F. X. Feeney
Select another critic »For 164 reviews, this critic has graded:
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82% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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15% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 5.2 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
F. X. Feeney's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 71 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Big Night | |
| Lowest review score: | Baby Geniuses | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 116 out of 164
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Mixed: 37 out of 164
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Negative: 11 out of 164
164
movie
reviews
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- By Critic Score
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- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- F. X. Feeney
Williams is a great clown, and Oedekirk and Shadyac give him room to really cut loose, and cure the movie. That’s as it should be.- L.A. Weekly
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- F. X. Feeney
The barometer of the film's undoing is Burns' super-low-key performance, which starts out as a pokerfaced spoof on heroic cool, but takes a misstep more fatal than mere time travel can undo.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- F. X. Feeney
A cleverly plotted, cleanly crafted matinee item -- pure entertainment on a romping continuum with Frankenheimer's "Ronin."- L.A. Weekly
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- F. X. Feeney
Less a movie about stepfamilies than a PSA about how cancer makes everyone behave themselves at Christmas.- L.A. Weekly
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- F. X. Feeney
The interactions between the realms of the magical and the everyday are carried off with an easygoing charm.- L.A. Weekly
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- F. X. Feeney
A smirky black comedy that, like its John Lurie score, is jazzy, dry, and light on its feet.- Mr. Showbiz
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- F. X. Feeney
To their great credit, writer Benjamin Brand and director Greg Harrison weave these contradictory variations into an effective puzzle, if one that doesn't quite transcend being a puzzle - it never becomes a mystery, like, say, "Mulholland Drive," or even "The Sixth Sense."- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- F. X. Feeney
First-time writer-director Paul Morrison has a gift for evoking a time and place.- L.A. Weekly
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- F. X. Feeney
Although this movie doesn't have an ounce of depth, it's so thoroughly amiable and upbeat that you'd have to be in a fighting mood to find fault with it.- L.A. Weekly
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- F. X. Feeney
An abbondanza of busy, situation comedy twists that snip one's suspended disbelief and send it crashing like a chandelier.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- F. X. Feeney
Taymor has done an inspired job of resurrecting one of Shakespeare's unruliest works, just in time for the new century.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- F. X. Feeney
Inglis offers complicated characters and uniformly worthy performances without falsely manipulating us into sympathizing with anybody but tries too strenuously to fuse his warring polarities of character-driven intrigue and plot-driven treacheries into an allegory of redemption. In the end, that feels like one or two big things too many.- L.A. Weekly
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- F. X. Feeney
Here, the volcanic villain behaves like a smart terrorist, taking over almost immediately and holding a collection of excellent actors (Tommy Lee Jones, Anne Heche, Don Cheadle) hostage for two hours of "real time."- L.A. Weekly
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- F. X. Feeney
By-the-numbers Oscar bait -- but Penn does manage, against such odds, to make us see Sam as a person, not a performance.- L.A. Weekly
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- F. X. Feeney
Writer-director Hernandez is comfortable with violent, perverse emotions, and can find humor in them -- a refreshing quality that keeps one watching long after her movie has jumped its own tracks and zoomed to a private world of obscurely motivated quarrels and uninvolving reconciliations.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- F. X. Feeney
Goei's sharp-eyed satiric sense evokes the diversity and energy of Singapore, and his good-humored nostalgia makes disco rise from the dead.- L.A. Weekly
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- F. X. Feeney
As powerfully as the film lingers in the mind, one can't help wishing he were led just a bit more by his heart.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- F. X. Feeney
The film works, cleanly, without any tiresome reliance on computer graphics.- L.A. Weekly
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- F. X. Feeney
The Marat/Sade irony of setting these scenes in a madhouse helps, but Macfadyen's volcanic magnetism and spot-on mimicry of Hitler's body language and speech patterns make insight flesh.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- F. X. Feeney
As with "The Blair Witch Project," one must swallow one's irritation at paying yet again for big-screen video -- but even so, the spectacle of an America falling apart is acutely and hilariously embodied by Dawn.- L.A. Weekly
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- F. X. Feeney
The romance and sheer fun that Where the Money Is packs into its swift 89 minutes follow from the sweet surprise that neither is threatened by the other.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- F. X. Feeney
At its best, there's a strong (albeit live-action) echo of Charles M. Schulz's "Peanuts" in Little Manhattan. The movie's hero, Gabe, is a world-weary 10-year-old who addresses us in eloquent voice-overs. Like Charlie Brown, he's in love with a red-headed beauty.- L.A. Weekly
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- F. X. Feeney
What is surprising, and what one takes away most deeply and happily from Triumph of Love, is a refreshed admiration for Mira Sorvino.- L.A. Weekly
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- F. X. Feeney
Overall, King of the Jungle never quite achieves a necessary, culminating insight about charity, or mercy -- though Leguizamo's performance puts one in reach.- L.A. Weekly
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- F. X. Feeney
A smoothly structured, earth-toned and well-drawn Japanese anime.- L.A. Weekly
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- F. X. Feeney
Silver, manages the deft balance of making Seagal seem both genuinely courageous and charmingly blockheaded.- L.A. Weekly
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