Dom Sinacola
Select another critic »For 71 reviews, this critic has graded:
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57% higher than the average critic
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8% same as the average critic
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35% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 5.8 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Dom Sinacola's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 71 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Mandy | |
| Lowest review score: | Home Sweet Home Alone | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 52 out of 71
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Mixed: 16 out of 71
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Negative: 3 out of 71
71
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Dom Sinacola
An open riff on First Blood, with shades of the 1973 Joe Don Baker vehicle Walking Tall, Rebel Ridge also feels like a determined return to the relentlessness of Saulnier’s first films.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Sep 6, 2024
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- Dom Sinacola
Bad Boys: Ride or Die is a genuine crowd-pleaser, just undeniably captivating, funny and raging, neon-pink copaganda.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jun 9, 2024
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- Paste Magazine
- Posted Feb 29, 2024
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- Dom Sinacola
Unsurprisingly, Dead Reckoning Part One’s plot, as convoluted as the best in the franchise, comes together stupendously.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jul 10, 2023
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- Dom Sinacola
This is all the makings of Oscar gold, rife with the story beats that The Social Network codified—and even succeeds in some clever elliptical storytelling, the stuff that makes award bodies shiver—but Johnson’s and Raab’s aesthetic consistently pulls the iconism of the story into messier immediacy.- Paste Magazine
- Posted May 12, 2023
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- Dom Sinacola
This time around, Murder Mystery 2 isn’t much of an actual murder mystery at all, less interested in the deductive skills of the Spitzes than in their indefatigable charm.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Apr 3, 2023
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- Dom Sinacola
Everything on screen is stupendous. This is what we want, to watch John Wick murder the whole world, forever and ever amen.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Mar 22, 2023
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- Dom Sinacola
The Way of Water’s true achievement is that it looks like nothing else but the first Avatar, unparalleled in detail and scale, a devouring enterprise all to itself. Watching The Way of Water can at times feel astonishing, as if the brain gapes at the sheer amount of physical data present in every frame, incapable of consuming it, but longing to keep up.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Dec 15, 2022
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- Dom Sinacola
A legacy sequel that does nothing to revitalize its characters, expand its canon, extend (heh) its mythos, or even really tell a new joke. I laughed through the whole thing.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jun 22, 2022
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- Dom Sinacola
Tippett purges his Id until he’s wrung the last bit of bile from the Assassin’s journey, but even throughout all the harrowing imagery, the director never loses a sense of cinematic wonder.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jun 15, 2022
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- Dom Sinacola
White Elephant too often proceeds as dull and dreamy, an occasionally violent eulogy for a life of crime for which we have little context.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jun 1, 2022
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- Dom Sinacola
Kosinski’s dogfights are pristine, incredible feats of filmmaking, economical and orbiting around recognizable space, but given to occasional, inexplicable shocks of pure chaos. Then quickly cohering again.- Paste Magazine
- Posted May 27, 2022
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- Dom Sinacola
Though an ensemble of Angelenos fills out the film as it barrels to pretty much the only conclusion it could have, Ambulance is about as tidy as a Michael Bay film can get.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Apr 8, 2022
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- Dom Sinacola
The context, however much of it there is, affects little, and the whole film begins to resemble a fetish object more than an adaptation. In a bad way.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Dec 16, 2021
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- Dom Sinacola
Home Sweet Home Alone doesn’t bear any aesthetic beyond “existing.” It is obligatory when it needn’t be. It will undoubtedly get a sequel.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Nov 15, 2021
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- Paste Magazine
- Posted Nov 9, 2021
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- Dom Sinacola
Against a lean genre construction, Cummings sputters and apologizes and screams at people and breaks things—vaping constantly—less a force of nature than a flesh-and-blood body half-failing to contain the whiny forces of nature within. His performance is a miracle of control and timing, focused by how little control Jordan has in his life, how poorly timed everything seems to be.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Nov 2, 2021
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- Dom Sinacola
Ghostland is a movie and place borne from nuclear disaster, populated with the denizens of countless B-movies and the spectres of whiplash Hollywood careers.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Sep 16, 2021
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- Dom Sinacola
Like RaMell Ross’s Hale County This Morning, This Evening, Faya Dayi wanders lovely, liminal spaces between narrative and fairytale, between documentary film and something looser, something personally vérité.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Sep 2, 2021
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- Dom Sinacola
Two lives connecting across the wasteland of modernity can be among the rarest and richest parts of our days on this planet. When Tsai makes those connections, all too briefly, it’s indelibly moving.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 12, 2021
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- Dom Sinacola
Ostensibly, Ema revels in the pulling down of walls, insistent on stripping away the artifice of civility and systemic conservatism.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 10, 2021
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- Dom Sinacola
As in all of Petzold’s films, Undine builds a world of liminal spaces—of lives in transition, always moving—of his characters shifting between realities, never quite sure where one ends and another begins.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jun 4, 2021
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- Dom Sinacola
A sequel of rare sincerity, Bill & Ted Face the Music avoids feeling like a craven reviving of a hollowed-out IP or a cynical reboot, mostly because its ambition is the stuff of affection—for what the filmmakers are doing, made with sympathy for their audience and a genuine desire to explore these characters in a new context. Maybe that’s the despair talking. Or maybe it’s just the relief of for once confronting the past and finding that it’s aged considerably well.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 27, 2020
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- Dom Sinacola
It’s all pretty marvelous stuff, as much a well-oiled genre machine as it is a respite from big studio bloat, a flick more decidedly horror than any version before and yet another showcase for Elisabeth Moss’s herculean prowess.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Feb 27, 2020
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- Dom Sinacola
Bad Boys for Life is better than it should be—the audience at my screening clapped when it ended—but not quite up to being what it must: a reminder that, you know what, a thousand years from now, Bad Boys will still fucking be here.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 16, 2020
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- Dom Sinacola
A marvel of so many confounding, disparate elements that somehow conspire to bring us from one side of the earth to the other. One would think the Safdies got lucky were we not wiser to their talent.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Dec 5, 2019
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- Dom Sinacola
It doesn’t necessarily matter—nothing matters, really—but Dark Fate is so self-serious, so expositionally overwhelming, that its tendency to tell rather than show bleeds into its every aspect.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Nov 12, 2019
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- Dom Sinacola
The sequel feels compromised, lumped with easy lessons about family and community, piecemeal and cobbled together from bigger ideas and the ever-nagging intuition that the sell-by date on the franchise has long expired.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Oct 17, 2019
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- Dom Sinacola
Do not let anyone tell you that Joker captures our specific time, represents our specific society, both births and defines our specific zeitgeist, grabs ahold of our specific faces and breathes smoke down our throats. It doesn’t. Joker is, more than anything, fine. And we, more than anything, are not.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Oct 2, 2019
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- Dom Sinacola
Ready or Not revels in expectations—it’s a survival thriller, dark comedy, gross-out revenge splatterfest—but rarely exceeds them, treading well through each genre signifier, as suspenseful and funny and violent as any one of us could hope.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 22, 2019
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- Dom Sinacola
Waugh’s action set pieces don’t surprise so much as operate with impressive efficiency- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 22, 2019
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- Dom Sinacola
Compared to the eight films preceding it, the mindlessness of Hobbs & Shaw isn’t a sign of humble poptimist genius, just of something less than what it could have been.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 1, 2019
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- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jul 25, 2019
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- Dom Sinacola
Like a particularly bad trip, Midsommar bristles with the subcutaneous need to escape, with the dread that one is trapped. In this community in the middle of nowhere, in this strange culture, in this life, in your body and its existential pain: Aster imprisons us so that when the release comes, it’s as if one’s insides are emptying cataclysmically. In the moment, it’s an assault. It’s astounding.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jul 2, 2019
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- Dom Sinacola
Dark Phoenix was always destined to fail. Limiting the sprawling story to one main arc severely debilitates the original’s emotional resonance, but avoiding Apocalypse’s swollen plot and stakes-less character narratives means reigning in an essentially big saga and cutting all of its awe down to some rote CGI. To make this work in one movie is to deny the essence of the source text.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jun 6, 2019
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- Dom Sinacola
Juxtaposing human-sized drama against classic Toho iconography and one jaw-dropping silhouette after another, King of the Monsters is often more magnificently overwhelming than not.- Paste Magazine
- Posted May 30, 2019
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- Dom Sinacola
As video games and action movies parabolically draw closer and closer to one another, John Wick 3 may be the first of its kind to figure out how to keep that comparison from being a point of shame.- Paste Magazine
- Posted May 16, 2019
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- Dom Sinacola
It’s not always clear that Denis’ film is convincing enough to prove a point, or if any point it would prove is inevitably consumed by the nihilism at the core of its narrative. It simply exists, finds a moment of empathy now and then, is maybe pointless in the end. Like every one of us.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Apr 12, 2019
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- Dom Sinacola
It is, despite its surprisingly gruesome violence, little more than another superhero movie that will make more money than the GDP of a small island nation. It’s pretty good.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Apr 4, 2019
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- Dom Sinacola
Let the Hitchcock comparisons come. Peele deserves them well enough. Best not to think about it too hard, to not ruin a good thing, to demand that Us be anything more than sublimely entertaining and wonderfully thoughtful, endlessly disturbing genre filmmaking.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Mar 22, 2019
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- Dom Sinacola
Like any obviously competent action director, Johnson establishes geography and spatial stakes with rigor, but then, like any incompetent action director—cough, Peter Berg, cough—he loses focus, the idea of the action overtaking its execution. It’s frustrating, because Johnson clearly understands what he’s doing.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Mar 15, 2019
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- Dom Sinacola
The Man Who Killed Hitler and Then the Bigfoot is an exquisitely boring movie, a promise of high-concept adventure that only delivers a stiflingly melancholy ode to the unknown soldier.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Feb 13, 2019
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- Dom Sinacola
For some, Piercing may be a sign of an exceptionally talented filmmaker still finding his stride, this expertly handled erotic thriller an imaginative, stylized headache. For others, Piercing may be all those things, but ultimately not worth the punishment.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Feb 7, 2019
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- Dom Sinacola
Everything is not awesome, but everything isn’t so bad either. How could it be when everything is everything? Perhaps this is the lesson on which kids can glom amongst this admittedly overlong, overwhelming experience: Yoda was wrong; trying is what matters. It’s a lovely lesson, and a lovely movie.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Feb 7, 2019
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- Dom Sinacola
Gina Rodriguez, who proved in Annihilation that she’s capable of something so much more addled and kinetic than this, does what she can with such aggravating material, but everything around her insults whatever emotional depth she can mine despite what she’s given.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 31, 2019
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- Dom Sinacola
We’re typically never trusted to accept the reality of an icon’s life for what it is rather than what media consultants want it to exemplify. What the film’s real failing amounts to is any lack of interest in Ginsburg’s true superpower: Her inhuman, sleepless drive to do the work.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 3, 2019
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- Dom Sinacola
The heartbreaking bravery of Barry Jenkins’ third brilliant film is that he rests upon a clean, aching ambiguity: Such hope is both enough, and will never be enough, because nearly 50 years later nothing has changed.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Dec 25, 2018
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- Dom Sinacola
For the most part, the DCEU just can’t square its admittedly exciting set pieces with solid storytelling. In turn, whenever Aquaman pops a squat to unload exposition, it grinds to an interminable halt. Those action scenes, though. Revolutionary at best, innovative at worst.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Dec 20, 2018
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- Dom Sinacola
Where Hill’s characters fill every frame with warmth and empathy, the world they inhabit is as contrived as a memory one trusts too much.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Nov 1, 2018
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- Dom Sinacola
As was the case in Cosmatos’s first film, the comparatively sedate Beyond the Black Rainbow, each frame, every shot of Mandy reeks of shocking beauty, stylized at times to within an inch of its intelligibility, but endlessly pregnant with creativity and control, euphoria and pain, clarity and honesty and the ineffable sense that Cosmatos knows exactly how and what he wants to subconsciously imprint into the viewer.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Sep 13, 2018
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- Dom Sinacola
Once all these characters come together, the film’s manic, disjointed first act settles in for some seriously rollicking ’80s-esque hijinks, replete with brand new Predator aliens and a healthy dose of worldbuilding that touches on today’s every hot button issue, from climate change to genetic modifications to anti-ableism that’s actually probably just ableism.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Sep 13, 2018
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- Dom Sinacola
It’s true that no one’s really making films like this anymore, but it’s also true that everyone pretty much wants to.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 23, 2018
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- Dom Sinacola
McQuarrie’s sense of building a scene on the barest of elements, communicating the most empirical of information, is so breathlessly impeccable, the plot barely seems to matter aside from creating easily understood stakes and giving Ethan Hunt a reason to keep, in the parlance of the film, figuring it out.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jul 26, 2018
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- Dom Sinacola
For every overgeneralization Macdonald leans into or too-obvious historic parallels he lets fly, there is a corresponding performance, ebullient and transcendent—a purity Macdonald, and his viewers for that matter, can’t help but sour.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jul 12, 2018
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- Dom Sinacola
What Leave No Trace portrays so beautifully, with so much unspoken grace, is that divide between living and surviving to live. One can find all of that dissonance in Foster’s fathomless eyes.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jun 28, 2018
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- Dom Sinacola
It’s a gorgeous film, mourning the impossibility of being alive as it celebrates that which binds us, a conscious-rattling, viscera-stirring piece of art.- Paste Magazine
- Posted May 23, 2018
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- Dom Sinacola
It’s a pretty great blockbuster if you don’t think about it much.- Paste Magazine
- Posted May 23, 2018
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- Dom Sinacola
What cinematographer Joshua James Richards can do with a camera bears the weight of countless filmmakers in thrall to the pregnant possibility of this marvelous continent. Every frame of this film speaks of innumerable lives—passions and failures and tragedies and triumphs—unfolding unfathomably.- Paste Magazine
- Posted May 9, 2018
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- Dom Sinacola
Bewitching and masterfully rendered, Zama is an elegant, ravishing, often delightfully strange achievement.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Apr 18, 2018
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- Dom Sinacola
If the film’s direction is workmanlike and the writers’ plotting flimsy, then the better to focus on the cast. They’re a joy to watch together.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Apr 5, 2018
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- Dom Sinacola
As much as the movie is an enrapturing, sometimes overwhelming experience, filled with passion and hard work and adoration for the impossible task of making such a singular movie at all, Anderson and his animation team find the film’s soul in these dog’s eyes.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Mar 28, 2018
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- Dom Sinacola
Lawrence (and his star, Jennifer Lawrence) want to leave no doubt that this is the lurid, infuriating stuff of the adult-minded, drenched in sophistication and pain—much like Lawrence’s dystopic vision for The Hunger Games, only anchored in the hyperreal world of the New Cold War we may be starting to realize isn’t “new” at all.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Mar 1, 2018
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- Dom Sinacola
Black Panther might be the first MCU film that could claim to most clearly be an expression of a particular director’s voice.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Feb 14, 2018
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- Dom Sinacola
Gorgeous and gross in equal measure, propelled by the sense that anything could happen, Like Me is a visual feast.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 27, 2018
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- Dom Sinacola
None of it ever escalates past a baseline of digestible insanity, which isn’t really all that insane when the pasts of Cage and Taylor are littered with the skeletons of seedier films and more preposterous premises.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 18, 2018
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- Dom Sinacola
Den of Thieves is such a dumb misunderstanding of the genres in which it plays, such a loud, interminable shart of unmitigated machismo, such a heavy-handed rip-off of Heat and The Usual Suspects and even Ocean’s Eleven (and maybe even The Fast and the Furious, but for scumbags) that it feels anachronistic on arrival, the kind of melodramatic, pulpy studio action flick that doesn’t get made anymore because it shouldn’t.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 18, 2018
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- Dom Sinacola
It’s a beautiful thing, Wright’s film, an act of historical tension made with the grandest of ambitions tempered by the most careful of portrayals—precise in its bloat and fearless in its fantasy—a reminder today of what makes for actual leadership in a world exhausted by flummoxed white men with sound and fury, signifying nothing.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Dec 21, 2017
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- Dom Sinacola
Justice League may be a more functional film that its predecessors, but it also lacks the style and go-for-broke big ideas that made Batman v Superman such a fascinating shitshow.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Nov 16, 2017
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- Dom Sinacola
Anthony’s is the rare film that thrives in its parts rather than in the sum of them, though the sum is breathlessly simple, to the extent that one wonders why no film has ever connected the lines—lined up the parallels—as Anthony has.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Oct 19, 2017
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- Dom Sinacola
Blade Runner 2049 should resonate deeply with anyone who’s ever held love for the original.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Oct 5, 2017
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- Dom Sinacola
It’s only in Dayveon’s final act that plot contrivances begin to wander away from Abbasi’s carefully calibrated realism.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Sep 22, 2017
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