Gary Thompson
Select another critic »For 358 reviews, this critic has graded:
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46% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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52% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 0.8 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Gary Thompson's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 65 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Monty Python and the Holy Grail | |
| Lowest review score: | Trapped in Paradise | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 255 out of 358
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Mixed: 77 out of 358
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Negative: 26 out of 358
358
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Gary Thompson
At least Aquaman has a different palette, and new shapes to work with. It’s still ultimately silly and dreary, and will test the endurance of fans who then must withstand an even longer credit sequence to get a whiff of the next DC story wrinkle.- Philadelphia Daily News
- Posted Dec 20, 2018
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- Gary Thompson
I wonder if Noe is familiar with the work of Three Dog Night, and their 1970 rumination on a party gone bad, “Mama Told Me Not to Come.” Its lyrics apply here: “I’ve seen so many things I ain’t never seen before. I don’t know what it is, but I don’t want to see no more.”- Philadelphia Daily News
- Posted Mar 7, 2019
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- Gary Thompson
Cowriter and director Dee Rees (Pariah, Bessie) does a skillful job making us feel these inequities as they take place over time and become the fabric of lives, the basis of the assumptions people make about race and culture — the way things are.- Philadelphia Daily News
- Posted Nov 16, 2017
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- Gary Thompson
The movie also trumpets hometown values, and makes fun of the way Liam’s wealth and fame have insulated him from simple pleasures of small-town life (underlined by director Bethany Ashton Wolf’s cozy visual presentation). The movie pokes fun at his materialism, when it’s not indulging in it.- Philadelphia Daily News
- Posted Jan 18, 2018
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- Gary Thompson
The Glass Castle is an unfortunately flat and messy adaptation of Jeannette Walls’ best-selling memoir about growing up with extreme poverty and with parents who both inspired and damaged her.- Philadelphia Daily News
- Posted Aug 10, 2017
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- Gary Thompson
I give Goodbye Christopher Robin credit for presenting audiences with a Pooh origins story they might not want to see, but having settled on this subject, the movie seems uncertain how to proceed.- Philadelphia Daily News
- Posted Oct 19, 2017
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- Gary Thompson
There are also Photoshopped aggregations of Bergen, Fonda, Keaton and Steenburgen, and though they were never actually grouped together when young, they register reasonably well here as lifelong friends. The movie rides entirely on their charm, not so much on the strength of the writing or the jokes.- Philadelphia Daily News
- Posted May 17, 2018
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- Philadelphia Daily News
- Posted Jun 27, 2017
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- Gary Thompson
When the creatively blocked Giacometti stares at his canvas, cursing. He is literally watching paint dry, and so are we.- Philadelphia Daily News
- Posted Apr 4, 2018
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- Gary Thompson
In an effort to work all of these characters into the plot, the movie has become incomprehensible, though I doubt anyone will care, since the movie is one big blizzard of karate chops, and that seems to be the point. [23 Dec 1994, p.33]- Philadelphia Daily News
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- Gary Thompson
Romeo Is Bleeding appears to be another misfired attempt to re-create the darkly comic, genre-sendup zing of "Reservoir Dogs." The extravagant violence, luridly colorful visuals and corny hard-boiled dialogue are there. Missing is a coherent story supported by internal logic. In other words, a reason to pay attention. Other than lingerie, I mean. [4 Feb 1994, p.51]- Philadelphia Daily News
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- Gary Thompson
Performances are good, the period details accurate, but the script is an artificial hybrid of better-known movies in the genre, borrowing whole scenes and story lines from Stand by Me and even Home Alone. [20 Oct 1995, p.52]- Philadelphia Daily News
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- Gary Thompson
Chemistry among the women is smooth, maybe excessively so. In movies about hustlers and confidence games, there is usually the scent of underlying treachery, the possibility of dishonor among thieves. In The Sting, for instance, we wonder: Is Redford conning Newman? Is the movie conning us? That kind of tension is missing here.- Philadelphia Daily News
- Posted Jun 6, 2018
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- Gary Thompson
The movie, by German directing legend Wim Wenders, is a sequel to his imaginative, winsome "Wings of Desire," and maybe that's the problem. The second time around, Wenders' ideas just don't seem so imaginative. [04 Feb 1994, p.46]- Philadelphia Daily News
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- Gary Thompson
It finds the right harmonized note of melancholy and humor in its closing moments.- Philadelphia Daily News
- Posted Oct 18, 2018
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- Gary Thompson
It all adds up to a bicultural comedy that is good-natured if not especially or consistently well-written. The movie takes too long to get moving, stays a tad too long, and efforts to retrofit the movie as a vehicle for Derbez come at the expense of Faris, a talented comedian who has very little to do here.- Philadelphia Daily News
- Posted May 3, 2018
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- Gary Thompson
This is the culmination of DeMonaco’s seething Purge scenarios, which have become increasingly focused on polarization and rage.- Philadelphia Daily News
- Posted Jul 4, 2018
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- Gary Thompson
And yet, the focus of the movie remains fixed on the men, which makes this Ode to Strong Women seem a little patronizing. Or expedient. The director's long-time girlfriend, co-star Bahns, has the most flattering female role. Bahns had no acting experience when she was cast in the low-budget "Brothers McMullen." She still doesn't. Watching her her in "She's the One," you realize that it must be love. [23 Aug 1996, p.45]- Philadelphia Daily News
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- Gary Thompson
A wishy-washy exploitation movie, which doesn’t show any real verve until the climax.- Philadelphia Daily News
- Posted Mar 1, 2018
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- Gary Thompson
All of this is in Hart's wheelhouse, and Night School might have fared better if it had surrendered completely to random comedy one-offs. It keeps coming back, though, to the desultory story of Teddy's strained romance, the least-compelling feature of the movie.- Philadelphia Daily News
- Posted Sep 27, 2018
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- Philadelphia Daily News
- Posted Apr 11, 2018
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- Gary Thompson
The animators have figured out horses and falcons and snakes, but human body movements are stiff, awkward, and mechanical.- Philadelphia Daily News
- Posted Feb 1, 2018
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- Gary Thompson
Fast Color is disciplined and restrained, yet feels a few tweaks away from being the rousing origin story it aspires to be.- Philadelphia Daily News
- Posted Apr 18, 2019
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- Gary Thompson
A bawdy, bloody but only sporadically funny spy spoof and buddy comedy.- Philadelphia Daily News
- Posted Aug 1, 2018
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- Gary Thompson
Kin positions itself as a B-movie cobbled together from sci-fi favorites of the past, and so we grant the movie wide latitude to be goofy. It's meant to be out there. Even by those lax standards, though, Kin tries the patience.- Philadelphia Daily News
- Posted Aug 30, 2018
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- Gary Thompson
As Knightley and Skarsgard wrestle with this material and each other, the movie around them goes plot crazy.- Philadelphia Daily News
- Posted Mar 28, 2019
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- Gary Thompson
The movie works reasonably well as a thriller but falls apart in other areas.- Philadelphia Daily News
- Posted Oct 12, 2017
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- Gary Thompson
As a symbiote, Brock/Venom is sometimes funny, and for a while the movie finds a rhythm that seems to suit director Ruben Fleischer, best known for Zombieland.- Philadelphia Daily News
- Posted Oct 4, 2018
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- Gary Thompson
The remake, directed by Twilight’s Catherine Hardwicke, makes substantial changes — taking the bare bones of the story and turning into a sort action-fable about female empowerment, starring Jane the Virgin headliner Gina Rodriguez.- Philadelphia Daily News
- Posted Feb 5, 2019
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- Gary Thompson
If HGTV and Lifetime had a TV channel baby, it would produce movies like The Intruder.- Philadelphia Daily News
- Posted May 1, 2019
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