Emily Yoshida
Select another critic »For 239 reviews, this critic has graded:
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41% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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56% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 3.9 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Emily Yoshida's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 62 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Shoplifters | |
| Lowest review score: | The Book of Henry | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 128 out of 239
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Mixed: 84 out of 239
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Negative: 27 out of 239
239
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Emily Yoshida
A rainbow-colored scream into the abyss, Nagahisa’s story of a quartet of orphaned tweens who start a chiptune rock band is as rigorous in its exploration of grief as it is stylistically exuberant, and one of the most exciting premieres at Sundance this year.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 10, 2020
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- Emily Yoshida
Lane observes with both wryness and palpable admiration as groups across the country embrace the gothic pageantry of the Temple as a means of exercising their political freedom.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Apr 17, 2019
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- Emily Yoshida
Violet wants to sing. Does Violet want to be a pop star? This is posed as the the driving question of the film, but nothing about Fanning’s performance suggests a desire for much of anything.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Apr 12, 2019
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- Emily Yoshida
As many times as I tried to get onboard with its proposed brand of breezy fun, it kept kicking me off, if only because I found myself running up against the very foundation of its premise.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Apr 12, 2019
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- Emily Yoshida
The first time I saw Peterloo, it sent me out of the screening room onto Park Avenue with my blood boiling. Despite the oratory and the funny hats, Leigh’s ability to incite felt utterly contemporary and urgent.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Apr 3, 2019
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- Emily Yoshida
Its own pointlessness may keep The Dirt from feeling like an actual affront to humanity, but that doesn't make it very good, either.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 23, 2019
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- Emily Yoshida
So here, in the year of our lord 2019, comes Five Feet Apart, and if it ends up being a late entry in the trend, it wouldn’t be a bad one to go out on.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 18, 2019
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- Emily Yoshida
What makes Booksmart land so delightfully is Wilde’s handle on exactly how seriously to take her neurotic heroines. ... Booksmart manages to be inclusive and progressive, without being precious about anything or sacrificing an ounce of humor. It feels at once like a huge moment for the teen movie genre, and also effortless, effortless enough to make one wonder what took so long.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 14, 2019
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- Emily Yoshida
The film ... is more emotional than definitive; stopping just short of bestowing sainthood on the artist, but still aiming for something a little more cosmic than reportorial. This is not a “what really happened” exposé of his death, nor is it an academic postmortem on Peep’s musical or cultural legacy. It’s most effective as a character study.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 13, 2019
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- Emily Yoshida
It’s a messier film than Get Out, in that it never quite gets around to saying the things it’s trying to say. This is not entirely a bad thing; its messiness allows the film to spend more time working up inventive scares than conveying an all-caps complete-sentence message.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 9, 2019
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- Emily Yoshida
Sword of Trust feints at being an Ideas movie, but really only wants to hang — which is certainly not a crime, but given the subject matter, and These Times, it’s a little disappointing.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Mar 9, 2019
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- Emily Yoshida
The film remains too mannered for its own good; it’s unquestionably nice and well-intentioned, but lacking momentum.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 28, 2019
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- Emily Yoshida
Merchant is more brutally honest than most sports movies — or any kind of rising-star movie, for that matter — about failure, and it makes Fighting With My Family better than it needs to be. The entire cast is a pleasure, particularly the dynamo Pugh.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 19, 2019
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- Emily Yoshida
What Men Want is a wildly uneven stretch of a movie that’s more of a flail than a romp.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 8, 2019
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- Emily Yoshida
The childlike, free-associative playfulness is now underscored by a palpable hunger to be the cleverest and coolest kids’ movie on the block, a hunger that weighs down Lord and Miller’s plenty-smart silliness.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 6, 2019
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- Emily Yoshida
What makes Late Night — otherwise a largely predictable story in a familiar mold — really pop is Kaling’s script, which is at the blunter and frankly more exciting spectrum of what Kaling has proven herself to be capable of in her writing career thus far.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 1, 2019
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- Emily Yoshida
As an origin story for a young actor’s warped worldview, Honey Boy is compelling.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 1, 2019
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- Emily Yoshida
As a psychological down-is-up horror movie, The Lodge has a few solid tricks up its sleeve. But when the smoke and mirrors clear, it’s ultimately a story about trauma, and a rather bleak one at that.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 1, 2019
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- Emily Yoshida
The little dramas and themes that emerge during the reunion of the film’s far-flung brood become, like a family, more than the sum of its individual parts, and an incredibly satisfying meal of a film.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 1, 2019
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- Emily Yoshida
If the narrative film only exists to give us the unsettling sliminess of Efron as Bundy, it won’t be a total waste. But it’s not much of a movie, either.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 1, 2019
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- Emily Yoshida
The only reason any of this works at all is Salazar and, I hate to say it, those goddamned big eyes. They’re the windows to the soul, after all, and this ungainly, lurching cyborg of a would-be blockbuster has more of that than meets the eye.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Feb 1, 2019
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- Emily Yoshida
It’s clear between this and Nightcrawler that Gilroy and Gyllenhaal have some kind of gonzo chemistry. Even if Velvet Buzzsaw starts to sputter slightly after it’s made its point, it’s plenty exciting to witness the incredibly specific madness they whip up together.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jan 28, 2019
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- Emily Yoshida
The film builds to an anarchic set piece, in which a school full of rambunctious children defend the world from evil while the adults literally disappear off the face of the earth. It’s the closest thing Cornish comes to a real-life prescription for what ails us, and it goes down pretty well.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jan 26, 2019
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- Emily Yoshida
If only the issue with Polar, Åkerlund’s fifth feature film, was merely shallowness. Polar is an execrable motion picture, a sad, lint-filled key bump scraped together from the bottom of the post-Tarantino ’90s exploitation baggie.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jan 23, 2019
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- Emily Yoshida
Replicas is chock-full of histrionic what-ifs that seem to hyperventilate so hard in their delivery that they don’t have enough oxygen to actually blow anyone’s mind. It would be the stuff of future cult screenings if it wasn’t so boring and muddled.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jan 11, 2019
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- Emily Yoshida
That more or less is The Upside in a nutshell. It’s a film that contains complicated, sad, interesting ideas rarely expressed on screen — even Kidman’s scold character unfolds into a more intriguing person, full of contradictions — but whose package is fundamentally unsuited to showcase those ideas, like a sweater with the holes in all the wrong places.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jan 11, 2019
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- Emily Yoshida
American Hangman, a bar thought experiment turned into a film every bit as simple and bad-taste-leaving as that would imply, only has use for humans as sock puppets.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jan 7, 2019
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- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jan 3, 2019
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- Emily Yoshida
This is too sunny a production to linger too long in the dark corners; even Laurel’s alcoholism is treated with a light touch when it comes up. Nevertheless, it still finds its way to some kind of profundity about the nature of long-term working relationships, something a little more complicated than the mere idea that the show must go on.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Dec 26, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
You don’t appreciate the art of a good genre contrivance until you see one pulled off poorly.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Dec 23, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
The contemporary nostalgia for romantic comedies is understandable (even if I do not personally share it), as is the nostalgia for Jennifer Lopez, movie star. Unfortunately, Second Act is a strange, scattered attempt to cash in on that longing, and it doesn’t seem to know what its own deal is aside from a rushed vision board collage of Things Women Are Probably Worried About.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Dec 20, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Welcome to Marwen is a totally confounding movie. None of this is because of Hogancamp’s actual story, which remains rich and wild and full of pathos, nor Carell’s performance, which is subtle and wounded and resists all mawkish special-man tics it could have lapsed into. But the frame of a Robert Zemeckis–directed Inspirational True Story and the syrupy Alan Silvestri score that blankets it are just too many layers of abstraction over a story that already contains multitudes.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Dec 19, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
It’s a deeply assured piece of direction, and though it only plays a few emotional notes, they are ones that won’t soon leave your memory.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Dec 12, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Like all good YA fantasy, it’s rooted in earnest adolescent anxieties, and dresses them up with the same level of earnestness.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Dec 12, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Aquaman’s as formulaic, excessively thrashy, and mommy-obsessed as any other entry in the DCEU, but its visual imagination is genuinely exciting and transportive, and dare I say, fun.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Dec 11, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
It’s painful, paranoiac stuff, and your heart breaks for Tyler, who feels increasingly trapped among a crew of rowdy, drunk, irreverent white dudes, as these little injustices mount.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Dec 10, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
As a story of popular art born in the crucible of violent trauma, it’s a fantastic, wildly ambitious idea; as a filmed drama with human characters, it’s confoundingly executed at every turn. Vox Lux is a failure, but one I can’t stop thinking about.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Dec 7, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Much like the first "Lego Movie," Spider-Verse feels like a bit of a conceptual dare, but it wins with its nano-second sharp timing, and percussive rat-a-tat-tatting of panels and split screens that make the action and visual gags feel jumpy and alive.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Dec 7, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
It’s neither a rigorous history lesson nor a particularly interesting work of drama and character, and it ends up doing the exact same things — pitting women against each other, fixating on fertility and virginity — it claims to find so oppressive for its heroine.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Dec 6, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
As the encounters stack up, though, the impact of what Hosoda is starting to do starts to cohere, and it’s pretty effective stuff. The extradimensional travel is an obvious but heart-tuggingly direct way to get at the truth that everyone was a kid once, a fact that is mind-boggling when you’re a kid, and bittersweet when you’re an adult.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Dec 1, 2018
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- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 21, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
It’s convincing because it’s not terribly sensationalized, and the film’s conclusion is similarly smart, completely pulling the rug out from under our expectations of justice and revenge.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 20, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
For the most part, Mu’min’s script is pleasantly inquisitive, and its refusal to arrive at easy answers is its engine. Jinn is a special little film, one that never lets its complicated, contradictory characters become abstractions, but instead revels in all the disparate elements that make them who they are.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 15, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
If Wreck-It Ralph was a film about jobs and self-image, the addition of commerce into that equation in its sequel makes everything exponentially more manic and unstable. And after nearly two hours of our eyeballs being flooded with savvy, incessant product placement of eBay, Amazon, Pinterest, and of course the entire Walt Disney Company portfolio, we’re all wrecked.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 14, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Despite the heavy context and historical precedent, there’s not a whole lot on Overlord’s mind, and a gestured-at “defeating the monsters makes us monstrous” philosophical thread ends symmetrically but pointlessly.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 9, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
I don’t hold Larsson’s novels in enough esteem to mind a theoretical sanding down of them into B-movie popcorn fare, but this isn’t the way to do it.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 6, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Heineman’s film is, in many ways, the movie so many people say they want: a portrait of a deeply complex, flawed, but brilliant and forceful woman. But as tempting as it is to think of Pike’s Colvin, with her eyepatch and sailor’s mouth, as a “badass,” there’s not much that’s aspirational about the film.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Nov 5, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
There’s nothing grounding enough here; everything — the sets, the costumes, the performances — seems to drift off in a CGI haze. As a contender for cherished childhood mythology, its methods are cheap. And as a mere child distractor, it seems awfully expensive.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 31, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Perhaps the greatest gift of Maria by Callas that gives it an advantage over so many recent biographical music documentaries is how willing it is to let its subject just perform, uninterrupted.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 31, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Shirkers is a joy, but it also feels haunted, as if Tan had the unique opportunity to unearth a perfectly preserved clone of her younger, more idealistic self.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 26, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
What is on paper a small-time heist film in the vein of the Coen Brothers or "Breaking Bad" is ultimately a cover for a more observant and relatable portrait of loneliness.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 19, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
It’s not brash enough to measure up to the very-near-future dystopia of "The Purge" franchise; it’s also not studied enough as a character ensemble to work as a dialogue-driven bottle movie. The Oath lands in an unpleasant middle ground that is too close to reality to feel like escapism, and too antic to feel equipped at anything like incisiveness.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 12, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Just like the families of the victims in the film who feel nauseous at the prospect of making a celebrity out of Breivik and spreading his toxic ideology, I feel a little queasy at the chilling, captivating portrayal of him by Anders Danielsen Lie. I feel uneasy being “captivated” by any of this, period.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 11, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
The how of Tillman, Mabry, and Wells’s telling distinguishes their story. The Hate U Give should be an epic, and it is: Yes, it’s a teen melodrama, but it’s also an elegantly constructed piece of world-building, a love story, a family history, a sociological spiderweb of cause and effect of the hate referenced in the Tupac-coined titled. If this is what the next wave of YA adaptation will feel like, we are in a good place.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 5, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Much of Her Smell, especially these backstage scenes, border on unintelligible, with numerous exchanges getting lost in the chaos. I found this to be incredibly, teeth-grindingly effective — this is a thoroughly subjective depiction of mental illness and substance abuse, and the accurate relay of information often takes a backseat in the throes of such a state.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Oct 3, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Like Teddy, there’s a lot of sophomoric silliness Night School feels obligated to perform. But there’s a heap of good intentions behind it, and enough big laughs to make us want to forgive it in the end.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 28, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Monsters and Men, then, functions more as a lightly fictionalized photo essay than a narrative film — which is okay, it just means that it feeds more off timeliness than character or art, and there are obvious limitations to that.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 26, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
The cast in House is exceedingly fancy, but they never seem to connect; Blanchett and Black are about as awkward a pairing as they sound on paper, engaged in two irreconcilable ways of going about their performances.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 24, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Put up side-by-side, the redemption of killers doesn’t feel quite as urgent a narrative as the alliance of idealists, and in its final minutes The Sisters Brothers retreats back from some interesting, adventurous territory to something all too familiar.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 20, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
There’s something strangely uninvolving about White Boy Rick, despite all its claims to be a sensational true story.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 20, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
With its martini-swilling leads and swingy French pop soundtrack, A Simple Favor seems to yearn for a bygone era of nail-biter, but rather than wallow in pastiche, it comes up with something truly contemporary feeling.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 15, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
In the hands of "Iris" and "Notes on a Scandal" director Richard Eyre, McEwan’s story is stagy and austere, taking place in gleaming flats and spotless courtrooms, like a Nancy Meyers movie with more court wigs. It’s a wan, sapped atmosphere, making the life, faith, and literal blood of a 17-year-old boy all the more stark a line to run through it.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 13, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Peppermint has no surprises up its sleeve, and casting Jennifer Garner as the put-upon housewife turned gun-toting vigilante doesn’t change that. If anything, changing one element of the formula does more to expose its dullness than the same movie starring Liam Neeson.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 8, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
From the script to the music to the unfinished-feeling sound edit — nothing about Sierra Burgess feels like it got past a first draft.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 7, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Suspiria is a gorgeous, hideous, uncompromising film, and while it seeks to do many things, settling our minds about the brutality of the past and human nature is not one of them.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Sep 1, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Cuarón never seeks a tidy resolution for their loving, lopsided, complicated relationship. But it’s one of the reasons why Roma leaves such a deep and lasting impression.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Aug 30, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Levin’s dialogue is relentless. Every line and retort is a punch line, and every punch line more or less amounts to Lindsey and Frank telling each other how much they stink.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Aug 30, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
It never gets tiring to watch the girls coast down the Manhattan streets, cocky and breezy and effortless, turning the heads of younger girls who gaze at them, starstruck. But it’s also featherlight, not meant to endure much longer than those brief airborne moments Camille and her friends live for.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Aug 17, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
That’s what’s great about The Wife: Joe is no saint, and his philandering appears to be an open secret in the literary community, but it doesn’t mean Joan doesn’t love him. If she didn’t, none of this would be half as wrenching.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Aug 17, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Condor is a ready-made star, and Centineo rises to meet her, the adoring, throaty lunk any introverted teen dreams of coming around and melting away her shyness. Theirs is a teenage romance I can believe in, despite its ridiculously convoluted circumstances.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Aug 15, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
It is neither dumb nor smart enough to be fun, and spends way too much time with its boring human characters when it could be spending it with, you know, the giant shark.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Aug 9, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Luckily, Crazy Rich Asians is, at its heart, a fish-out-of-water story, and it has a lot more going for it than its literal money shots.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Aug 8, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
The Darkest Minds is just too foggy to make out much of anything in.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Aug 6, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
It is one of the more sadistic family films I have ever seen, a picture of the residents of a neglected childhood reckoning with the abandonment of their beloved, now grown-up human leader.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Aug 2, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Cameron Post is the kind of film that openly courts falling into the cinematic limitations of an “issues film.” Akhavan’s sense of place and ensemble do a lot to counter that, but that specificity ends with the main character.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Aug 2, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Like its protagonist, Puzzle finds itself as it goes along, and Agnes becomes a truly interesting person to root for.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 26, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
As it cliff dives, unprompted, into reheated cocaine-nightmare territory done better by any number of 1990s ’70s nostalgia films before it, it not only ceases to be fun, but stops pretending it has any vision for where its lead characters should go.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 26, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
In Dark Web, the threat is wholly of this world, which makes the sequel feel as though it comes from another universe entirely. It is scary, but it isn’t much fun.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 20, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
The film starts to feel like it’s more invested in selling the idea of the series rather than a film in and of itself.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 19, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Here We Go Again ties up these two wackadoo films’ hijinks in a very sincere bow. After all, Mamma Mia is a mom movie, in every way imaginable.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 17, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Ultimately, Hotel Transylvania 3 is for very young children, and God love it for that.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 15, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
The problem isn’t Reiner taking dramatic liberties with the facts, it’s that his toolbox for doing so hasn’t changed since the mid-’90s.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jul 12, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
With a light touch but deep reserves of respect for fans both old and new Ryuichi Sakamoto: Coda is an extremely fitting portrait of the influential composer. There’s an air of patience that presides over director Stephen Schible’s footage, even during a period that presents a lot of tumultuous questions for his seemingly unflappable subject.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 28, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
When Day of the Soldado truly wallows in violence, it does so exquisitely, with the kind of hopelessness that film violence, especially around this subject matter, should convey. But it also destabilizes any marketable attempts at heroism or character investment.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 25, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
The doubt about what is real and what isn’t has permeated so much of the film that when things take a turn for the serious in the final act, we the audience can’t even quite believe what we’re seeing, until the credits roll and you shrug to yourself, “Huh, I guess it was for real.” That’s a weirdly muted note to end such an otherwise over-the-top — conceptually and physically — comedy.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 14, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Ultimately, in all its artifice and haphazard but enthusiastic invention, Hotel Artemis makes me a bit nostalgic for French ’90s genre fare of Jean-Pierre Jeunet and Marc Caro and, of course, Luc Besson, embracing their daffiness and dreaminess with an somewhat counterintuitive, almost naïve lack of vanity.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 12, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Alex Strangelove is a little stylistically unambitious, nor is it terribly compelling as a romance — who Alex ends up with is ultimately beside the point.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 7, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
I left Ocean’s 8 more convinced than ever that no amount of fierce, fantastic female ensembles can overcome the mediocrity of a dull male director.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 5, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
The experience of watching it, especially given its dreamlike unreality and head-scratching punnery (this is a deeply unfunny movie) is like listening to a doddering old man for whom every story — about art, politics, local goings on — ends up being about how every woman is an evil witch that can’t be trusted.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 5, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Every scene adds another onion-skinlike layer, adding density and mass so slowly that you hardly notice the emotional weight of it all until it is suddenly overwhelming.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 5, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Adrift is enough of a boilerplate piece of survival drama that you know to expect those beats more or less coming on schedule, but Woodley makes it more emotionally satisfying than it would be otherwise.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted Jun 1, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
A great and grimy little screw-turner of sci-fi schlock, the kind that they truly don’t make anymore, the kind that would make Carpenter and Cameron proud.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted May 31, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
It’s remarkable how engaging and light on its feet the director and cast are able to keep this subject matter, how much permission he gives them to f*ck up and try again.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted May 31, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
It feels like the self-admittedly emotionally bottled Talley is ready to talk about all of it. It’s too bad his biographer is less so.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted May 28, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Ibiza doesn’t have the strength of wit and character to suffice as a hangout vacation movie, and it has zero idea how to be a romantic comedy, either. It’s not a movie, it’s Netflix.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted May 24, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Two biographical documentaries in, and it still feels like we’re in need of a Houston film that digs into her music first, and the hows and whys of its enduring power.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted May 19, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Its lead protagonists and their endless reserve of raw, bittersweet chemistry are Kahiu’s greatest asset.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted May 19, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
Unfortunately McEwan, adapting his own work, and first-time director Dominic Cooke, have a hard time rendering the touchy, interior subject matter cinematic; a potentially promising story of an emotional and physical impasse is flattened so much as to be offensive.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted May 18, 2018
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- Emily Yoshida
There is so much fascinating, underplayed tension running through Burning.... I was a little let down, then, when Burning lost its steam in its second half.- New York Magazine (Vulture)
- Posted May 17, 2018
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