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
The Vietnam echoes are everywhere. The vocabulary is mere embellishment- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Sep 25, 2025
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- John Anderson
It’s difficult to describe the astonishing beauty of “Porcelain War” without trivializing everything and everyone involved.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Sep 25, 2025
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- John Anderson
Both the underlying story and the dramatic re-creations possess an urgency that eludes so much televised—and sensationalized—nonfiction.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Sep 11, 2025
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- John Anderson
Hell of a Summer, as written and directed by Finn Wolfhard and Billy Bryk, manages to mine some fresh mirth out of the mayhem while lampooning a format’s classic conceits.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Aug 30, 2025
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- John Anderson
It’s easy to smile at The Thursday Murder Club, with its veteran performers chewing the scenery and still having the teeth to do it. Does that sound ageist? It might, if the charms of this lighthearted, star-studded confection weren’t all about its main characters being advanced in years and still as sharp as an insulin injection.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Aug 30, 2025
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- John Anderson
What’s missing from Stans is a sense of humor—not among the stans, who are self-reflecting and self-effacing. Mr. Mathers, outside of his songwriting, seems to believe that amused self-examination is a weakness to be hidden. The stans, ironically, are hiding nothing.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Aug 21, 2025
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- John Anderson
Mr. Hallström, who has made some emotionally satisfying and even delicate movies (“What’s Eating Gilbert Grape,” “My Life as a Dog,” “The Cider House Rules”), doesn’t really have the material here that he had in his other films. His cast is pretty; the Sagrada Familia is more eloquent.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Aug 20, 2025
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- John Anderson
There are a few speedbumps of illogic along the gnarled route of Night Always Comes, but they can’t negate the pace of the storytelling, Mr. García’s gymnastic shooting, or the sense of there being no bottom to the well of darkness explored by Mr. Caron.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Aug 14, 2025
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- John Anderson
Ms. Carson is a photogenic commodity to have in your film; so is Oxford, and director Iain Morris (the rebooted “Time Bandits”) balances the visual dimension of his film upon these twin resources.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Aug 1, 2025
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- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 10, 2025
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- John Anderson
It may be a historical documentary, but it has blinkers on.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 2, 2025
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- John Anderson
It is a very personal documentary, a designation that can connote the good, the not-so-bad and the distinctly uncomfortable. My Mom Jayne has it all, including a puzzle that Ms. Hargitay pursues throughout.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jul 1, 2025
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- John Anderson
Director Mark Monroe’s nearly two-hour Titan: The OceanGate Disaster is the most exhaustive exploration thus far.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jun 16, 2025
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- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 30, 2025
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- John Anderson
Nonnas is directed by Stephen Chbosky (“The Perks of Being a Wallflower”; the film version of “Dear Evan Hansen”) with undistilled sincerity and dollops of goo. But Mr. Vaughn’s Joe Scaravella, who seems to hew quite closely to the story’s real-life restaurateur, is free of Vaughn-ish smirk. He approaches pathos.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted May 8, 2025
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- John Anderson
“Disaster Is My Muse” differs from other “American Masters” programs by having a subject who is alive, well, loves his wife, Françoise (who appears frequently and to great effect), and about whom there is a more than generous amount of documentation (as in drawings) and footage.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Apr 11, 2025
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- John Anderson
The compositions and palette are occasionally stunning (the cinematographer is Scott Siracusano), and while the story lacks a certain momentum, the intention, quite successful, is to keep a viewer curious.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 13, 2025
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- John Anderson
There are many more questions in “CHAOS” than hard answers, but one thing is clear, namely the hypnotic quality of Mr. Morris’s filmmaking, enhanced to no small end by the dread in Paul Leonard-Morgan’s score and even in the demo recordings by Manson of his songs (which might have been sung by someone like Johnny Mathis, weirdly enough).- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Mar 7, 2025
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- John Anderson
Much of “Over 30 Years Later,” without the surprise factor, seems very soft.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Feb 14, 2025
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- John Anderson
To its credit, Unstoppable features a first-rate performance by Jharrel Jerome (“Moonlight”), who is never less than convincing as Anthony and sometimes seems to be in a different movie from his co-stars.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jan 16, 2025
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- John Anderson
Yes, there’s a sermon of sorts at the center of “A Different Man.” But the message arrives post-movie, thanks to a narrative that is consistently compelling in its novelty, and twin performances—by Messrs. Stan and Pearson—that really do get under the skin.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jan 16, 2025
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- John Anderson
Ms. Wilson may put a viewer off balance with a lack of concrete detail, but it is a seduction technique that works, to satisfying effect.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jan 9, 2025
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- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jan 9, 2025
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- John Anderson
Where one suspects Mr. Sires wants to go in his ultimately righteous film is into the squalid margins of America whence a Babudar might spring. That he hits a stone wall, in the form of the subject’s mother, is too bad, but no surprise.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jan 3, 2025
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- John Anderson
Vandross regularly produces sounds that seem superhuman, and does so with no visible strain. It is also no work at all enjoying a movie so full of affection for its subject and his music.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jan 3, 2025
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- John Anderson
Despite the “improvements” to the animation technique, there remains a purity to Wallace & Gromit. In fact, the most endearing aspects of the series are its links to silent comedy. And dogs, naturally. And penguins.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Jan 3, 2025
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- John Anderson
There are few moments in the film—one that is wearyingly indignant and emotionally inert—that feel genuine.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 19, 2024
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- John Anderson
With Taron Egerton as its hero and Jason Bateman as its villain, it is a perfectly serviceable two hours of action and angst- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 12, 2024
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- John Anderson
Screenwriter Steven Knight has much to answer for in Callas being quite so shrill, but Ms. Jolie is unable to turn her storied character—one of opera’s most important and influential performers, a woman of polarizing voice, scandalous history and tempestuous personality—into something recognizably human.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 12, 2024
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- John Anderson
If you happen to need a good cry, you can’t go wrong with Super/Man: The Christopher Reeve Story, a documentary about decent people, bewildering misfortune and how bad luck can have a ripple effect—especially if you are lucky enough to have people who love you. If you don’t want to cry, you probably will.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 5, 2024
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