Eli Friedberg
Select another critic »For 37 reviews, this critic has graded:
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18% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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80% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 3.2 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Eli Friedberg's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 62 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Final Account | |
| Lowest review score: | My Neighbor Adolf | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 21 out of 37
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Mixed: 13 out of 37
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Negative: 3 out of 37
37
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Eli Friedberg
Despite loose ends, it’s one of the most dreamily affectionate (and affectionately critical) portrayals of the natural sciences ever committed to the screen.- Slant Magazine
- Posted May 5, 2026
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- Eli Friedberg
On the whole, Blue Film’s raw, skin-crawling interrogations of aberrant sexuality and trauma ring fearless and true.- Slant Magazine
- Posted May 4, 2026
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- Eli Friedberg
Fatih Akin’s Amrum is a delicate coming-of-age parable tracking national identity and violence to their most intimate origin points during the waning days of the Third Reich.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Apr 14, 2026
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- Eli Friedberg
The narrative is nonsense, but it’s at least an arch and sweet kind of nonsense as it jumps through its fairy-tale hoops on the way to the next splash of artful color and manically doodled creativity.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Apr 7, 2026
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- Eli Friedberg
François Ozon’s adaptation of Albert Camus’s novel is haunting, transportive, and tragically humanist, a worthy introduction to the text for the skeptical (or a refresher for the lapsed) and a memorably grim drama in its own right.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Mar 29, 2026
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- Eli Friedberg
Nadav Lapid’s film locates a dire spiritual crisis facing the nation of his birth.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Mar 24, 2026
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- Eli Friedberg
This is an immensely effective tropical island-set chamber drama in which two characters see their gender and labor relations start to reverse in ways that eventually reveal surprising ambiguities.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 28, 2026
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- Eli Friedberg
More than anything, this twisty dystopian thriller commits to the jittery anxiety of doomscrolling.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 21, 2026
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- Eli Friedberg
The film is a satiric look at Stalinism and bureaucracy with shades of Kafka, Orwell, and Gogol.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Oct 7, 2025
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- Eli Friedberg
Kathryn Bigelow’s nerve-shredding A House of Dynamite stares down impossible questions about an unthinkable scenario.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 29, 2025
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- Eli Friedberg
If there’s still anyone uncritically repeating Riefenstahl’s narrative of naïveté, they’ll find it hard to sustain by the end credits.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 1, 2025
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- Eli Friedberg
Inoue’s film is not just an effective youth melodrama––much as it is that––but a fully sensory action film that deeply understands the raw appeal of its subject beyond wide-angle shots from the bleachers.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jul 25, 2023
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- Eli Friedberg
What I can’t help but miss in all this is the poetic free spirit and deep human interest that once defined most things associated with Hideaki Anno—his concerns, it seems, have shifted from individual to structural, and perhaps people just aren’t so compelling to him anymore. Higuchi’s evidently having a great deal of fun, however, and surely has more of those rubbery monsters up his sleeve. He’s doing fine.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jan 19, 2023
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- Eli Friedberg
Evangelion 3.0 + 1.01: Thrice Upon a Time is so bewilderingly maximalist in its ambitions, so conflicted in its heart, so dense and idiosyncratic from its title on down that it’s hard to know where to even begin gauging one’s own reaction to it except by probing inward.- The Film Stage
- Posted Oct 5, 2021
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- Eli Friedberg
Many Saints comes bursting out of the proverbial shed with so many new ideas that one gets the sense it easily could—perhaps should—have been a new season of television.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 27, 2021
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- Eli Friedberg
This is Imaishi’s world. Every cut, gesture, and line of dialogue here is punctuated by maximum comic book-style exclamation points. Every spectacular action feat is escalated several different times over the top, crossing from coolness through self-parody and back to coolness in a way that’s bound to make the attention-deficient among us stand up and cheer.- The Film Stage
- Posted May 24, 2021
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- Eli Friedberg
Though not a film as big or bombastic as North Korea’s political gestures, nor one to ruminate on larger questions about the political state of East Asia’s former Third World and the Western observer’s role to bear, White’s picture pokes its head above the masses of drably shot, dryly informational documentaries currently dominating streaming services with both its clear and concise journalism and its deft command of narrative and genre.- The Film Stage
- Posted May 24, 2021
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- Eli Friedberg
Action sequences are choreographed and edited with a degree of tight conceptual and spatial coherency that puts nearly any Marvel movie to shame, whether close-quarters scuffles or epic woman-on-kaiju confrontations.- The Film Stage
- Posted May 24, 2021
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- Eli Friedberg
The Holocaust is one of the most exhaustively documented events in history, yet it can seemingly never be documented enough. This is not only due to the relentless persistence of antisemites and fascist sympathizers in trying to sow doubt as to its veracity, but because many more seemingly benign parties have managed to distance themselves from fascism’s warning to the West, and the world.- The Film Stage
- Posted May 21, 2021
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- Eli Friedberg
Having come upon a provocative allegory for the endemic dissociation of the hyper-digital age, though, Nikou does not interrogate it as intensely or from as many angles as possible in the lean, character-driven 90-minute film.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 14, 2020
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- Eli Friedberg
What it lacks in formal finesse or educational scope, the film more than compensates as a taut illustration of the profound disconnect between high-level social engineering and the lived social realities that totalitarian policies entail. It’s quiet, feminist rage against Big Brother.- The Film Stage
- Posted Aug 5, 2019
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