David Rooney
Select another critic »For 1,353 reviews, this critic has graded:
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54% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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44% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 1.9 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
David Rooney's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 67 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | The Hand of God | |
| Lowest review score: | The School for Good and Evil | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 836 out of 1353
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Mixed: 433 out of 1353
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Negative: 84 out of 1353
1353
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- David Rooney
There’s a beguiling dichotomy in Kristen Stewart’s accomplished first feature as writer-director — between the dreamlike haze and fragmentation of memory and the raw wound of trauma so vivid it will always be with you.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 18, 2025
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- David Rooney
Ramsay’s film is hard to love, but that beautiful visual casts such an intense glow it pulls the whole unwieldy thing together.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 18, 2025
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- David Rooney
It’s bloated, self-indulgent, rambling, crazily ambitious and commendably odd, but so overstuffed it becomes a lethal combination of baffling and boring.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 16, 2025
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- David Rooney
If it’s going to be the last we see of one of the most consistently entertaining franchises to come out of Hollywood in the past few decades — a subject about which Cruise and McQuarrie have remained vague — it’s a disappointing farewell with a handful of high points courtesy of the indefatigable lead actor.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 14, 2025
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- David Rooney
This is distilled Mamet, peeling back psychological layers and building characters exclusively through chiseled dialogue.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 8, 2025
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- David Rooney
While a handful of the characters and the actors playing them have appeared in previous entries, there’s a disarming freshness to this first-time assembly, not to mention something even more unexpected: heart. That’s due to an appealing ensemble cast but also to the new blood of a creative team with a distinctive take on the genre.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 29, 2025
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- David Rooney
With Hardy in fine form at the wheel, Havoc knows what its audience wants. It also looks great.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 24, 2025
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- David Rooney
The pangolin is such a unique beast — this one hilariously feisty and driven — and Thomas’ dedication to its care so touching that the captivating movie never loosens its hold.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 17, 2025
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- David Rooney
As much arthouse as grindhouse, it’s a blood-drenched mix tape that shouldn’t work. But it does, thanks to Coogler’s muscular direction, a terrific cast, enveloping IMAX visuals, body-quaking sound and music that stirs the soul while setting the pulse racing.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 10, 2025
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- David Rooney
The thing about James Hawes’ film of the 1981 Robert Littell novel is that while it prompts raised eyebrows with the contrivances of its plotting and the seeming ease with which the underestimated protagonist outwits everyone, it at least looks and feels like a real movie.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 8, 2025
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- David Rooney
As courageous as the platoon members are, Warfare is not to be confused with a movie about heroism; it’s a movie about hell that leaves you shaken.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 28, 2025
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- David Rooney
There’s no escaping the fact that Eric Larue is a downer, but it’s a work of thoughtful intelligence and restraint, elegantly shot and graced by a striking score from Jonathan Mastro full of dissonant strings that often evoke a sense of nerves about to shatter. Most of all, it’s beautifully acted.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 25, 2025
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 19, 2025
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- David Rooney
Anvari’s movie strikes a keen balance between psychological thriller and eerie folkloric horror. Its disturbing ambiguities take on whole new shadings after an unexpected reveal in the end credits.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 12, 2025
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- David Rooney
The actors are all game for anything, but this is thankless work, in which the mix of live action and animatronics has no magic. The same goes for the talented voice cast, which also includes Colman Domingo and Hank Azaria in small roles.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 7, 2025
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- David Rooney
It’s witty, stylishly crafted and boasts a stellar ensemble, led by especially toothsome work from Cate Blanchett and Michael Fassbender. It keeps you glued, even if the movie ultimately feels evanescent, a slick diversion you forget soon after the end credits have rolled.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 6, 2025
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- David Rooney
Blue Moon is a deceptively modest project, but it’s beautifully executed and fascinatingly nuanced despite being quite straightforward in terms of plot.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 18, 2025
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- David Rooney
Bong’s adventurous new film barrels forward with chaotic plotting, as is often the case with the director’s work. But thematic coherence remains frustratingly elusive.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 15, 2025
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- David Rooney
What really distinguishes Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy, however, is the depth of feeling it brings to the protagonist’s grief and her gradual emergence from it. That goes double for Zellweger’s performance.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 12, 2025
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- David Rooney
The movie arguably takes a little too long to kick in, but once its sense of danger — devious, disturbing, wryly amusing — is established, it never stops.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 5, 2025
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- David Rooney
The Ballad of Wallis Island breaks no new ground, but it’s an unexpectedly pleasurable, funny-sad watch, full of sweet, soothing music.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 5, 2025
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- David Rooney
Despite its shadowy visuals and insidious soundscape, it’s neither frightening enough to play like full-fledged horror, nor complex or curious enough to pack much weight as psychological drama.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 31, 2025
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- David Rooney
Bryn Chainey’s Rabbit Trap has a creepy sense of dread, striking images of invasive nature and an intriguing baseline about the otherworldly properties of sound, making it a somewhat promising debut feature.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 31, 2025
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- David Rooney
First-time writer-director Carmen Emmi’s aesthetically overworked use of low-grade video and distorted sound is intrusive, but very fine performances from Tom Blyth and Russell Tovey keep you glued to this sexy, sad, authentically gritty drama.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 31, 2025
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- David Rooney
It’s Never Over might not be the Buckley bio everyone needs, but it’s a stirring tribute made with a lot of heart.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 30, 2025
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- David Rooney
It’s refreshing to see a horror movie that relies less on shock tactics than good old-fashioned dread and revulsion.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 30, 2025
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- David Rooney
The passage of time is somehow both fluid and jagged in Clint Bentley’s soulful film of the Denis Johnson novella, Train Dreams. It flows or ambles or bumps along, passing over moments of joy, shock, discovery, lonesomeness or devastating sadness, but just as often over seemingly mundane experiences that only later reveal their significance when we look back.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 29, 2025
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- David Rooney
Funny and poignant in equal measure, the comedy of manners does sag here and there, with a noticeable energy dip around the two-thirds mark. But the winning cast are able to steer it back on track before the irresistibly sweet conclusion.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 28, 2025
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- David Rooney
Bill Condon sets himself a tough assignment trying to transform the tricky material into a great movie musical, but thanks in part to laudable work from his three leads, he occasionally comes close.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 28, 2025
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- David Rooney
Poetic in its simplicity yet crafted with as meticulous attention to detail as Hujar’s reflections on his day, this is a singular meditation on the life of an influential artist for whom major recognition came only after his death. It has the feel of a rare find plucked from a dusty archive.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 27, 2025
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- David Rooney
While the drama depicts a situation most parents would find unthinkable, it does so with unfailing compassion and sensitivity.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 25, 2025
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- David Rooney
Made with love and acted with great empathy by a cast led by always dependable pros Olivia Colman and John Lithgow, Jimpa is nothing if not sincere. But to be brutally honest, it’s also kind of a cringey bore, like being stuck in a room with a bunch of oversharers from queer studies class.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 25, 2025
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- David Rooney
Through all this, Byrne’s high-wire act remains riveting, scrutinized for long stretches of the film in DP Christopher Messina’s probing closeups. It’s a bruising performance, digging deep into the intense pressure and isolation that can sometimes accompany motherhood.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 25, 2025
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- David Rooney
The movie won’t carve a spot in the classic action-comedy canon, but it’s easily digested fun, which is no bad thing.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 16, 2025
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- David Rooney
There’s no shortage of intensity or gore, not to mention brisk efficiency in the way the script isolates a fragile family unit before plunging them into lycanthropic mayhem.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 15, 2025
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- David Rooney
The unapologetic sentimentality doesn’t make this bittersweet comedy-drama any less touching or insightful in its observation of spiky family interactions when end-of-life issues and questions of inheritance cause sparks.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 9, 2025
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 11, 2024
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- David Rooney
Whatever script flaws there are in terms of structure, plot momentum and an opaque central character, A Complete Unknown offers rewards in its lived-in performances and in the exhilarating music sequences that propel it forward. For many audiences with an affection for Dylan’s music and the era in general, that will be enough.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 10, 2024
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- David Rooney
It’s a Gothic horror nightmare heaving with sumptuous visual detail, groaning under the weight of portentous dread, writhing with both convulsive violence and sweaty eroticism and leavened by sly hints of fiendish camp.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 2, 2024
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- David Rooney
Tedeschi’s film is a declaration of love for the Beatles, but what distinguishes it is its curiosity about the America of that time, beyond the bubble of the four Scousers who can hardly believe they’re drinking cocktails in Miami.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 25, 2024
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- David Rooney
Grande and Erivo give Stephen Schwartz’s songs — comedy numbers, introspective ballads, power anthems — effortless spontaneity. They help us buy into the intrinsic musical conceit that these characters are bursting into song to express feelings too large for spoken words, not just mouthing lyrics and trilling melodies that someone spent weeks cleaning up in a studio.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 19, 2024
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- David Rooney
In terms of brutal spectacle, elaborate period reconstruction and vigorous set pieces requiring complex choreography, the sequel delivers what fans of its Oscar-winning 2000 predecessor will crave — battles, swordplay, bloodshed, Ancient Roman intrigue. That said, there’s a déjà vu quality to much of the new film, a slavishness that goes beyond the caged men forced to fight for their survival, and seeps into the very bones of a drama overly beholden to the original.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 11, 2024
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- David Rooney
This is a high-concept, CG-saturated bore that lacks heart and infectious humor, even if it huffs and puffs its way to a little poignancy in the end.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 5, 2024
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 31, 2024
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- David Rooney
For a movie covering such an expansive passage of American life, Here feels curiously weightless. It’s no fault of the actors, all of whom deliver solid work with characters that are scarcely more than outlines.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 26, 2024
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- David Rooney
Hardy brings sufficient charm (and witty voice work) to his symbiote-inhabited character’s internal battle between id and superego to make each entry diverting enough, even if they leave little aftertaste. And so it goes with Venom: The Last Dance, which caps the trilogy by going gleefully out on its own.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 23, 2024
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- David Rooney
A haunting lead performance from Marco Pigossi, steeped in melancholy and raw pain but also in moments of openness, optimism and even joy, helps make High Tide an affecting portrait of untethered gay men seeking meaningful connections.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 17, 2024
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- David Rooney
The cumulative experience is affecting in its own minor-key way, an appealing throwback to old-fashioned family dramas of a more innocent era.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 16, 2024
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- David Rooney
Smile 2 confirms Finn as a gifted visual stylist who has an assured hand with his actors. He perhaps just needs to back off a little from the misconception that more is more and maintain a greater focus on his story skills.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 16, 2024
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- David Rooney
This recap of a unique and deeply sincere bid to demystify utopian ideals for the conservative masses using the platform of popular television offers a fascinating glimpse into a very different period in this country’s past.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 8, 2024
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- David Rooney
Any thoughts about the violence we’re seeing are strictly our own, never fed to us by the filmmaker. That makes Afternoons of Solitude, in its uncompromising way, a doc as muscular and ferocious as the poor creatures being ritualistically slaughtered in those bullrings.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 3, 2024
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- David Rooney
Flow is a joy to experience but also a deeply affecting story, the work of a unique talent who deserves to be ranked among the world’s great animation artists.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 26, 2024
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- David Rooney
Capturing that transitional moment when seemingly permanent adolescent ties suddenly appear uncertain, this is a melancholy drama laced with notes of anger and disquiet, but also resilience.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 24, 2024
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- David Rooney
Fun is banished from Aja’s latest, which starts out mildly intriguing and chalks up a few bracing jump scares before running out of juice.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 17, 2024
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- David Rooney
Had all those assets been funneled into a movie with some tonal consistency and a script that built credible relationships, the result might have been a nasty bit of fun. Instead, it wobbles awkwardly between creeping mob menace and scrappy sitcom, inching toward a violent climax that still doesn’t acquire cohesion.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 13, 2024
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- David Rooney
The special sauce here, however, is the bond of love and support through tough times between Anthony and his mother Judy, stirringly portrayed by Jharrel Jerome and Jennifer Lopez.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 12, 2024
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- David Rooney
Even if The Last Showgirl feels slender overall, more consistently attentive to aesthetics and atmosphere than psychological profundity, there’s moving empathy in its portrait of Shelly and women like her, their sense of self crumbling as they become cruelly devalued.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 9, 2024
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- David Rooney
Adams is reason enough to see it anyway in a performance that gives us intimate access to her character’s fears and anxieties.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 8, 2024
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- David Rooney
Nutcrackers is not exactly robust as uplifting family comedies go, but for audiences willing to get in sync with Green’s free-flowing groove, the emotional payoff will be affecting.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 6, 2024
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- David Rooney
This is a sizable step up for the Boukherma brothers from the smaller-canvas genre films they have done up to now and they bring a satisfying cinematic sweep to the material that feels more Hollywood than French — for better or worse. Their sensitive direction of the intimate exchanges is sharp, even if scenes veer at times from melodrama into soap.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 5, 2024
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- David Rooney
I’m Still Here is a gripping, profoundly touching film with a deep well of pathos. It’s one of Salles’ best.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 4, 2024
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- David Rooney
Gaga is a compelling live-wire presence, splitting the difference between affinity and obsession, while endearingly giving Arthur a shot of joy and hope that has him singing “When You’re Smiling” on his way to court. Their musical numbers, both duets and solos, have a vitality that the more often dour film desperately needs.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 4, 2024
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- David Rooney
In Queer, Luca Guadagnino meets William S. Burroughs on the iconoclast’s own slippery terms and the result is mesmerizing.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 3, 2024
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- David Rooney
Swinton and Moore imbue the movie with heart that at first seems elusive, along with the dignity, humanity and empathy that are as much Almodóvar’s subjects here as mortality.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 2, 2024
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- David Rooney
The Brutalist is a massive film in every sense, closing with a resonant epilogue that illustrates how art and beauty reach out from the past, transcending space and time to reveal a freedom of thought and identity often denied its makers.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 1, 2024
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 30, 2024
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- David Rooney
The movie is like a glittering jewel in a glass showcase, inviting you to look but not touch.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 29, 2024
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- David Rooney
The zippy pacing, buoyant energy and steady stream of laugh-out-loud moments hint at the joy Burton appears to have found in revisiting this world, and for anyone who loved the first movie, it’s contagious. That applies also to the actors, all of whom warm to the dizzying lunacy.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 28, 2024
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 22, 2024
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- David Rooney
It’s not hagiography when the subject’s generosity of spirit infuses the entire doc.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 15, 2024
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- David Rooney
A final-act development lurches into overblown and slightly daffy extreme sicko horror, but there’s enough that works, especially in terms of sustained tension and big juicy frights, to give the xenomorph-hungry what they want.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 14, 2024
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- David Rooney
Roth’s messy storytelling is so anxious to get to the next blast of rote action — amped up by Steve Jablonsky’s hard-working synth and orchestral score and lots of shoddy CGI — that the characters have scant opportunity to form real bonds.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 7, 2024
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- David Rooney
It’s not terrible but it’s far from great, instead landing in that dispiriting morass best identified as “passable entertainment,” designed to make critics grasp for new ways to say “Meh.”- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 1, 2024
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- David Rooney
I found this movie messy and overstuffed, but I laughed almost as often as I cringed from its obnoxiousness and can’t dispute that a vast audience will delight in every moment. Even if they spend much of the running time sticking blades through each other’s handily regenerating flesh, Reynolds and Jackman make sweet love and appear to be having a great time doing it.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 23, 2024
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- David Rooney
The artisanal spirit and abundant creativity of the enterprise is undeniable, immersing us in a vivid world crafted from clay, wire, paper and paint, without a single frame of CG imagery.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 19, 2024
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- David Rooney
The movie occasionally veers toward cliché, but its delicacy and restraint keep it dramatically compelling and its emotions are never unearned, right through to its lovely open-ended conclusion.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 15, 2024
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- David Rooney
Twisters gets the job done in terms of whipping up life-threatening tornadoes that leave a trail of wreckage in their wake. But the extent to which all this is conjured with a digital paintbox lessens the pulse-quickening awe of nature at its most destructive.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 10, 2024
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- David Rooney
Writer-director Osgood Perkins’ serial killer chiller fully acknowledges a debt to The Silence of the Lambs in its chronicle of a young female rookie agent pulled into the FBI manhunt for a killer wiping out entire families. But the movie is also its own freaky trip, a darkly disturbing experience pulsing with an evil that’s unrelenting in its subcutaneous creepiness.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 8, 2024
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- David Rooney
While Murphy coasts along on charm, his material is just not sharp enough to generate big laughs.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 2, 2024
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- David Rooney
The sophomore writer-director adapts to the requirements of the genre, expertly sustaining tension, peppering big scares throughout and earning our emotional investment in the key characters. Plus a cat.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 27, 2024
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- David Rooney
A glorious paean to the lurid sensuality and gory excess of 1980s sexploitation and horror, MaXXXine completes Ti West’s trilogy of star showcases for his fearless muse Mia Goth on a delectable note.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 26, 2024
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- David Rooney
It’s the balance of basic psychology with abstract concepts and inspired observational comedy that makes this a uniquely captivating coming-of-age tale.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 12, 2024
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- David Rooney
For those of us who have loved Faye Dunaway in movies, Bouzereau’s doc will be bittersweet viewing. It re-examines her run of brilliant, blazing performances in a handful of New Hollywood classics but also leaves us to ponder how brutally she was sidelined, uncommonly so for a movie star of her stature- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 10, 2024
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- David Rooney
The Watchers, sadly, is less disturbing than dull, less harrowing than hackneyed.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 6, 2024
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- David Rooney
The film captures with enormous sweetness feelings probably familiar to many queer adolescents still figuring out who they are — of insecurity, questioning and giddy crushes on frequently unattainable objects of desire.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 4, 2024
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- David Rooney
Despite its flaws, Motel Destino has mood, rawness and atmosphere to burn, fueled by Amine Bouhafa’s score, which becomes steadily more disquieting as it ratchets up the urgency.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 23, 2024
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- David Rooney
There’s much to appreciate in Parthenope, Paolo Sorrentino’s second consecutive bittersweet paean to his home city of Naples. At least for a while, before the too-muchness of it takes hold and the character at the center stops being intriguing and just becomes a siren with an air of mystery but too little evidence of all that’s supposedly going on behind it.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 21, 2024
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- David Rooney
While Anora could stand to lose 10-15 minutes, it’s a very satisfying watch; the director continues firmly staking out his niche as a chronicler of the messy lives of an often invisible American underclass.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 21, 2024
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- David Rooney
Even if some viewers might grow impatient with Simon’s passivity in the face of endless microaggressions, there’s enough tenderness, heart and ultimate self-realization in Solo to keep you watching.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 21, 2024
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- David Rooney
Some will argue that Stan’s performance in the central role is a touch too likeable, but the actor does an excellent job, going beyond impersonation to capture the essence of the man. In a character study of a public figure both widely parodied and unwittingly self-parodying, Stan gives us a more nuanced take on what makes him tick.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 20, 2024
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- David Rooney
The baseline is a drama of criminality and redemption, but then there’s an unforced current of Almodóvarian humor, along with moments of melodrama, noir, social realism, a hint of telenovela camp and a climactic escalation into suspense, ultimately touched by tragedy.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 19, 2024
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- David Rooney
Working from a discursive screenplay he co-wrote with Jon Baird, Costner is not at his best as a director with this kind of multi-branched narrative. He struggles to keep all the story’s plates spinning, as characters are sidelined and resurface with too little connective tissue.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 19, 2024
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- David Rooney
Zhao’s face is one of the most transfixingly expressive in modern cinema, and her long collaboration with her husband Jia stands among the screen’s greatest actress-director unions.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 19, 2024
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- David Rooney
For a film about big themes like mortality, memory, truth and redemption, Oh, Canada feels both slight and stubbornly page-bound, too unsatisfyingly fleshed out to give its actors meat to chew on.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 19, 2024
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- David Rooney
It may not be as thematically cohesive on a first watch as some audiences will wish for, but the longer you mull it over the more the pieces of the puzzle begin to fit and the common threads start to emerge.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 17, 2024
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- David Rooney
It’s windy and overstuffed, frequently baffling and way too talky, quoting Hamlet and The Tempest, Marcus Aurelius and Petrarch, ruminating on time, consciousness and power to a degree that becomes ponderous. But it’s also often amusing, playful, visually dazzling and illuminated by a touching hope for humanity.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 16, 2024
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- David Rooney
Anya Taylor-Joy is a fierce presence in the title role and Chris Hemsworth is clearly having fun as a gonzo Wasteland warlord, but the mythmaking lacks muscle, just as the action mostly lacks the visual poetry of its predecessor.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 15, 2024
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- David Rooney
This tightly focused character study is a tiny film, with an emotional effect in inverse proportion to its size.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 10, 2024
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- David Rooney
This is a handsomely produced, solidly acted thriller that’s certainly watchable, though the perplexing subtitle is not its only issue. Unlike its riveting predecessor, it’s absorbing but never quite gripping.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 8, 2024
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- David Rooney
Josh Friedman’s smart screenplay takes its cue from its recent predecessors in reflecting the politics of its time. But the movie works equally well as pure popcorn entertainment, packing its two-and-a-half-hour running time with nail-biting thrills but also allowing sufficient breathing space to build depth in the characters and story.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 8, 2024
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