Luke Hicks
Select another critic »For 64 reviews, this critic has graded:
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53% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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44% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 5.9 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Luke Hicks' Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 71 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Sentimental Value | |
| Lowest review score: | Emilia Pérez | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 45 out of 64
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Mixed: 17 out of 64
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Negative: 2 out of 64
64
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Luke Hicks
Gyllenhaal never tones down the brutality, ripping us through bloody tongues, heads, and bodies—in cinematographer Lawrence Sher’s fit of gorgeously captured violence—until the frenzied finish- The A.V. Club
- Posted Mar 4, 2026
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- Luke Hicks
Diaz makes a mockery of Magellan in his depiction of the revered globetrotter, his take on the Age Of Discovery damning to say the least.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jan 8, 2026
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- Luke Hicks
The screenplay is overflowing with memorable meditations, blunt-but-heartfelt exchanges, and piercing affection for its people, all rooted in the natural world around them.- The Film Stage
- Posted Oct 29, 2025
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- Luke Hicks
Whether it’s a new chapter for Aronofsky or a tangential dip into different territory, Caught Stealing proves the auteur hasn’t lost his touch.- The Film Stage
- Posted Aug 31, 2025
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- Luke Hicks
Splitsville is overflowing with one-liners and gut-busters that make it ripe for subsequent viewings.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jun 12, 2025
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- Luke Hicks
The characters are so fleshed-out, the diction so lived-in, the backstories and present stories so engaging. Their conversations seem less like scripted scenes than real moments lucky to have been captured. In creating a relatively small and recognizable film that can feel revelatory, Trier shows sleight of hand that could only belong to a young veteran at the height of his career.- The Film Stage
- Posted May 22, 2025
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- Luke Hicks
I don’t know if The History of Sound is worth revisiting for its devastating romance, the likes of which deepen this story’s emotion but make it a much heavier haul, but I’m counting down the days until I can revisit its songs, sonically and visually; the hearing speaks for itself.- The Film Stage
- Posted May 22, 2025
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- Luke Hicks
The duo is responsible for one of cinema’s greatest cinematic achievements, Malcolm X, while the other three would have a fighting chance at most directors’ best. If Highest 2 Lowest falls on the lower end of their partnership, the sparks of brilliance they’ve found in the past will flare up multiple times.- The Film Stage
- Posted May 22, 2025
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- Luke Hicks
It’s textbook Petzold, which I mean as a major compliment. Don’t expect all of the mysteries to be uncovered. There is no big explainer moment or narratively satisfying closure, the likes of which Petzold rejects, but the enigmas that do reveal themselves yield rare treasures.- The Film Stage
- Posted May 19, 2025
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- Luke Hicks
At worst it’s preachy and, I fear, will feel “old” to younger audiences. At best, Nouvelle Vague is the kind of movie that emboldens people to make films themselves, and even more so, to adopt filmmaking as a way of life.- The Film Stage
- Posted May 18, 2025
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- Luke Hicks
The movie looks amazing, it’s often intriguing, the style is evocative, and it should be distinct from Kaufman’s work. But in the ways that it’s similar, there’s less to be discovered––the ghost of revelation where it feels revelation could be.- The Film Stage
- Posted Mar 17, 2025
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- The Film Stage
- Posted Jan 15, 2025
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- Luke Hicks
Goswami gives a subtly powerful performance grounded in perpetual shock, patience to act, and measured wisdom. And the enigmatic screenplay devises a grey area so hazy you’ll be going over it in your head for weeks, if not months, asking yourself what you would’ve done in Santosh’s impossible situation.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jan 15, 2025
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- Luke Hicks
Loktev seems to be everywhere at once. She risks her life with the camera as journalists do with their pens, programs, and presence, holding on as long as they can in the week after the war begins.- The Film Stage
- Posted Nov 1, 2024
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- Luke Hicks
With Costa’s nearly unfettered access to the main characters of modern Brazilian politics, the events of Apocalypse in the Tropics practically unfold in real time––a thrilling, profound documentary horror.- The Film Stage
- Posted Nov 1, 2024
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- Luke Hicks
Minh Quý’s slow-cinema sensibilities are nothing short of spellbinding, the trance of rumination within reason enough to seek it out. And if that’s not enough, go for the best final shot of the year: a breath-stealing beauty that will leave you frozen in your seat even after the credits are over.- The Film Stage
- Posted Nov 1, 2024
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- Luke Hicks
Baby Invasion’s feature watchability aside, Korine’s new chapter is a tectonic experimental development for the film industry, a step in the right direction towards uncharted territory by nature of exploration and originality alone.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 6, 2024
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- Luke Hicks
It’s not that the film is so crazy that you have to see it (in fact, what’s crazy about it is that it isn’t); rather that few have ever had a platform like Philips and Joaquin Phoenix to fool with expectations of the masses so blatantly. How they did it is something worth seeing.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 4, 2024
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- Luke Hicks
Where other filmmakers fall flat with the same material, Kurzel nails every emotional beat, wrenches your gut more than a few times, and immerses you in a primal modern history you likely don’t know this well. He weds the cinematic elements to a relatively memorable whole that envisions the past with clarity and hyper-relevance as only film can.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 3, 2024
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- Luke Hicks
All We Imagine as Light may not transcend form or style the way Kapadia did in her first feature––perhaps the only thing they share is dreamy titles––but that doesn’t make it any less transcendent. If anything, this is a more universal transcendence, one predicated on the strength of being together, the innate spark in people, and the potential we all have to see everyone as someone.- The Film Stage
- Posted May 28, 2024
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- Luke Hicks
The aspirations are admirable, but at 140 minutes it’s overlong, arriving at a pretty natural end before another act begins and we launch into what suggests an unwarranted second film. (Still, one that also ends up being good.)- The Film Stage
- Posted May 23, 2024
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- Luke Hicks
Anora is a devastating, gut-busting beauty––regular cinematographer Drew Daniels lending his brilliance to yet another Baker triumph––the kind that hurts your heart and holds you tight to recover at the same time, tears of laughter streaming down your face.- The Film Stage
- Posted May 22, 2024
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- Luke Hicks
The charges against him are lobbied on a cellular level, eventually turning The Apprentice into a deep-dive diss track on the souls of the ex-President and the country, its traditional values, and one man’s infatuation with them.- The Film Stage
- Posted May 21, 2024
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- Luke Hicks
Lanthimos has put together another dark, well-crafted delight, if not a slightly more forgettable one.- The Film Stage
- Posted May 19, 2024
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- Luke Hicks
At the end of the day, for better and for worse, in awe and in tired confusion, Megalopolis is a garish wonder to behold.- The Film Stage
- Posted May 17, 2024
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- Luke Hicks
Hit Man is far from one of Linklater’s best, but in the context of his career it’s a welcomed addition, and on its own a damn good time.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 7, 2023
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- Luke Hicks
At the end of the day, Priscilla’s multifaceted brilliance comes back around to Coppola’s immaculate sense of restraint in both screenwriting and direction.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 6, 2023
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- Luke Hicks
Penélope Cruz steals the show as the pistol-wielding Laura. . . It’s a great performance founded on a sizzling bitterness that manifests the film’s only (darkly) comedic moments in bursts of scathing monologue.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 3, 2023
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- Luke Hicks
There hasn’t been such a delightfully strange and thoroughly developed cast of characters in years.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 1, 2023
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- Luke Hicks
Asteroid City is an absolute delight, Anderson’s best since The Grand Budapest Hotel.- The Film Stage
- Posted May 24, 2023
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- Luke Hicks
It would be very fair to expect a movie about a woman who raped a child and her future family’s reckoning with that to be dark, heavy, even overbearing. But May December is more funny than it is fervent, a bona fide spring suburban anthem, an American malady in chrysalis.- The Film Stage
- Posted May 22, 2023
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- The Film Stage
- Posted May 21, 2023
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- Luke Hicks
What starts as a relatively clear story about sinister pyros, “pig-brained” kids, and abusive teachers transforms, through labyrinthine story mechanics, into a maze of limited perspectives crafted by loss, misinterpretation, and rejection.- The Film Stage
- Posted May 19, 2023
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- Luke Hicks
The Eternal Daughter buries us in the apprehension and frustration of writing and self-discovery as if they were one act, inextricable necessities. It’s spectral; much of what’s going on or being said doesn’t actually connect, but feels like it should. In a world of ghosts, somehow it does—a phantom connection that hovers brilliantly over everything.- The Film Stage
- Posted Oct 12, 2022
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- Luke Hicks
Without his trademark vulgarity and narrative absurdity, McDonagh’s challenged himself to draw humor and meaning from the mundane. And he does.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 7, 2022
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- Luke Hicks
The chemistry between Chalamet and Russell is off the charts. Their love is desperate, passionate, true, confused and confounded, perpetually crushing under the ethical crisis they face in killing innocent people to survive, not to mention the fact that they feel very differently about it.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 4, 2022
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- Luke Hicks
When it’s all said and done—the technical marvels elucidated, the stylistic flare appreciated, the wide-eyed self-reflection given a fair shake in retaliation to the all-too-easy critique of self-indulgence—I can’t help but wince a little at the thought of a second watch. If it’ll be great to revisit certain sequences, the thought of stomaching all three hours again so soon is grueling.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 2, 2022
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- Luke Hicks
Broker marks a thematic continuation of career-length fascination with alternative families and the legal, social, and philosophical values that paint such complicated ethical portraits of them. The director still has plenty to say, and does so quite eloquently.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jun 1, 2022
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- Luke Hicks
Among many films that tackle class, race, and privilege at Cannes this year ... War Pony is more subtle in its pursuit. The stories aren’t plotless but the emphasis isn’t on any one narrative conflict. Keough and Gammell make it more about witnessing the culturally and spiritually rich world of Pine Ridge.- The Film Stage
- Posted May 28, 2022
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- Luke Hicks
There’s never a moment of grand revelation; rather a subtle, perpetual sense of understanding what’s going on, a fact that takes some pressure off the film and will likely make for a richer rewatch.- The Film Stage
- Posted May 25, 2022
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- Luke Hicks
Though struggling with some pacing issues, it’s mostly an engaging, well-performed drama that offers a fascinating peek into an institution matched in significance only by the Vatican itself.- The Film Stage
- Posted May 25, 2022
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- Luke Hicks
At a lengthy 140 minutes, the film flashes by. The deeper you go the more you want to know, and the more there is to know.- The Film Stage
- Posted May 24, 2022
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- Luke Hicks
Paris, 13th District wades in the strange, true interconnectedness of life and evokes the banality within, so much that it starts to become banal itself.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jul 26, 2021
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- Luke Hicks
If The Year of the Everlasting Storm isn’t exempt from the typical disjointedness of portmanteau films, it yields more coherency than its kin. With so many disparate works included, the experience becomes an intriguing exercise in cinematographic range and creative perspectives on the most globally unifying trauma in human history.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jul 21, 2021
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- Luke Hicks
It isn’t the most entertaining version of a Velvet Underground documentary, but it’s the truest to the group. Haynes hones in on character and new elements they brought to the table which, like elements of modern art, are best captured through philosophies and conceptual understanding, as they are here.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jul 20, 2021
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