Leah Greenblatt
Select another critic »For 697 reviews, this critic has graded:
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81% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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17% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 9.5 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Leah Greenblatt's Scores
- Movies
- TV
Score distribution:
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Positive: 595 out of 697
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Mixed: 99 out of 697
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Negative: 3 out of 697
697
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Leah Greenblatt
Subtle it's not: Kate is red-meat storytelling, all broad outlines and crunched bones. But there's a visual wit and visceral energy to it that other recent efforts (the pop-feminist comic-book gloss Gunpowder Milkshake, also on Netflix, and Amazon Prime's spectacularly silly Jolt, featuring a rampaging Kate Beckinsale) struggle to find.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Sep 9, 2021
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- Leah Greenblatt
Director Kevin MacDonald (The Last King of Scotland, Touching the Void) gives the movie both the global sweep of a thriller and the more granular details of a procedural, though in the end hardly any of it takes place in a courtroom.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Feb 11, 2021
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- Leah Greenblatt
It helps immensely that the film has an actress like Amy Ryan (Birdman, Beautiful Boy) to play Mari Gilbert, whose years-long battle to get anyone at all — the press, the police, the people of New York — to care about her daughter Shannan forms the emotional core of the story.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Mar 12, 2020
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- Leah Greenblatt
A dizzy, fizzy comedy with occasional flashes of real wit.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 13, 2018
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- Leah Greenblatt
This Seven’s just silly, solid entertainment: multiplex fun by numbers.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Sep 21, 2016
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- Leah Greenblatt
How to Be Single is a lot like its Jager-bombing, romance-seeking protagonists: Cute and goofy and kind of a mess.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Feb 11, 2016
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- Leah Greenblatt
To be clear, Stuber is a very silly movie: Half the action scenes look like they were shot inside a Cuisinart, the sexual politics are questionable, the violence cartoonishly extreme, and the plot has the general coherence of a wet napkin. But Stuber knows that sense and logic aren’t what its audience came for; we’re here for good dumb fun — and of course, central air.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jul 11, 2019
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- Leah Greenblatt
As Bird time-jumps between the claustrophobic action of the house and a desperate sort of jailbreak, director Susanne Bier (The Night Manager) keeps the mood taut and defiantly in the moment.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Dec 5, 2018
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- Leah Greenblatt
If the buildup and catharsis of its final minutes are more than a little silly, and marred by Whannell’s urge to put too neat bow on it all, the movie still has its satisfying jolts — including possibly one of the single most shocking screen deaths so far this year.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Feb 26, 2020
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- Leah Greenblatt
Touched With Fire has something to say about a thorny, serious subject, but the light it shines doesn’t really illuminate anything new.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Feb 17, 2016
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- Leah Greenblatt
In its own druggy, dick-pic way, it’s also a pretty endearing tribute to male friendship — hammy and crude and more baked than a fruitcake, but with a sweetly squishy holiday heart at its center.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Nov 18, 2015
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- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 23, 2022
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- Leah Greenblatt
A quiet, intermittently poignant portrait of two people who've lost each other and aren't sure they want to find their way back.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jan 14, 2015
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- Leah Greenblatt
It turns out that Rules Don’t Apply is hardly about Hughes at all. Instead, it’s a small-scale, lovingly filmed study of the blossoming romance between two fictional show-business newbies.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Nov 21, 2016
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- Leah Greenblatt
In the absence of a clean ending, then, what's left is the familiar intrigue of smart men squinting dolefully at distant horizons and bloodied crime scenes, an ocean of bottled-up feeling, and a movie that takes a good half of its secrets to the grave.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jan 26, 2021
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- Leah Greenblatt
A love triangle, or maybe something more like a love polygon, lies at the center of the slight but alluring latest from Parisian writer-director Jacques Audiard (Rust and Bone, The Sisters Brothers) — one of those supremely French films in which impossibly chic people fight, come together, and fall apart, all filmed in saturated black and white.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Apr 15, 2022
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- Leah Greenblatt
There’s a pleasing sort of B-movie-on-an-A+-budget simplicity to Death Cure.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jan 26, 2018
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- Leah Greenblatt
It’s Nyong’o who makes Monsters worth spending 90 breezy, bloody minutes on; wielding her tiny guitar like she did a fateful pair of scissors earlier this year in Jordan Peele’s "Us," she’s both a warrior queen and a fallible, believable human woman — and never not a movie star in every scene.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Oct 9, 2019
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- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Apr 15, 2022
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- Leah Greenblatt
A film literally made from thin air, the French thriller Oxygen (on Netflix starting Friday) is a neat little sci-fi nightmare; a cool-toned exercise in claustrophobia that nearly pulls off the innate improbabilities of its high-concept nonsense.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted May 14, 2021
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- Leah Greenblatt
Gucci might have been a better movie if it had fully committed to the high camp its Blondie-soundtracked trailer promises. It's more serious than that, at least intermittently; a strange melange of too much and not enough. The script also skimps, weirdly, on the actual murder, which is treated mostly as a framing device and felonious afterthought until the final moments. But even a House divided is still more fun than it probably should be: a big messy chef's kiss to money and fashion and above all, movie stars — criming and scheming like they have nothing left to lose, until it's true.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Nov 22, 2021
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- Leah Greenblatt
Frankly, it's almost enough just to watch them all run around in states that range from manic panic to Zen serenity while McKay employs his usual coterie of meta tricks and treats. But it's hard not to long for the shrewder movie that might have been: Not just a kooky scattershot look, but a deeper truer gaze into the void.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Dec 7, 2021
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- Leah Greenblatt
What’s fun is just watching Lopez and her supporting cast — including her real-life best friend Remini, Tony winner Annaleigh Ashford as her tightly wound coworker, and a loopy Charlyne Yi as her phobic new assistant — move through the scenes so easily.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Dec 20, 2018
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- Leah Greenblatt
Caring may be fundamental, but it never quite feels necessary.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 23, 2016
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- Leah Greenblatt
The movie Tokyo-drifts into tedium in its more chaotic, casually gruesome chase scenes, and the “serious” dialogue is so consistently clunky it feels like it’s been carved from woodblocks with a dull butterknife. Thankfully, it’s frequently also much funnier and lighter on its feet than previous outings, and a lot of that credit goes to Statham and Johnson.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Apr 9, 2017
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- Leah Greenblatt
Boys no doubt has its benefits as both a history lesson and an outsize acting showcase for its talented cast; as a film experience in 2020, though, it often comes as a kind of relief to know that the seismic half-century-plus since its creation — as a play and a 1970 film, then a play and a movie again — have given us so many other sweeter, deeper stories to tell.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Sep 30, 2020
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- Leah Greenblatt
The violence is cartoonishly casual and the ending pure Hollywood corn. The absurdity, though, is the point: They're just two brothers on the run, and escape is what we came for.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Apr 6, 2022
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- Leah Greenblatt
Adapting the script from his own 2020 audio play, Eisenberg treats his cast with measured acidity, drawing out their snarky moods and narcissistic missteps without mocking them too cruelly; you may not particularly love these characters, but that's no match for how little they like themselves.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jan 22, 2022
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- Leah Greenblatt
What makes it more than a slick impersonation of sociopathy, though, is the layers he peels — Bundy’s desperation, his endless calculations and longing for connection. He also has some great interplay with John Malkovich, as the Tallahassee judge who engages in a sort of folksy, combative back-and-forth with him in court that nearly verges on buddy comedy.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted May 4, 2019
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- Leah Greenblatt
Lively looks fantastic in every era’s fashion as it passes, and she does a nice job of conveying Adaline’s old-world diction and reserve; there’s no Gossip in this girl.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Apr 22, 2015
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