Derek Smith
Select another critic »For 336 reviews, this critic has graded:
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15% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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83% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 14.2 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Derek Smith's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 51 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Everything Everywhere All at Once | |
| Lowest review score: | The Last Face | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 133 out of 336
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Mixed: 74 out of 336
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Negative: 129 out of 336
336
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Derek Smith
John Crowley’s film blunts the force of the naturalistic performances by Florence Pugh and Andrew Garfield as it shifts around the timeline of the story with little rhyme, reason, or rhythm.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Oct 10, 2024
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- Derek Smith
There’s a certain pleasure in basking in the anarchic behavior of the SNL cast as depicted in Saturday Night, but it’s rendered hollow by the film’s often grating mythologizing of them, which includes trying to turn the 90 minutes before the first episode into a frenetic comedy of Safdie-esque proportions.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 25, 2024
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- Derek Smith
As the film goes on, it stretches its own internal logic and, following a genuinely shocking third-act twist, renders the world that it’s created virtually incoherent merely in a ploy to keep the audience on the edge of their seats.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 17, 2024
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- Derek Smith
The world of My Old Ass retains a lived-in quality, in large part due to the shrewd, sensitive way in which it treats the emotional struggles of its teenage characters.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 12, 2024
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- Derek Smith
The film’s treatment of its subject is belligerently hamfisted, disingenuous, and incurious.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 27, 2024
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- Derek Smith
The remake gets bogged down by a superfluous, hackneyed backstory and narrative threads that are conspicuous for their lack of emotional gravitas, causing the film to feel like a wheel-spinning exercise.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 22, 2024
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- Derek Smith
The importance of touch between a parent and child—and, in the case of this film, specifically between a father and daughter—is rarely discussed openly in Daughters, but it looms large over nearly every scene.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 6, 2024
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- Derek Smith
The film speaks unflinchingly to the unique anxieties and frustrations of early teenhood.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jul 21, 2024
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- Derek Smith
All of the time spent on Thomas Munro’s various campaigns for reconciliation and harmony between two Māori tribes hampers the film, which would have been better served had it expounded on the grander conflicts that it only superficially acknowledges.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jul 8, 2024
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- Derek Smith
The film is all table-setting, with the stories lacking in polish and dramatic momentum and the characters never developed beyond archetypes.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jun 24, 2024
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- Derek Smith
Ultimately, in trying to make Katherine both a historical girlboss and a near-martyr to a vaguely articulated cause, Firebrand’s meandering, under-baked screenplay manages to neither have its cake nor eat it too.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jun 10, 2024
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- Derek Smith
The film leaves no room for doubt about what Trudy Ederle will accomplish, and thus creates virtually no dramatic tension in her inevitable rise to the top ranks of women’s swimming.- Slant Magazine
- Posted May 30, 2024
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- Derek Smith
Whenever its main characters are pulled apart, the movie magic, in every sense of the phrase, dissipates, leaving us with a bland, derivative action-comedy that’s never quite as funny or thrilling as it thinks it is.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Apr 30, 2024
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- Derek Smith
Slow steadfastly remains a character-driven piece, homing in on the intricacies of its protagonists’ psychologies and engaging with their subtle emotional shifts as they become more intimate with one another.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Apr 28, 2024
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- Derek Smith
To Ritchie’s credit, he keeps his film moving along at a consistently brisk clip, but that breeziness is also the cause of its weightlessness, rendering its vision of historical events as outright cartoonish, down to the often clownish portrayals of Nazis and the flawless execution of nearly every element of March-Phillips’s plans.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Apr 16, 2024
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- Derek Smith
The film is held together by the universal strength of its performances, particularly James and Smollett, and the elegance with which it veers between dreamy interludes and poetic flourishes stemming from Malik’s imagination and the more quotidian presentation of the small world he lives in, warts and all.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Apr 15, 2024
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- Derek Smith
The last 20 minutes live up to the promise of bludgeoning viewers with plenty of rock-‘em-sock-‘em combat and demolished human landscapes, but what any of it is actually for will be forgotten even before the dust begins to settle.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Mar 28, 2024
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- Derek Smith
The film’s final act contains some of the most twisted, gory violence this particular subgenre of horror has seen in years, ultimately recalling nothing less than the films of the ultra-violent New French Extremity movement.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Mar 14, 2024
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- Derek Smith
The film never thinks to lean into the blatant silliness that its premise invites.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Mar 7, 2024
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- Derek Smith
This shaggy, disjointed film is less interested in the complexities of Marley’s personal or professional life than it is in presenting him as a hero and an inspiration.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Feb 13, 2024
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- Derek Smith
Much of Rich Peppiatt’s film isn’t about respectability, but rather debasement, and sugar-coating Kneecap’s widespread antics isn’t on the menu.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 29, 2024
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- Derek Smith
Suncoast spends much of its runtime trafficking in tiresome coming-of-age tropes, until the resulting crowd-pleaser has snuffed out much of what’s so singular about its central story.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 29, 2024
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- Derek Smith
The film approaches a new tech frontier with an objective, responsibly apprehensive, eye.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 21, 2024
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- Derek Smith
It’s not unlike a partially completed sketch whose occasional flashes of color only serve to remind us how incomplete and lazily constructed the rest of it is.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 10, 2024
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- Derek Smith
Will Gluck’s rom-com doesn’t bother to create a compelling world around its charming leads.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Dec 21, 2023
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- Derek Smith
Paul King again proves himself a masterful engineer of imaginary worlds, and it’s the meticulous attention to detail that makes Wonka so captivating.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Dec 4, 2023
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- Derek Smith
Thanks to Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor’s unflappable performance, the theories that Isabel Wilkerson laid out in her book emerge with an emotional clarity that can be forceful, but the film’s often inelegant, choppy structure also works against that clarity.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Dec 4, 2023
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- Derek Smith
More times than not, the film’s bursts of humor clash awkwardly with the far more frequent attempts at gravitas that the filmmakers strive for when our protagonist is in battle or engaged in political discussions.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Nov 16, 2023
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- Derek Smith
The searing images of various gulags, public executions, and private beatings will not be easily forgotten.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Oct 30, 2023
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- Derek Smith
By its conclusion, what we’re left with is a cinematic Frankenstein, whose disparate genre elements have been cobbled together without much consideration or fuss.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Oct 26, 2023
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