20 minutes from the end, when it’s suddenly very good — quiet, tightly focused, stunning. It’s a pity that the first hour needs to be endured, but it does set the stage as well as soften you up for the indelible scene to come.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 22, 2019
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- David Edelstein
The film is intense and features a performance by Chloë Grace Moretz that’s more committed than this swill deserves.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 21, 2019
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- David Edelstein
It’s worth shaking off the incongruities and getting on the movie’s wavelength. Once Transit’s bitterly ironic vision takes hold, it eats into the mind.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 21, 2019
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- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 15, 2019
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- David Edelstein
Stalk-and-kill movies bear some resemblance to classic farces, but no horror movies have taken the similarities as far as Happy Death Day and its busier, just-as-fun sequel, Happy Death 2 U. The new film repeats some of the original material but with even more madcap permutations.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 13, 2019
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- David Edelstein
Nicholas McCarthy, the director of the new bad-seed movie, The Prodigy, works in a low key that still somehow scrapes your nerves, so when the nasty stuff arrives, you realize (too late!) that you’ve been softened up for the kill. The film is cruelly well-made.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 8, 2019
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- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 8, 2019
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- David Edelstein
High Flying Bird is an unshapely piece of storytelling — there are gaps in the plot, and it never locks into a rhythm — but that mournfulness and resentment seep into you.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 4, 2019
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- David Edelstein
The actors are good, but their lovemaking has no raw edges, no messiness. Deschanel lights them like sculptures — art objects — while Richter saws away to serenade their transcendent oneness. It’s Middlebrow Realism, comrades.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 4, 2019
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- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 1, 2019
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- David Edelstein
The souped-up plot is certainly indigestible (cheesecake, beefcake, bullets — choke on that), and there’s a steady stream of bad laughs, but something genuinely frightening comes through: a woman’s sense of disempowerment by men on all sides of the law. Hardwicke sticks to her guns — meaning there’s no play in the gunplay, only horror.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 1, 2019
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