Lena Wilson
Select another critic »For 143 reviews, this critic has graded:
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44% higher than the average critic
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4% same as the average critic
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52% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 7.9 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Lena Wilson's Scores
- Movies
- TV
Score distribution:
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Positive: 62 out of 143
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Mixed: 52 out of 143
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Negative: 29 out of 143
143
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Lena Wilson
By the end of Blue Film, it’s hard not to feel like it didn’t quite live up to its potential. As a novel, it would be engrossing. As a movie, it’s got good bones but a cowardly lack of boners.- The Playlist
- Posted May 8, 2026
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- Lena Wilson
Honey Bunch is a work of art, but it won’t go down easily for everyone, and it’s sure to be divisive. Definitely watch it with a friend or loved one — whether you’re picking apart the plot holes or reveling in the reveal, you’ll need to debrief afterward.- The Playlist
- Posted Feb 13, 2026
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- Lena Wilson
“American Pachuo” is just a nice movie about a visionary guy. Entertaining and educational, to be sure, but so frictionless it barely sticks.- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 31, 2026
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- Lena Wilson
The downside is that Lagos is a more interesting character in this film than Lady herself, who Nwosu outlines with far less finesse. Such a glaring imbalance is symptomatic of the script’s overall flimsiness, which stands in contrast to this debut’s heartfelt performances and staggering visuals.- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 30, 2026
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- Lena Wilson
Brides has good bones — an interesting premise and a clearly capable director — but it’s unclear what it ultimately wants to say.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 25, 2025
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- Lena Wilson
Though the aesthetics are consistently on point – great camerawork, suspenseful use of shadows and light – its characters and plot lack coherence. Tension builds promisingly in the first half, but by the climax, muddled action and shallow character motivation sap the suspense, and any opportunity for commentary is wasted- IGN
- Posted Jul 16, 2025
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- Lena Wilson
Please Don’t Feed the Children has a few things going for it – namely capable lead performers Michelle Dockery and Zoe Colletti – but Destry Allyn Spielberg’s boring, predictable first feature definitely doesn’t feel like it comes from a descendant of filmmaking royalty.- IGN
- Posted Jul 1, 2025
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- Lena Wilson
Despite a passionate performance from Colby Minifie and some compelling visuals, The Surrender sidelines its deft exploration of grief for drawn-out, pointless supernatural horror.- IGN
- Posted May 22, 2025
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- Lena Wilson
Novocaine offers more depth than its gimmicky “man who feels no pain” premise may lead you to believe. This movie breathes new life into old ideas, with an original hero buoyed by the charm of Jack Quaid and a heroine who ably beats the damsel-in-distress allegations. Novocaine is smart, but not so self-aware that it’s likely to alienate anybody; sharp, but not without feeling.- IGN
- Posted Mar 8, 2025
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- Lena Wilson
Two Women is a titillating, vibrant send-up of societal expectations that goes down easy despite its brashness. (See: Violette’s farcical misinterpretation of the #MeToo hashtag.) It’s strongest when leaning hard into hedonism, but even a distracted narrative can’t bring this frothy flick down.- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 31, 2025
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- Lena Wilson
Despite its ferocious source material and lead Amy Adams, Nightbitch is a bloodless tale of maternal doldrums with little payoff.- IGN
- Posted Dec 6, 2024
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- Lena Wilson
While it’s nice to see Toni Colette and Chris Messina face off both in and out of the courtroom and Zoey Deutch gives a strong dramatic performance as Ally, even the best acting can’t make Juror #2 make sense.- The Playlist
- Posted Dec 6, 2024
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- Lena Wilson
Though it features delightfully weird visuals and a stellar turn by Kathryn Hunter, The Front Room can’t find its identity, both on-screen and in its own marketing.- IGN
- Posted Sep 5, 2024
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- Lena Wilson
Though Skincare’s script lacks bite or balance, Elizabeth Banks gives a riveting lead performance with assistance from Lewis Pullman as her sketchy sidekick.- IGN
- Posted Aug 15, 2024
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- Lena Wilson
Thanks to slick screenwriting, stylish art direction, and a sparkling lead performance from Blake Lively, It Ends with Us tackles difficult subject matter with maturity, tenderness, and just a dash of whimsy.- IGN
- Posted Aug 7, 2024
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- Lena Wilson
The Strangers: Chapter 1 might freak you out if you aren’t old enough to remember The Strangers, but where its predecessor was subtle and interesting, Renny Harlin’s reboot chooses to be ridiculous and boring.- IGN
- Posted May 16, 2024
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- Lena Wilson
Ito is undeniably brave, but this autobiographical doc could stand to be a bit less shiny.- The Film Stage
- Posted Feb 1, 2024
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- Lena Wilson
It’s nice to see a first-time director unafraid to let his viewers have their own experiences and come to their own conclusions. Here’s one: the bravest thing about Little Death isn’t its risks––it’s the filmmakers’ choice to forgo nihilism for hope.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jan 31, 2024
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- Lena Wilson
Seeking Mavis Beacon quickly becomes less about what this software and its spokeswoman represent, more about what Jones and Ross are thinking or doing at any given time––even if it distracts from the film’s mission.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jan 31, 2024
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- Lena Wilson
Although the script could certainly use pruning, Suncoast balances intellect and emotion to deliver clever, memorable lines and a climax that will leave you weeping.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jan 29, 2024
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- Lena Wilson
Its scrappiness is what brings the charm à la the early work of Madeleine Olnek. Random attempts at depth detract from the final product rather than add to it.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jan 29, 2024
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- Lena Wilson
The patients, experts, and tireless doctors and activists who director Tracy Droz Tragos (“Rich Hill,” “Abortion: Stories Women Tell”) interviews are dedicated and admirable, but this documentary’s humanity comes at the expense of basic facts.- TheWrap
- Posted Oct 12, 2023
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- Lena Wilson
Mamacruz is finely crafted, if not particularly challenging. This film clearly wants to wrestle with taboos, but that revolutionary spirit doesn’t go much further than the basic premise. With such important themes, this film deserves to be a bit more memorable than it ultimately is.- The Playlist
- Posted Jul 10, 2023
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- Lena Wilson
“Boston Strangler” may muddle its facts, but its message never wavers. In a genre dominated by perfunctory intrigue, how exhilarating to see a film with morals this clear, consistent, and touching.- TheWrap
- Posted Mar 16, 2023
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- Lena Wilson
Even when it drags — 169 minutes is a lot of time to fill, even for this masterful crew — the film gamely mixes comedy, action, and drama into one truly satisfying cocktail.- TheWrap
- Posted Mar 13, 2023
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- The Playlist
- Posted Feb 17, 2023
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- Lena Wilson
This high-concept horror too easily crosses over from charmingly erratic to nonsensical.- The Playlist
- Posted Feb 9, 2023
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- Lena Wilson
Why Magic Mike’s Last Dance chooses to teach viewers about love, consent, and having it all, then, is a mystery. The Galentine’s Day crowd will probably be too drunk to notice.- TheWrap
- Posted Feb 7, 2023
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- Lena Wilson
Body Parts has a lot to say about onscreen objectification, but it would benefit greatly if — like Quentin Tarantino’s camera on a young woman’s feet — it maintained its focus.- TheWrap
- Posted Feb 2, 2023
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- Lena Wilson
Where Anderson went to great lengths to address some salient topics in his novel — like colonialism, the American healthcare system, and the obsolescence of the working class — Finley’s “Landscape” lacks the worldbuilding necessary to make any such strong connections. This could be a scathing indictment of our country’s growing class divide. Instead, it’s a nice-looking, entertaining movie that conveniently pulls its punches.- TheWrap
- Posted Jan 28, 2023
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