Joshua Rothkopf
Select another critic »For 1,122 reviews, this critic has graded:
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48% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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50% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 0.1 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Joshua Rothkopf's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 66 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Vertigo | |
| Lowest review score: | The Back-up Plan | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 487 out of 1122
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Mixed: 576 out of 1122
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Negative: 59 out of 1122
1122
movie
reviews
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Though play with fire she might, couldn't screenwriter Jonas Frykberg have played with a little button called DELETE? There's no reason why a two-hour movie should feel like three, nor require quite so much fidelity to Larsson's plot curlicues.- Time Out
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- Time Out
- Posted Dec 11, 2010
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- Joshua Rothkopf
A proper profile of Hefner would start and end with sex, and not merely glance on casualties like Dorothy Stratten (and even the loveless Hef himself). The movie can't seem to get it up.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The Shape of Water is a movie of too many ideas, including love. For that reason alone, it drinks like a bottomless glass of velvety wine.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 2, 2017
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Christopher Felver, while an inspired photographer, is not the director for the job; he dutifully ticks off Ferlinghetti’s major achievements — such as the founding of North Beach’s literary mecca, City Lights — yet never imbues his life with anything more than lefty zeal.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 5, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Cave of Forgotten Dreams feels stuck in a middling zone of too much conjecture and not enough scholarship.- Time Out
- Posted Apr 26, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
No performances stand out, which is a shame given Affleck's track record with actors. Ultimately, it comes down to a chase to the airport, with a scary Revolutionary Guardsman at the gate.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 9, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
I'd trade much of The Master for one extraordinary moment played by the ever-improving Amy Adams, in front of the bathroom mirror with Hoffman.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 11, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The plot takes a timely turn toward homegrown terrorism, and even as cinematographer Alexander Dynan amasses ominous clouds, the film’s break from head-bound matters is a tonic.- Time Out
- Posted May 17, 2018
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- Joshua Rothkopf
How can a movie so steeped in post-Katrina imagery eschew even the smallest comment about social responsibility? Maybe that was deemed too earnest, a decision that makes zero sense when a twinkling score is ladled on like instant pathos. Real people aren't beasts, nor do they require starry-eyed glorification. Bring your liberal pity.- Time Out
- Posted Jun 26, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
A horror film with the power to put a rascally grin on the face of that great genre subverter John Carpenter (They Live), Get Out has more fun playing with half-buried racial tensions than with scaring us to death.- Time Out
- Posted Feb 17, 2017
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The movie skips along episodically; it's not quite as sharp as a war narrative needs to be, even if its nightmarish psychology feels spot-on.- Time Out
- Posted May 10, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Holy Motors is aggressively "wild," a puzzle that tweaks the mind but doesn't nourish.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 16, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Meek's Cutoff has found its passionate defenders, those who admire it almost because of its meandering, heavily politicized nature. Yet you might try it-and try it again-and still only grab a handful of dust.- Time Out
- Posted Apr 6, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The film feels naive for an audience that's ready for some harder truths.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 25, 2012
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Dazzling on his recently concluded Kroll Show in multiple caricatures, Nick Kroll makes a savvy pivot to a role that allows for similar shades.- Time Out
- Posted Apr 23, 2015
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- Joshua Rothkopf
The original film, for all its zaniness, existed in a recognizable Koch-era metropolis, one that paradoxically added to our hero's likable haze of denial. This time, the town is far shinier (what recession?).- Time Out
- Posted Apr 6, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Listen to the rhythms of "Broadcast News" - from Holly Hunter's daily crying jags to William Hurt's cock-of-the walk patter - and you'll hear how romantic comedy can approach an art form, a roundelay that requires the ear of a conductor. How Do You Know, James L. Brooks's latest, has such tone-deaf passages that it feels made by a totally different man.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 14, 2010
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- Joshua Rothkopf
A manufactured kid-in-jeopardy climax and Blake’s rehab stint blow the mood. Until then, this is great American acting.- Time Out
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Yet after the actorcentric fireworks of Cianfrance’s "Blue Valentine" (2010), it’s impressive to see him going after a wider sociopolitical scope, one that would have been better served by a less repetitive structure.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 26, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
It all feels a touch schematic, trying to satisfy every audience type, when each haircut is different. Barbershop: The Next Cut actually ends up in the chair, with a highly symbolic snipping that could have come straight outta the 1950s.- Time Out
- Posted Apr 15, 2016
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Cosmatos needs you to be charitable toward his performances. Or, barring that, he needs you to be stoned. Many will oblige: Mandy is an instant midnight mood, graced by a thickly menacing synth score by composer Jóhann Jóhannsson (Sicario), whose recent death from a drug overdose robs us of not only a singular talent but also an obvious superfan of Vangelis.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 14, 2018
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Undeniably, The Post feels timely, but there’s a counter-argument to be made that, in our current era of “fake news” and easily swayed public opinion, it’s actually a dinosaur of a film—and not Jurassic Park. Thank God for the owners, it ultimately says, who sometimes do the right thing. That’s a perfectly fine idea, but our times could use something sharper.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 19, 2017
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- Joshua Rothkopf
After 2012’s similarly themed "Sleepwalk with Me," Birbiglia continues to mine a scene he knows well, and even though he doesn’t strike you as a natural-born filmmaker (some of these scenes are as flatly lensed as the Saturday Night Live sketches being spoofed), he’s evolving as a confrontational dramatist.- Time Out
- Posted Jul 20, 2016
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Still, you can’t help but be swept up by the sincerity here — that and the sight of a hard man softening to a sympathetic nuzzle. (This is some excellent equine acting.) The Mustang is leagues beneath the recent "The Rider" or "Lean on Pete," both superior in terms of articulating silent human-animal relationships that fulfill larger psychological needs.- Time Out
- Posted Mar 15, 2019
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Daringly plotless and disconnected (“just like my life!” squeals the target audience), Noah Baumbach’s latest, a breeze, feels a lot less self-absorbed than usual, mainly for not having a neurotic at its core.- Time Out
- Posted May 14, 2013
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Murder, skulduggery and an avalanche of plotting makes Rian Johnson's latest a retro pleasure for those who enjoy being dizzied.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 9, 2019
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- Time Out
- Posted Oct 18, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Comfortable with subtle Proustian detachment, the director has taken another stab at colossal scope, this time getting lost in the cerebral folds.- Time Out
- Posted Aug 2, 2011
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- Joshua Rothkopf
Director Paul Greengrass remains a genius of claustrophobia, yet his better films — "Bloody Sunday," "United 93" and "The Bourne Ultimatum" — all beat with a stronger sense of central identification. He doesn’t have as much to work with this time, and his solution is to slow down the pace. The result is more clarity, but also more monotony.- Time Out
- Posted Oct 8, 2013
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