Guy Lodge
Select another critic »For 926 reviews, this critic has graded:
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54% higher than the average critic
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6% same as the average critic
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40% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 2.6 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Guy Lodge's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 68 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Over the Limit | |
| Lowest review score: | The Murder of Nicole Brown Simpson | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 572 out of 926
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Mixed: 310 out of 926
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Negative: 44 out of 926
926
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Guy Lodge
On the Adamant is most moving when it stands back, letting its most disenfranchised subjects talk, or shout, or sing.- Variety
- Posted Feb 25, 2023
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- Guy Lodge
Outside those charged moments of hands-on connection, however, Someday We’ll Tell Each Other Everything is something of a slog, hampered by escalating dramatic obviousness and thin characterization- Variety
- Posted Feb 25, 2023
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- Guy Lodge
Too often, the film’s well-meaning reportage is muddled with needless vanity sequences of the actor-director as an on-the-ground trailblazer, as the film fashions the impression that Penn himself — as much as any news agency — is a vital courier of the horrific events around him to Western audiences.- Variety
- Posted Feb 25, 2023
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- Guy Lodge
Limbo joins a long line of fine Australian films taking to the desert to disinter racial trauma, to rebury the bones with more care and awareness, but also enduring fury.- Variety
- Posted Feb 24, 2023
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- Guy Lodge
It’s the film’s great, disorienting structural risks, its humoring of human untidiness and confusion, that make it so subtly thrilling and moving.- Variety
- Posted Feb 24, 2023
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- Guy Lodge
It’s a film of fragmentary but funny rewards — funnier still, most likely, if accompanied by smoking of a different kind.- Variety
- Posted Feb 23, 2023
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- Guy Lodge
“In Viaggio” captures the Pope, and by extension the whole Church, in an uncomfortable limbo state between defensiveness and progressiveness, though it keeps its own critique tacit and un-narrated, hinging on what the viewer brings to its hand-picked footage.- Variety
- Posted Feb 23, 2023
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- Guy Lodge
A pair of sensational performances by Nathan Stewart-Jarrett (“Candyman”) and George MacKay (“1917”), locked in a nervy duet as two men with virtually nothing in common but their sexuality, represents the chief selling point for this stylish, commendably uncompromising fusion of genre fireworks and measured, thoughtful character study.- Variety
- Posted Feb 23, 2023
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- Guy Lodge
Examining the unique ties that bind farming families, where everyone’s welfare hangs on the same unkind elements, this exquisitely textured film observes how children’s lives echo those of their parents, repeating for generations on the same constantly inconstant land, until somebody breaks the pattern.- Variety
- Posted Feb 22, 2023
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- Guy Lodge
Even when Disco Boy threatens to be too much or too little, however, Rogowski’s strange, sparse, plaintive performance keeps its soul intact, and its most poignant query afloat above all the flash and dazzle and neon lights: just how much of themselves people will sacrifice for a paper identity.- Variety
- Posted Feb 21, 2023
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- Guy Lodge
The Adults is most moving in its understanding of the trivial quips, asides and slight, splintered anecdotes that are sometimes all that remains between adult relatives who once shared richer connective tissue.- Variety
- Posted Feb 21, 2023
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- Guy Lodge
Evocative and appropriately aggravating as Baby Ruby is in its portrayal of mental breakdown following traumatic childbirth, however, its parlaying of this condition into full-blown genre tensions and terrors yields mixed rewards.- Variety
- Posted Feb 2, 2023
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- Guy Lodge
Director Shô Miyake’s measured, unsentimental adaptation of a memoir by Keiko Ogasawara — who turned professional despite the difficulties of lifelong deafness — turns out to be somewhat aptly described by its own title, though none of those adjectives quite conveys its rare and delicate grace.- Variety
- Posted Feb 2, 2023
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- Guy Lodge
As a pure adrenaline-rush experience, however, The Deepest Breath is hard to argue with, coming closer than might seem possible to conveying the exhilaration and/or terror of descending further than the length of a football field into infinite aqua.- Variety
- Posted Feb 1, 2023
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- Guy Lodge
Courtesy of source material by offbeat fantasy maestro Terry Pratchett, it’s genuinely eccentric enough — with its sly talking cat, intrepid band of gold-hearted rats and chronic aversion to keeping the fourth wall intact — to come off as charming rather than smarmy.- Variety
- Posted Feb 1, 2023
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- Guy Lodge
This is a farce of stasis, not frenzied activity. By holding his characters literally captive — as the village is held, absurdly but violently, under siege — Kolirin forges an actual microcosm through which to examine the social and political status of Israel’s Arab community.- Variety
- Posted Jan 31, 2023
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- Guy Lodge
Regan’s debut rehashes a host of familiar elements from assorted kitchen-sink dramas and dysfunctional parent-child stories, painting them colorfully enough that audiences won’t mind the odd bit of rust.- Variety
- Posted Jan 28, 2023
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- Guy Lodge
There’s an unforced authenticity to its portrait of ruptured early childhood that isn’t matched by its later, more melodramatic depiction of father-daughter warfare — even if its tear-jerking tactics are undeniably effective. That it’s affecting in both registers comes down to a performance of quiet, good-humored grace by Scoot McNairy.- Variety
- Posted Jan 28, 2023
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- Guy Lodge
When it sticks to the trivial stuff, Shotgun Wedding is at least capably mediocre, coasting on its coastal scenery — actually the Dominican Republic, and brightly shot by David Lynch collaborator Peter Deming, not that you’d ever guess — and Lopez’s reliably sparky screen presence. It’s intermittently stolen, however, by everyone’s favorite Jennifer of the moment, Coolidge, as the gaffe-prone mother of the groom.- Variety
- Posted Jan 19, 2023
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- Guy Lodge
The cruelties of the French immigration system lend a bitter back note to Petit’s otherwise upbeat heartwarmer — a mostly palatable affair that can’t wholly sidestep white-savior cliché in a rushed final course.- Variety
- Posted Jan 13, 2023
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- Guy Lodge
It’s an auspicious arrival for first-time feature director Diem, who handles delicate subject matter (not to mention vulnerable human subjects) with a frankness that stops short of button-pushing. That tact is crucial in a film operating as both close-quarters character study and wider ethnographic portrait, offering a rare, dedicated view of Vietnam’s little-represented Hmong population.- Variety
- Posted Dec 16, 2022
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- Guy Lodge
This is a predominantly observational affair, marked by unusual tenderness and human interest, shot with a camera that feels all but invisible to its subjects — belying the director’s delicate, precise approach to light and framing.- Variety
- Posted Nov 22, 2022
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- Guy Lodge
Tartly funny and plungingly sad in equal measure, this is nuanced, humane queer filmmaking, more concerned with the textures and particulars of its own intimate story than with grander social statements — even if, as a tale of transgender desire in a Muslim country, its very premise makes it a boundary-breaker.- Variety
- Posted Nov 15, 2022
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- Guy Lodge
The film is too emotionally blunt not to wring tears (or at least a solid lump in the throat) where required, though they don’t always feel artfully earned. Either way, at over two hours, it’s a long trudge toward an inevitable end.- Variety
- Posted Oct 27, 2022
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- Guy Lodge
The film’s intimate scenes of mother-son discord are remarkable, played with raw, nerve-pushing testiness by two first-time actors.- Variety
- Posted Oct 13, 2022
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- Variety
- Posted Oct 12, 2022
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- Guy Lodge
Via a blend of free narrative speculation and exacting musical presentation, Petr Vaclav’s stately, sumptuous biopic Il Boemo seeks to restore a degree of iconic status to a talent latterly overshadowed by relative 18th-century contemporaries, albeit not with much swagger or modernity of its own: This is costume drama of a traditional, ornately brocaded stripe, a classical music lesson for classicists.- Variety
- Posted Oct 10, 2022
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- Guy Lodge
The film, on balance, is cheery, sherbet-colored stuff, bursting with goodwill for all good people. What you remember from it, however, is each scene in which elder malevolence deliciously spoils the party.- Variety
- Posted Oct 5, 2022
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- Variety
- Posted Oct 5, 2022
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- Guy Lodge
The Girl With a Bracelet comments intelligently on our culture’s propensity to sex-shame and emotionally instruct young women in particular — points which stand regardless of whether shedunnit or not.- Variety
- Posted Sep 28, 2022
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