Lee Marshall
Select another critic »For 229 reviews, this critic has graded:
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57% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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40% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 6 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Lee Marshall's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 72 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Dogman | |
| Lowest review score: | The Painted Bird | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 165 out of 229
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Mixed: 62 out of 229
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Negative: 2 out of 229
229
movie
reviews
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- Lee Marshall
Goodman emerges as a passionate advocacy journalist but also a well-navigated professional who is wise to the tricks of the trade and prepared to use them.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 7, 2026
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- Lee Marshall
Perhaps the most impressive thing about a hugely impressive exercise in directorial control is the fact that we come away from an intensely violent film, a film where bones crunch and blood smells, touched by pathos and a strange sense of hope.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 17, 2018
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- Screen Daily
- Posted Apr 21, 2016
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- Lee Marshall
There are moments when, like the gaudy lights of Acapulco, Sundown flickers into something rather special when seen from the right angle, in the right mood: a film about a goodbye to life which is also a film about a kind of afterlife.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 6, 2021
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- Lee Marshall
It’s a modern melodrama that dances through a moral maze, sometimes uncomfortably so. Yet, coming from a filmmaker who has always been preoccupied with the roots and the dynamics of male violence, it poses an intriguing central question.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 19, 2024
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- Lee Marshall
Its relatively tranquil surface, its small amusements (many of them revolving around a tasty turn by John Turturro as a histrionically insecure American leading man), its moments of touching, almost Sirkian melodrama, above all its ability to tease resonant themes out of seemingly inconsequential scenes or lines of dialogue, make for a film that is greater than the sum of its parts.- Screen Daily
- Posted Apr 16, 2015
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- Lee Marshall
The film’s most rewarding strand is the inventive, pointed way in which clothes and textiles are used as metaphors both for female constraints and female defiance.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 28, 2020
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- Lee Marshall
What is so compelling is the picture I Am Greta pieces together of Thunberg herself.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 15, 2020
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- Lee Marshall
If the film doesn’t always mesh its two main strands – tough family drama and reflections on the state of a nation – it does so often enough and passionately enough to impress.- Screen Daily
- Posted Nov 21, 2025
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- Lee Marshall
It’s a strange film, one that feels its way through Hasna’s story, changing tack, trying out different methods – including the casting of three different women as the adult Hasna, one of them the director herself, and a final shift into documentary.- Screen Daily
- Posted Nov 4, 2022
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- Lee Marshall
There’s an air of well-oiled, made-for-TV efficiency about the exercise that extends from Lunchbox director Ritesh Batra’s safe hand on the tiller to Stephen Goldblatt’s golden-light photography.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 17, 2017
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- Lee Marshall
Audiences will likely approach the film a series of sketches linked as much by mood as by theme. Some hit the spot, two or three are laugh-out-loud funny, but others seem little more than space-fillers in a film that is both enjoyable and frustrating.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 24, 2019
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- Lee Marshall
Shot with grace and sensitivity in black and white using available and natural light, What You Gonna Do is a visual treat, the easiest on the eye of all the director’s films to date. It is also, for all its unevenness, a stirring, committed portrait of black lives at a crossroads in the American South.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 15, 2018
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- Lee Marshall
Johnny Depp’s broodingly psychotic turn as convicted Boston crime lord James ‘Whitey’ Bulger is not the only tasty thing about Scott Cooper’s tale of the unholy alliance between a South Boston Irish mobster and the FBI.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 4, 2015
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- Lee Marshall
The ‘I could have been a contender’ brand of sports movie gets a twist in this tasty, if minor-key, biopic.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 14, 2016
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- Lee Marshall
The Childhood Of A Leader is as relentlessly sombre and compelling as the film’s remarkable, full-volume orchestral soundtrack by musician’s musician Scott Walker.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 18, 2015
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- Lee Marshall
Buoyed by two outstanding performances – from Adèle Exarchopoulos and first-time child actress Sally Dramé – and shot in ravishing 35mm, The Five Devils is a finely-crafted drama-genre hybrid, let down only by the fact that the story is a lot less interesting than the themes it carries.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 28, 2022
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- Lee Marshall
It is, in essence, the celebrated ‘cosmic’ sequence from the Tree of Life expanded into a full-length feature, and many of the audio-visual tableaux it weaves are astonishing, mesmerising, delightful. The problem is that they are not also informative.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 7, 2016
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- Lee Marshall
Ultimately, it’s difficult to say what A Private Life is trying to say, but remarriage comedies don’t really need to be anything more than that – and the ending is winsome enough to make up for that second-act wobble.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 24, 2025
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- Lee Marshall
A handful of bone-crunching, arrow-whirring, neck-slicing battle scenes allow us some time off from trying to follow the convoluted narrative thread.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 25, 2023
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- Lee Marshall
In the end, for all the plot tension and genre tastiness –underlined by some acidic colour photography and lighting that plays up sickly yellows and purples – there’s just something a little too mannered about the exercise.- Screen Daily
- Posted Aug 13, 2015
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- Screen Daily
- Posted Nov 23, 2016
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- Lee Marshall
Like the film, the soundtrack doesn’t quite know where it’s going, but it takes us on a curious and often engaging stroll.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 8, 2016
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- Screen Daily
- Posted Mar 3, 2023
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- Lee Marshall
As fragmented as its title suggests, Pieces of a Woman contains parts of a good film, possibly a great one.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 12, 2020
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- Lee Marshall
Visually inventive, wryly satirical, White Noise the film leaves viewers to apply DeLillo’s sometimes prescient visions of a morally and physically diseased America to post-pandemic 2022 as they see fit. But it still has a lot going for it, much of it entertaining.- Screen Daily
- Posted Aug 31, 2022
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- Lee Marshall
For those prepared to invest the time, One Floor Below quietly builds into a devastating portrait of a weak man and the weak society he represents, both of which have lost their moral compasses.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 22, 2015
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- Lee Marshall
The subtext of In Viaggio (which translates as ‘Travelling’) is that it is while on the road, away from the close confines of the Vatican, that Pope Francis is at his most uninhibited and, therefore, most revealing.- Screen Daily
- Posted Feb 23, 2023
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- Lee Marshall
A little too jaunty and picaresque at times, Bye Bye Germany is nevertheless, when it hits its stride, an entertaining, watchable take on the oppressed-minority-comeback genre (“We’re the Jewish revenge”, as one of the salesmen bitterly quips), shadowed at every turn by an unspeakable horror.- Screen Daily
- Posted Apr 13, 2018
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- Lee Marshall
A welcome return ... The Book of Solutions is an ode to time-wasting distractions and shelved projects, one that suggests that perhaps it’s here, rather than in the boring finished stuff, that you can find an artist’s soul.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 27, 2023
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