Jim Vorel
Select another critic »For 134 reviews, this critic has graded:
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64% higher than the average critic
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5% same as the average critic
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31% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 1 point higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Jim Vorel's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 67 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Young Frankenstein | |
| Lowest review score: | Playdate | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 90 out of 134
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Mixed: 42 out of 134
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Negative: 2 out of 134
134
movie
reviews
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- Jim Vorel
Graceful and honest in its assessment of the frayed bonds of marriage and extended family, A Little Prayer thrives on a duo of beautifully rendered performances from David Strathairn and Jane Levy, brought together as two people seemingly meant to be in each other’s proximity–not as romantic partners, but as confidants of a nature that is almost more intimate in its own way.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 28, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
It’s to the film’s credit that its writer-director resists pretty much every one of those conventional impulses, steering his breezy but meandering story in unexpected directions, letting it simply develop into a character portrait of two emotionally polarized individuals.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Nov 12, 2024
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- Jim Vorel
A still somewhat convoluted wrap story that clarifies a few of the show’s bigger mysteries while indulging in a parade of series callbacks of varying quality.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jul 21, 2023
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- Jim Vorel
The characters of Universal Language somehow leave you feeling better about humanity than you did before viewing it.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Feb 14, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
What [Gandbhir] presents is stark, horrifying, and infuriating on multiple levels.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Oct 15, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
There are few comedies in Hollywood history more universally beloved than the likes of Mel Brooks’ Young Frankenstein, but perhaps the most impressive thing about that adoration is the fact that for many viewers it was earned without anything more than the barest conception of how effective a parody the film truly is.- Paste Magazine
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- Jim Vorel
Where Predators becomes fascinating as a documentary is not in its rise-and-fall accounting of the titular series, however, but in the way it examines the evolution of empathy or vindictiveness in those who have been touched by abuse and tragedy.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Sep 15, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
All in all, Vengeance Most Fowl casts a wide net–calculated as a return to the franchise that is clever enough for adults and charming and broad enough for kids, regardless of whether they have any familiarity at all with its characters.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 2, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
At times arrestingly suspenseful, at others bitterly funny, but often inert in its transitions, Misericordia is an occasionally confounding mixed bag, but one that stands out for the realistic recriminations of a place where grievances run deep and mercy comes with strings attached.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Mar 21, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
Regardless of how you approach it, The Girl with the Needle remains an absolutely harrowing piece of historical horror, with an atmosphere of coldness and all-too-real misanthropy that captures a searing sense of truth.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Dec 10, 2024
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- Jim Vorel
It’s tough to watch Secret Mall Apartment and not fall under the spell of Townsend and his earnest collaborators, possessing as they do the idealism and righteous conviction of young people in a bygone era who are quite certain that they’re going to change the world.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Mar 24, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
Theatre of Blood is a classic revenge story in the Grand Guignol tradition, following a single mastermind as he hunts down and messily dispatches all who have wronged him in ironic fashion.- Paste Magazine
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- Jim Vorel
A dark, percolating family drama that eventually takes a stunning turn into the savagely metaphorical, writer-director Alireza Khatami’s The Things You Kill proved to be one of the most impressive overall features at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Feb 6, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
A squirmy delight with real insight into both celebrity culture and exploitative relationships, it stands out as one of 2025’s most promising debuts.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 21, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
With a silly genre premise that could easily have been rendered as either an Asylum-esque B movie or a four minute SNL sequence, Sketch instead stands out as a triumph of movie-making chutzpah, an impressively confident and well-executed combination of family comedy, adventure, fantasy and even the occasional twist of horror and suspense.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jul 30, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
Visually, the film can be a bit rough around the edges, but at its heart it is built from the kind of pulpy sci-fi goodness that longtime series fans have likely been craving.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jun 9, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
Categorizing Dead Mail is the exact sort of detective challenge faced by those sorting letters in the film’s post office dead letter unit: It’s a psychological aesthete crime story with occasional giallo tendencies, a film that will immediately become one of the strangest and most unconventional things on Shudder.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Apr 11, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
There’s little here for the casual horror fan, but genre completionists will likely find something that sticks with them.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jun 7, 2021
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- Jim Vorel
As for the cinematic The Disaster Artist, outside of its magnificent central portrayal by the elder Franco, its strongest and occasionally most problematic elements revolve around the huge ensemble cast of familiar faces.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Nov 30, 2017
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- Jim Vorel
Handsomely odd and yet evocative of universal adolescent experiences, Boys Go to Jupiter trades in familiar coming-of-age sentiment, but looks like no other film you’ve ever seen in doing it.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 6, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
Heartfelt, gently humorous and possessing a keen understanding of the passage from juvenile to adult thinking, it’s a thoughtful and solemnly beautiful feature debut.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Sep 10, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
Carry-On is good for a chuckle in fits and starts, primarily when dealing with the easily imagined workday horrors of dealing with irrational holiday travelers in a packed American airport, or the behind-the-scenes camaraderie of the TSA with their bingo cards for items such as confiscated drugs, weapons or embarrassing sex toys. There’s also a few well-executed action sequences.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Dec 12, 2024
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- Jim Vorel
This film is as good as this project could ever hope to be, and it bodes well that Part Two will live up to everything that’s been set up here. When granted the chance to see them back-to-back, we just may, as the song goes, all be changed for the better. After this first act, it’s already safe to claim that Wicked is frickin’ Oz-some.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Nov 19, 2024
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- Jim Vorel
Yes; it stars a dog–but it’s also one of the year’s most potently unnerving and emotionally resonant horror films at the same time.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Oct 2, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
For Zodiac Killer Project to work, it would have to be coming from a filmmaker who is fully ready to admit their own culpability in continuing to fuel the worst aspects of the genre they intended to exploit. That kind of brutal self-admission would have taken a great deal of courage, but Shackleton can’t quite get there, even if he comes close at times.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 29, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
It’s directed and edited in totally competent fashion. But none of that justifies taking the time to watch an often tedious reworking of a story you’ve already seen so many times before.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Nov 21, 2024
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- Jim Vorel
With an incredibly deep and frankly excessive wealth of archival footage at its disposal, Perry examines filmic versions of the video store experience, drawing conclusions about what they meant to us, how filmmakers used them, and how we processed the end of the video store era.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jul 8, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
Metrograph Pictures’ Gazer is effectively a neo-noir mystery, one with heavy 1980s and especially 1970s stylistic trappings, with elements of surrealistic horror dancing on the edges.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 28, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
This is a startlingly creative and skillfully assembled little movie–one that eventually overreaches to some degree, but as a viewer you wouldn’t have wanted it any other way. The ambition of its filmmakers to reach well beyond their meager resources is as inspiring as the film is creepily unsettling.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Nov 17, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
An occasionally inscrutable and tonally unpredictable look at family, (lack of) empathy, self-centeredness and societal (and generational) rot, the film veers wildly between the genuinely disturbing and cynically comedic as it indicts Japanese society’s particular ennui toward happiness, satisfaction and aging.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jun 11, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
Feverishly funny, gruesomely gross and unrelenting in its satirical critique of both beauty standards and the designation of a cinematic “protagonist,” director Emilie Blichfeldt’s The Ugly Stepsister is a film that will have jaws dropping at Sundance this year.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 24, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
It’s a hagiography more than anything, one that does benefit from access to an intriguing library of behind-the-scenes footage, interviews and outtakes, but rarely does I Like Me know how to connect this material to any kind of deeper insight into John Candy’s psyche, with a few notable exceptions that ultimately aren’t enough.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Oct 8, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
Kirk’s film is a surprisingly lyrical and quite gritty, intimate thriller, one that makes the best of its unorthodox choice of performers to tell a story that is equal parts tender and savage.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Sep 25, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
Credited to being “based on an original idea” from star Daisy Ridley, Magpie works in fits and starts as a portrait of an unbelievably, almost comically toxic marriage, but never aspires to really plumb the psyches of its characters or present them with anything but the most obvious and unchallenged choices.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Nov 12, 2024
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- Jim Vorel
The Witch this is not, but that’s ultimately fine—although the themes may be something like a mash-up of The Scarlet Letter and The Crucible, the tone has a much more pop mentality that is at least consistent throughout.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jul 16, 2021
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- Jim Vorel
Even with a bit of a dip in “Kidprint,” V/H/S/Halloween registers as one of the series’ strongest recent efforts, buoyed by the joyfully demented humor and explosive bloodletting of “Diet Phantasma,” “Fun Size” and “Home Haunt” in particular.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Oct 2, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
David Gordon Green’s Halloween is an intensely frustrating experience, buoyed by solid action and well-crafted scares, but simultaneously damned by an incredibly clunky script and appalling lack of focus.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Oct 18, 2018
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- Jim Vorel
The tone has more of the edgy, joyfully nihilistic streak present in something like Heathers. Tack on some legitimately brutal deaths, and you have a very effective modern black comedy/horror hybrid in the making, enhanced by an evocative score, crisp cinematography, lively camera and appropriately grungy soundtrack of early ‘90s classics.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jul 2, 2021
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- Jim Vorel
It’s an impressive recreation of a familiar format–but at the same time, Strange Harvest ultimately struggles a bit to maintain the chilling atmosphere that at first seems effortless.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 11, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
Ultimately, the ambiguousness of the conclusion can’t really dim the engrossing and nigh-mystical sense of enrapturement that Meanwhile on Earth can project when it’s really firing on all cylinders.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Nov 4, 2024
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- Jim Vorel
The new feature, debuting on Shudder today, delivers no more and no less than what it promises: A deeply creepy, ultimately engrossing battle of wills between two phenomenal lead performers.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Mar 10, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
This is a daring, unsettling, inscrutable and at times deeply boring venture into the farthest boundaries of horror esotericism, utterly unlike anything that most viewers will have ever seen before.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 17, 2023
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- Jim Vorel
Mountainhead promises and delivers a takedown of those tech bros who now rule our society, although there are few genuinely schadenfreude-derived smiles to be had in the exercise.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jun 2, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
In Rounding, you can see the basic outline of a worthy psychological drama, but its screenplay fails to turn that vague shape into a fleshed-out story, instead relying on the viewer to fill in the gaps, while the horror elements merely detract from the material that might have worked otherwise.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Feb 18, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
The strong results of segments like “Stork,” “Live and Let Dive” and “Stowaway” buy the series a brief reprieve for now, but the yearly releases feel increasingly like a beast that will never be satiated.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Oct 1, 2024
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- Jim Vorel
It’s fascinating and enlivening to watch how the fusion of two intensely familiar subgenres–serial killer thriller and shark-starring B-movie–can result in a work that is somehow brimming with life and verve.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jun 6, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
The Prosecutor is often at odds with itself, but is saved by the sheer, bravura intensity of its superior action thriller side.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 10, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
The Damned gets by more than well enough via the elemental strength of its moral dilemma and the pristine beauty and unrelenting inhospitality of the Icelandic wilderness that is its scene-stealing star.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Dec 12, 2024
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- Jim Vorel
Jharrel Jerome gives his all, but without a screenplay to stand on, balance is impossible.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 15, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
Gorgeously shot and intellectually/emotionally provoking, the film tantalizes with transcendent revelations but is simultaneously unbalanced in how it approaches its characters and minimalist storytelling.- Paste Magazine
- Posted May 19, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
In the end, The Apprentice is a story whose central character wouldn’t really justify the telling of said story in normal circumstances, except for the fact that he eventually became a ruinous president of the United States.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Oct 10, 2024
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- Jim Vorel
Put simply, V/H/S/94 is almost less an anthology than it is a vehicle for a single, deliriously creative segment from director Timo Tjahjanto, which dominates the entire center of the film. All the other segments simply orbit this central anchor, caught in the inexorable pull of Tjahjanto’s demented imagination, which manages to give V/H/S/94 at least 30 minutes in which one cannot look away.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Oct 6, 2021
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- Jim Vorel
Villains is a workmanlike thriller with a pair of memorable performances and a simplistic premise.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Sep 4, 2019
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- Jim Vorel
At times, By Design is agonizingly opaque or borderline insufferable in its pretentious indulgences; at other times it’s laugh-out-loud funny as it skewers equally pretentious targets.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Feb 28, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
Frankenstein Created Woman is an entertaining aberration in a series of films that have a tendency to run together somewhat, combining beloved tropes of the format–the laboratory sets and sci-fi rigmarole have never looked better than here–with a fresh take on this particular brand of mad science, which sees the title character looking inward, toward the primordial origins of what makes us human.- Paste Magazine
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- Jim Vorel
It’s not as sordid as it plays at, but Bone Lake is wickedly entertaining nonetheless.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Sep 29, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
Deeply silly but more narratively ambitious than one would likely expect, it’s bursting (honestly overstuffed) with ideas and cinematic verve, taking advantage of a slightly longer runtime to really venture into increasingly bonkers metaphysical territory as it draws on and creates new cinematic tropes for movies about witches.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 13, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
At the very least, it manages to remind us of how miraculous the commitment of human ingenuity can be, when it comes to making a new life possible.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Nov 15, 2024
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- Jim Vorel
At times, Armand threatens to lose itself entirely in the fever dream it conjures, like the film itself is going to reach its combustion point and ignite, but it gets just enough of its disquieting atmosphere across to lodge in the memory all the same.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Feb 7, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
Being Eddie is not the all-access, honest recounting of a star’s rise that some fans would no doubt like for it to be, and it may well be intended to mostly serve as a table setting for the stand-up return that Netflix will presumably announce one of these days. But despite its shortcomings, the sharp-eyed viewer will still glean some interesting tidbits about the comedy legend from what is left unsaid.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Nov 13, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
This is a confidently directed and visualized debut with a strong central performance, albeit one not fully supported by its screenplay.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 22, 2025
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- Paste Magazine
- Posted Mar 5, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
In the moment, what it does do well is tease the increasingly metaphysical conclusion that is swiftly approaching, which looks to shed some of the “slasher movie” trappings and embrace the idea of a supernatural evil that resonates and repeats across centuries and generations of lives. Here’s hoping that the Fear Street trilogy can stick the landing.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jul 7, 2021
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- Jim Vorel
What Scream VI ultimately lacks, on the other hand, is a clear sense of what it’s trying to say beyond the literal plot unfolding on screen.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Mar 10, 2023
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- Jim Vorel
If only Jennifer Jason Leigh had been available for a few more days of shooting, perhaps Night Always Comes could have put some flesh on the bones of its family drama, enlivening what is otherwise an overly familiar crime caper, but like an absent parent, the supporting elements of the film just can’t be counted on when you need them.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 18, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
A queer ghost story with devastating emotional power and transgressive themes of domination, selfishness and abandonment, it is all too often hamstrung by plodding stylistic choices and a thin script that stretches many of its interactions until they’re so thin, threadbare and ethereal that they end up just as spectral.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 13, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
Judged purely on the promises made by the title, it’s hard to see Godzilla vs. Kong as anything but a success. As a film, on the other hand, Wingard’s G v. K often still feels like it’s held together with copious amounts of cinematic duct tape.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Mar 29, 2021
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- Jim Vorel
The feeling is one of depletion, as V/H/S/99 begins robbing past hits in a grim effort to keep itself mobile and vital.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Oct 20, 2022
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- Jim Vorel
All in all, Get Away becomes surprisingly effective by the time all is said and done, bleakly satirical, bloody and a far cry better than the trite parody of director Steffen Haars other 2024 collaboration with Nick Frost, Krazy House.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Dec 2, 2024
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- Jim Vorel
Together, these intersecting storylines yield more than enough funny, gross and surprisingly sweet moments to keep Freaky Tales chugging merrily along, even though it feels quite clearly calculated for the midnight festival crowd in particular.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Apr 1, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
Sweeney may have taken this role with Oscar statuette dreams and “legitimate actress” intent, but thanks to its sketchy screenplay and languid boxing bonafides, the result tends to be as dull and thudding as gloves striking a heavy bag.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Nov 4, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
Ultimately, Borderline’s various threads threaten to unravel, but it succeeds in making a point about delusion and both unrealistic expectations and the lies we tell ourselves to make it through the day.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Mar 17, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
Destined to be divisive, it’s a piece of modestly indulgent arthouse horror that is equal parts bewitching and belabored, but at least it has the good instinct to trim itself to a short runtime that doesn’t allow it to become genuinely grating.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Sep 9, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
The Italy-set farce can boast 96 minutes of smooth comedic chemistry, but struggles to organically integrate its believable characters with the madcap situation it’s building around them, ultimately feeling like it’s missing some final push into more subversive territory.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jun 6, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
Snyder is trying to do so much here that the whole thing practically collapses under its own weight, a victim of its own attempt at bombast and visual iconoclasm.- Paste Magazine
- Posted May 19, 2021
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- Jim Vorel
It’s arguably led astray by an imperative to swing in the direction of pulpier (and sellable) revenge story, backloading its genre goods so deeply that when they finally arrive late in the game, they derail the more contemplative mood that has been established. Tornado is left stranded between tones, set adrift without a rudder.- Paste Magazine
- Posted May 29, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
Havoc doesn’t lack for recognizable faces for the American market, not with Tom Hardy, Timothy Olyphant and Forest Whitaker front and center. But it’s also not really interested in giving those performers real roles to chew on. Rather, Havoc is primarily a canvas for Evans to paint in bullet holes and viscera, delivering wave after wave of hilariously over-the-top, comic overkill, at least in its back half.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Apr 24, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
At the end of the day, Sweethearts just feels wan and inconsequential as a result of its lack of focus.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Nov 25, 2024
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- Jim Vorel
Anyone nostalgic for their grandmother’s cooking will no doubt feel its inexorable pull toward the kitchen.- Paste Magazine
- Posted May 8, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
This is a showy exercise, Ponciroli purposefully hamstringing one dimension of his film and then expecting to be praised for rising above the very adversity he created, and not even the bloodthirsty action can salvage it from pretentiousness.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Apr 28, 2026
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- Jim Vorel
It benefits from a strong central protagonist’s performance, but is simultaneously let down by a screenplay that collapses under the slightest bit of scrutiny. Clown in a Cornfield simply isn’t as smart as it needs to be in order to prove that it’s more than its title.- Paste Magazine
- Posted May 6, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
Don’t Die offers an engrossing window into the mania of a unique individual, one with the outlandish resources to do something that no normal person would even be able to dream about attempting.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 2, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
Don’t Move’s protagonist may be rendered inert, but the film retains just enough energy and menace to spare.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Oct 25, 2024
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- Jim Vorel
Psycho Therapy’s screenplay derails it in its closing minutes with genuinely whiplash-inducing abruptness, running out of gas when it’s still seemingly far from its natural finish line.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Apr 9, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
Adulthood makes the occasional odd choice, setting up elements that seem like Chekhov’s gun-type instances that never get around to paying off, and it’s never quite as tense as Winter probably envisioned it would be, even when it builds up a head of steam. But there are enough moments of either well-calculated gallows humor or generational commentary to keep things moving briskly along, and both Gad and Scodelario find room to have a new definition of maturity thrust upon them.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Sep 19, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
In a field full of would-be auteurs flailing against cliche and artistic malaise, Powell somehow manages to take a deeply familiar outline and breathe enough life and verve into it to truly stand out.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Oct 28, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
We're presented with a mixed bag that feels emblematic of the series itself: Peaks and valleys have always been the norm.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Oct 2, 2023
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- Jim Vorel
Sadly, even a perfectly workable premise needs engaging writing, directing and performances to bring it to life, and in this capacity, Netflix’s new feature Brick is as utterly inert as its title–likewise reused from Rian Johnson’s far more interesting high school neo-noir from 2005.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jul 8, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
Occasionally funny in spite of itself, particularly when relying on tried and true slapstick zaniness and the admittedly irresistible performance of Christopher McDonald as Shooter McGavin, it steadily becomes a punishing endurance run that belabors the same handful of gags to the point of nausea.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jul 25, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
For a film that spends this much time yammering about wind speeds and precipitation measurements, it’s surprising that Watch the Skies does feel like it can break through to a general audience primed for sci-fi adventure.- Paste Magazine
- Posted May 8, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
With a plot that likewise falls apart under the lightest bit of scrutiny, what we really needed was more judgement of our protagonist, and not less.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Sep 25, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
For far too much of its bloated runtime, it becomes an incomprehensible slideshow of trauma and weakly executed horror imagery, only occasionally revealing the far more effective, character-driven psychological thriller it’s clearly yearning to be.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Sep 15, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
Ultimately, The Trouble with Jessica runs out of gas and limps in the direction of a contrived conclusion, lacking the mercurial spark that all its characters attribute to Jessica at one point or another. If only the experience of watching the film could be as engaging as the implied experience of knowing her.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Apr 30, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
Director Yeon Sang-ho, who staged genuinely tense sequences in the first film, just seems suddenly out of his element here when expected to produce a grander action spectacle.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 18, 2020
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- Jim Vorel
Street Trash is having a blast as it turns most of its characters into puddles of goo, and that’s all you can really ask of it.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Nov 18, 2024
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- Jim Vorel
In truth, the entirety of Halloween Ends is suffused in some kind of magic or witchcraft, a gauzy layer of unreality that prevents a single character in the film from behaving like an actual human being.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Oct 14, 2022
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- Jim Vorel
The film needed to be either a dark, moody story about criminals seeking a way to break out of the ruinous track of their exploited lives, for the sake of a baby … or a winking, snarky heist comedy with a charismatic lead character. It instead tries to do both simultaneously, and the clash between those elements is distinctly awkward.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Aug 22, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
[Black] hands us a frenzied combination of action, comedy and criminal caper, patently absurd but well served by knowingly silly performances and solid jokes.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Sep 30, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
Back in Action functions modestly well as a welcome back to the screen for Cameron Diaz, who is still capable of being as charming today as she ever may have been. It even functions decently well as an action movie for the specific, too-narrow frames of time where Diaz and Foxx are thrashing wave after wave of nameless mooks–whoever the choreographer and stunt coordinators are here, they’ve done the heaviest lifting of anyone on the project. But the film feels absolutely threadbare in all other dimensions.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Jan 16, 2025
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- Jim Vorel
Rarely does it ever genuinely feel like a horror movie at all, in fact. Instead, it’s more like a halfhearted feminist kitchen drama, with the occasional “scary” beat inserted under protest, a horror film via technicality of labeling and marketing rather than any particular intent. It wants to be just about anything but.- Paste Magazine
- Posted Oct 7, 2024
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