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
We’re watching a period piece that feels beautifully and painfully present: beautifully because love stories are timeless, painfully because the spectacle of racial injustice feels up to date.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 14, 2018
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- Joe Morgenstern
What’s mysterious about this film is why, with so much on its mind and such gifted stars to express it, the drama should be so unaffecting — even when the two women finally meet, as they neglected to do in the less shapely drama of real life.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 6, 2018
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- Joe Morgenstern
Beneath the glitzy surface of Vox Lux — the title of one of Celeste’s studio recordings — lie deeper superficialities, so many that I found myself admiring the movie’s wild ambition while grinding my teeth at its pretentiousness.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 6, 2018
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- Joe Morgenstern
Anna and the Apocalypse does have its singular moments. On the whole, though, I’d say don’t bite.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 29, 2018
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- Joe Morgenstern
But all of that — the visual style included — changes as the film develops an edge, then expands into a lyrical realm that is both very Japanese and entirely universal.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 29, 2018
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- Joe Morgenstern
The comedy is elegant, frequently dark and genuinely witty. The spectacle is gorgeous.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 23, 2018
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- Joe Morgenstern
Tolstoy got it wrong and Shoplifters gets it right. All happy families are not the same. Hirokazu Kore-eda’s enchanting, subversive masterpiece takes on family values and bourgeois pieties through a Japanese crime family that is not what it seems.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 23, 2018
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- Joe Morgenstern
There’s no other way to say it than to say it: Roma is one of the best movies I’ve ever seen, and one of the most moving. If Norma Desmond had been able to see it she wouldn’t have worried about the pictures getting small.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 21, 2018
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- Joe Morgenstern
Green Book warms the heart, then numbs the mind. It’s a broad-brush lesson in racism, a sermon on the power of empathy, a user’s guide to tolerance packaged as a mismatched-buddies comedy.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 15, 2018
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- Joe Morgenstern
This clearly qualifies as a heist film, and a hugely entertaining one, notwithstanding a few plot perforations and a running time of two hours plus that might have been trimmed a bit.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 14, 2018
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- Joe Morgenstern
The production’s shrill insistence on scandal-mongering as the poison of our political process is trivializing, too. Given the profound currents and countercurrents that have transformed — and menaced — the news media in the last few years, this story plays like quaintly ancient history.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 8, 2018
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- Joe Morgenstern
The stars were misaligned from the start for this frantic, turgid thriller. That’s no knock on Ms. Foy, who might have surprised us if she’d had a different director working from a different script under a different set of studio imperatives that didn’t involve extracting blood from a very cold stone.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 8, 2018
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- Joe Morgenstern
The whole film feels magical in the way it gets at intangible, invisible, ineffable things without naming them, and tells a gripping story of obsession at a poet’s pace, without need of conventional explanations.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 1, 2018
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- Joe Morgenstern
The most compelling reason to see A Private War is Rosamund Pike’s stunning performance as Marie Colvin, the American war correspondent who died in a bombardment while covering the Syrian government’s 2012 siege of Homs.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 1, 2018
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- Joe Morgenstern
The film is all the more powerful for its grounding in fact. How powerful? Sufficiently, during most of its length, and extremely during several eruptions of searing drama.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 1, 2018
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- Joe Morgenstern
The good news is twofold. Ms. Foy, an accomplished performer, is appealing throughout. And Keira Knightley, as the Sugar Plum Fairy, gives the film several desperately needed jolts of edgy energy.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 1, 2018
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- Joe Morgenstern
The whole thing devolves into such highfalutin silliness that it’s impossible to care what happens to whom. In Mr. Guadagnino’s previous film, “Call Me By Your Name,” the tone was romantic, and sustained to the very end. In Suspiria, style stomps fun into submission.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 25, 2018
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- Joe Morgenstern
Border may not be everyone’s idea of a fun night out, but it takes you to places you won’t forget, and that’s nothing to sniff at.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 25, 2018
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- Joe Morgenstern
In the realm of documentary films, as in the news media, polemicists are ascendant, but Frederick Wiseman isn’t one of them. For the past half-century, since his first film, “Titicut Follies,” he’s been an observationist. Not an observer, which carries a passive connotation, but a filmmaker who’s made a distinguished career of observing in a particular way — closely, calmly, shrewdly and systematically, with an eye to the institutions and social structures that shape and reveal people’s lives.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 25, 2018
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- Joe Morgenstern
It’s full of music that makes the case for its subject’s pre-eminence—he played with the intensity of a highest-category hurricane—and has an interesting slant on the issue of cultural appropriation; Butterfield was white, and the blues he played were, and remain, indelibly black.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 25, 2018
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- Joe Morgenstern
The film is not only not unpleasant but a genuine, authentic and honest-to-goodness pleasure.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 18, 2018
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- Joe Morgenstern
An affecting coming-of-age drama based on a superb book and directed by an exceptional actor in his directorial debut.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 18, 2018
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- Joe Morgenstern
This fine debut feature by Elizabeth Chomko dramatizes well-worn themes — degenerative illness, family dysfunction, anguishing choices to be made in the face of implacable decline. Yet the cast is exceptional, the performances are extraordinary, the writing and direction are heartfelt, and the film is, consequently, stirring, frequently funny and consistently affecting.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 18, 2018
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- Joe Morgenstern
The root problem is repetitiveness, the seemingly endless cycle of progress and relapse that causes heartbreak in real life and induces déjà vu in audiences — even dejà déjà vu, since there’s repetition within the already familiar pattern. The mosaic structure is simply, though not successfully, an attempt to hold our attention.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 11, 2018
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- Joe Morgenstern
However inward the hero may be, the movie around him is thrillingly outward, not to mention poundingly onward and relentlessly upward.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 11, 2018
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- Joe Morgenstern
What Sadie brings most importantly to Private Life is the lovely, sometimes loopy and always infectious joy she takes in living. She’s a bright, welcome presence in a film that can be startlingly dark, even polemic, and she represents another side of Ms. Jenkins, whose previous films, “Slums of Beverly Hills” and “The Savages,” were overflowing with life.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 4, 2018
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- Joe Morgenstern
The simplest thing to say about A Star Is Born is that it’s all right. Not all right as in OK with a shrug, but thrillingly, almost miraculously right in all respects.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 2, 2018
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- Joe Morgenstern
Free Solo would be an exceptional piece of filmmaking if it confined itself to the physical poetry of Mr. Honnold’s achievements. But it gets at his inner life too, and goes a long way toward answering the unspoken question of what makes — or allows — him to do what he does.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Sep 27, 2018
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- Joe Morgenstern
In a word, The Old Man & the Gun is enjoyable; that’s all it means to be and that’s what it is.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Sep 27, 2018
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- Joe Morgenstern
Every once in a while a movie grabs you, unsuspecting, and hustles its way into your heart. Jeremiah Zagar’s We the Animals does that. This exquisite debut feature, based on a poetic debut novel by Justin Torres, is a tumbling evocation of a volatile family, narrated by one of three young brothers living in upstate New York with their Puerto Rican father and white mother.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Aug 22, 2018
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