David Sims
Select another critic »For 464 reviews, this critic has graded:
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50% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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47% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 2.1 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
David Sims' Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 68 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | One Battle After Another | |
| Lowest review score: | Dolittle | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 313 out of 464
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Mixed: 102 out of 464
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Negative: 49 out of 464
464
movie
reviews
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- David Sims
That Rose-Lynn is an onstage force is easy to tell from the second she picks up a microphone, but Taylor makes this film less about her gift than about the maturity she needs to take it beyond the local Glasgow pubs. As a result, the film’s melancholy but uplifting closing notes land that much more powerfully.- The Atlantic
- Posted Jun 19, 2019
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- David Sims
It’s a sincere, measured, and clever homage to its subject, a work of storytelling that would have made Mister Rogers proud.- The Atlantic
- Posted Nov 21, 2019
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- David Sims
The film is not gritty, unvarnished, or hard to watch; it’s an easygoing, charming work, buoyed by Blank’s excellent lead performance and suffused with snappy jokes and sparkling supporting turns.- The Atlantic
- Posted Oct 12, 2020
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- David Sims
Lowery’s film is an easy-breezy celebration of Redford’s charisma and a fitting swan song given that it might be his final on-camera role.- The Atlantic
- Posted Sep 26, 2018
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- David Sims
Fincher didn’t set out to make a movie about today’s politics; he’s telling a universal story about trying to change an industry (and a world) in which every system seems freighted with inertia. Mankiewicz isn’t quite a radical, nor is he especially principled. Still, in trying to make sense of his experiences with Hearst through a Hollywood narrative, he transforms a familiar tale about shattered idealism into a revolutionary work of art.- The Atlantic
- Posted Nov 10, 2020
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- David Sims
It’s a diverting, high-energy romp, packed with a charming ensemble and armed with an unsubtle disdain for the one percent.- The Atlantic
- Posted Sep 22, 2023
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- David Sims
Villeneuve’s film is a grand success, working on an even broader canvas than the first Dune—but it’s tinged with deep mournfulness, a quality that sets it apart from its blockbuster contemporaries.- The Atlantic
- Posted Feb 29, 2024
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- David Sims
Everyone plays it reliably straight, a contrast that helps the film maintain its zany energy—and, in the spirit of the original trilogy, maximize the number of jokes per minute. If one bit flops, another arrives in a few seconds to make up for it.- The Atlantic
- Posted Aug 1, 2025
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- David Sims
Green has crafted a hermetic, office-bound world so ambiguous that the moments when she reveals its dynamics directly sometimes come off as disconcerting.- The Atlantic
- Posted Feb 1, 2020
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- David Sims
Hustlers would work as a goofy comedy; it works even better as a thoughtful one, crammed with killer lines and supporting work from both acting veterans (Julia Stiles) and fresh faces (Cardi B). It’s a salute to extravagance that knows when to cut loose and when to hold on quiet, introspective beats.- The Atlantic
- Posted Sep 11, 2019
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- David Sims
Let the Sunshine In is a unique, spellbinding work, worthy of comparison to Denis’s best films.- The Atlantic
- Posted May 4, 2018
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- David Sims
Kimi is yet another inventive blend of throwback suspense storytelling and current concerns; if Soderbergh wants to keep churning out one of these a year, he’s unlikely to run out of thematically ripe material.- The Atlantic
- Posted Feb 14, 2022
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- The Atlantic
- Posted Aug 1, 2018
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- David Sims
I’m Thinking of Ending Things is long (two hours and 14 minutes) and often frustrating, but it’s also incredibly satisfying on rewatch, which makes its Netflix release a boon. There’s a weird thrill to getting lost inside this movie, only so you can study every odd detail from new angles, over and over again.- The Atlantic
- Posted Sep 3, 2020
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- David Sims
It’s a roller coaster that viewers can enjoy riding all the way up, but it’s not afraid to question its own climax the whole way down.- The Atlantic
- Posted May 12, 2023
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- David Sims
Given its similarity to the original, Gloria Bell could have just been a curiosity—but the hilarious performances by Moore, Cera, and Turturro make Lelio’s return to his own material more than worth it.- The Atlantic
- Posted Mar 8, 2019
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- David Sims
Monos is an undeniable wonder, but one that enchants the most when its head is in the clouds.- The Atlantic
- Posted Sep 26, 2019
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- David Sims
The director, Chad Stahelski, has been with the series since its inception and is clearly working with his biggest budget yet, so he compensates for any story weakness by serving up a seven-course meal of set pieces.- The Atlantic
- Posted Mar 16, 2023
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- David Sims
Soderbergh’s unorthodox film release and cheap, idiosyncratic shooting style are ideal fits for the director’s fascinating, speculative story about the future of the NBA.- The Atlantic
- Posted Feb 10, 2019
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- David Sims
William is a strong character on his own, but he is also a metaphor for America’s struggle to overcome its grimmest failures and to break free from cycles of violence. Schrader understands that those are nigh-impossible tasks; still, he shows the value in trying nonetheless.- The Atlantic
- Posted Sep 17, 2021
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- David Sims
The film earns its length not by overstuffing the frame with opulent action, but by slowing things down and basking in the charisma of its ensemble.- The Atlantic
- Posted Apr 23, 2019
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- David Sims
Oldboy is mostly absorbing because of the intense anguish radiating off the screen at all times; Park’s ability to effectively communicate obsession, and put the audience in the head of someone who has almost entirely lost touch with his sense of self, feels unparalleled to this day.- The Atlantic
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- David Sims
The Sisters Brothers feels special. It has the painterly visuals of a classic film, but its lead characters are black-hatted villains whose road to redemption is mostly motivated by exhaustion rather than guilt. The story is grim and violent, but the brothers’ relationship is shot through with ramshackle humor, and the men they’re ultimately tasked with pursuing are portrayed as loving and idealistic—an utter rarity for this kind of story.- The Atlantic
- Posted Sep 22, 2018
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- David Sims
Despite the wistful tone, it’s a bitingly funny viewing experience. Shrunken to Hart’s height and given his balding pate, Hawke is transfixing in the role; as Hart, he holds everyone’s attention whenever he’s monologuing.- The Atlantic
- Posted Nov 6, 2025
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- David Sims
Barbarian serves up all the requisite thrills with panache, but it also provokes deeper, longer-lasting reflections. That balance is why the film has continued spreading so organically months after its release, and why it’ll keep tempting viewers down to the basement for years to come.- The Atlantic
- Posted Nov 4, 2022
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- David Sims
By framing her characters’ inventiveness with boldly bizarre imagery, Schoenbrun is getting at what makes internet horror such a unique mode of cinema. The viewer is unsettled not just by the content, but by their ambiguous relationship to who’s sharing it.- The Atlantic
- Posted May 21, 2022
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- David Sims
For Frankenstein, Netflix handed him a massive budget to play with, and the money is all up on the big screen, if you can catch the movie on one. But just like del Toro’s previous reverent adaptations, all of that sumptuousness is hamstrung by his apparent desire to remain faithful to the original tale.- The Atlantic
- Posted Nov 13, 2025
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- David Sims
The story’s heightened reality works best when it’s barely distinguishable from our own—though it starts to lose steam the more it drifts into fantasy. The movie is at times a mess, but a compelling one, and this debut from Boots Riley should herald a fascinating filmmaking career.- The Atlantic
- Posted Jul 9, 2018
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- David Sims
There is no sense of real danger, because the mission has to continue, if only to keep this impressive long shot going. Any time there’s a larger, more cataclysmic set piece, our heroes look like tiny chess pieces on a much bigger board, bystanders who move around exploding mortars and whizzing bullets to produce the most stunning tableaux possible.- The Atlantic
- Posted Jan 3, 2020
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- David Sims
For all its body horrors and apocalyptic conclusions, High Life is one of Denis’s most loving and tender creations.- The Atlantic
- Posted Apr 4, 2019
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