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
With less pedestrian writing, there might have been some genuine uplift in the outcome of a family reinforcing its bonds while taking on future missions as a unified team. But Secret Headquarters is mostly just meh.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 12, 2022
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- David Rooney
This is compelling storytelling by any standard, its supple rhythms hypnotic, its atmosphere potent and its prevailing hushed tone and intimate camerawork affording us the closest possible access to three characters who in turn are constantly studying one another. The actors playing those three points of a complicated triangle could not be better.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 3, 2022
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- David Rooney
For a movie with so much volatile physicality and bruising punishment, there’s an inertia about the whole thing, a soullessness that makes every contrived smirk grate. We don’t care about who gets pounded to a pulp or shot to pieces because there are no characters to root for — good guys or bad.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 2, 2022
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- David Rooney
Thankfully, there’s more than enough fascinating material — as well as choice archival footage and photographs — to build a robust narrative.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 26, 2022
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- David Rooney
This is Manville’s film, a too-rare star vehicle in which one of England’s most invaluable actors carries us effortlessly on the wings of Mrs. Harris’ dream of egalitarian elegance.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 12, 2022
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- David Rooney
Persuasion is sufficiently bold and consistent with its flagrant liberties to get away with them. It also helps that the novel’s long-suffering protagonist, Anne Elliot, has been given irrepressible spirit and an irreverent sense of irony in Dakota Johnson’s incandescent performance.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 8, 2022
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- David Rooney
Dipping less rewardingly from the same well in Thor: Love and Thunder, Waititi pushes the wisecracking to tiresome extremes, snuffing out any excitement, mythic grandeur or sense of danger that the God of Thunder’s latest round of rote challenges might hope to generate. Chris Hemsworth continues to give great musclebound himbo, but the stakes never acquire much urgency in a movie too busy being jokey and juvenile to tell a gripping story.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 5, 2022
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- David Rooney
In its fine balance of emotional and intellectual curiosity, and its elegant assembly of a rich archive of home movies, photographs and interviews, this film unpacks those memories with beguiling candor- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 23, 2022
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- David Rooney
This utterly toothless, glorified Hallmark movie for Paramount+ proves the director is only as good as his material.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 17, 2022
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- David Rooney
This is a funny spinoff with suspense and heart, a captivatingly spirited toon take on splashy live-action retro popcorn entertainment. The title character is given splendid voice by Chris Evans, balancing heroism and human fallibility with infectious warmth.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 13, 2022
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- David Rooney
Whatever goodwill superfan director Colin Trevorrow earned with 2015’s enjoyable reboot, Jurassic World, he pulverizes it here with overplotted chaos, somehow managing to marginalize characters from both the new and original trilogies as well as the prehistoric creatures they go up against in one routine challenge after another. Evolution has passed this bloated monster by.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 8, 2022
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- David Rooney
Even if Being BeBe doesn’t often go deep, the candor and infectious humor of Ngwa make it a satisfying watch — particularly for fans who have made RuPaul’s Drag Race its own vibrant chapter in contemporary queer pop-culture history.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 8, 2022
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- David Rooney
There’s a depth of feeling and a disarming sincerity to the movie that keeps you watching. Even the inevitable triumph seems refreshingly understated.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 2, 2022
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- David Rooney
This is a highly original work that goes beyond its theological aspects to explore more universal questions of mankind and our evanescent place in the world.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 28, 2022
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- David Rooney
The evocative sense of a place frozen in time and the raw feelings behind the family dynamic ultimately carry the film- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 28, 2022
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- David Rooney
This beautifully acted, expertly modulated film is a work of such enveloping gentleness that even the worst crises are simply absorbed into the fabric of life and work. While the ending might have been corny in a less subtle director’s hands, here it’s quietly restorative. We don’t deserve Kelly Reichardt.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 28, 2022
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- David Rooney
Much of this might have been formulaic in less artful hands, but Kore-eda has an unfaltering lightness of touch, a way of injecting emotional veracity and spontaneity into every moment.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 27, 2022
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- David Rooney
What this twisty espionage thriller ... doesn’t have enough of is character depth or storytelling coherence.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 26, 2022
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- David Rooney
There’s almost always something interesting about even Denis’ flawed films, but this troubled travelogue just feels a little off at every fumbled step.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 26, 2022
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- David Rooney
If the writing too seldom measures up to the astonishing visual impact, the affinity the director feels for his showman subject is both contagious and exhausting. Luhrmann’s taste for poperatic spectacle is evident all the way, resulting in a movie that exults in moments of high melodrama as much as in theatrical artifice and vigorously entertaining performance.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 25, 2022
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- David Rooney
It’s a pleasurable enough watch — nicely acted and with a gentle rhythm tuned to the main characters’ searching paths as they drift in and out of each other’s lives over 30 years — though ultimately, it lacks weight.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 24, 2022
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- David Rooney
Crafted with unforced humor, ravishing visuals and commanding maturity, Decision to Leave intoxicates with its potent brew of love, emotional manipulation — or is it? —and obsession.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 24, 2022
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- David Rooney
Moonage Daydream is short on insight, and ends up feeling more enervating than enlightening.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 23, 2022
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- David Rooney
The film offers up more mysteries than it solves. Still, riveting work from Viggo Mortensen and Léa Seydoux as performance artists whose canvas is internal organ mutations will draw the curious.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 23, 2022
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- David Rooney
There’s no doubt as to where all this is headed, especially to anyone familiar with Pride and Prejudice. But Ahn’s light-touch direction, the appealing cast and the frisky humor and stealth soulfulness of Kim Booster’s script keep it breezy and captivating as the predestined romantic partners butt heads or drop in and out of each other’s orbits when faced with various obstacles.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 23, 2022
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- David Rooney
As facile as Triangle of Sadness becomes, Östlund at least provides full-circle follow-through when beauty and sex once again become bartering assets and a late gag mocks the global obsession with branded luxury goods. But this is a glib movie, self-indulgent in its extended running time and far too amused with its easy digs at wealth and privilege.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 22, 2022
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- David Rooney
While there’s a liberal sprinkling of humor, the mysteries it conjures are windy and academic, though not the kind of academic that stands up to scrutiny.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 20, 2022
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- David Rooney
An unvarnished family snapshot that traces the seeds from which the artist evolved and the tough lessons about life’s unfairness that helped shape his character, this is a refreshingly understated drama whose gentleness makes it all the more bittersweet.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 19, 2022
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- David Rooney
The best thing this movie does is boost visceral analog action over the usual numbing bombardment of CG fakery, a choice fortified by having the actors in the airborne cockpits during shooting.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 12, 2022
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- David Rooney
The fact that the outcome is wide open to different interpretations makes Men a more ambiguous work than Garland’s sci-fi horror hybrids, Ex Machina and Annihilation. It’s also more menacing and viscerally creepy.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted May 9, 2022
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- David Rooney
Even the acerbic bons mots delivered with crisp aplomb by Maggie Smith’s Dowager Countess, Violet Grantham, don’t match the tart-tongued precision of her best retorts. And the direction of Simon Curtis — the man who made even Helen Mirren dull in Woman in Gold — seldom rises above serviceable.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 25, 2022
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- David Rooney
The film is affecting, because it outlines the saddening end of an adored American icon. But for all its promises of unheard insights, it seldom goes much deeper than an E! True Hollywood Story.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 25, 2022
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- David Rooney
A far more decorous affair than its macho-burger title would suggest, this is a classy production with a first-rate ensemble cast, splicing the story’s intrigue with a poignant vein of melodrama.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 21, 2022
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- David Rooney
The Northman is certainly a lot of movie, and while its hysterical intensity at times veers into overwrought silliness, it’s both unstinting and exhilarating in its depiction of a culture ruled by the cycles of violence. The cohesion of Eggers’ vision commands admiration, as does the commitment of his collaborators, both in front of and behind the camera.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 11, 2022
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- David Rooney
The storytelling moves along at a steady hum, maintaining intrigue as different pieces of the puzzle come together.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 6, 2022
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 31, 2022
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- David Rooney
It’s just a shame this opening salvo takes itself too seriously to have much fun with the mayhem, despite the potential in Smith’s devilish turn for amusing interplay between the antagonists.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 30, 2022
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- David Rooney
Lyne’s take on the material, scripted without distinction by Zach Helm and Sam Levinson, manages to drain all the subtlety and psychological complexity from Highsmith’s story of marital warfare, transgression and obsession.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 16, 2022
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- David Rooney
It’s clearly a labor of love, a unique reflection on an unforgettable summer, inviting us to share in a moment of communal spirit which now seems to belong to another world.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 13, 2022
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- David Rooney
Nothing if not true to its title, this frenetically plotted serve of stoner heaven is insanely imaginative and often a lot of fun. But at two hours-plus, it becomes unrelenting and wearisome.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 11, 2022
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 9, 2022
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- David Rooney
Turning Red is original, funny and tender, an affectionate reminder that adolescence is a time of life not easily tamed, and sometimes the animal inside us demands release.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 7, 2022
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- David Rooney
This glowering study in crime and punishment is meticulously crafted, vividly inhabited storytelling with a coherent, thought-through vision, and that makes for muscular entertainment.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 28, 2022
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- David Rooney
In the end, the most remarkable thing about Against the Ice is that a real-life story of two men at the mercy of the unforgiving elements, of hunger and illness, possible attack and encroaching madness, can be so curiously deprived of tension.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 22, 2022
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- David Rooney
The deadpan edge of much of the film’s 90 minutes of prattle conceals thoughts on the insularity of creative communities, the ticking clock of an artist’s life and the importance of remaining open to finding truth even in what appear to be random connections.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 18, 2022
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- David Rooney
Perhaps more than anything, the doc celebrates the remarkable creative union between Cave and his chief collaborator and bandmate Warren Ellis.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 17, 2022
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- David Rooney
Lovely, unforced Chekhovian notes grace the gently observed snapshot of a summer of unstoppable change and momentous upheaval. Even if there are moments of frustration in which Simón and co-writer Arnau Vilaró pull away just as conflicts are heating up, the film’s immersive, lived-in nature has a transfixing grip.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 16, 2022
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- David Rooney
Peter von Kant is perhaps a bit too rarefied an endeavor to significantly expand Ozon’s following, and some LGBTQ audiences might conceivably flinch at its protagonist’s self-flagellation, much as they did with Fassbinder’s. But its skewering of celebrity is mischievously enjoyable and its declaration of love for a queer-cinema forefather disarmingly sincere.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 16, 2022
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- David Rooney
The film spans several years in her life and that of her family, covering moments both important and relatively inconsequential. It’s a credit to Hers’ contemplative, never intrusive observational style that by the end of the two-hour running time we know them intimately.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 16, 2022
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- David Rooney
The sense of love dissolving and lives thrown into chaos as a dormant past violently breaks through the surface is unexpectedly moving, all the more so because of the film’s rigorous rejection of sentimentality.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 15, 2022
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- David Rooney
What in lesser hands might have been just another tiresome COVID-19 quickie, locking us into a reality we’re all desperate to escape, becomes a tautly suspenseful nail-biter in Kimi, thanks to tirelessly eclectic director Steven Soderbergh and seasoned screenwriter David Koepp.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 9, 2022
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- David Rooney
For some of us who look back with affection on John Guillermin’s lush 1978 screen version, there’s a nagging feeling throughout that Branagh, while hitting the marks of storytelling and design, has drained some of the fun out of it.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 7, 2022
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- David Rooney
Strong performances from the four leads, plus the film’s unsettling visuals and crafty use of score, sound and strategic silence make it both a tough watch and impossible to look away from.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 3, 2022
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- David Rooney
A fascinating window into the psychological and emotional minefield of early puberty and the torn feelings of a vulnerable child watching her darkest instincts play out, Hatching delivers.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 26, 2022
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- David Rooney
Sure, there’s some fun in all that meta-playfulness. But there’s also a facetiousness that wears thin and intrudes on the killing spree, making me often wish I was watching any one of the superior movies being referenced.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 12, 2022
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- David Rooney
It’s all quite watchable and not without suspense, but the characters reveal too little emotional depth or complexity to make us care much about either their losses or their hard-fought victories.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 6, 2022
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 23, 2021
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- David Rooney
The edges are perhaps rougher and the narrative more structured, but the film carries echoes of the work of Asian contemplative cinema maestros Tsai Ming-liang and Apitchatpong Weerasethakul, both of whom Yogi cites as influences.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 9, 2021
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- David Rooney
A cynical, insufferably smug satire stuffed to the gills with stars that purports to comment on political and media inattention to the climate crisis but really just trivializes it. Dr. Strangelove it ain’t.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 7, 2021
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- David Rooney
Anyone curious about the mechanics of a pioneering sitcom will be entertained by Being the Ricardos, and there’s no denying that the performances offer much to savor. I just wish there was more of a sense of the director serving the subject rather than making the subject serve him.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 7, 2021
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- David Rooney
While many wondered about Spielberg’s chutzpah in tackling a movie musical widely regarded as an ageless classic, his richly satisfying remake gives this version a resplendent life of its own.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 2, 2021
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- David Rooney
A strong cast and tightly focused direction make The Unforgivable an engrossing enough redemption drama, though this Americanized feature adaptation of British TV writer Sally Wainwright’s 2009 miniseries, Unforgiven, doesn’t always benefit from its condensed plotting.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 24, 2021
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- David Rooney
Ridley Scott’s film is a trashtacular watch that I wouldn’t have missed for the world. But it fails to settle on a consistent tone — overlong and undisciplined as it careens between high drama and opera buffa.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 22, 2021
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- David Rooney
The movie, particularly in its meandering second hour, often leaves you wondering where it’s going, more in frustration than curiosity.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 15, 2021
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- David Rooney
Disney’s Encanto is, well, enchanting. It’s tricky to make an animated film so infused with exuberant sweetness without it becoming cloying. But this whimsical dose of magic realism set amid the lush greenery of the Colombian mountains benefits as much from the purity of the storytelling as the stunning vibrancy of the visuals.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 15, 2021
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- David Rooney
Swan Song becomes increasingly earnest and dull, spending such an inordinate amount of time lingering over tearfully contemplative gazes that it’s too maudlin to exert much of a genuine pull on the heartstrings.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 13, 2021
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- David Rooney
You can’t argue with the muscular marquee value of headlining Dwayne Johnson, Ryan Reynolds and Gal Gadot in a slick, fast-paced action thriller laced with playful comedy, even if it’s an empty-calorie entertainment like Red Notice.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 3, 2021
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- David Rooney
There’s little that’s unpredictable in Miguel Sapochnik’s unabashedly sentimental sci-fi road movie, which could almost have been assembled in a robotics lab from the durable parts of countless movies past. But darned if I wasn’t misting up in the melancholy climactic scenes.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 3, 2021
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- David Rooney
The storytelling overall is less sophisticated, leaning a little too often on strained humor, but this is a slick, enjoyably playful entertainment.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 26, 2021
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- David Rooney
The attention to character, group dynamics and emotional texture makes the film often feel more alive in its quieter moments than its fairly routine CG action clashes. But the depth of feeling helps counter the choppy storytelling in this new tangent in the MCU narrative- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 24, 2021
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- David Rooney
As a window into the campaign process, Mayor Pete doesn’t match the perspective or dramatic payoff of Moss’ last film, Boys State, co-directed with McBaine. But it does have the benefit of showing a man who seems destined to remain a force in American politics, growing into the role in real time.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 15, 2021
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- David Rooney
Chronicling an ignominious chapter in queer history, Great Freedom is also a contemplative psychological study of the effects of incarceration, and beyond that, an unconventional love story, tender but unsentimental.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 14, 2021
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- David Rooney
It may not rank up there with Skyfall, but it’s a moving valedictory salute to the actor who has left arguably the most indelible mark on the character since Connery.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 28, 2021
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- David Rooney
The Tragedy of Macbeth is a raw, lucid retelling, rendered spellbinding by its enveloping stylized design and its masterful black-and-white visuals, evoking the chiaroscuro textures of Carl Theodor Dreyer.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 24, 2021
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- David Rooney
torm Lake is an elegiac heartland portrait, often melancholy in its reflections on compromises to the traditional fabric of local life, and yet colored by the hope of endurance, both for the newspaper and the community it represents.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 22, 2021
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- David Rooney
The late-’60s and early-’70s production and costume design, by Bob Shaw and Amy Westcott, respectively, are rooted firmly in an evocative sense of time and place, enhanced by a soundtrack of pinpoint needle drops. But The Many Saints of Newark is more of a diverting footnote than an invaluable extension of the show’s colossal legacy.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 21, 2021
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- David Rooney
This is a minor-key modern Western whose melancholy probe into the bruising past gives way, in a quietly satisfying conclusion, to the hope of reconciliation, even healing.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 17, 2021
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- David Rooney
An atmospheric slice of vintage Americana that shows there’s plenty of life left in seasoned Western archetypes, Old Henry gets much of its mileage from the somewhat unexpected lead casting of Tim Blake Nelson.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 17, 2021
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- David Rooney
An acutely observed chamber piece played out by two exceptionally well-cast actors who keep you guessing about the subtle shifts in their characters’ relationship, this is an unflinching account of human lives rendered disposable by greed and corruption.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 17, 2021
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- David Rooney
This is a story so crusty and antiquated in its conveniently resolved conflicts, contrivances and drippy sentimentality that it should have been left on the shelf.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 15, 2021
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- David Rooney
For all its high style and aestheticized visuals, this is a work of self-conscious posturing with nothing to say.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 14, 2021
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- David Rooney
This biographical drama, grounded in the anguished poetry of its protagonist, is hushed and decorous to a fault. But it does eventually wind its way to a profoundly affecting conclusion.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 13, 2021
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- David Rooney
The movie, with its numbing overload of pastels and prayer, is too tonally uncertain to yield any fun. It’s a depressing window into the worst excesses of faith racketeering that has little to offer in the way of commentary.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 12, 2021
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- David Rooney
Happening is often a tough watch, compassionate but brutally honest, and almost breathless in its chronicle of a struggle that has obviously stayed with the author for decades.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 11, 2021
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- David Rooney
Ultimately, The Last Duel is the affecting story of one woman’s quiet heroism that requires you to wade through a lot of blustery accounts of the honor, the pride and the wars of men in order to get to it. Which is kind of like perpetuating the patriarchy.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 10, 2021
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- David Rooney
Green has made exactly the kind of witless, worthless sequel that bled the franchise dry in the 1980s and ’90s.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 8, 2021
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- David Rooney
As a character study of a man with good reason to wean himself off the very basic human instinct of hope and teach himself, even at some personal cost, to care for no one and nothing, Sundown gains texture from its stark setting in a seaside playground stained with blood. But of all the director’s films to date, this might be the most airless.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 7, 2021
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- David Rooney
The reclusive Italian author’s familiar themes of female relationships, sexuality, motherhood and women’s struggle to carve a professional space outside it are beautifully served in this uncompromising character study, illuminated by performances of jagged brilliance from Olivia Colman and Jessie Buckley as her younger self.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 6, 2021
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- David Rooney
Last Night in Soho is an immensely pleasurable film that delights in playing with genre, morphing from time-travel fantasy to dark fairy tale, from mystery to nightmarish horror in a climax that owes as much to ’60s Brit fright fare as to more contemporary mind-benders.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 4, 2021
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- David Rooney
Not everything lands in Spencer, and I often wondered if the film was so set on bucking convention that it would alienate its audience. But it tells a sorrowful story we all think we know in a new and genuinely disturbing light.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 3, 2021
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- David Rooney
The storytelling lacks the clean lines to make it consistently propulsive. Paradoxically, given its lofty position in the sci-fi canon, much of the narrative’s novelty has also been diluted, rendered stale by decades of imitation.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 3, 2021
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 3, 2021
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- David Rooney
A companion piece of sorts to First Reformed, this is another bruising character study of a solitary, burdened man who processes his most intimate thoughts in a journal, living with his guilt until he’s handed an unexpected opportunity for redemption.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 2, 2021
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- David Rooney
It’s the work of a director in full command of his gifts, from the kaleidoscopic vignettes of family life that make the first half such a constant delight through the supple modulation of tone midway, when shocking tragedy prompts a shift into a more ruminative mood.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 2, 2021
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- David Rooney
This is an exquisitely crafted film, its unhurried rhythms continually shifting as plangent notes of melancholy, solitude, torment, jealousy and resentment surface. Campion is in full control of her material, digging deep into the turbulent inner life of each of her characters with unerring subtlety.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 2, 2021
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- David Rooney
While Parallel Mothers doesn’t match the intricately interwoven layers of Almodóvar’s top-tier work — All About My Mother, Talk to Her, Pain and Glory — and some of its key plot disclosures can be seen coming, that doesn’t make the melodrama any less gripping or emotionally satisfying.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 1, 2021
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- David Rooney
There’s abundant joy, spirited resilience and sweet humor on tap that should be especially infectious for young LGBTQ audiences, or anyone with experience of outsider stigmatization.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 26, 2021
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 26, 2021
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- David Rooney
Rebecca Hall’s admirable refusal to soften the brittle edges of her recently widowed protagonist in The Night House makes her a compelling variation on the usual woman in ghostly peril.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 26, 2021
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- David Rooney
Director Nia DaCosta, working from a script she wrote with Jordan Peele and Win Rosenfeld, uses Bernard Rose’s 1992 film as a jumping-off point for bone-chilling horror that expands provocatively on the urban legend of the first film within the context of Black folklore and history, as well as the distorting white narrative that turns Black victims into monsters.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 25, 2021
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