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
Taut and well-acted as this queasy little thriller can be, its unflinching tale of corporate authoritarianism is much too streamlined to reflect the emotional truth of watching totalitarianism in motion. The result is a hollow synecdoche of today’s America that seems timely and ridiculous in equal measure.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 28, 2025
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- David Ehrlich
Life and art will always be more tightly entwined for Stiller than he knows how to untangle; that he’s at least learned to become aware of that is perhaps as touching and honest a tribute as he ever could have paid to his parents’ legacy.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 23, 2025
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- David Ehrlich
The Hand That Rocks the Cradle is easily at its best whenever it digs into the art of repression — repressed feelings, repressed desires, repressed pain.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 22, 2025
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- David Ehrlich
Even the most formulaic scenes in the film bop with the zest of history being lived first-hand, as if the script were happily oblivious to its own clichés, and while the filmmaking itself falls well short of creating the chaos that it aspires to celebrate, Fluk at least taps into the fun of telling us about it.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 20, 2025
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- David Ehrlich
See Fuck My Son! not because it’s good, but rather because it refuses to pretend that it isn’t bad. If only that argument were enough to convince me that it shouldn’t have been better.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 15, 2025
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- David Ehrlich
The director is so eager to make a spectacle out of this scenario that Good News begins to feel as self-insistent as its characters.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 15, 2025
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- David Ehrlich
Leto’s performance works because he’s so utterly believable as a soulless ghoul that it’s easy to buy into the happy-to-be-here warmth of his emergent humanity.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 7, 2025
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- David Ehrlich
Most of the shorts here try to use holiday goofiness as a gateway to serious terror, but unsurprisingly struggle to make it across that hell-mouth intact; meanwhile, the sole episode that keeps a straight face and taps into some of the real fears that accompany trick-or-treating manages to become the franchise’s most genuinely upsetting short in years.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 3, 2025
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- David Ehrlich
Every scene is relaxedly suffused with the tension between the limits of perspective and the empathy of storytelling, until the act of seeing becomes as problematized as the refusal to look, and the boundaries between reality and fiction grow as blurred as those between the various genres that Gavagai swirls into an unclassifiable sludge.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 3, 2025
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- David Ehrlich
While this isn’t quite the stuff of vintage Black, it’s close enough that I wouldn’t mind seeing him crank another one out every two years for the next decade.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 30, 2025
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- David Ehrlich
The action is taut, the stakes are clear, and Kirk never misses a chance to remind us that all of these are just regular people who’ve crossed paths in a dark place.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 25, 2025
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- David Ehrlich
Him asks its characters ad nauseam how far they would go to be great, but this dreadfully compromised movie never even risks enough to be good.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 18, 2025
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- David Ehrlich
One Battle After Another might be among the sillier films that Anderson has ever made, but there’s no mistaking the sincerity of its horrors, or how lucidly it diagnoses the smallness of the men inflecting them upon the innocent and the vulnerable.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 17, 2025
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- David Ehrlich
A propulsive (and hilarious) comedy that gradually melts into a dreamlike (and not so hilarious) modern fable, this hyper-stylized whatsit might be at its best when shooting fish in a barrel, but Gavras’ film is much less interested in poking fun at easy targets than it is in leveraging its characters — terrorist and hostage alike — towards unformed ideas about truth, performance, and the cleansing power of death in the face of a society so ego-driven that it’s impossible to tell the difference between heroes and clowns.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 13, 2025
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- David Ehrlich
Hypnotic from start to finish and unexpectedly hopeful for a movie with so much arsenic in its blood, Islands knows that even the greatest of vacations can never compete with the rewards of fostering a reality you actually want to return to when it’s over.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 9, 2025
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- David Ehrlich
Real or fake, finished or not, a genre exercise or a full-hearted statement of purpose, the things we create have an impact on the world that no market could ever be able to measure. And, for better or worse, the same is true of the people who are brave enough to create them.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 9, 2025
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- David Ehrlich
Eternity does what it can to leverage its heady concept into a heart-stirring tale of love and longing, but the world-building — or lack thereof — invariably gets in the way of the emotion that Freyne is hoping to generate from it.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 8, 2025
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- David Ehrlich
That Bad Apples is so much fun to hem and haw about is a testament to Ronan’s typically excellent performance, which showcases both her low-key comic charm and also her pronounced talent for ambivalence.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 8, 2025
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- David Ehrlich
This is a nice movie: the kind that’s lit brighter than a dentist’s office, scored by the lead singer of Sigur Rós (along with Alex Somers), and aimed towards a heart-stirring conclusion about empathy, isolation, and the power that we all have to affect each other’s lives. It’s about the hard areas of being human, but it only displays a passing interest in exploring them.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 6, 2025
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- David Ehrlich
Charli xcx’s casting adds a metatextual richness to the movie and vice-versa, as the friction between her pop star persona and Bethany’s somnambulant everywoman deepens the sense of a woman divided between the superreal and the literal, the spectacular and the mundane.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 5, 2025
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- David Ehrlich
At a time when the American government is waging a sustained attack on investigative journalism, and on the very nature of truth itself, to watch Cover-Up is not just to wonder what they might be trying to hide, but also to recognize that we’ve seen it before.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 5, 2025
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- David Ehrlich
The ultimate brilliance of Fastvold’s movie, which remains without question for all of its peaks and valleys, is that it has the courage to reimagine the essence of belonging itself; to see it not as something we find, but rather as something that we create together.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 1, 2025
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- David Ehrlich
Despite promising a welcome throwback to the sort of down-and-out milieu that authors like Graham Greene once put on the map, this Lawrence Osborne adaptation winds up feeling like nothing so much as a quintessential Netflix movie: Easy to watch and impossible to care about.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 31, 2025
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- David Ehrlich
The violent beauty of this film, which rips your soul out of your chest so completely that its seismic grief almost feels like falling in love or becoming a parent, is that it’s as much about the experience of having a child as it is about the experience of losing one.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 30, 2025
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- David Ehrlich
Cooper’s film wants to be the “Nebraska” of rock biopics, but it lacks the finesse to retain the essence of that sound when transferring it into the body of a commercial biopic. In that sense at least, it all too perfectly articulates how difficult it can be too move forward when something is holding you back.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 30, 2025
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- David Ehrlich
There are any number of movies about people who try to reinvent themselves in the face of a crisis. There are many fewer movies about people who violently refuse to even consider that idea — people who would rather kill someone else than become someone else. Park Chan-wook’s bleak, brilliant, and mordantly hilarious “No Other Choice” is the exception that proves the rule.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 29, 2025
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- David Ehrlich
Baumbach lacks Sofia Coppola’s singular ability to leverage a character’s wealth for the wanting it reveals of them, but he, Mortimer, and Clooney share a vivid understanding of the resentments that can form in the space between who we are and how we’re seen — and of how stardom can widen that space to the point that friendships and families are liable to fall into it unnoticed.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 28, 2025
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- David Ehrlich
Megalopolis is one of those movies that feels like it offers an accurate window behind the scenes of its own creation process, and Megadoc confirms as much without ever becoming redundant.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 28, 2025
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- David Ehrlich
Style has always been the vehicle for his substance, and while it’s easy to imagine why an overdone misstep like “Parthenope” might inspire Sorrentino to rein things in a bit for his next feature, it’s funny that said feature turned out to be the story of a man who threatens to unravel from self-doubt at the height of his power.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 27, 2025
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- David Ehrlich
For all the texture of the film, which was shot in and around a New York City vibrantly retrofitted to the story’s 1998-set specifications (costumes, music, locations, the whole kit), the hammy way important beats and plot points are served up feels out of step. It doesn’t pop, at least until the film’s final act, which finally brings together Aronofsky’s disparate parts and shows an inkling of what the filmmaker was attempting to capture.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 27, 2025
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