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
The movie's final frame asks us to believe that Sarah Jo has finally, ecstatically found herself; by then, whatever reason we have for watching is already long lost.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jan 23, 2022
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- Leah Greenblatt
Cave has a smart, stylish way of storytelling that somehow makes a film built on bone saws and grotesqueries feel almost breezy.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jan 23, 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
Worst has no shortage of gorgeous-people problems — more than enough, in fact, to fill 12 cinematic "chapters" — but it vibrates with real life, a film so fresh and untethered to rom-com cliché it might actually reshape the idea of what movies like this can be.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jan 21, 2022
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- Leah Greenblatt
Even as the story's inevitable reckoning descends, Farhadi allows his modest morality tale to take on a note of battered, ambiguous hope: a cautionary fable whose purest notes ring poignantly, painfully true.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jan 6, 2022
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- Leah Greenblatt
Without much dramatic tension beyond the will-he-or-won't-he of Cameron's final choice, the film feels oddly inert, a melancholic iPhone ad stretched to feature-length.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Dec 21, 2021
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- Leah Greenblatt
The real draw is Dinklage: with his mournful eyes and crooked smile, he's the tender, towering soul of Cyrano.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Dec 21, 2021
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- Leah Greenblatt
The way that the movie eventually manages to bridge all those multiplicities and pull them into focus feels both obvious and ingenious.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Dec 16, 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
There are more cohesive coming-of-age movies to be sure, and subtler ones. But God doesn't really try too hard to make it all make sense; it's just one boy's dolce vita, drenched in Mediterranean sun, hormones, and salt air.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Dec 7, 2021
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- Leah Greenblatt
Nightmare Alley is both a beautiful-looking film and an oddly forgettable one, maybe because borrowed material is no match for the ingenious creations of del Toro's own mind.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Dec 2, 2021
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- Leah Greenblatt
It feels like a rare achievement to even attempt to scale the unscalable and still, after more than half a century, be able to make it sing.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Dec 2, 2021
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- Leah Greenblatt
Licorice (the title, never once mentioned or explained, remains a happy non sequitur) is a love letter to an era, and more than that a feeling: a tender, funny ramble forged in all the hope and absurdity of adolescence, one wild poly-blend rumpus at a time.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Nov 25, 2021
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- Leah Greenblatt
The cast's chemistry never quite gels beyond their staged circumstances, and too much of the dialogue replicates actual life without finding a deeper resonance: the rambling anecdotes, latent passive aggressions, and aimless small talk of ordinary people just living their lives.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Nov 24, 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
For all its eerie scene-setting and squishy entrails, Antlers never really exposes the emotional guts of its narrative beyond the scope of midnight-movie horror; without that, it's just another nightmare fairytale leaning hard on heavy vibes and jump scares, and losing the forest for the trees.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Nov 4, 2021
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- Leah Greenblatt
For all the outsize fight scenes and casual profanity though, the whole thing is oddly bloodless. (Even a rampaging bull hardly leaves a bruise.) And so Red Notice goes: blithely skimming through its slapstick fantasy, and laying bejeweled eggs wherever it lands.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Nov 4, 2021
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- Leah Greenblatt
Nothing in Souvenir Part II is obvious; one could argue it's even obtuse to the point of excluding most casual moviegoers. But surrendering to Hogg's slow alchemy still feels like a rare treat: a beguilingly meta portrait of the artist as a young woman learning to find herself not just in the mirror of others, but in her own hand behind the camera.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Nov 4, 2021
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- Leah Greenblatt
Soho is one hell of a half of a movie: a wildly styled neon reverie whose spooky bedazzlement only crashes to earth when it succumbs to bog-standard horror in the final act.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Oct 27, 2021
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- Leah Greenblatt
The looping flashback structure and relaxed, intimate pacing has the odd effect of making the fate of the free world feel a lot less urgent than it probably should; the movie frequently comes off less like a standard MCU tentpole than a metaphysical family drama whose black sheep just happens to be Thanos.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Oct 26, 2021
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- Leah Greenblatt
The film can't seem to stop piling on idiosyncrasies, a kind of willful kookery that mixes uneasily with the more serious elements of personal tragedy and mental illness that run through it.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Oct 22, 2021
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- Leah Greenblatt
The movie's stark Nordic mood and obscure mystery are as coolly immersive as nearly anything on screen this year — and in the hammy world of supernatural horror, that ambiguity alone feels like a small, spooky gift.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Oct 8, 2021
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- Leah Greenblatt
Duel is entirely, often sensationally watchable without ever quite justifying why it needs to remind us what the world has done to women for centuries.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Oct 8, 2021
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- Leah Greenblatt
Rocket is leisurely episodic and at over two hours, almost certainly longer than it needs to be, but the director's singular gift for street casting — beyond Rex, hardly anyone here has acted professionally before — and deeply embedded sense of mood works its own kind of unhurried alchemy.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Oct 1, 2021
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- Leah Greenblatt
If we're all disposable space chum in this franchise game anyway, who needs a coherent narrative and character arcs? Just bite the head off every chicken, and lean in.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Sep 30, 2021
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- Leah Greenblatt
The levity of the first half is soon sorely missed, and the run length alone — the movie clocks in at just under 165 minutes — dilutes the intended emotional resonance of the final scenes; Never Say Time might have been a truer title.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Sep 29, 2021
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- Leah Greenblatt
In an era when nearly everything that can be done on film already has been, Titane forges something sensational from nerve and pure metal, and makes it new.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Sep 27, 2021
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- Leah Greenblatt
Saints can't be what Sopranos was — without the time or the ones who've been lost to tell it, fuggedaboutit. But for a hundred-something minutes, it feels close enough to coming home again.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Sep 21, 2021
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- Leah Greenblatt
Laurent, an actress known Stateside for movies like Inglorious Basterds and Beginners, has adapted Ball from the bestselling novel by Victoria Mas, whose facts are rooted in actual history. She shares Mas' justifiable outrage at the casual inhumanity of it all — the brutal experiments and biased theories, the rampant physical and emotional abuse — and also her sense for melodrama.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Sep 17, 2021
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- Leah Greenblatt
Riz Ahmed takes Encounter a long way. But he can't single-handedly carry a film that never quite figures out what it wants to be — stark sci-fi paranoia? Psychological family drama? Desert road-trip apocalypse?- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Sep 14, 2021
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