John Anderson
Select another critic »For 559 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 0.9 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
John Anderson's Scores
- Movies
- TV
Score distribution:
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Positive: 322 out of 559
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Mixed: 197 out of 559
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Negative: 40 out of 559
559
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- John Anderson
Everyone is doomed in Mr. Diaz’s account of European colonialism and exploratory naval history—not just the primitive Filipinos and Indonesians but the Portuguese on the mission from their silent God. And their covetous king.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 24, 2026
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- John Anderson
It will prove a literally breathtaking adventure, depending on one’s phobias about heights, water and psychopaths. But it is an ordeal saga, a predator thriller with horror-film accents—and a considerable amount of violence and pain for the character played by the ageless Ms. Theron, who may be giving the most athletically demanding performance of her action-movie career.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 23, 2026
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- John Anderson
The tale doesn’t need any artificial twists. They occur naturally. There’s character development. Foreshadowing.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 17, 2026
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- John Anderson
“The Logo” is directed by “Black-ish” creator Kenya Barris, who is too much of a presence in his own movie. It’s his first documentary. It may be the first one he’s seen. Documentarians usually hide themselves unless they have something to add, which he doesn’t.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 15, 2026
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- John Anderson
While Ms. Gillespie can’t solve the mystery of why exactly her subject did what he did, she has created a novel kind of crime film, one aided in no small way by what seems to be the complete flight recording from Russell’s mad act. And a group of loved ones willing to listen to it.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 13, 2026
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- John Anderson
Ms. Zenovich possesses the interviewer’s most valuable skill, knowing when to shut up.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 2, 2026
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- John Anderson
“1000 Women” is briskly entertaining and wildly informative as a clip show, insightful in its academic analysis, and the structure of the film enables a tidy organization of an often messy bunch of films.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 20, 2026
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- John Anderson
Straightforward storytelling was never the strong suit of the show, which relied very much on Mr. Murphy’s charisma and that of his co-stars, notably Sophie Rundle, who plays sister Ada Shelby. The future always looked grim in Peaky Blinders, but the fate of the show, which apparently has two Murphy-less years to go in a planned sequel, is beyond uncertain.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 20, 2026
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- John Anderson
While essentially a disaster film, the visually alarming and nerve-racking “Fukushima” is also a cross-cultural psychodrama, about an industry, and perhaps a society, having a meltdown all its own.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 6, 2026
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- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Feb 26, 2026
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- John Anderson
Like Sun Ra’s music, the motion picture is deliberately fractured, the virtues to be found in the departures from the expected, the familiar, the comfortable.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Feb 19, 2026
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- John Anderson
Director Rory Kennedy strives to make Ms. Polgár’s story—that of the greatest female player in the game—a validation of women in chess, without paying much attention to their continued under-representation, post-Polgár, in international competition. What she does come close to validating, however hesitantly, are the unorthodox educational theories of Judit’s father, László.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Feb 12, 2026
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- John Anderson
Beast of War is a rare animal—a hybrid shark movie and a war film—and it takes care to deliver some tweaks.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jan 16, 2026
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- John Anderson
The Rip is a sturdily entertaining, hyper-kinetic avalanche of action propelled by equal parts bullets and f-bombs.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jan 15, 2026
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- John Anderson
Mr. Chase still tries to be funny here, sometimes desperately, and isn’t. Which along with a career’s worth of ill will puts the sting in I’m Chevy Chase and You’re Not.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jan 2, 2026
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- John Anderson
I love a good film-clip movie as much as the next cinemaniac, and “Breakdown” provides plenty of great moments snatched out of what has been called the New American Cinema of the ’70s—the Scorsese-Coppola-Polanski-Malick heyday. But Mr. Neville is going for something deeper. Deeper even than what is usually attributed to the zeitgeist. Or its cousin, coincidence.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 19, 2025
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- John Anderson
Influencers both dwells in and demolishes an online, text-happy, selfie-saturated world, one that thrives on misinformation and FOMO-mongering and drives CW more than a little crazy. Watching poseurs brought down is fun, though. So is Ms. Naud.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 11, 2025
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- John Anderson
While it isn’t the intention of the film to generate sympathy for Mr. Út, one can’t quite help it.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 8, 2025
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- John Anderson
As naturally and insistently buoyant as Mr. Strassner is, Ms. Larsen is a marvel.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 8, 2025
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- John Anderson
There is an implicit story within—about the ancients building with marble for eternity and us moderns building with concrete for a virtual moment. But it isn’t just beauty Mr. Kossakovsky is concerned with here. It is how humans view their world and, more importantly, themselves. And their place in the universe. And their disposable landscape.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 8, 2025
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- John Anderson
“Reflection” is a highly playful exercise in its kaleidoscopic approach, though “kaleidoscopic” is about as useful as “surreal” in describing the film’s effect or philosophy.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 5, 2025
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- John Anderson
The film acknowledges the bones of Johnson’s story—a very thin narrative in terms of things actually happening, though the things that happen are enormous. The execution is nevertheless lush, sometimes startlingly beautiful, and painterly and evocative of Johnson’s elegiac theme about a bygone America. The Old World is never old until it’s gone, but in Train Dreams one feels it passing.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 20, 2025
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- John Anderson
Minka Kelly has a face that could launch a thousand cable movies and is the freshest thing about “Champagne Problems,” a holiday-season romance that takes the welcome tack of embracing its own clichés.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 19, 2025
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- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 14, 2025
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- John Anderson
Is this movie better seen in a theater than at home on Netflix? Yes, no and what can one say? Watch it anyway.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 6, 2025
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- John Anderson
Mr. Davenport, who makes films “about disability” according to his website, also makes them from the perspective of the disabled—he has cerebral palsy and often uses a wheelchair. Like many people who find themselves on the anti- side of the assisted-suicide issue, he takes the concept to what seem very logical conclusions—with an assist from Canada.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 31, 2025
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- John Anderson
There is no reason to adapt an existing work without doing something new, and Ms. DaCosta does plenty, though much of the updating shows how truly groundbreaking Ibsen was. And how little ground is left to break.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 31, 2025
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- John Anderson
This critic is a sucker for Ms. Knightley, so please disregard anything here that sounds remotely positive. Because it really is a ludicrous exercise, the kind one hopes was fun for the actors because the results are so wacky, and the cast so prestigious.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 10, 2025
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- John Anderson
The filmmakers may have refashioned the book to make it a vehicle for Mr. Murphy, and done so successfully. But they were right about the POV: Witnessing the turmoil of these very troubled youths through the frustrations of their teachers makes for more convincing drama than would a delinquent’s-eye view of the same situation.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 2, 2025
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- John Anderson
All horror film is metaphorical. But to qualify for the genre itself—and satisfy the base demands of the base—a movie is required to both accelerate toward lunacy and entertain a certain amount of mayhem. “Bring Her Back” contains enough gore to swamp a blood bank. But it also features a performance by Sally Hawkins that may be the best of the year, or even her career.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 2, 2025
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