Leslie Felperin
Select another critic »For 842 reviews, this critic has graded:
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44% higher than the average critic
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5% same as the average critic
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51% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 2.3 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Leslie Felperin's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 63 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Toni Erdmann | |
| Lowest review score: | Hector and the Search for Happiness | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 374 out of 842
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Mixed: 440 out of 842
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Negative: 28 out of 842
842
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Leslie Felperin
Director Pete Ohs and his screenwriting-cast deftly manage the transition from creepy to comic by slow degrees. The two female leads hold down the fort with dry delivery and somewhat haunted-looking expressions; they are bright attractive women who have had to put up with crap like this from leering men all their lives.- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 31, 2023
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- Leslie Felperin
The Disappearance of Shere Hite ponders this paradox, and while somewhat vexingly it doesn’t fully explain why or to what extent Hite “disappeared” from public view in the decades before her death in 2020, it draws a vivid portrait of a complex, fascinating woman.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 30, 2023
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- Leslie Felperin
Scrapper is a sweet bit of fluff that’s trying too hard to be funny and offbeat and ends up being too often simply annoying.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 28, 2023
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- Leslie Felperin
This lively, likable, if somewhat on-the-nose work grabs viewer attention with fourth-wall-breaking monologues, jocular explanatory graphics, and tightly choreographed dance numbers to vintage American and Iranian pop songs.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 27, 2023
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- Leslie Felperin
Unfortunately, the dialogue sounds as if it was written by one of those newfangled AI chatbots, or maybe an actual human being who aspires to write as well as an AI chatbot but is not there yet.- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 23, 2023
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- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 23, 2023
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- Leslie Felperin
A lot of True Grit-style grizzled-guy-smart-kid bonding that’s hackily written but reasonably watchable thanks to Cage and Armstrong’s screen chemistry.- The Guardian
- Posted Jan 10, 2023
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- Leslie Felperin
So if current hit Violent Night sounds a little too classy and mainstream, then here is this shoddily made but tinsel-bright gift for you, the cinematic equivalent of a cheap soap and body lotion set bought at the last minute. It’s serviceable, but not a lot of thought went into it.- The Guardian
- Posted Dec 7, 2022
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- Leslie Felperin
Due to the fact that the canvas is broader this time around — and the subjects Lears has chosen to focus on don’t have four discreet, parallel narratives that we can see through to the end — there’s inevitably less coherence to this film strictly in terms of storytelling. Instead, each of these women is trying to make a difference in the climate crisis in very specific ways, but for all of them history keeps interfering.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 21, 2022
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- Leslie Felperin
It seems almost frivolous to note this, but the hyper high-definition cinematography is both beautiful in a savage way and adds immediacy to the viewing experience.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 11, 2022
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- Leslie Felperin
Director Lorenzo Vigas, who collaborated on the script with Paula Markovitch and Laura Santullo, adeptly manoeuvres things so that the film slides effortlessly from mystery to criminal story to quasi-Greek tragedy, changing registers with subtle alterations of tone. The landscape – vast, desiccated, menacing – is practically a character in its own right, full of inscrutable secrets like Hatzín’s own deadpan face.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 8, 2022
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- Leslie Felperin
Some shocking twists go off like well-timed bombs in the back half of the film, somewhat compensating for what is, in all honesty, a bit of a slog.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 2, 2022
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- Leslie Felperin
Luxuriating in a wealth of archival material that encompasses radio and TV interviews, privately recorded conversations from reel-to-reel tapes (Armstrong could swear like a sailor), and good old-fashioned newspaper clippings (remember them?), this documentary about the great Louis Armstrong is a real keeper.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 27, 2022
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- Leslie Felperin
Vesper plays like a cult film waiting to be discovered. It adeptly fuses a compelling YA-friendly story about a teenage girl’s survival in a hostile environment with dense, thoughtful world-building, the sort required to draw in nerdy-minded viewers. That savvy combination creates a narrative that breathes and expands, like one of the freaky mycelium-like life forms that populate the story.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 21, 2022
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- Leslie Felperin
Assembled with seemingly deliberate disjointed editing that scrambles the time line, and shot through with unsettling shock cuts backed by Oliver Coates discordant, droning minimalist score, The Stranger definitely feels like an elevated genre exercise — more challenging than the average crime drama but also more interesting.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 20, 2022
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- Leslie Felperin
Clearly made with the best of didactic intentions, and especially affecting when paying tribute to “original gangster” film theorist Laura Mulvey, interviewed all too briefly here, the film is founded on a simplistic, poorly argued thesis that is way out to sea, many waves of feminist film theory behind from what’s going on these days in academic circles and feminist discourse.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 17, 2022
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- Leslie Felperin
The team manages to hit most of the right notes with this perky, peculiar adaptation. Or maybe the film has just enough bright shiny objects and tightly synchronized dancing-child chorus lines to stop anyone from caring about all that problematic whatnot. In any case, it mostly works.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Oct 5, 2022
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- Leslie Felperin
Like the junk food that the central characters sell in their convenience store, it’s a strangely moreish brew that you enjoy but feel faintly guilty about consuming, like nachos with cheese-flavoured sauce or a blue slushy ice drink.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 15, 2022
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- Leslie Felperin
Thinly scripted rom-com Ticket to Paradise puffs its way through 104 minutes mostly on the vapors of its lead actors gassing around together, albeit with an assist from spectacular Australian scenery standing in for Bali.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 14, 2022
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- Leslie Felperin
However intrinsically fascinating the Gibbons sisters’ story might be, Smoczynska and Seigel’s interpretation of the material feels off somehow — a little too pleased with its own quirk, and too preoccupied with surface texture and color to help viewers truly understand its troubled protagonists.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 14, 2022
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- Leslie Felperin
Without revealing which one wins out, I can assure you that a huge amount of murderous mayhem is unleashed, including death by woodchipper.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 13, 2022
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- Leslie Felperin
Beneath the crazy candy-coloured palette, there is actually some real human warmth in the love story, and the acting ensemble features some great comic performers in supporting roles.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 13, 2022
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- Leslie Felperin
This is a portrait of Monroe that accentuates her suffering and anguish, canonising her into a feminist saint who died for our scopophilic sins, that we might feast on her beauty and talent. Maybe it’s not an opera but a kind of religious ritual for the modern age, visiting the stations of the crosses Monroe bore, the Passion of the Marilyn.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 8, 2022
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- Leslie Felperin
Although Hill certainly puts in a few sly tips of the hat to canonical and cult favorites and is clearly enjoying exploiting the audience’s expectations of the genre, Dead for a Dollar isn’t an empty nostalgia exercise. Nor is it a revisionist postmodern deconstruction. It’s somewhere between the two, built on a narrative architecture as classical in its vernacular as Doric columns on a bank, but with details that will surely remind audiences of the future that it was made in the 2020s.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 8, 2022
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- Leslie Felperin
In the end, it plays a little too often like an academic pastiche of horror tropes even though its emotional core rings with resonance.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 6, 2022
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- Leslie Felperin
This pious work is clearly designed to send believers into a state of ecstasy, but it may be a bit of a slog for the secular.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 6, 2022
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- Leslie Felperin
This schematic but sweet-natured comedy drama drives down a narrative track as straight and comfortingly predictable as an episode of Thomas the Tank Engine.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 6, 2022
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- Leslie Felperin
In short, this is not very good but there are worse things you could be watching as you fall asleep on the sofa after a heavy night’s drinking, which is exactly what it feels like this was designed for.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 6, 2022
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- Leslie Felperin
The result is an expressive and moving portrait of a tempestuous marriage, one told with elan that feels rich in feeling even if its entire budget probably wouldn’t have covered the cost of croissants on an average film shoot in France.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 4, 2022
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- Leslie Felperin
Baker, with his scrawny frame and ratty features, can actually act, although he’s consistently upstaged by young Reid, as the stronger performer and the one with the more interesting character story here.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 2, 2022
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