Joe Morgenstern
Select another critic »For 2,688 reviews, this critic has graded:
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44% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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54% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 3.7 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Joe Morgenstern's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 62 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Drive My Car | |
| Lowest review score: | Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,446 out of 2688
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Mixed: 742 out of 2688
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Negative: 500 out of 2688
2688
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Joe Morgenstern
There’s never been anything quite like it — an exquisitely crafted work of cinematic art putting radiant black-and-white photography (by Vladimír Smutný) in the service of indescribably shocking images that reflect the darkest of human impulses, as well as the unquenchable will to survive.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 16, 2020
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- Joe Morgenstern
In the end Relic really is about decay, both physical and spiritual, and filial devotion. But devotion to what is the question. The answer makes this movie distinctive, and well worth seeing.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 9, 2020
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- Joe Morgenstern
Parts of the drama play out on its star’s face, and they’re the best parts, because there’s no one better at portraying a good man’s self-doubts and a frightened man’s courage.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 9, 2020
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- Joe Morgenstern
What makes The Old Guard special is that, for all its canny action tropes, the film really does deal with the prevalence of evil in the world, and the limits of doing good. It’s a lot to squeeze into a smaller screen.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 3, 2020
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- Joe Morgenstern
This isn’t a great film, but it’s a work of great subtlety with artfully smudged boundaries — “Rashomon” in modern dress and watercolors.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 2, 2020
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- Joe Morgenstern
A treat that becomes a chilling enthrallment, one of those closely observed dramas you love — for its intimacy, calm authority and mystery — even before you begin to get what it’s really about.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 25, 2020
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- Joe Morgenstern
The film, streaming on demand, brings old news that can’t hold a flickering candle to the events of our flabbergasting moment, and a clever twist doesn’t redeem long passages of gratingly broad and awkward humor.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 25, 2020
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- Joe Morgenstern
What the film does sustain, and quite remarkably, considering its serious theme, is a delicately comic tone. That’s due in large measure to the screenplay by Frank Cottrell Boyce.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 18, 2020
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- Joe Morgenstern
The level of artistry here is out of all proportion to the smallish scale of this Australian coming-of-age drama, which was directed by Shannon Murphy from a screenplay by Rita Kalnejais. Everything seems freshly discovered. Lives connect spontaneously, explosively. Love bursts forth inappropriately, yet unquenchably. Moments come along, not just a few but many, that stop your heart, leave you grinning with delight or watching breathlessly.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 18, 2020
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- Joe Morgenstern
The content can be raw, sometimes startling, but before and after everything else the film is hilarious, and constitutes a cockeyed pantheon of comic performances. On top of that it is beautiful. The more you laugh, the more deeply you’re moved by its portrait of a lost manchild trying to find himself in a present that’s missing a precious piece of his past.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 11, 2020
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- Joe Morgenstern
A drama crossed with a polemic that’s enriched by a black-history lesson, the film is sprawling, enthralling and essential viewing.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 11, 2020
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- Joe Morgenstern
For all its verbal combat, and marital strife that’s echoed and amplified by a younger academic couple in the manner of “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf,” the story works best when the dialogue tides subside. In those fleeting moments Ms. Moss is able to convey, eloquently and almost wordlessly, a tormented soul.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 4, 2020
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- Joe Morgenstern
Should you choose to watch Judy & Punch, the best way to do it is with the sound turned low or off. The downside is missing part of Ms. Wasikowska’s performance; she plays Judy with impressive ferocity. The advantage lies in losing the repetitive bombast of Punch’s drunken posturings while enjoying the genuine prettiness of Stefan Duscio’s cinematography and Josephine Ford’s production design.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 4, 2020
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- Joe Morgenstern
The oddity of the crime lay in the value of the art — relatively low, except to the artist, a young Czech woman who was neither famous nor rich. The beauty of the film lies in the bond she forges with one of the thieves after they’re found by police and sentenced to 75 days in prison. Questions of identity haunt both the victim and the perp — not their names or addresses, but who they are in the farthest reaches of their psyches, and who they may become.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 21, 2020
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- Joe Morgenstern
Sure, the formula has worn thin; this installment is, in fact, the end of the road. But what was great at the outset — supersmart banter coupled with sensational celebrity impressions — is still pretty darned good, and the meander takes an unexpected turn.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 21, 2020
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- Joe Morgenstern
Mr. Hardy does have a few sensationally lurid moments, but the stuff of high drama isn’t there. Most of the time his character is a minimally animate object, scowling furtively and growling in a voice that evokes Marlon Brando, Lionel Stander and Stephen Hawking’s synthesizer.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 14, 2020
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- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 7, 2020
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- Joe Morgenstern
Verve! Lilt! They are precious qualities in movies. As soon as you encounter them you know that liftoff is likely. Saint Frances, newly available on demand, has them in an abundance.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 7, 2020
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- Joe Morgenstern
Mr. Dujardin won a best actor Oscar in 2012 for his buoyantly funny performance in “The Artist” as George Valentin, a silent-film star on the way down. Here he’s Georges with an “s” but without the buoyancy or the fun, a man descending into murderous delusion. Quentin Dupieux’s glum absurdist fable gives absurdism a bad name. It’s a facile notion inflated to feature proportions — just barely, since the running time is only 77 minutes.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 30, 2020
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- Joe Morgenstern
For all its imperfections, this docudrama with an agitprop heart finds a surprising way into the subject of undocumented immigrants languishing in detention centers.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 30, 2020
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- Joe Morgenstern
People can indeed live at war with themselves and not know it. Here’s a case of great things happening once peace is declared.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 23, 2020
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- Joe Morgenstern
Still, the two main performances count for a lot. Ms. Hayward, who was so endearing as Suzy, the tween lover in “Moonrise Kingdom,” is touchingly winsome as Iris, though she’s sometimes allowed or encouraged by her director to be busier than an actor need be. Ms. Liberato has the best of both worlds, and makes them better; a natural at comedy, she’s adept at serious drama.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 23, 2020
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- Joe Morgenstern
Abe is played by Noah Schnapp, from “Stranger Things,” and he’s irresistibly charming. Abe the movie is charming too.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 16, 2020
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- Joe Morgenstern
The film is funny and astute on the boundless self-seriousness of adolescence, and a formidable start for Ms. Poe’s career. Here’s looking to her for the next one.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 16, 2020
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- Joe Morgenstern
Sergio, a Netflix docudrama directed by Greg Barker from a banal screenplay by Craig Borten, catches flashes of his brilliance from time to time but scatters and dims them through a mosaic structure that’s ultimately no structure at all.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 16, 2020
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- Joe Morgenstern
Mr. Yang’s story unfolds with decreasing velocity; in the latter stretches patience is required, though amply rewarded.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 10, 2020
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- Joe Morgenstern
It’s an emotional investment with rich returns. Pedro Costa’s hypnotic drama, shot superbly by Leonardo Simões, follows its heroine through a dark night of the soul into the light of a new life in a new land.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 26, 2020
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- Joe Morgenstern
The film, newly streaming on Netflix, pulls together disparate strands of an untold saga into something thrillingly new.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 26, 2020
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- Joe Morgenstern
The Hunt occupies a special place in the chockablock landscape of movie junk. This gleeful, gross-out gorefest looks as tacky and violent as its trackdown plot would suggest, and lives up to certain parts of its bad reputation. It is also funny, genuinely topical, extremely shrewd and, heaven help us, slyly wise. I liked it quite a lot.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 12, 2020
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- Joe Morgenstern
This tough-minded, forthright and exquisitely tender film transcends polemics. It’s the odyssey of a lost child in poorly charted territory.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 12, 2020
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