K. Austin Collins
Select another critic »For 250 reviews, this critic has graded:
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35% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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63% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 1.6 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
K. Austin Collins' Scores
- Movies
- TV
Score distribution:
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Positive: 148 out of 250
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Mixed: 95 out of 250
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Negative: 7 out of 250
250
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- K. Austin Collins
Lohan’s most distinguished quality as a star is that glowing goodness, a real, unshakeable joy that can only barely be imitated, let alone replicated, and which feels perfectly at home in the bright, buoyant, only glancingly ironic realm of happy-go-lucky comedy.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 14, 2022
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- K. Austin Collins
The movie isn’t always on such sure footing. But that’s almost appropriate: a messier movie trying to reckon with a messier range of feelings.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 8, 2022
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- K. Austin Collins
Ultimately, Something in the Dirt doesn’t quite convince as a genuine mystery — and it doesn’t seem to be meant to. Having fun with the artifice of it all — the loose “documentary” format, the well-played and visibly signaled “clues” scattered throughout — seems far more to the point.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 7, 2022
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- K. Austin Collins
If anything, Good Night Oppy could be nerdier, a little more in the weeds of the science that makes all of this possible. That’d prove a little less lightly entertaining, for some. But it’d also be true to what the movie is already about.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 7, 2022
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- K. Austin Collins
With a single shot, Descendant ceases to be a story about the recovery of a ship. It rapidly morphs into something broader: a story about the land. Who owned it back in the 1800s, who owns it now, and what all of this means for everyone else.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 31, 2022
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- K. Austin Collins
All That Breathes favors a poetic, almost dreamy style, filled with the kinds of ugly-beautiful images and thoughtfully dispatched voiceovers that can strip a narrative of outright propulsion in favor of mesmerizing us with ebbing ideas and moments of wonder. It occasionally strains. But the basic conflict at play, between the selflessness of these medics, the growing need for their work, and the utter folly of this mission — it can feel a little like standing in front of a moving train — gives it all an urgent undercurrent.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 31, 2022
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- K. Austin Collins
Armageddon Time isn’t a movie about bad people or good people. It’s more shocking because it’s more banal: It’s a movie about people. It doesn’t excuse peoples’ choices. But it knows that it cannot change them.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 31, 2022
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- K. Austin Collins
Chukwu’s script, co-written with Michael Reilly and Keith Beauchamp, is interesting for all of the predicaments it stares down and quietly works its way through.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 31, 2022
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- K. Austin Collins
Aftersun, which Wells also wrote, is for the most part a thorough depiction of a brief period in these two peoples’ lives. But its emotional canvas is far more encompassing than this implies.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 24, 2022
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- K. Austin Collins
Carlota Pereda's debut feature, Piggy, takes horror’s revenge trope and twists it just so. It isn’t so simple as a much-abused underdog getting a freakish chance to get her payback and painting the landscape with her enemies’ dispatched blood and guts, though in this case, as in many cases, you might forgive her if she did.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 17, 2022
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- K. Austin Collins
Halloween Ends is a curious and mostly effective mix of slasher antics and dramatically straight-faced themes. It’s a good enough slasher to provoke laughter in some of its grimmer moments, because the deaths are that ridiculous and the targets are sometimes, unfortunately, a little deserving.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 13, 2022
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- K. Austin Collins
The actors try their best, but Östlund’s insistent conceptual droning overtakes them.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 11, 2022
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- K. Austin Collins
Perhaps the best thing that can be said about Tár is that it is far more than a mere vehicle for one showboating performance. And even if it were, with a performance like this, who would mind?- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 11, 2022
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- K. Austin Collins
God’s Creatures is a quiet movie, but its emotional drift is violent; Watson and Franciosi are particularly effective at giving us women being swept up into the currents.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Oct 3, 2022
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- K. Austin Collins
Sidney works as a tribute, or a beginner’s course. More probing questions about Poitier’s “meaning,” the impossibility of his position, the way it served as a measuring stick for taking stock of Black politics over many decades — these are problems bigger than, and largely beyond, this movie.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 26, 2022
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- K. Austin Collins
Blonde is no truer or more intelligent than a more openly sleazy rendition of this story. It leaves too little room (despite its two hour and 40 minute runtime) to reconcile the fuller reality of this woman.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 19, 2022
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- K. Austin Collins
Honk for Jesus is a fine, often funny movie about the moral hypocrisy of the church and an even better movie about a woman forced to endure looking like a fool, an outright clown, because of her husband.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Sep 6, 2022
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- K. Austin Collins
Owen Kline’s script is boisterous, funny, and very much committed to the bit. This is a movie about junior independence, after all, about a slightly full-of-himself young talent who’s journeying out on his own for the first time. So Kline makes sure the journey is memorable.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 30, 2022
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- K. Austin Collins
Breaking is a family affair, a film that works because every person in its cast, even those playing the “villains,” gives you a character whose flawed humanity is worth believing.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 29, 2022
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- K. Austin Collins
When it’s working, Three Thousand Years is an old curiosity shop of a movie, a cache of curios and strange conceits, many of which, when the movie isn’t working, are submerged into the bland uniformity of Miller’s stylistic approach to large stretches of this film.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 26, 2022
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- K. Austin Collins
It’s funny to think of this new chapter, with all its mean twists and its tense character convolution, as a prelude to the story we already know. Orphan is the longer movie, but compared to First Kill, it’s a psychologically slim, unmessy affair in comparison.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 24, 2022
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- K. Austin Collins
Free Chol Soo Lee is not a true crime documentary. If anything, it goes out of its way to avoid becoming one.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 22, 2022
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- K. Austin Collins
As a social tract, Emily the Criminal is more impassioned than wise. As a thriller, it fares better — in that case, no one’s asking for wisdom.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 15, 2022
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- K. Austin Collins
Fall is a straightforward survival thriller with just enough personality to glue you to your seat.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 12, 2022
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- K. Austin Collins
What makes Dunham’s art worth watching is what makes so much of it feel like a gamble. It invites projection.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 8, 2022
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- K. Austin Collins
It wants to be a slasher, but it isn’t reckless enough. It wants to be funny, but it only has two jokes, and it repeats them ad nauseum. It wants to be tense, but it takes advantage of almost none of the tension that this scenario and its McMansion setting have to offer.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 8, 2022
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- K. Austin Collins
Vengeance exercises [Novak's] knack for making unappetizing social qualities watchable, maybe because he’s playing a character whose self-confidence you don’t really believe in, or maybe because you already know that the movie will make him the butt of some of its rudest jokes.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Aug 1, 2022
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- K. Austin Collins
This is a movie that knows the power of images. It has learned, from the greats of the genre, that what we fear most is what can’t be seen, what’s merely implied.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jul 20, 2022
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- K. Austin Collins
The cast puts its effort into a slightly less underwhelming movie, one a little more willing to engage this gallery of personalities, which, insofar as they’re based on the characters in the novel, are just engaging enough to watch this once and never think about again. Austen works hard. But mediocrity, this movie reminds us, works harder.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jul 18, 2022
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- K. Austin Collins
Elvis is an entertaining movie about the man’s sex appeal and a pretty good movie about his life, even as it never dials things back enough for anyone to catch a breath. Luhrmann’s zigzagging, triumphantly kitschy style suits his subject.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jun 27, 2022
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