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
It’s a near-perfect portrait of a domestic tragedy as a master-and-servant psychodrama, one that leaves catastrophic collateral damage in its wake.- Time Out
- Posted Jul 30, 2013
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- David Fear
The final KO of a brilliant cinematic one-two punch, Leos Carax’s follow-up to his gobsmacking feature debut, Boy Meets Girl (1984), proved this enfant terrible was no one-hit wonder. Boy still meets girl, in the form of feral Denis Levant and gorgeous Juliette Binoche, but this sophomore outing’s real romantic coupling is an artist swooning head over heels for his medium.- Time Out
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- David Fear
The attention to visuals is above and beyond what most vérité is capable of; doing double duty as the film's cinematographer, Fan demonstrates a pitch-perfect photojournalistic eye.- Time Out
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- David Fear
Seeds is, at the abundant heart of it all, a work of protest art and political activism through sheer poetry. Attention must be paid.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 20, 2026
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- David Fear
Though McQueen continues to work his themes of suffering and spiritual transcendence, this unflinching, unforgiving drama is not about a slave, but about slavery itself.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 15, 2013
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- David Fear
What Raimi has done with his contribution, however, is construct not another roller coaster but one hell of a haunted house, one fueled by an abundance of eccentric creativity, imagination, and finely honed chops. The methods he employs to his Madness are what makes this movie stick out, in this or any other universe.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 3, 2022
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- David Fear
All of this is presented with Director Park’s usual eye for extraordinary compositions and the occasional baroque flourish — dig that shot from the bottom of a boilermaker, as it’s being consumed! — but rest assured his tongue is resting comfortably in his cheek.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 23, 2025
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- David Fear
Even with its simple set-up and at a scant 71 minutes, there’s an entire buffet for thought laid out here. Alexandrowicz may have given us the single best documentary of the year; he has undoubtedly given us one of the most vital.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 9, 2021
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 7, 2018
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- David Fear
Varda by Agnès goes out not with a bang but a graceful farewell, as the director sits on a beach, a sandstorm whipping around her as vows to “disappear in the blur” and slowly fades from the image.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 27, 2019
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- David Fear
It’s a harrowing documentary, to be sure, but also healing in a way that doesn’t go for easy emotional button-pushing, or play down the white-knuckle struggle they endure while processing all of it.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 22, 2021
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- David Fear
It’s a matter of opinion whether Thunder Road is one of the best films of 2018, a distinction best left for listmakers and marketers. (Cue “It, Me” copping to the former.) But I can say it’s one of my favorites, the sort of experience where you walk out of a theater 90 minutes later and feel like something inside you has shifted two klicks to the left.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 11, 2018
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- David Fear
This is an actors’ film, one that proudly wears its women-run-the-world bona fides on its sleeve. They provide the sisterhood and the sense of boiling over. After a full-circle callback to its beginning, Support the Girls ends, pitch-perfectly, with a primal scream therapy session on the top of a strip-mall building, female voices being heard above highway noise.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 24, 2018
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- David Fear
What Seligman, Sennott and Edebiri have given us is nothing less than a Heathers for this generation. It hits you, and it feels like a kiss.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 13, 2023
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- David Fear
It’s a devastating look at paternal love and resilience, which respectfully follows this grieving father (and several others like him) as he refuses to give up.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 10, 2026
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- David Fear
Love Lies Bleeding doesn’t have time for a slow burn. It’s a movie that comes in hot and leaves in a molten blaze of glory.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 22, 2024
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- David Fear
Williams and Bernal aren’t focused on making a dramatized ESPN-friendly narrative or a melodrama about a gay man suffering the slings and arrows of intolerance. They’re far more interested in what resides in the thin middle of that Venn diagram, in which a luchador finds his authentic self in the most outrageous, over-the-top way possible, and revolutionizes a sport in the process.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 21, 2023
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- David Fear
It’s a great espionage thriller, and an even better scenes-from-a-marriage drama. Ian Fleming would love this. So would Ingmar Bergman.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 12, 2025
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- David Fear
It’s a movie that utilizes every bit of Gavras’ abundant chops and marshals them to make a coherent statement, tapping brains and heart and spleen in the name of forcing you to recognize what he’s putting in front of you.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 8, 2022
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- David Fear
It’s the perfect movie for Louis-Dreyfus to flex her comitragic chops.- Rolling Stone
- Posted May 26, 2023
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- David Fear
It’s one of the best films of the year, full stop. But now it’s both invaluable and something of a warning for many of us on the shape of things to come.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 18, 2025
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- David Fear
Sciamma is weaving a spell here, so pure in its emotional resonance that it breaks your heart even as it heals wounds.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Apr 19, 2022
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- David Fear
The movie would hit every bullseye it needed to even without her near-surgical deconstruction of the narcissistic monsters who scream “action” and “cut.” With Cruz’s take on artistic “genius,” however, this satire officially becomes a work of actual genius.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 16, 2022
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- David Fear
Part anthropological study, part rise-and-fall epic and all-out mesmerizing, this regional spin on the “family business” saga makes you rethink the notions behind why we watch crime flicks past the vicarious thrills. It’s both foreign and familiar.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 14, 2019
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- David Fear
Atlantics pulls you into an experience. The empathy machine runs at full speed here. Ada, c’est moi.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 16, 2019
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- David Fear
Watching Collective when it premiered on the fall festival circuit last year, it was easy to see that it should be considered a flat-out masterpiece regardless of timing. Yet to watch it, or rewatch it, now is to experience something even deeper. It’s a story of a nation’s inability to take care of its citizens that comes to us in the middle of a pandemic that’s crippling America’s economy and killing its citizens.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 3, 2020
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- David Fear
There are surreal and absurdist touches throughout Nyoni’s second feature, and like the Zambian filmmaker’s awe-inspiring debut, I Am Not a Witch (2017), it proves she has a perfect sense of how to blend no-nonsense realism with its more magical counterpart.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 7, 2025
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- David Fear
Kapadia, as masterful a filmmaker as they come, is happy to let viewers wonder where these stories will intersect, and how they’ll collide into or off of each other.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 15, 2024
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- David Fear
Prey, director Dan Trachtenberg’s addition to the Predatorverse, isn’t just an intriguing expansion of the series or a cool intellectual-property detour; it’s something close to a B-movie masterpiece, a survivalist thriller-slash-proto-Western-slash-final-girl horror flick that, like both its iconic alien and its indigenous Ripley 2.0 heroine, is extremely good at what it sets out to do.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 4, 2022
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- David Fear
Erivo is not the only reason to see Drift. But the actor most certainly is the reason to see it ASAP.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 14, 2024
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