Donald Clarke
Select another critic »For 560 reviews, this critic has graded:
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53% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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44% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 2.2 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Donald Clarke's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 68 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Son of Saul | |
| Lowest review score: | Sonic the Hedgehog | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 283 out of 560
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Mixed: 256 out of 560
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Negative: 21 out of 560
560
movie
reviews
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- Donald Clarke
The set pieces are well handled, but this prequel stands out most for its commitment to fleshy humanity.- The Irish Times
- Posted Jun 27, 2024
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- Donald Clarke
We don’t demand hard realism from such a project, but a little more edge would have been nice. Solid, middlebrow entertainment, nonetheless.- The Irish Times
- Posted Feb 11, 2026
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- Donald Clarke
Even an actor as good as Craig struggles to make sense of that more sensitive, more sharing version of Bond. Too many opposing cogs are creaking within a psyche that has never been much at home to contradiction. Then, towards the close, it comes together in such stirring form that only the most awkward customer will leave unsatisfied.- The Irish Times
- Posted Sep 28, 2021
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- Donald Clarke
The creators of Deadpool will argue, lamely in my view, that by admitting the puerile nature of the humour they inure themselves to criticism in that area, but no such excuses are offered for the onanistic self-regard. After two hours of this infantile mugging, one is left longing for the genuinely upending humour of the Batman TV series from 60 years ago. Awful. Just awful.- The Irish Times
- Posted Jul 23, 2024
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- Donald Clarke
For all the good work, however, the film fails to fully capture the madness of the response at home.- The Irish Times
- Posted Sep 13, 2025
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- Donald Clarke
The cartoonish closing battles make it clear that, not for the first time, Gunn is striving for high trash, but what he achieves here is low garbage. Utterly charmless. Devoid of humanity. As funny as toothache.- The Irish Times
- Posted Jul 8, 2025
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- Donald Clarke
Made within the communities it satirises, I Blame Society thrives on its own crotchety energy.- The Irish Times
- Posted Apr 23, 2021
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- Donald Clarke
The picture doesn’t reach out and grab you. It doesn’t fling viscera in your face. It hangs around outside your house, half hidden in shadow, and gradually insinuates malaise. So, no, not comfort food.- The Irish Times
- Posted Sep 9, 2022
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- Donald Clarke
If anything, The Unbearable Weight is not quite tricksy enough.- The Irish Times
- Posted Apr 21, 2022
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- Donald Clarke
Already established as a wizard with buried irony, Pugh politely steals the film with a witty performance that makes sense of even the silliest moments.- The Irish Times
- Posted Jul 9, 2021
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- Donald Clarke
It has the precision of retooled memory. It speaks to experienced time and place.- The Irish Times
- Posted Oct 5, 2023
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- Donald Clarke
No doubt millions will be have no difficulty ferreting out the emotional core and propelling The Way of Water to box office success. But the indulgence of it all causes one to yearn for the raw, propulsive action of Cameron’s first two Terminator movies.- The Irish Times
- Posted Dec 14, 2022
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- Donald Clarke
Are we supposed to be scared or are we supposed to be laughing at the absurdity of it all? Happily, the actors throw enough energy at the screen to deflect any incoming frustration. An odd beast.- The Irish Times
- Posted Aug 23, 2023
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- The Irish Times
- Posted Oct 13, 2021
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- Donald Clarke
The film does indeed reflect how megastardom goes about its business. The script, by the director and Emily Mortimer, piles on the irony with admirable diligence. But this is about as cutting-edge as making fun of Donald Trump for being orange.- The Irish Times
- Posted Aug 28, 2025
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- Donald Clarke
Imagine a Roger Corman film made with the combined budgets of every Roger Corman film and you are halfway there.- The Irish Times
- Posted Feb 16, 2023
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- Donald Clarke
The Surfer, for all its unpleasantness, offers encouraging evidence that there is still room for existential awkwardness in contemporary cinema. No better, odder man than Nicolas Cage to act that out as the catechism of surfism gains another worthy chapter.- The Irish Times
- Posted May 7, 2025
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- Donald Clarke
That first (third) act functions effectively as a bewitching enigmatic short that gets away with its downbeat denouement. The audience can fill the gaps in whatever enigmatic way they see fit. Unfortunately the movie continues backwards into increasingly mawkish territory.- The Irish Times
- Posted Aug 20, 2025
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- Donald Clarke
All You Need Is Death, craggy and rough-edged, may be in constant conversation with the distant past, but it also puts up signposts to the future for Irish horror cinema. It’s about time somebody found a name for this artistic movement (if it is yet that).- The Irish Times
- Posted Apr 18, 2024
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- Donald Clarke
Too murky. Too little access to the character’s face. It takes a long, long time for the film to redeem itself with the biplane stunt you’ve seen on the poster.- The Irish Times
- Posted May 14, 2025
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- Donald Clarke
Full marks for character and setting. Less enthusiastic hurrahs for narrative arc.- The Irish Times
- Posted Jul 31, 2020
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- Donald Clarke
Coogler and his team have pulled together a functional time-passer in difficult circumstances. As before, the costumes are a gorgeous exercise in Afrofuturist chic. The music neatly works ethnic elements in with triumphant orchestral swirls. And the actors are consistently strong.- The Irish Times
- Posted Nov 10, 2022
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- Donald Clarke
Jurassic World: Rebirth plays, nonetheless, as a refreshing blast of matinee exuberance after the pomposity of the previous three films. Yes, third best in the series. For whatever little that is worth.- The Irish Times
- Posted Jul 2, 2025
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- The Irish Times
- Posted Sep 15, 2023
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- Donald Clarke
We bounce from one adventure to another without settling into anything like a rhythm. But the nuanced acting and characterisation elevate a film that feels securely connected to a particular place and time. The Bronx has rarely been so affectionately evoked.- The Irish Times
- Posted Aug 26, 2022
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- The Irish Times
- Posted Sep 27, 2021
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- Donald Clarke
Arriving somewhat under the radar, Marley Morrison’s enchanting comedy makes something convincingly British of a form that the American indie cadre has exploited to near exhaustion.- The Irish Times
- Posted Oct 8, 2021
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- Donald Clarke
The Palestinian submission for international picture at the incoming Academy Awards is a handsome, old-fashioned production that, even when it is telling us things we didn’t know, confirms all our worst suspicions about the British colonial experience in the Holy Land.- The Irish Times
- Posted Oct 31, 2025
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- The Irish Times
- Posted Aug 22, 2024
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- Donald Clarke
James Watkins’s version easily justifies its independent existence, however. Four first-rate performances find new energies in the story. The shift in nationalities adds other interesting angles.- The Irish Times
- Posted Sep 10, 2024
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