Eric Hynes
Select another critic »For 135 reviews, this critic has graded:
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31% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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67% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 12.5 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Eric Hynes' Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 53 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Little Fugitive (re-release) | |
| Lowest review score: | To Age or Not to Age | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 29 out of 135
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Mixed: 91 out of 135
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Negative: 15 out of 135
135
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Eric Hynes
It also serves to undercut fine performances by Connelly and Harris, whose choices are constantly destabilized by scripted swings between comedy and drama, realism and fantasy, genuine catharsis and indie-film ornamentation. Black's overactive melodrama is more than a representation of schizophrenia; it's the embodiment of it.- Time Out
- Posted May 15, 2012
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- Eric Hynes
Though overly dependent on a roundelay of talking heads, the film escalates into an ace legal thriller, spinning a web of shame that snags everything from the Austrian government to America's most beloved not-for-profits.- Time Out
- Posted May 8, 2012
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- Eric Hynes
Time and changing tides have been kind to Graceland (and to the local musicians who've since become internationally renowned), but an on-camera meeting between the songwriter and ANC leader Oliver Tambo finds their conflict between creative freedom and revolutionary solidarity fascinatingly unresolved.- Time Out
- Posted May 8, 2012
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- Eric Hynes
Fellag does for the film what his Lazhar does for the pupils: He's soothing and entrancingly enigmatic enough to keep us fixed to our seats.- Time Out
- Posted Apr 10, 2012
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- Eric Hynes
This impassioned documentary could have the same real-world impact as Errol Morris's "The Thin Blue Line," and help to free a wrongly convicted man. The filmmaking could be better, but it's hard to argue with that kind of potential.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 27, 2012
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- Eric Hynes
Despite being as pathetically penile-obsessed as any postmillennial comedy, Goon prevails where other sports-film farces fail thanks to Scott's winning, unwinking performance; Liev Schreiber's spot-on turn as a wizened, clock-punching rink assassin; and a pucked-up love of a bloody game.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 27, 2012
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- Eric Hynes
The backbeat anarchy is fun while it lasts, but without a persuasive purpose, it's all just noise in the end.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 6, 2012
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- Eric Hynes
Attenberg shares with the Oscar-nominated "Dogtooth" a weakness for overgrown innocence and deadpan perversity.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 6, 2012
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- Eric Hynes
The only time a subject directly addresses Takesue, it's with a doozy of a query: "Why are you taking my story to USA, New York?" The answer is as complex as the film itself, and as simple as deciding to not look away.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 28, 2012
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- Eric Hynes
Boy needn't be pop-culturally fluent to be relatable; believable human characterizations would have sufficed.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 28, 2012
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- Eric Hynes
Armed with archival footage and wrenching interviews, filmmaker Chad Freidrichs revisits one of our nation's darkest hours - and emerges with a scrupulous, revelatory consideration of the varied factors that turned a worthy plan into a horrific, state-sanctioned nightmare for a generation of working-class African-Americans.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 7, 2012
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- Eric Hynes
The movie indulges a few too many whims, but it's never less than alive.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 13, 2011
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- Eric Hynes
The unveiling is unnerving, and suggests that some dangers are now permanently beyond our control.- Time Out
- Posted Nov 29, 2011
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- Eric Hynes
It's no recipe for hilarity or pitter-pattering hearts, but like our hero's sweets, this pleasant, delicate confection goes down easy enough.- Time Out
- Posted Nov 22, 2011
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- Eric Hynes
As this engaging, if rote, doc points out, the name Eames, much like Victorian, now defines the style of an era. Yet how many of us knew that the industrial designers behind those midcentury molded mod chairs were an eccentric married team?- Time Out
- Posted Nov 15, 2011
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- Eric Hynes
Like a "Training Day" for spy thrillers, The Double provocatively pairs Gere and Grace as a gray-green odd couple, only to unravel as the double-crossed absurdities pile up and the duo start trading bad Russian accents in a private Mexican standoff. Oh nyet you didn't!- Time Out
- Posted Oct 25, 2011
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- Eric Hynes
Spacey is ever the pro, shilling Axle's absurd redemption and countenancing the likes of Johnny Knoxville and John Stamos as if a third Oscar were in the offing. Yet his female costars fare worse, forming an unfortunate collection of dismal, man-dependent stereotypes, from Belle's perma-pouting idealist to Heather Graham's breast-obsessed, sapphic-by-choice ballbuster.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 18, 2011
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- Eric Hynes
Gil's alternative history gets one thing bang-on right: If Butch were to live into his senior days, he'd absolutely have to be played by Shepard. Wrinkled, leathery and densely carpeted in a salt-and-pepper beard, the 67-year-old playwright and actor still exudes intellectual mischief and hard-stare sex appeal; his self-styled ruggedness is a perfect match for an infamous gringo living incognito.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 4, 2011
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- Eric Hynes
Bunraku aspires to be "Kill Bill: Vol 3"; it's more like an ornate pitch for a "Dick Tracy" reboot.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 27, 2011
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- Eric Hynes
Amid its celebrations of black power, ambitious Afros and fly female trombonists, the film serves as a rousing testament to the singular blessings of music education, since there's nothing inherent or automatic about kids learning how to groove.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 20, 2011
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- Time Out
- Posted Sep 13, 2011
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- Eric Hynes
Shared tragedy can bind together the most unlikely of people. Movies often make too much of that truism, but surprisingly committed performances from actors like these can still make it feel like something meaningful.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 6, 2011
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- Eric Hynes
Outside of a few spirited celebrity cameos - Favreau seems convincingly affronted by Dax's ineptitude, Bradley Cooper gamely tussles with him on a suburban lawn - this meta-vanity project isn't funny so much as counterproductive. It's no less a work of wankery for winking at us.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 6, 2011
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- Eric Hynes
When Gonzo divulges his classmates' darkest secrets, we're meant to disapprove of his transformation from swaggering New Journalist to WikiLeaks extremist. In the real world, we've still haven't decided which ethical version we prefer.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 6, 2011
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- Eric Hynes
Yet even with the rich, inherently cinematic texture of the urban setting and two excellent native outer-borough actors in Morales and Reyes, Gun Hill Road falters thanks to its paint-by-numbers storytelling.- Time Out
- Posted Aug 2, 2011
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- Eric Hynes
Point Blank fires nothing but blanks in the end, dealing in increasingly ludicrous plot twists and one fizzle of a finale.- Time Out
- Posted Jul 26, 2011
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- Eric Hynes
The first major motion picture to come out of Congo in decades happens to be one of the best neonoirs from anywhere in recent memory.- Time Out
- Posted Jun 7, 2011
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- Eric Hynes
This boppy biopic pushes a wealth of outrageous incidents while never making anything resembling a point.- Time Out
- Posted May 31, 2011
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- Eric Hynes
Only old pros James Brolin and Jane Seymour, as Eva's colorfully squabbling parents, occasionally rouse the film beyond its fate as fodder for a Snuggie-wrapped slumber.- Time Out
- Posted May 31, 2011
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- Eric Hynes
What Lost Bohemia lacks in aesthetic presentation - first-time filmmaker Astor seems to have gathered footage without much forethought - is made up for by an intimacy familiar from home movies, revealing eccentric neighbors at their most frank and endearing.- Time Out
- Posted May 17, 2011
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