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
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- David Fear
This is still star-driven, big-screen goofiness writ large, something to be consumed with popcorn and a crowd, and that fact its hitting U.S. screens during the summer dog days couldn’t be more welcome. You just might want to wear two masks in the theater.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 12, 2022
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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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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 25, 2019
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- David Fear
Thankfully, Lynn Hershman-Leeson's loosely organized doc offers a long-overdue primer on what these radical groundbreakers accomplished.- Time Out
- Posted May 31, 2011
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- David Fear
The film’s tendency to wax sentimental occasionally undermines its authority, but you won’t find better behind-the-scenes looks at the era’s mouse-eared power struggles or at the making of modern Disney classics.- Time Out
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- David Fear
Whether the climax, which veers close to magical realism and even closer to cloying, undoes the good will its built up will defend on the filmgoer. But for a long while, the tour these unlikely dreamers take you on is worth the trip. Samuel Clemens would have approved.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 9, 2019
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- David Fear
This may be the first film in which mutual attraction is commodified by cold, hard business talk.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 12, 2025
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- David Fear
There’s a lived experience pulsing at the center of this slice-of-life tale, which helps guide it over some of the more generic elements and weaker patches, especially when things threaten to detour directly into poverty-porn and/or Amerindie miserablism territory.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jul 28, 2023
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- David Fear
You leave impressed that Anderson can still manage to do what his does best without succumbing to self-parody here. The blueprint may be familiar. But it’s still a pretty foolproof plan.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 28, 2025
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- David Fear
The movie just ping-pongs between empathetic chuckles at Helms's charming social awkwardness and putting him through a raunchfest ringer.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 9, 2011
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- David Fear
The creative workaround does drop you into the middle of the shady-as-hell action in a way that, say, recordings playing over a close-up of a grainy photo does not. But it also starts to become more than a little distracting, and you find yourself tuning into the performances instead of the particulars of the case.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 17, 2021
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- David Fear
A strong contender for both the artiest drug movie and the druggiest art movie ever made, Gaspar Noé's tour de force of forced perspectives and free-form grief is, in every sense of the word, a trip.- Time Out
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- David Fear
The whole thing takes on a level of fractured fairy-tale storytelling that nods to both the Brothers Grimm and the father-figure Cronenberg.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 14, 2021
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- David Fear
Debate all you want about whether this movie actually teaches you how to train a dragon. What this movie is actually trying to accomplish, beyond a shadow of a doubt, is how to train their audiences to keep buying the same thing over, and over, and over again.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 11, 2025
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- David Fear
The way that Qualley brings her star presence and her chops to Honey O’Donoghue, however, feels unique. You’re used to seeing people in neo-noirs do their variations on Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall’s line readings; no one has managed to fuse those icons’ respective personae into one role and make it feel completely their own. It’s truly a great sync-up of performer and part.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 20, 2025
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- David Fear
Tuesday makes a strong case for death as a natural, if not the most natural part of life. It makes an even stronger case, however, for Julia Louis-Dreyfus being one of the greatest actors working today.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 10, 2024
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- David Fear
An intriguing stab at modern Hasidic horror — we smell a burgeoning subgenre — The Vigil will feel like well-trod ground to anyone who’s seen a few supernatural thrillers; only the neighborhood has changed.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 25, 2021
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- David Fear
Movies about children fending for themselves are predicated on pushing prepubescent despair into viewers' faces, which only makes this Swedish film's graceful mixture of terror and transcendental girl power that much more impressive.- Time Out
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- David Fear
The result may occasionally be more of a journalistic scrapbook than a Wisemanian all-points portrait, but the impact of seeing such unvarnished public activism in the raw can't be overestimated.- Time Out
- Posted Jun 12, 2012
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- David Fear
There is real joy in how this man lives perpetually in the moment, embracing the small, unassuming pleasures of the present.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 7, 2024
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- David Fear
Come for the way this film twists a disaster-movie premise into sociological commentary while still bringing the weirdness. Stay for how Kircher and Duris embed a father-son story into the fantastical elements, and transform a far-out tale of genetics run amuck into an elegy about the pain of letting go.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 15, 2024
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- David Fear
A former stand-up comic, Miller lends a sense of puckish mischief to his tenderhearted, troubled Cupid, yet everything else about this drama - even the cultural and spirit-of-'68 historical touches - feels like Nesher is simply mashing several stock elements together and gracelessly parading them around.- Time Out
- Posted Aug 14, 2012
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- David Fear
This is little more than an episode of VH1's Classic Albums writ large. You'll learn everything you ever wanted to know about the making of this chart-topping behemoth - except for insights about the man in the mirror who created it.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 19, 2012
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- David Fear
Yes, The Piano Lesson hits a few bum notes. Its melody nonetheless remains intact.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 21, 2024
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- David Fear
As something that seeks to confuse and delight you in equal measures, this is seven courses of absurdity, served with a side of tongue in cheek from a trio who know what they’re doing, even if you’re not always sure what that is.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 10, 2024
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- David Fear
By the time these two comedians are served dessert, they’re bickering over Coogan’s level of fame regarding a fake eulogy and trading celebrity impersonations. Fourth verse, same as the first. Only the scenery has changed.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 21, 2020
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- David Fear
The whole thing is a blast, which doesn’t mean you don’t sense that the stakes are high or that the tension between this threesome isn’t threatening to smother a great creative collaboration in the crib.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 5, 2019
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- David Fear
There's just enough uncut truth and soul in Fishbone's story to keep die-hard Boneheads skankin' to the beat, even if it's just for nostalgia's sake.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 20, 2012
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- David Fear
Peck has long cratfed impeccable, politically charged fictions, docs, and docudramas, whether it’s his 2000 biopic on Patrice Lumumba or his peerless portrait of James Baldwin (the aforementioned I Am Not a Negro). With this latest magnum opus, the Haitian filmmaker has given us not just an invaluable, iris-out look at our present moment but the scariest movie of 2025 by a wide margin.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 2, 2025
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- David Fear
Long after the dance-movie thrills are in the rearview and before the images turn themselves upside down — before the movie becomes a literal danse macabre — you find yourself impressed by the fact that he’s not out to recreate a bad acid trip. He’s trying to create his own bad trip sans the drugs. And the fucked up thing about it is: You end up wanting to go along for the ride.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 28, 2019
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