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
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- John Anderson
With his Maasai-influenced braids or canopy of Jheri curls and his use of sex and misogyny to sell himself, James is a kind of dinosaur. But he’s also one whom Mr. Jenkins—one of our better cultural critics who happen to make films—pursues to enlightening effect.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Sep 3, 2021
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- John Anderson
It is in part biographical, with the young-hunk-makes-good tale of the film world and a parade of clips from the movies that he made. But the documentary’s main concern is Hudson as the ultimate closeted homosexual, the CinemaScope version of a tale gay men had been forced to live out for generations, or risk scandal, blackmail and even criminal prosecution.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 29, 2023
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- John Anderson
A mood piece, a character study and an exercise in poetic gesture possessed of a sort of evanescent, secular spirituality.- Variety
- Posted May 12, 2013
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- John Anderson
Wildcat is not a fairy tale. The rigors endured by Mr. Turner’s principal sidekick, an ocelot named Keanu (the actor should be pleased), seem very basic compared to the human subject’s process of rehabilitation. But it does reconcile its realities with the elusive nature of happiness, which for both men and cats can mean what’s within their grasp.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 29, 2022
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- John Anderson
The performers—not just the miraculous Ms. Pugh but Ms. Cassidy; her mother, Elaine Cassidy (who plays Anna’s mother); and Tom Burke, as the journalist-love interest Will Byrne—give memorably complex portrayals in a tale where elements theological, maternal, political and pictorial are transformed alchemically into narrative gold.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 17, 2022
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- John Anderson
The divide between Mr. Sutherland and the rest of the cast is striking: The way Friedkin shoots him, and the nature of his portrayal, are in sharp contrast to the more stage-bound performances of his co-stars; it may have been intentional, though it doesn’t really work.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 6, 2023
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- John Anderson
Sleepwalk With Me makes the subject palatable, funny and maybe even touching.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Aug 31, 2012
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- John Anderson
Ms. Plaza delivers a wide-ranging, nuanced and demanding performance as a mad woman, whose attic is the cellphone.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Aug 10, 2017
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- John Anderson
There’s no glory in the pugilism of The Survivor, save for the last, exquisite shot of Haft in his Marciano fight, which is alarmingly beautiful, a catharsis for Haft and a moment of aesthetic delirium for the viewer.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 29, 2022
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- John Anderson
There's a near-sacred history in Hollywood of non-U.S.- born directors providing fresh perspectives on America. Miloš Forman. Alfred Hitchcock. Ang Lee. Ernst Lubitsch. Billy Wilder. For Prisoners, a stress-inducing trip into child abduction, the director is Quebecois filmmaker Denis Villeneuve, who gives us an American "hero" guaranteed to push many buttons, many times, and who might not have been allowed to be quite so awful, under a different director's lens.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Sep 19, 2013
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- John Anderson
Ms. Richen has a problematic subject for a documentary, and the problems extend beyond the limitations of footage. She needs to sell the event, thus her lineup of marginally relevant characters gushing about it.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Sep 10, 2020
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- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Sep 19, 2019
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- Los Angeles Times
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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
By making Emilia Pérez a quasi-musical, Mr. Audiard cranks up the campiness; by making it a parable about one’s own past being inescapable, he makes it profound.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 14, 2024
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- John Anderson
The upshot is an emotionally satisfying fusion of the mixed up and the magical.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Aug 25, 2016
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- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 23, 2021
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- Variety
- Posted Mar 18, 2014
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- John Anderson
Social media is not an inherently cinematic subject, but Ms. Binoche is, and in the hands of director Nebbou and cinematographer Gilles Porte the story of Claire becomes, both visually and psychologically, a bridge between worlds, ethereal, tragic and more than a little scary.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Sep 3, 2021
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- John Anderson
A kind of blues song in its own right, Sidemen: Long Road to Glory is an affectionate attempt to showcase three major figures in the development of Chicago blues, musicians who spent their entire lives eclipsed by the oversized stars they played with.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Aug 24, 2017
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- John Anderson
With Mr. Harrelson, Mr. Moverman has created an antihero of epic proportions and indiscretions.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Feb 9, 2012
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- John Anderson
Goofily funny, and silly, and in many ways follows the currents of contemporary comedy into the gulf stream of inanity. And yet Ned turns out to be a strangely moving figure, a comic foil worthy of affection, perhaps even respect.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Aug 25, 2011
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- John Anderson
There are clashes of philosophy and practical action that need sorting out, and After the Bite treats both sides with respect.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 27, 2023
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- John Anderson
There are degrees of villainy in “Operation Varsity Blues,” but it’s hard to peg the privileged, bribe-paying parents as the worst of a bad lot. Besides, they have to live not just with their criminal convictions but with those wiretapped conversations, in which they reveal what they really think of their own children.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 19, 2021
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- John Anderson
As directed by Celia Aniskovich and Jennifer Brea, Call Me Miss Cleo is an affectionate portrait of a fringe character who was more a tool than a beneficiary of PRN’s seamy efforts.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 16, 2022
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- John Anderson
We are set up to dislike her, but we do not. We like her very much, despite, or thanks to, the potent sense of diva that lingers in the air.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 19, 2024
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- John Anderson
Something about Eklavya: The Royal Guard suggests a lost film by David Lean. With some muted echoes of "Hamlet." And a whiff of "Rigoletto."- Los Angeles Times
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- John Anderson
Mr. Morris is among the most intellectual of documentary makers, but on an artisanal level his trademark is the head-on confrontation, the face-to-face interview. In refining that process, he developed the Interrotron, which enables him to interview a subject eye-to-eye while still having that subject look directly into the camera.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 27, 2020
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- John Anderson
The common problem of Solondz's characters is an inability to see the world in shades of grey, which is fitting in a film where color-garish, boring or just plain ugly-is so important, and the actors are working off palettes of such extreme emotions. A few of them-notably Ms. Rampling, Mr. Hinds and Ms. Sheedy-are as good here as they've ever been.- Wall Street Journal
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- John Anderson
What Mr. Parker has committed to the screen is a righteously indignant, kinetic and well-acted film — Mr. Parker, as Turner, delivers a fierce, complex performance. At the same time, his film is remarkably conventional. The framing and the camera movements are all very routine, even dated; one would have said it looks like television, before television gained its current lustre.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 6, 2016
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