John DeFore
Select another critic »For 1,483 reviews, this critic has graded:
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45% higher than the average critic
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5% same as the average critic
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50% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 5.8 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
John DeFore's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 60 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Mandy | |
| Lowest review score: | The Trouble with Terkel | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 703 out of 1483
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Mixed: 632 out of 1483
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Negative: 148 out of 1483
1483
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- John DeFore
Viewers may worry that Bazawule's starkly gorgeous pictures aren't going to add up to anything, but Burial satisfies in prosaic as well as poetic terms, supplying an end that makes sense of its beginning. It will leave many who see it eager for the young filmmaker's next fable.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Apr 2, 2019
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- John DeFore
Whatever its shortcomings, American Relapse deepens our sense of the catastrophe caused by opioid overprescription and over-availability.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 29, 2019
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 29, 2019
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- John DeFore
A charmer with strong appeal for video release, it is lively enough to merit a niche theatrical run beforehand.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 28, 2019
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- John DeFore
Not exactly the celebration of female promiscuity its title suggests.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 28, 2019
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- John DeFore
A very entertaining film, stuffed with colorful idiots and serves-you-right twists. Silly in ways that reflect poorly of the filmmaker's taste but will endear it to many viewers, it's a true-crime tale that has much to do with Major League Baseball but requires no interest in the sport to enjoy.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 25, 2019
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- John DeFore
A Vigilante offers some grim, imaginary satisfactions in support of real survivors who need whatever help we can give.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 25, 2019
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- John DeFore
A look at how a post-industrial ghost town became home to one of the world's largest contemporary-art venues, Museum Town also exemplifies a problematic category of documentary: the project whose makers are close enough to the subject to deliver an attention-worthy film, but too close to make a comprehensive one.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 19, 2019
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- John DeFore
The book's creepy premise justifies this modern second look, which proves to be a solid if not earthshaking horror pic built around notably good performances.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 16, 2019
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 16, 2019
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- John DeFore
The writer-director's first feature has much going for it, above all a striking performance by Emilie Piponnier in the title role. Neither a fallen-woman melodrama nor an encomium to guilt-free sex work, the complicated moral tale has strong art house potential.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 16, 2019
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- John DeFore
While the beats of its plot may be nothing very new, the tone, language and performances here make Self-Defense its own beast.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 15, 2019
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- John DeFore
A well-tuned vehicle for the comic charms of Irish stand-up Maeve Higgins.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 15, 2019
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- John DeFore
It's another chapter in an oeuvre that is so peculiar some of us will root for it to keep going.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 14, 2019
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- John DeFore
A too-familiar vibe hangs over much of the film, whose comic violence is nothing new and whose banter underwhelms, but the pic gets more fun as it goes, especially after an unlikely hallucinogen makes its entrance.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 14, 2019
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- John DeFore
More polished docs like "Restrepo" have covered similar ground in less scattered fashion, usually giving more coherent pictures of military operations while they're at it.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 14, 2019
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 13, 2019
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 12, 2019
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 12, 2019
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- John DeFore
Costner and Harrelson both give fine performances, but when it's time for each to have his one allotted dramatic monologue, you can practically hear the movie clearing its throat: Shut up and listen while the man is speaking, folks.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 11, 2019
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- John DeFore
Very funny whatever you think of its more old-fashioned notions, the picture will charm many viewers who can set implausibility aside for a while.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 10, 2019
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- John DeFore
Enjoyably shaggy ... Both [Maron] and [Shelton] seem happy to play to their fans in this modest outing, worrying little about straying beyond their comfort zones.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 9, 2019
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- John DeFore
Clearly the work of an ambitious writer/director who can see himself inheriting the mantle of Rod Serling ... it offers twists and ironies and false endings galore — along with more laughs than the comedian-turned-auteur dared to include in his debut film. ... It packs a punch.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 8, 2019
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- John DeFore
The result is very pleasing, even for moviegoers who don't pine for the Western's return, and represents a big step forward in the directing career of D'Onofrio.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 7, 2019
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- John DeFore
Following a few years after "3 Geezers," Schumacher's reviled feature directing debut starring Simmons and Tim Allen, I'm Not Here represents a great leap forward, but still doesn't hold out much promise for future efforts that aren't built around performances by Simmons.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 6, 2019
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- John DeFore
Whatever its impetus, the film is a warm bath of sensations that suffers little for any thematic haziness.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 6, 2019
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- John DeFore
An English cousin to the earlier Jamaica-set films "The Harder They Come" and "Rockers" that is vastly superior in cinematic terms and just as valuable as a cultural document.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 6, 2019
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- John DeFore
Summarizing the great strides he made for journalism without ignoring his colorful flaws, Oren Rudavsky's Joseph Pulitzer: Voice of the People is an excellent primer, not just on the man but on the birth of the modern newspaper.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 28, 2019
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- John DeFore
Initial hints of a "Mean Girls"-meets-"Lord of the Flies" complication don't come to much in this straightforward pic, which will be zeitgeisty enough for some viewers while leaving most wanting something a bit more imaginative.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 27, 2019
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- John DeFore
The deeper the script gets into how its version of witchcraft works, the less convincing it becomes. Uniformly solid performances and artful camera/sound work make the movie hard to dismiss out of hand, but the script doesn't sell its hokum as effectively as more mainstream supernatural soap operas.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 21, 2019
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