Kyle Smith
Select another critic »For 1,925 reviews, this critic has graded:
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35% higher than the average critic
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1% same as the average critic
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64% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 14 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Kyle Smith's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 52 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | The Birth of a Nation | |
| Lowest review score: | Victor Frankenstein | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 794 out of 1925
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Mixed: 411 out of 1925
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Negative: 720 out of 1925
1925
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Kyle Smith
Someone makes a jokey reference to the cartoon contrivance of “Scooby-Doo,” and the comparison is brutally apt.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Dec 1, 2025
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- Kyle Smith
As dry and matter-of-fact as Ms. Zhao was in Nomadland, which won her Oscars for best director and best picture (as she was one of its producers), she is the opposite here, driving her actors to maximal emoting. The movie purports to dip into the deep well of Shakespearean magnificence but emerges only with a ladle full of greasy schmaltz.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 29, 2025
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- Kyle Smith
Rich, evocative, crafty and exciting, it’s one of the few standout movies of the year.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 28, 2025
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- Kyle Smith
Though the oddness of the situation yields the same kinds of lightly funny observational moments that gave Lost in Translation some of its charm, Rental Family is, like Sofia Coppola’s movie, above all else a sweet drama about the difficulty of connections. Which makes it an unusually mature and considered experience at the movies.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 20, 2025
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- Kyle Smith
Mr. Chu knows exactly how to bring this story emphatically home, and as we’ve heard before, there’s no place like it.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 20, 2025
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- Kyle Smith
With so much going on, there’s no time to make any of the action truly engaging, especially given Mr. Fleischer’s rigid determination to be as flashy as possible all of the time.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 14, 2025
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- Kyle Smith
Writer-director Noah Baumbach’s funniest and finest movie in many years is perfection all the way through: the perfect casting choice, the perfect balance of comedy and pathos, the perfect wacky route to the perfect ending.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 14, 2025
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- Kyle Smith
Mr. Powell remains one of today’s most promising leading men, but he’s running in place here.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 14, 2025
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- Kyle Smith
Like everyone else on hand, Mr. Woodall deserves a better director than he gets here, just as the audience deserves a better script than one that asks us to believe Göring was so clever he nearly dodged blame for the Holocaust.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 6, 2025
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- Kyle Smith
In the title role, Sydney Sweeney must be relieved to be giving people a reason to discuss her acting. She’s excellent in the role, small and vulnerable yet tough and fierce, a pink-clad dynamo who is nevertheless beholden to others.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 6, 2025
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- Kyle Smith
In an odd way, Predator: Badlands is a date-night movie posing as merely a sci-fi killing jamboree. All of those lovable lummoxes out there with their hyper-verbal lady friends will learn a little about cooperation.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 6, 2025
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- Kyle Smith
Sentimental Value is an affecting look into a fractured family. Art and domestic life intertwine with each other, inform each other and perhaps support each other more than is at first apparent, leading to an ending that provides a satisfying union of the two realms.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Nov 6, 2025
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- Kyle Smith
Just as early youth means the endless fascination of new encounters, it also brings sudden, bewildering losses. “Little Amélie” brims with feeling for every precious moment of it.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 31, 2025
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- Kyle Smith
Sly, wry, adorable and deplorable, Guillaume Marbeck is priceless as the endlessly irritating and yet frustratingly charismatic Godard in one of the year’s brightest pictures, a rare standout in a sea of multiplex mediocrity.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 31, 2025
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- Kyle Smith
Bugonia isn’t merely dark; it’s a black hole. But Mr. Lanthimos’s vision is sternly compelling, and Bugonia is that exceptional movie that’s extremely hard to forget.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 23, 2025
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- Kyle Smith
Thin characterizations, bland acting and a surfeit of bubbly cuteness combine to make a throw-pillow of a movie: It’s soft and decorative without being particularly useful or interesting.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 23, 2025
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- Kyle Smith
Occasionally the movie does offer up a pleasing little nugget about the creative process, as when Springsteen changes a lyric from the third person to the first: There is glory in such little adjustments. But most of the movie’s backstage material is uninspired.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 23, 2025
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- Kyle Smith
The climax, in which police slowly drag the truth out of the central figure, is harrowing.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 17, 2025
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- Kyle Smith
Notwithstanding some clunky moments, Mr. Ansari not only engineers up-to-the-minute twists on the musty Hollywood angel movie, but decorates his story with clever dialogue and wicked observations about street-level existence in the City of Angels.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 16, 2025
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- Kyle Smith
Directed by his longtime friend and collaborator Richard Linklater, Mr. Hawke makes the most of what might be the year’s most brilliant screenplay, by Robert Kaplow, by delivering a Hart full of mischief and wit, desperation and self-loathing. There has never been a great book written about Hart, but at last he has this movie to renew and restore his story.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 16, 2025
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- Kyle Smith
The subject matter is worthy of serious dramatic interrogation, and there’s a good movie in here someplace. But “After the Hunt” feels like a messy first-draft script, shoddily directed, rather than an accomplished feature from a veteran filmmaker.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 10, 2025
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- Kyle Smith
The laughs, the warmth, the love and the faith-based fellowship die out in the dismal final act.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 10, 2025
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- Kyle Smith
The potential for an interesting sci-fi spectacle is there, at least at the start, but Tron: Ares does nothing with it.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 10, 2025
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- Kyle Smith
Though Ms. Bigelow includes a few humanizing and even humorous touches . . . she is not interested in the imperatives of the action movie or the moral lesson. She simply lays out one nauseatingly possible future, which means A House of Dynamite is one of the most terrifying movies ever made, but not in a fun way.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 10, 2025
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- Kyle Smith
Though all of the film’s events could be recounted in a few sentences, “Anemone” is a vivid character study and an acting showcase for the four lead performers, each of whom gets ample opportunity to show a deep understanding of their tortured pasts.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 3, 2025
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- Kyle Smith
Despite the surface Mr. Safdie has designed—hand-held cameras, unglamorous sets, closeups of people in misery—The Smashing Machine is notably reluctant to go deep.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 3, 2025
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- Kyle Smith
Rangy in tone, style and theme, it has so much going on that a single viewing hardly seems sufficient to absorb it all. Whether it’s a masterpiece or a hodgepodge will be a matter of some discussion; the reach is evident but the grasp is a little shaky.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Oct 2, 2025
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- Kyle Smith
The documentary’s director, Linus O’Brien (son of the show’s creator), interviews fans and outside experts to piece together the still-amazing story of how “Rocky Horror” caught on.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Sep 25, 2025
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- Kyle Smith
It ought to be a treat to see such charismatic talents falling in love, but the only overwhelming and unstoppable force in the movie is its love for cutesy and cloying gimmicks. It’s a cinematic crime to waste these two stars: I charge “A Big Bold Beautiful Journey” with unconscionably aggravated whimsy in the third degree.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Sep 19, 2025
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- Kyle Smith
Mr. Tipping ditches reasonable motivation to deliver a satirical haymaker aimed at those whose religion is football. Like many failed satires, the conclusion is more vehement than amusing.- Wall Street Journal
- Posted Sep 19, 2025
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