David Ehrlich
Select another critic »For 1,695 reviews, this critic has graded:
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46% higher than the average critic
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4% same as the average critic
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50% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 1.8 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
David Ehrlich's Scores
- Movies
- TV
Score distribution:
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Positive: 976 out of 1695
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Mixed: 568 out of 1695
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Negative: 151 out of 1695
1695
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- David Ehrlich
Power achieves a profoundly unsettling sweep by prioritizing breadth over depth, and Ford’s doc is able to cover a ton of ground as it hopscotches between chapter titles like “PROPERTY” and “STATUS QUO” in order to argue that policing has always served as an instrument to maintain class order.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 25, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
In spite of its demented enthusiasm (as well as this independently financed, Sam Raimi-produced film’s welcome rejection of anything that might resemble a studio note), Mohr’s frenetic and exhausting video game of a movie doesn’t know where to focus its energy.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 25, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
Humane doesn’t want to be a hard-hitting drama about moral equity in an unequal world that nobody escapes alive, it wants to be a satirical — and increasingly basic — thriller about the evils of financially incentivized health policies in a world where nobody deserves to die, and it’s hard for it to succeed on those terms without caring about which of its characters ends up in Bob’s other body bag.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 25, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
If this catastrophic bore of a film isn’t game over for “Rebel Moon,” then nothing will be able to stand in her way.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 19, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
As much as I’d love to see these characters in another film, I’d also love to have seen more of them in this one. Oh, and a quick general note to action directors everywhere: Silencers are great for stealth kills, but they really suck the fun out of a full-blown siege.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 16, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
These competitors only feel alive when they’re bound together by the mutual intimacy of being edged to the break points of their desire, and Guadagnino’s deliriously enjoyable movie doesn’t let any of its characters get off until even the most sophisticated Hawk-Eye line-calling technology on Earth would be unable to pinpoint the exact spot where tennis ends and sex begins.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 12, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
It’s only because Freire’s hyper-combustible debut feature remains so true to itself that we believe Malu and Lili might find what they’re looking for, even if it ultimately doesn’t look anything like what we expected them to find.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 10, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
There’s decent fun to be had in this crafty and contained Aussie skin-crawler (a low-budget affair that doesn’t scrimp when it comes to its WETA-created monster), but Sting is a bit too small for its massive alien spider to maneuver itself in unexpected ways, and the tender human story that Roache-Turner weaves around her lacks the bite it needs to melt your heart or liquify any of your other organs.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 10, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
The Long Game is determined to ape the tropes of a feel-good sports drama, but only as a means to an end, and its struggle to balance the demands of the genre with the deeper concerns underpinning this story ultimately stops either side of that equation from going the distance.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 8, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
The film is too close to — and too impressed by — the simple fact of what just happened to see under the surface, or even bother to look that hard.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 4, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
No disrespect to the similarly Proustian rewards of “Ratatouille,” but here is a 73-minute movie — animated by about 10 people — that manages to deliver twice the flavor with a fraction of the ingredients.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 3, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
The unrepentant movie-ness of “In the Land of Saints and Sinners” can also be part of its charm, especially when it comes to the cast members whose performances aren’t as stale as their parts.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 29, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
This goofy-ass, clumsily assembled Saturday morning cartoon of a movie might as well be called “Godzilla Minus Everything,” if only because the more accurate “Godzilla Minus Everything Plus Dan Stevens in a Hawaiian Shirt” wouldn’t fit on a marquee.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 28, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
Philibert’s fly-on-the-wall documentary is all the more effective because the director refuses to pretend that he isn’t visible — not in this place where people come to be seen, and not merely looked at.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 26, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
Late Night with the Devil fails to deliver an ending as fresh as the rest of the movie. The fact that you’ll see it coming makes it less fun but sure as hell doesn’t make it less honest.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 22, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
At the very least, it seems safe to assume that Doda wouldn’t mind how this documentary casts her as a quasi-deliberate revolutionary, but McKenzie and Parker lack the intel to see any deeper into Doda’s bimbo savviness, just as they lack the ambition to explore whether intentionality even matters when it comes to changing the world.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 22, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
Riddle of Fire is all too happy to wander around in circles as it simmers in its own absurdity, as if any kind of legitimate incident might threaten to break its spell.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 22, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
The details are so hypnotically sadistic that Titley’s documentary is seldom bothered to deviate from them, as none of the film’s retrospective interviews, candid and thoughtful as they are, prove as gripping as the raw video of Nasubi’s ordeal.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 21, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
I wish we got to see more of the big show at the end of the movie, but that’s almost beside the point — all that matters is that, somehow, someway, it goes on.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 15, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
A light but meaty piece of magical-realism that threads the needle between Cronenbergian body horror and Miyazaki-like fantasy to create a modern parable that evokes any number of identifiable emergencies — deforestation, the AIDS epidemic, the global migration crisis and its attendant xenophobia, etc. — in the service of a story that refuses to be reduced into a clear metaphor for any one of them.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 15, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
It’s great that “Stormy” might buy its namesake a small measure of the sympathy she deserved from the start, but 110 minutes of your time shouldn’t feel like this steep of a price.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 14, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
It’s as if “Cabrini” is trying to separate the Christian ideals of the saint’s teachings from the political realities of putting them into practice; as if it’s trying to flatter the moral principles of its conservative audience without pushing that crowd to embody them. Just scan the QR code in the credits, pay a few movie tickets forward, and let the hard work of solving anti-immigrant discrimination become somebody else’s problem.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 9, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
The funniest thing about Ricky Stanicky might be how recently its director was holding an Oscar on the stage of the Dolby Theater.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 6, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
You can almost feel the director coming alive behind the camera whenever Amelia’s Children shifts gears from a gothic horror story to a giallo-inflected satire about the European aristocracy’s penchant for self-preservation at any cost.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 1, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
Satisfying as this documentary might be in the greater story of Lopez’s personal growth, it barely hangs together on its own.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 27, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
Witnessing is the most effective defense people have against occupation, and the Israeli military, like all thieves, wilts in the face of being watched. The footage is out there, and it’s rarely been assembled into a more concise, powerful, and damning array than it is here. Now it only has to be seen.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 23, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
Another End knows that we’ll never stop trying to cheat death (or at least to deny it for as long as we can), but Messina’s film is so entranced by the dull flame of that desire that it fails to consider what it might illuminate about the darkness that surrounds it.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 22, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
Maybe Ordinary Angels is so accessible to godless critics and church-going civilians alike because it focuses on a circle of hell that everyone in this country has to enter at some point, no matter what they might believe in: the American healthcare system.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 22, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
No filmmaker is better equipped to capture the full sweep of this saga (which is why, despite being disappointed twice over, I still can’t help but look forward to “Dune: Messiah”), and — sometimes for better, but usually for worse — no filmmaker is so capable of reflecting how Paul might lose his perspective amid the power and the resources that have been placed at his disposal.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 21, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
While La Cocina can’t always shake the polemical stiffness of its source material or the political chokehold of its modernized setting, the film’s agit-prop expressionism allows it to push beyond the boundaries of other stories like it.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 18, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
An inoffensive, almost endearingly lame whiff of a movie that has the misfortune of arriving at a time when the superhero genre has almost returned to pre-MCU levels of popularity, this “Daredevil”-ass disaster is hilariously retrograde for a story about someone who discovers that she can see a few seconds into the future.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 13, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
There’s no doubt that Tornatore could have created a more artistically self-possessed homage to his most iconic collaborator, but then again, didn’t he already do that with “Cinema Paradiso?”- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 7, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
If not for Newton and Sprouse’s performances, “Lisa Frankenstein” would be fully embalmed well before Lisa realizes that she’s totally, butt-crazy in love with the shambling corpse she hides in her bedroom.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 7, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
It’s not unusual for such high-concept films to indulge in a thorny and fascinating second act only to find itself grasping for a more defined conflict in the third, and that’s essentially what happens here, as the broad philosophical mysteries take Leyla down a rabbit-hole that might be too deep for her to ever climb out.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 2, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
Charmatz’s nimble direction allows the action to flitter between the imagined past and the “actual” present without missing a beat, and that deftness proves key to the Pete Docter-like anthropomorphism that renders the Dark and his colleagues as working stiffs with a job to do.- IndieWire
- Posted Feb 1, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
Argylle ends on another glorious high that a more serious movie would never have been able to pull off, but the flimsy and hyper-contrived fluff leading up to it is so determined to justify its own absurdity that it doesn’t leave us enough of a chance to enjoy it.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 31, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
Union is all the more effective because it doesn’t see the need to argue its case. Instead, the film is free to focus its attention on how difficult and inspiring it was and remains for the Amazon Labor Union to press that case into action — and even just to exist in the first place.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 27, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
An enormously moving documentary made all the more effective by co-directors Angela Patton and Natalie Rae’s steadfast refusal to settle for easy sentiment in the face of difficult outcomes, Daughters has as much ugly-cry potential as any film in recent memory.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 26, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
While The Greatest Night in Pop may not amount to anything more than a sanitized and somewhat masturbatory look back at one of the wildest get-togethers in the modern history of music (the film doesn’t offer any commentary deeper than “isn’t it so fucking crazy that this happened, and that we have it all on tape?”), there’s no denying that it’s a lot of fun to watch it all go down.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 24, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
Fingscheidt’s nonlinear approach allows the film to ride the tidal rhythms of addiction, while Ronan’s committed performance churns those ebbs and flows into a widescreen journey that earns its epic backdrop.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 22, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
Modest and casual until the exact moment when the film’s master plan suddenly clicks into place like the hammer of a gun transforming a neutral tool into a deadly weapon, “Good One” is the kind of movie that tightens its complete lack of tension into a knot in the pit of your stomach.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 22, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
Girls State gradually moves away from the reality show-like competition baked into its premise in favor of something more interesting and less resolvable.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 22, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
By refracting Brian De Palma’s self-reflexiveness and the Coen brothers’ mordant fatalism through the prism of his most personal obsessions, Schimberg creates a house of mirrors so brilliant and complex that it becomes impossible to match any of his characters to their own reflections, and absolutely useless to reduce the movie around them to the stuff of moral instruction.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 22, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
In focusing less on the happiness we imagine for other people than on the happiness we get to share with them instead, it finds enough fleeting joy to make being alive feel like its own eternal reward.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 21, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
By the time the movie arrives at its broadly sweet but emotionally hollow final scene, it seems clear that the Zucheros want the audience to feel everything, but all I felt was nothing.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 19, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
Schoenbrun’s astonishing second feature manages to retain the seductive fear of their micro-budget debut and deepen its thrilling wounds of discovery even while examining them at a much larger scale.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 19, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
A sensitive but almost fatally self-absorbed death drama that has much to say and little to feel.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 16, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
What this movie has — courtesy of Kurt Wimmer’s upwardly mobile script — is a rickety ladder that it climbs from comically low stakes up to the highest levels of power.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 10, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
Fans of “The Raid” franchise will feel right at home, even if Mayhem! never approaches the operatic scale that made the fight scenes in those movies feel larger than life.- IndieWire
- Posted Jan 4, 2024
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- David Ehrlich
Where the previous “Aquaman” was psychedelically high on its own supply and so eager to top itself that it eventually led to Jason Momoa talking to a mythical sea monster who sounded a lot like Julie Andrews, “The Lost Kingdom” becomes more and more formulaic as it digs into its mythos, as if the movie were caught between being its own thing and being nothing at all.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 21, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
Anyone but You actually works best when it leans harder towards the screwball comedies of the 1930s than it does the more grounded rom-coms they inspired at the end of the century.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 21, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
The Boys in the Boat would be the most old-fashioned movie of the year even if the year were 1994. For at least the first half of Clooney’s latest movie, the comfort food of it all proves to be part of its gently stirring charm, stale as it might be.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 15, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
It’s hard to be even morbidly curious, let alone excited, about any future iterations or installments of a franchise so determined to remix a million things you’ve seen before into one thing you’ll wish you’d never seen at all.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 15, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
Durkin’s movie has its fair share of crucial moments in the ring, but none of them would land with a fraction of the same impact if not for the many crystalline little moments in which Kerry, Kevin, David, and Mike get to build each other up.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 12, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
The End We Start From leaves most of its spectacle to the imagination (radio news reports handle the lion’s share of the heavy lifting), freeing Belo to train her camera on the whirlwind of emotions that storm across Comer’s face as her character gradually comes to realize that none of this is just for now.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 8, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
Watching Brosnan shoot a henchman’s earring off from 20 feet away is fun and all, but the real pleasure of Fast Charlie has less to do with such “he’s still got it!” theatrics than it does with the slow-boiling idea that, for Charlie and Marcie, the best might still be yet to come.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 5, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
But it’s the shadow of despair that “Wonka” traces most clearly; the cloud of disenchantment that can hover over every inch of our waking lives when the wrong people are allowed to monopolize our dreams. This may not be Paul King’s most satisfying film, but even at a scale — or at least a budget — several times larger than that of “Paddington 2,” the purity of its imagination remains unquestionable.- IndieWire
- Posted Dec 4, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
While the rest of Silent Night is so abysmal that its prologue might as well be the last hour of “Hard Boiled” by comparison, it’s hard to imagine a more appropriate introduction to a movie whose only upside is the vulgar thrill of watching something that feels utterly anonymous and wildly idiosyncratic at the same time.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 27, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
Its characteristic focus on the tension between tactile labor and abstract crises — between day-to-day upkeep and spiritual survival — is present from the opening moments, but so is its characteristic refusal to artificially define the contours of that tension.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 21, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
A somewhat funny, perversely family-friendly musical-comedy about all of the ways that modern parents are making their children insane with anxiety.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 17, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
Waterloo makes for a clear and terrific setpiece that’s almost on par with the digital spectacle that Scott creates from the cold death of Austerlitz, but by that point Napoleon’s outsized ambitions have been long subsumed by a film so lost in its epic sweep that it’s become the butt of its own, frequently scathing joke.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 14, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
Significantly more intimate and grounded than the previous “Hunger Games” movies (despite being longer than any of them and responsible for seeding all of their lore), “The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes” is the rare prequel that manages to stand on its own two feet and still feel taller than the other stories it’s ultimately meant to support.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 9, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
A Still Small Voice — much like the residency program that it chronicles — is all the more valuable because it never pretends that being a palliative chaplain is an inherently selfless task.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 8, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
Bernstein’s debut is at once both too grounded to be so broad, and too heightened to honor the tragic reality of its circumstances.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 7, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
Perhaps suffering from the same kind of identity crisis as its heroine, Burger’s soggy mishmash of an adaptation struggles to thread the needle between pulpy fun and a probing character study.- IndieWire
- Posted Nov 2, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
A repetitive slog that’s only shape or narrative momentum comes from its slow unmasking as religious propaganda.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 27, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
Every winking iris shot and cheesy cross-dissolve adds to the timeless spirit of a film that knows beauty may be short-lived, but good schlock never dies.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 26, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
I’m all for comedies mixing things up with deliberate intention, but “Old Dads” smacks of simple rookie mistakes that suck the air out of even Burr’s most road-tested bits; the plotting is so clumsy and erratic that it’s easier to stop following the story and just keep a running list of all the things that make Jack angry.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 19, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
In some respects, it feels like the most nakedly personal film the now 83-year-old has ever made. In others, it feels like the only film he’s ever made. Or maybe all of them.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 18, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
This low-rent, no-energy, seen-it-all-before genre wank left me absolutely terrified of returning to an era when micro-blogged cries for help could last for half a year and run the length of a novella.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 13, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
An execrable film that’s redeemed by almost nothing besides Leslie Odom Jr.’s well-modulated lead performance and the ambient sense of unease that Green casts over the story’s first half, “Believer” is so creatively spineless and bereft of its own ideas that its entire concept of sacrilege is limited to imperiling its franchise’s legacy.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 4, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
Perverse as it is to cast two of the world’s most talented young actors as the two sides of a curdled marriage, Mescal and Ronan both excel at sinking into themselves, with the latter’s irrepressible force of will squeezing against the walls of the musty farmhouse as if her life were a shoe five sizes too small.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 30, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
There’s nowhere for the movie to go once it establishes that the safety love offers can also be the source of its undoing.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 26, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
But the most fundamental reason why “The Creator,” for all of its shortcomings and clichés, ultimately sold me on its optimism is that it succeeds as a blueprint where it fails as a movie.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 26, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
Things get harried in a hurry, and while Duffield doesn’t reinvent the wheel when it comes to the various “Home Alone”-like battles that pit Alien vs. Dever, the “Spontaneous” director stages them with rare aplomb and an unerring respect for the fact that Brynn’s house represents her entire universe.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 22, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
These days, it’s almost refreshing to see a big dumb garbage sequel that doesn’t have any other agend4.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 21, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
A litany of jolt-focused dream sequences do little to escalate the tension or advance the plot, and Dutta — making his feature directorial debut — hasn’t developed a deep enough skill set for the scares to be as specific to his movie as Sam’s fears are to her immigrant experience.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 20, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
Betts’ adaptation never loses its sense of humor, and the multiplex flair it brings to such a sensitive subject — its wry, politically inclusive approach to illustrating how burying America’s heartache without a headstone only guarantees that the pain will continue — allows for a verdict that feels damning and hopeful in equal measure.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 13, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
Long on voiceovers, short on specificity, and so high on the generic-brand Scorsese of it all that it glosses right over the gray areas that make its characters so tragic, Yates’ film is more focused on being easy to swallow than it is on meaningfully addressing the source of the pain.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 11, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
Dream Scenario is simply the best absurdist comedy of its kind since “Anomalisa” (the Kaufman connection being further cemented by a Cage performance that feels like it was born from superimposing both of his “Adaptation” characters on top of each other. …And also by a running joke about antkind).- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 10, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
Much like “Les Misérables” before it, “Les Indésirables” is a series of riveting setpieces that are strung together with a mess of exposed wires, and much like “Les Misérables” before it, “Les Indésirables” can be easy to forgive for its contrivances because Ly’s anger is so palpable, his vision so viscerally lived-in, and his widescreen cinema so capable of galvanizing suffering through spectacle (a mixed blessing).- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 9, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
When enthusiasm alone can no longer keep the ship afloat, sheer audacity rides to the rescue, as “Dicks” ends with an inevitable but satisfying eruption of bad behavior that feels so good — one that leaves you wondering just how much funnier and more transgressive this movie could have been had it allowed itself to go that hard from the start.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 9, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
While this dream-like warble of a swan song may be too pitchy and scattered to hit with the gale-force power that made “The Wind Rises” feel like such a definitive farewell, The Boy and the Heron finds Miyazaki so nakedly bidding adieu — to us, and to the crumbling kingdom of dreams and madness that he’ll soon leave behind — that it somehow resolves into an even more fitting goodbye, one graced with the divine awe and heart-stopping wistfulness of watching a true immortal make peace with their own death.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 7, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
We can appreciate the righteous good of putting something like “Rustin” into the world at the same time as we lament how sorely the film lacks its namesake’s inspirational flair for defying convention.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 6, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
The singular vibration that Nichols brings to the golden age of motorcycles gives way to the all-too-familiar entropy that ended it, as a movie that busts out of the gate as some kind of new American classic ultimately runs out of gas on the side of the highway.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 6, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
Powell and Arjona have fizzy chemistry with each other, which isn’t much of a shock for two people who could probably get a spark going with a paper bag during a rainstorm, but it’s fun to watch both of their characters throw themselves into their new lives.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 5, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
The film’s true power stems from and speaks to our specifically present condition as people beset on all sides by the fears of our own imagination. By the trauma of something that already happened, or the terror of something that might.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 5, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
I was bored or exasperated by almost every minute of “Aggro Dr1ft,” but there are only 80 of them, and not a single second of this AI-inflected nightmare experiment feels insincere.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 5, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
Priscilla may not be one of the better movies that Coppola has ever made . . . but it stands apart from the rest of her work as the uniquely sensitive and self-honest portrait of a girl who starts to realize that she may have outgrown her greatest fantasy.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 4, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
The vibes are immaculate from the start and only grow more so as the characters gradually start to become as detailed as the world that “The Holdovers” constructs around them.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 3, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
Another smirking and vaguely satirical psycho-thriller that wants to have its cake, eat it too, and then soil the plate for good measure, Fennell’s immaculately crafted follow-up to “Promising Young Woman” might have a lot more fun pushing your buttons if it had any clue how to get under your skin.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 2, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
Haigh tells this potentially maudlin story with such a light touch that even its biggest reveals hit like a velvet hammer, and his screenplay so movingly echoes Adam’s yearning to be known — across time and space — that the film always feels rooted in his emotional present, even as it pings back and forth between dimensions.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 1, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
While The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar may be, in some respects, the most literal Dahl adaptation you could possibly imagine, the true author of this project is never in doubt.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 1, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
El Conde isn’t big on subtlety (Lachman’s rich cinematography offers the film its only shades of gray), and so it feels like a missed opportunity that Larraín didn’t squeeze more juice from the all-too-relevant fact that deposing a fascist from power isn’t the same as defeating them.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 31, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
A horror movie — even one as grounded and genre-adjacent as this — can’t hope to survive if it doesn’t even feel believable on its own fantastical terms.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 18, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
The Reyes family is a fun group, and “Blue Beetle” is at its best whenever it lets them lead the way.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 16, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
Sometimes, this peculiarly amusing film argues in its own special way, coming face-to-face with the weirdness that life throws your way can be the most important step towards learning how to live with it.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 14, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
If you’re going to make an R-rated horror wank about Dracula slurping throats with a smile on his face, make sure that the rest of the movie doesn’t suck as hard as he does.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 10, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
This visceral portrait of life during wartime is at its most harrowing and unshakeable when it confronts the heightened reality of its conceit with the apathetic naturalism of its drama.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 4, 2023
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- David Ehrlich
This decades-spanning drama — a lyrical and probing adaptation of David Chariandy’s novel about two siblings coming of age under the care of their Trinadadian single mother in the suburbs of Toronto — is so unstuck in time and shot through with raw emotion that its clunkier moments tend to function like tender maps back to the heart of the matter.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 4, 2023
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