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
Abbasi isn’t a subtle filmmaker, and his need to provoke sometimes undermines his points; his previous movie, the serial-killer thriller Holy Spider (2022), was a commentary on social misogyny that inadvertently courted the very thing it was trying to criticize. Here, the blunt force works in his film’s favor.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 21, 2024
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- David Fear
The universal rule of sequels dictates that you give viewers another helping of the same thing yet somehow make it different, the sort of koan that only makes sense to lifelong Zen masters and studio suits. Yet, against the odds, the creators of this continuation have managed to do more than just produce a carbon copy with a new number after the title.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 14, 2025
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- David Fear
Is this moving-picture love letter overly sentimental, sloppy to a fault, and slightly more affectionate toward its posthumous subject than a basket of puppies high on laughing gas? Yes. Does that mean that, in its own way, it perfectly mirrors Candy’s own tendency to overdo it and still make you like him, really, really like him? Also yes.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 5, 2025
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- David Fear
Director Paolo Sorrentino’s gorgeously gaudy, chalice-runneth-over satire, is really about one person: Silvio Berlusconi.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 27, 2019
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- David Fear
It’s a delightful throwback to an age when a comic mystery fueled by someone with a screen-friendly persona and even screen-friendlier good looks weren’t an anomaly, and a perfect vehicle for Hamm. It’s right in the breezy, funny, irreverent sweet spot in which a filmmaker poised between journeyman and auteur like Greg Mottola works best.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 26, 2022
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- David Fear
If nothing else, Damon and Affleck’s Beacon Street Wild Ride reminds you that movie stars plus car crashes, divided by gunshots and laughs, was part of a regular, balanced American-cinema breakfast.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 1, 2024
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- David Fear
Dragged Across Concrete is apt to send crime-film fanatics, especially ones who prefer their pulp nasty, brutish and incredibly long, into frothing fits of glee. For other folks, the title will double as an apt description experience of watching it.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 20, 2019
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- David Fear
So much of what makes Catherine Called Birdy sing comes down to Dunham and Ramsey working in conjunction to give you a portrait of a 13th-century teenager woman that feels thoroughly modern without being winky-nudgey, spiky and tender, oddly family-friendly while still being defiant.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 26, 2022
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- David Fear
It works far better as a free-floating vibe than a movie, which can be read as a backhanded compliment or a sign of surrender.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 11, 2024
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- David Fear
Yes, it’s grim and gloomy — and like Lil Peep’s music, there’s also a sense of catharsis in all of this. More than anything, Jones and Silyan seem to be fashioning a postmortem that plays like his greatest hits, in which wounded wooziness somehow gives way to exhilaration and a warped sense of uplift.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 19, 2019
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- David Fear
The Last Voyage of the Demeter is a threadbare high-concept story given the high-thread-count treatment — a lovely piece of luxury pulp. It’s also the creepiest and classiest bit of late-summer counterprogramming you’re likely to find, which may say more about our current landscape of cinematic pleasures than the movie itself.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 11, 2023
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- David Fear
It’s the sort of movie that likes its volume dial to be permanently stuck at 11, its references to be hidden in plain sight and/or deafeningly trumpeted and its freak flag flying very, very high.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 5, 2018
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- David Fear
You can’t say that Gyllenhaal hasn’t gone for broke with The Bride!, and the more you watch the actors give life to the central idea of a meeting of scarred bodies and equal minds, the more you feel like you’re watching something not just perversely over-the-top but personal.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 9, 2026
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- David Fear
What Soto and company have done with the saga of Jaime Reyes, however, suggests a formula that may save this whole genre from simply going down, down, and away- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 16, 2023
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- David Fear
The movie may ping between social drama and IRL courtroom saga. Whenever Foxx struts and frets — and bellows, coos, rages, and waltzes — his two hours upon this stage, you realize that it may simply work best as a star vehicle.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 13, 2023
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- David Fear
Like the young women who we spend nearly two hours with, we also emerge feeling both tinges of empowerment and a palpable sense of deflation.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 5, 2024
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- David Fear
It’s a documentary that starts as a nonfiction portrait and ends as a horror movie.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 9, 2019
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- David Fear
The filmmakers want to jolt folks, for sure. But they also want to bring you to a place where the emotional after effects of that juddering linger long after the jump scares have faded away.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 30, 2025
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- David Fear
Welcome to Chechnya is a horror movie, but it’s also a collective profile in courage. You can’t say that “such people” are not here. They are, and they’re not just heroes, the movie suggests. They’re the last thing standing between survival and a purge.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 30, 2020
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- David Fear
It’s not exactly the second coming of Walk Hard, though it’s the best Weird Al movie since UHF [cue laugh track and maybe a Whoppee Cushion sound effect] — and like Al himself, it still hits each beat with an infectiously goofy exuberance.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 9, 2022
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- David Fear
While no one could accuse Ticket to Paradise of being a “great” movie, or even a “very good” one, there’s something about watching Clooney and Roberts butt up against each other in front of a screen-saver background that scratches a long-dormant itch.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 20, 2022
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- David Fear
Mostly, it’s a testament to a storied legacy that may be gone, but deserves never to be forgotten.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 8, 2020
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- David Fear
It helps that Davis is insanely charismatic onscreen, but her ability to showcase the vulnerability and scar tissue beneath this human embodiment of an extended middle finger gives the movie a semblance of depth.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 19, 2018
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- David Fear
How to Talk to Girls at Parties is all feedback. It talks loud and says next to nothing.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 24, 2018
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- David Fear
A tonally uneven mishmash of Wes Anderson quirk, John Cassavetes guts-spilling and The Breakfast Club, all of which somehow manages to dampen the talents of its crack ensemble cast.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 3, 2017
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- David Fear
There's too much undeniably impressive filmmaking to dismiss Thelma; there's too much uncertain storytelling to actually recommend it. Trier undoubtedly has a great horror-movie character study in him. We can't wait to see it.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 9, 2017
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- David Fear
Tomb Raider may be a less camp, more cunning take on the arts and Crofts that have made the brand a hit, but to call this a better-than average videogame movie is to damn it with faint praise. Don't hate the players. Hate the genre.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 15, 2018
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- David Fear
These artists are risking everything by playing Western-influenced music; that Ghobadi cheapens and cheeses up their subversion with Hollywood tricks makes for a seriously bitter irony.- Time Out
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- David Fear
Starting with the French revolution and ending with Monsieur Bonaparte’s no-bang-all-whimper exit from this mortal coil, the director’s sweeping, swaggering, occasionally stumbling history lesson is nothing more than an attempt to conjure up the road-show movie magic of yesteryear.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 21, 2023
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- David Fear
What you won’t be bowled over by, however, is the storytelling, which makes Missing Link the weakest link in Laika’s chain of movies to date.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 9, 2019
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