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
A star-studded new historical comedy that’s amusing at best, noxious at worst, and frantically self-insistent upon its own negligible entertainment value at all times as it strains to find the beauty in the mad tapestry of life? That’s right: David O. Russell is back.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 27, 2022
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- David Ehrlich
Janney makes a great murderous curmudgeon, but the script’s big reveal strands the actress with a “layered” character who’s never given the chance to transcend the most basic aspects of her archetype. Worse: She only gets to kill like three people!- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 23, 2022
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- David Ehrlich
If the movie itself can be as clumsy and erratic as its heroine — especially during a third act that tries to split the difference between the Dardenne brothers and “Dog Day Afternoon” — Davis’ performance holds it all together with the power of centrifugal force, the actress spinning in circles of joy and rage so fast that you couldn’t get up from your seat even if you wanted to.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 22, 2022
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- David Ehrlich
While depicting a landmark moment in humanity’s efforts to understand our place in the universe, Good Night Oppy renders the rovers’ journeys with such oppressive sentimentality terms that it can be hard to feel the full weight of the awe and wonder the movie drops into your lap.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 17, 2022
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- David Ehrlich
Devotion can be stiff and hackneyed at the best of times — it’s nothing if not a war movie that has seen too many other war movies — but it lifts a few inches off the ground whenever it locks in on the loneliness that Brown must have felt as he flew towards an aircraft carrier whose landing signal officer may have wanted him to crash, or soared in formation with people who might have been happy to shoot him down.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 17, 2022
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- David Ehrlich
There’s some fun to be had in the Brando-like flickers of Cage’s performance, but Polsky’s film is too practical and logic-driven to indulge them.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 17, 2022
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- David Ehrlich
Even a movie as evocative and well-mounted as this one can’t help but feel like a shadow of a shadow. It traces the silhouette of “The Strange One” without ever achieving the emotionality it needs to feel her touch first-hand.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 15, 2022
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- David Ehrlich
This could all feel schematic in lesser hands, but Neugebauer gives Lawrence and Henry the space they need to make the film’s characters feel like real people. As a result, the inevitable glimmer of hope they share at the end is as honest as the hurt that guided them to it.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 14, 2022
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- David Ehrlich
I’d say this playful yet nakedly personal coming-of-auteur epic was trying to split the difference between memoir and crowdpleaser, but it seems even more determined to reconcile the two: What else would Steven Spielberg’s ultimate divorce movie be about if not the hope for some kind of reconciliation?- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 11, 2022
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- David Ehrlich
If A Compassionate Spy is oddly dispassionate for a documentary so attuned to the humanistic inner-workings of history in progress, the film can’t help but find a measure of beauty in the unspoken trust that Ted and Joan placed in one another.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 9, 2022
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- David Ehrlich
While Love Life has its fair share of sharply written heart-to-hearts, many of its most touching moments (and all of its most telling ones) hinge on a certain kind of emotional geography.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 9, 2022
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- David Ehrlich
It’s the rare movie that can drop a long-take dance sequence into the middle of a pressing conversation without seeming the least bit mannered or aloof; the rare movie that only feels more honest as a result of its most flamboyant choices, and only makes its heroine more empathetic as a result of how she pushes other people away.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 8, 2022
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- David Ehrlich
The Son is too suffocated by the severity of its writing and the sterility of its environments for the film’s characters to grow beyond the scenarios they represent.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 7, 2022
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- David Ehrlich
Where Hogg’s last two movies saw the filmmaker tracing a version of herself from memory, this one sees her tracing a memory from a version of herself.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 6, 2022
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- David Ehrlich
This isn’t a film that strives for big laughs — McDonagh seems more interested in putting you in a particular frame of mind, even when doing so requires a fair bit of downtime and dead air — but its constant undercurrent of humor affords the story’s most pressing questions an appropriately ridiculous context, one that speaks to the absurdities of all existence.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 5, 2022
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- David Ehrlich
A stunning debut that develops with the gradual poignancy of a Polaroid, Charlotte Wells’ Aftersun isn’t just an honest movie about the way that we remember the people we’ve lost — fragmented, elusive, nowhere and everywhere all at once — it’s also a heart-stopping act of remembering unto itself.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 4, 2022
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- David Ehrlich
It’s wonderful that Mendes spent the pandemic making a movie about the irreplaceable vitality of movie theaters — even going so far as to paint them as one of the final strings in what’s left of our social fabric. It would have been even better if he spent the pandemic making a movie worth seeing in one.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 4, 2022
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- David Ehrlich
Hard as it might be to imagine, Women Talking is an upbeat and propulsive film cut with a sharp wit and a ready sense of humor, even if its characters are often laughing as hard as they wish they could cry.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 3, 2022
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- David Ehrlich
Impressive as it is that The Wonder is able to squeeze so much from its spartan trappings, the film still feels clipped at 110 minutes; there may not be a lot to chew on, but there’s almost too much to savor.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 2, 2022
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- David Ehrlich
Athena effectively taps into the class, racial, and religious angers of modern France, which it sees as a powder keg that’s just waiting for the right spark to explode, but the film’s broad saga of brothers in crisis is so thin and symbolic that any deeper connection to the real world is sacrificed at the altar of intensity. An intensity that resists psychology, muffles sociopolitical context, and eventually swallows itself whole.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 2, 2022
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- David Ehrlich
With “Bardo,” Iñárritu delivers a cartoonishly indulgent film about the fact that he makes cartoonishly indulgent films — a rootless epic about a rootless man who’s been unmoored by his own self-doubt.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 1, 2022
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- David Ehrlich
TÁR is a provocation full of slow-motion suckerpunches and the driest of laughs (even its accented title is a knowingly pretentious in-joke) and yet Field seems as uninterested in trolling his liberal audience as he is in patronizing them.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 1, 2022
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- David Ehrlich
Baumbach is ultimately too in sync with DeLillo for “White Noise” to escape from the shadow of its monolithic source material, as movie struggles to escape the hat on a hat sensation of that match between filmmaker and novelist, and often feels like the work of a third party who’s trying to imitate them both at once. All the same, you can still hear something almost subliminally divine under that uncanniness whenever Baumbach cranks up the volume.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 31, 2022
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- David Ehrlich
The genius of Legge’s design, and why his debut works as more than just a cute little curio despite its thinness, is that it mines a sneaky emotionality from the bedrock of the film-within-a-film structure.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 8, 2022
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- David Ehrlich
Luck is a terrible idea for a movie, executed poorly, and by someone who used to know better. The best thing I can say about the finished product is that, unlike most forms of bad luck, this one is wonderfully easy to avoid altogether.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 3, 2022
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- David Ehrlich
Pitt’s stardom has never been more obvious, and it shines bright enough here for everything else to get lost in the glare.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 2, 2022
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- David Ehrlich
This super-cheap Netflix Original is so determined to satisfy the algorithm that it would lack any coherent sense of self if not for the fact that it was chiefly designed as a star vehicle for Disney Channel grad Sofia Carson — but there’s something rather stubbornly honest about the heartbeat of desperation that thrums below its Walmart veneer.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 29, 2022
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- David Ehrlich
One Man Dies a Million Times” might be slow cinema writ large — its story told through erosion, and with all the velocity of a famine — but the half-imagined past that it remembers is coming for us at the speed of real life.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 28, 2022
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- David Ehrlich
Told with no frills, less personality, and just enough quiet dignity to sustain itself for 18 days (or 147 minutes), Howard’s serviceable “Thirteen Lives” is a far cry from the kind of souped-up spectacle some of his Hollywood contemporaries might create out of this material. And yet, its let the story speak for itself approach feels misjudged in the aftermath of a documentary so rich with big personalities, knotted with stomach-churning suspense, and shadowed by a lingering sense of ethical ambivalence.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 25, 2022
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- David Ehrlich
There’s such a warm buoyancy to My Donkey, My Lover & I — such a well-earned, rejuvenating naturalness to the way that Vignol addresses the insecurities and frustrations that keep middle-aged women from loving themselves — that it eventually hits with the same oomph of a film that takes itself far more seriously.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 21, 2022
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