Katie Walsh
Select another critic »For 1,358 reviews, this critic has graded:
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64% higher than the average critic
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6% same as the average critic
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30% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 2.1 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Katie Walsh's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 64 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | jackass: best and last | |
| Lowest review score: | Father Figures | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 806 out of 1358
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Mixed: 380 out of 1358
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Negative: 172 out of 1358
1358
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Katie Walsh
Everything hums along until it abruptly crashes and burns, and one can’t help but wonder if the film was picked apart to fit a PG-13 rating (the original is R) and a sub-100-minute runtime.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 27, 2020
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- Katie Walsh
What makes Synchronic sing is the two together, zinging each other with sardonic one-liners, their conversations meandering to the cosmic and the macabre after a few whiskeys.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 21, 2020
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- Katie Walsh
While Bad Hair is more humorously incisive than truly terrifying, Lorraine, in the leading role, sells it, while Simien creates space to discuss the ways in which women enforce unfair standards of beauty on each other in a white patriarchal society, using the horror genre as a blunt but effective tool to clear the path.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 21, 2020
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- Katie Walsh
Erika Cohn’s documentary Belly of the Beast, which depicts the fight to ban non-consensual sterilizations performed on female prisoners in California, is at once a thrilling legal drama and heartbreaking depiction of devastating human rights violations that you can’t imagine happening in the 21st century.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 20, 2020
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- Katie Walsh
The Devil Has a Name has an important message if you can get past the unwieldy melodrama of the film, but the second coming of “Erin Brockovich” this is not.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 15, 2020
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- Katie Walsh
Pietro Marcello’s sweeping historical Italian epic Martin Eden is a whole lot of movie. It possesses a weight and heft, both cinematically and philosophically, that make it a rare treat. And at the center of the film is a whole lot of movie star: Luca Marinelli’s performance in the title role is an outstanding star turn for the Italian actor.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 14, 2020
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- Katie Walsh
Bradley’s film is a lyrical documentary, a piece that feels like a poem or a prayer, an almost meditative experience, set to a plaintive piano score.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 7, 2020
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- Katie Walsh
Yellow Rose is an emotional blunt instrument. It’s not exactly subtle, but then again, the best country songs, and the best coming-of-age tales, rarely are.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 6, 2020
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- Katie Walsh
The Forty-Year-Old-Version is that rarest of films: funny, wry, incisive, sexy and sincere.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 1, 2020
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- Katie Walsh
Using every tool at her disposal, Taymor crafts an epic tapestry of a remarkable life, paying tribute to the glorious Gloria Steinem.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Sep 29, 2020
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- Katie Walsh
How does it all end? Don’t go looking to Save Yourselves! for answers. It lands in an ambiguous middle that’s not too bleak or too hopeful and just falls flat; an exaggerated shrug.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Sep 29, 2020
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- Katie Walsh
For such a sweet film, Ottolenghi and the Cakes of Versailles evolves into a complex exploration of the symbiotic relationship between money and art, and questions what the visibility of that conspicuous consumption could portend.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Sep 23, 2020
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- Katie Walsh
Blackbird is a simple tale, well-told, but it’s also the tale of all tales, of life, death and everything in between.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Sep 17, 2020
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- Katie Walsh
For all the film’s minor flaws, it is deeply moving and incredibly important to witness the impact of "I Am Woman” as an enduring, uplifting cry for freedom and empowerment.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Sep 10, 2020
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- Katie Walsh
The lush production design by Zazu Myers, especially in the Chloe Hotel, and rich cinematography by Alar Kivilo make for a colorfully saturated fantasy of New York City that elevates the film. This is a big, juicy rom-com that has proven to be a rare entity these days on the big screen.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Sep 9, 2020
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- Katie Walsh
Bill and Ted bouncing through time means the narratives of these films are merely loose assortments of kooky bits and cameos, and “Face the Music” doesn’t stray from that. While it doesn’t quite gel cohesively, in this casual kickback with a pair of old pals, it’s the dudes who remain excellent.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Aug 28, 2020
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- Katie Walsh
The story is simple but what makes the film remarkable is how Haley effortlessly, earnestly marshals performance, tone and style.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Aug 27, 2020
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- Katie Walsh
Sharrock’s directing is unshowy, focused on the characters and performance moments that make this film a simple, yet effectively moving story about dreaming of a life beyond the walls, something we can all appreciate at this particular moment.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Aug 20, 2020
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- Katie Walsh
Though the film initially feels like a patriotic tale of a daring mission, this isn't a story of U.S. military triumph, it's one of sorrow.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Aug 20, 2020
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- Katie Walsh
The film swerves from sci-fi to horror to psychological thriller to melodrama, but in a way, it works. It’s clear Abramenko wants to serve a full-course meal of a movie, and in stretching the dynamic range of emotion he hits on moments that are at times operatic and at others somewhat soapy. But in doing so, brings a new layer of story that makes Sputnik feel epic.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Aug 13, 2020
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- Katie Walsh
It is potentially the most culturally relevant film of the fall, masterfully made and one heck of an emotional roller coaster. From moment to moment Boys State veers from exciting to troubling to amusing, and it's never anything less than utterly riveting.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Aug 11, 2020
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- Katie Walsh
It gestures toward controversial ideas but always swerves back to a simple but profound message of togetherness and family, and the personal importance of honoring tradition and memory.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Aug 5, 2020
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- Katie Walsh
Although The Fight is swift and jam-packed with ups, downs, wins, losses, injunctions, stays, hearings and Trump speeches, the film is remarkably detailed and careful.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 30, 2020
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- Katie Walsh
It's a refreshing spin on this type of film that's usually quite white and heteronormative.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jul 29, 2020
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- Katie Walsh
Maine’s film captures something indelible about adolescent female desire, without condescending or objectifying, because she understands, subjectively, what that looks and feels like: all the confusion and shame, but yes, also the pleasure to be found there. She beautifully depicts something that has been rarely seen on film: the lustful gaze of an adolescent woman (as opposed to the lustful gaze being directed at her).- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jul 23, 2020
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- Katie Walsh
Despite the talent involved, and the incredible subject matter, the irritating tendency to over-explain to the audience means there’s very little spark to be found in the enervating Radioactive.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jul 22, 2020
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- Katie Walsh
What is remarkable, though, is just how unbelievably unbelievable this inspired-by-true-life tale is.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jul 15, 2020
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- Katie Walsh
The film undeniably captures the breathtaking and unique landscape of coastal Western Australia. It's an incredibly beautiful film, but it's a challenge to emotionally connect to it. It feels like the outline of what would have been an epic novel, but in the translation to the screen, it has lost its interiority, and anything profound it might have communicated.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jul 14, 2020
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- Katie Walsh
All too often, the human aspect gets lost in the spectacle of an action movie. But Rucka and Prince-Bythewood foreground that element of the story to create something with stakes, intrigue and philosophical weight. They make sure this cool concept and cast are given their due, and set up a sequel too. With any luck, we'll see this world again.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jul 7, 2020
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- Katie Walsh
Porter’s film is a warm biography and depiction of Lewis’ life, but there are moments where one wishes it had a bit more bite.- St. Louis Post-Dispatch
- Posted Jul 2, 2020
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