David Fear
Select another critic »For 1,267 reviews, this critic has graded:
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34% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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64% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 4.7 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
David Fear's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 61 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion [re-release] | |
| Lowest review score: | Madame Web | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 537 out of 1267
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Mixed: 641 out of 1267
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Negative: 89 out of 1267
1267
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- David Fear
Come for the uplift of an underdog sports story centered around the guys who made you realize a shoe isn’t just a shoe, superstar foot or not. Stay for the film that Davis gives you when, standing unguarded, she’s suddenly passed the ball, effortlessly rolls it off her fingertips, and gets nothing but net.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 4, 2023
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- David Fear
Part horror movie and part sideways swipe at cancel culture and social pariahdom, Dream Scenario is the sort of high-concept, surreal comedy that Michel Gondry, Spike Jonze, and Charlie Kaufman used to do on the regular — think Eternal Nicshine of the Spotless Cage.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 11, 2023
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- David Fear
Gillespie and his movie-star cast aren’t trying to short squeeze the topic for statuettes. They’re just laying out what happened, why it happened, and why it mattered in the most audience-friendly manner imaginable, then take the whole thing to the moon. And it’s the lack of pandering in the way that they do it while also drawing clear battle lines that make it a surprisingly safe bet. We like the stock here.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 11, 2023
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- David Fear
The movie nearly killed him (Gilliam). Yet the victory isn’t just that he finished it, but that he’s fashioned something so magnificent in its messiness. He should be proud as well as relieved. The impossible dream is dead. But long live The Man Who Killed Don Quixote.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 17, 2019
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- David Fear
Should you want to spend 90 minutes watching Nazis get shot, stabbed, gutted, blown up, run over, and beaten with a variety of inanimate objects, in the most violent and gory manner possible, this war movie is the answer to your pulp-cinema prayers.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 5, 2023
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- David Fear
She Said doesn’t pretend that wrongs have been righted once and for all. It just wants to pay tribute to two people stood up to a Goliath and took him down not with one good shot but a million tiny cuts and a lot of hard work.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 17, 2022
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- David Fear
Wicked may take great pains to recreate the musty Britain of the 1920s, but don’t be fooled by the cloche hats and frilly frocks. The female rage that powers every frame of this comedy didn’t go away when that decade ended. It’s regrettably more recognizable and still more righteous today one century later.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 27, 2024
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- David Fear
[Eichner] wanted to make a gay rom-com. It isn’t a huge leap, however, to say that he’s both entertaining a mass audience and leaving his own mark on a long, storied history of fighting to be seen and heard — to tell stories that have been dismissed or neglected or suppressed. Mission accomplished.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 3, 2022
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- David Fear
If this pitch-black comedy seems perilously close to falling apart under the weight of its creator’s ambitions and near-camp aesthetic (a common problem with even the best of Dupieux’s work), it also comes at a type of delusional alpha dudes in the most gleefully caustic of ways.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 30, 2020
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- David Fear
While the movie also offers a much-needed context of the “Satanic panic” of the ’80s and ’90s — backwards messages and heavy metal and Dungeons & Dragons, oh my! — as well as vintage afternoon-TV handwringing and glimpses of organizational in-fighting, it’s these scenes of folks engaging in real political showdowns by any ridiculous means necessary that give the movie its sense of currency.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 20, 2019
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- David Fear
Chase has delivered something that walks the tightrope between social melodrama and fan service, and that sometimes teeters on the edge of falling. But he has also given us the foundation for the moment when a man from New Jersey will wake up one morning and get himself a gun.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 28, 2021
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- David Fear
War Game concentrates a lot on the “how to” part. But it also says a lot about how eerily easy and how horrifyingly relatable the “why” of it all is.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 2, 2024
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- David Fear
It’s all a very by-the-books music biopic, which the sole exception of which species is singing about manufacturing miracles and angels contemplating his fate.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 25, 2024
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- David Fear
The movie may want you to see the best of us in the dingiest of places. But you’re as delusional as Mikey Saber if you think it will avert its eyes from showing us the worst of us as well.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 6, 2021
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- David Fear
It’s a surprisingly good sports movie that wants little more than to be a surprisingly good sports movie, one that knows it’s working with creaky triumph-of-the-underdog clichés but is willing to do a full-court press to sell them.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 14, 2022
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- David Fear
What gives this pulpy creation such a savory flavor and lasting bite isn’t just the puncturing of romantic clichés cemented 24 frames per second over decades, or the low-hanging-fruit pokes at society’s reliance on technology taken to extremes. It’s the way it makes you suddenly start questioning the whole notion of finding your soulmate if, given the opportunity, you can just purchase them and pay on installment.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 31, 2025
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- David Fear
There’s a whole other movie happening within Good Fortune‘s attempt to Aesop-fable its way to some moral about a modest life being a more fulfilling one even if you’re forced to live in your car. And when Reeves gives you a glimpse of that story, in which someone truly learns that humanity is both painful and blissful in equal measures, and anchors it all with a truly divine turn, well — you feel fortunate that get to witness that.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 17, 2025
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- David Fear
There are many elaborate lessons on life and how to live it in Soul, though its best may ironically be its simplest: Look. Listen. Learn. Enjoy. You may not turn the film off with an answer to what a soul is. But you may find yourself wondering if you’re forgetting to occasionally connect with your own.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 29, 2020
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- David Fear
Fans have been patiently waiting for the screen version of Wicked for decades now, and it’s safe to say that their faith will be rewarded. It’s also obvious that as much as this is still a tale of two witches, each blessed with equally beautiful voices, there’s a very clear standout here that’s lifting this occasionally leaden jazz-hands-extravaganza up to higher ground.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 19, 2024
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- David Fear
The Wind does indeed blow a hell of a chill through you, though that has less to do with thing that bump in the night than in the psyche.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 5, 2019
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- David Fear
[Parker's] made a scary movie that balances psychological shock therapy with old-fashioned fright, shadowy dread with blunt splatterfest FX, an artsy-fartsy sense of stylistics slapped on to a twisty B-movie scenario. It may open with Paramount name slapped on the beginning, but this is textbook A24 horror by any other name.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 29, 2022
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- David Fear
The Guilty is many things, not all of which work 100-percent of the time. But it does succeed as one hell of a radio play with benefits, letting a literal call-and-response crime procedural play out in real time.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 18, 2018
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- David Fear
To say that this horror movie hits all of the marks it needs to hit would be just south of blasphemous. The manner in which Grant both grounds the material and lobs it into over-the-top territory, however, is simply divine.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 8, 2024
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- David Fear
This tender, gory trip through the guts of a nation is blessed with one of those magical instances of casting the right actor in the right part, and it’s impossible to think of someone else who could do justice to this young woman the way that Taylor Russell does.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 21, 2022
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- David Fear
A throwback WWII men-on-a-mission adventure marinated in modern bloodlust and movie references, this particularly pulpy take on a Dad Cinema staple couldn’t be more violent and more derivative of past works. It also couldn’t be more of a blast to watch if you enjoy a certain strain of carbon-dated derring-do mixed with cheeky carnage.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 18, 2024
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- David Fear
It’s an unabashedly style-over-substance take on a particular type of modern horror story. This is less a serial-killer thriller than a feature-length nightmare vibe.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jul 11, 2024
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- David Fear
Like the movie itself, the performance doesn’t need to reinvent the wheel in terms of how a good man goes evil. But both the actor and Ballad seem to respect the fans and the franchise, not just in terms of investment but in building out things sideways instead of forward.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 16, 2023
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- David Fear
A movie that starts off as a scalpel-sharp satire, casually slides into becoming a skin-of-your-teeth horror film and ends as a flamebroiled screed in more ways than one, director Mark Mylod’s Grand Guignol take on the master-and-servant relationship of hospitality industries will not suit everyone’s palettes.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 21, 2022
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- David Fear
There’s a good deal of fun in Glass Onion too, along with some sharp throwaway lines and the joy of watching actors dig into parts in which the option of going over the top has already been built in.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 22, 2022
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- David Fear
Pieces of a Woman largely belongs to the woman on the verge of a nervous breakdown at its center, however, and it’s Vanessa Kirby who gifts the film with The Performance.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 8, 2021
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