Manohla Dargis
Select another critic »For 2,344 reviews, this critic has graded:
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46% higher than the average critic
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3% 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)
Manohla Dargis' Scores
- Movies
- TV
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,182 out of 2344
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Mixed: 893 out of 2344
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Negative: 269 out of 2344
2344
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Manohla Dargis
Like the first movie, the second is a sleek diversion with brittle and sharp laughs, truckloads of couture threads and lashings of light drama.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 30, 2026
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- Manohla Dargis
Jones has turned a life into a hackneyed survivor’s story with cartoon villains, cardboard saints, pretty scenery, mewling piano notes and expedient, drama-goosing epiphanies.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 23, 2026
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- Manohla Dargis
The downer here is that Lowery doesn’t seem to know what to do with his stars, performers who are never better than when they’re just doing what they do best — you know, acting.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 16, 2026
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- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 9, 2026
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- Manohla Dargis
Alas, Tereza, whose interior life remains largely obscured from start to finish, isn’t a compelling vessel for whatever Mascaro is trying to do in this movie. And, as it drifts from one place to another, one encounter to another, one sketchy idea to another, so may your attention.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 3, 2026
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- Manohla Dargis
Zendaya and Pattinson are both enjoyable to watch, but she’s given too little to do and he’s given too much.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 2, 2026
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- Manohla Dargis
Yes is an unsparing movie and can be hard to watch partly because Lapid’s raw fury and maximalist approach can border on off-putting excess. There are times in “Yes” when he seems to be veering out of control. At other times, he almost seems to bait you to look away, to turn off and tune out just like his revelers, even as he inexorably pulls you in, forcing you to bear witness alongside him.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 26, 2026
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- Manohla Dargis
It’s a sneak attack of a movie, one that invites your laughter, even as it jabs you in the ribs.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 20, 2026
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- Manohla Dargis
These cinematic allusions are catnip to film lovers, and while they’re pleasurable to consider they’re so delicately woven into the story that they never distract from the characters or the emotion, or edge into directorial cleverness.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 19, 2026
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- Manohla Dargis
Lord and Miller, almost by default, accentuate the positive to the detriment of the very movie that they’ve painstakingly created. Like a lot of Earthlings, they seem more at home in a far-out fantasy than on our ordinary, terrifying planet, which is why this particular message of hope ends up being a bummer.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 19, 2026
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- Manohla Dargis
Written by Masato Kato, Bushido holds you with its performances and a story that circles around questions of honor, loyalty, masculinity and the ties that bind and sometimes throttle.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 13, 2026
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- Manohla Dargis
It doesn’t always make sense tonally and intellectually, but the whole thing is energetic, handsome and stocked with enough expert, appealing performers to hold your interest through the rougher, less coherent passages.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 5, 2026
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- Manohla Dargis
The results are, by turns, amusing and lightly scary, though never truly surprising.- The New York Times
- Posted Feb 26, 2026
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- Manohla Dargis
The story and the actors make How to Make a Killing easy to drift along with, even if it never coheres tonally, logically or, really, any which way.- The New York Times
- Posted Feb 19, 2026
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- Manohla Dargis
Robbie and Elordi hold your attention well enough, though they’re more persuasive apart than when they’re together.- The New York Times
- Posted Feb 12, 2026
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- Manohla Dargis
A B-movie throwback with plentiful winks, it has few thrills, but it has a touch of science, a plausible-enough threat, suitably disgusting splatter, appealing actors and a fleet running time.- The New York Times
- Posted Feb 12, 2026
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- Manohla Dargis
It’s a sincere, mesmerizing and admirably unorthodox film that, by turns, invites your love and tests your patience. It demands attention and generosity from you, including toward characters who can be tough to tolerate, much less care about. They and the movie can be maddening, even when it’s impossible to look away.- The New York Times
- Posted Feb 6, 2026
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- Manohla Dargis
Much like the dress that Mr. Pierre designed for her — a white number whose bold black zigzag obscures all of its seams — Mrs. Trump seems exceptionally good at keeping hidden how everything, her marriage and family included, fits together.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 30, 2026
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- Manohla Dargis
The Moment lights on substantive subjects throughout, yet partly because it’s about one individual’s ostensible struggles rather than the larger system, its bite is toothless.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 29, 2026
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- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 22, 2026
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- Manohla Dargis
The intrigue is far-fetched and surprising — this is one movie you can’t write in your head — and delivered with increasing winks and charm.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 15, 2026
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- Manohla Dargis
The most arresting way that Diaz telegraphs, though, is through the sheer beauty of his images. The movie is often visually intoxicating, at moments gasp-out-loud ravishing, especially in its presentation of the natural world, which can have a soft visual quality that deepens the sense of otherworldliness.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 8, 2026
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- Manohla Dargis
No Other Choice is easy to admire from one perfectly balanced shot to the next; it is a pleasure to see how Park plays with visual space and deploys some of the more slapstick comedy with sharply timed, Rube Goldberg-style finesse. If only the movie’s tones and moods were as modulated as its two vibrant, often touching lead performances.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 30, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
A hyper-charged take on a bildungsroman, Marty Supreme is one of the most thoroughly pleasurable American movies of the year and one of the most exciting. Part of what makes it electric is how organically its numerous parts — its themes, characters, camera movements and accelerated pacing — fit together in a whirring whole.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 24, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Cover-Up is a model of efficient, engaging documentary filmmaking; it looks good, for starters, and it moves energetically.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 18, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
The fight sequences are models of spatial coherency and escalating tension, and they grab you wholly, turning a movie into a full-body workout. That feeling dissipates whenever the fighting stops, the story cranks back up and somebody calls someone else “bro,” which happens too often.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 18, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
At times, it can seem that Fuller is about to lose himself in the movie’s filigreed details, its curlicue lines, lush flowers and confectionary rest. In truth, I think he’s is sharing his delight in the imaginative possibilities of storytelling and in the plasticity of the medium itself, which is as infectious as it is welcome.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 12, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Strange describes the world of “Resurrection,” as does entrancing, tender, surprising, mournful and, at times, mystifying; it too is a labyrinth of a kind, one that Bi has filled with abrupt turns, elusive figures and shattering moments.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 11, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Djukic has a fine eye and is a talent to look out for, even if here, like Ana-Maria, she chose the wrong girl.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 4, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
It’s enjoyable to be back in Sorrentino’s richly detailed and stylized universe, with all its enchantments and individualized, warm-blooded characters.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 4, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
In its intimacy and naked truth-telling, Sorry, Baby is the kind of independent movie that can seem like a gift.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 2, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
I don’t think for a second that Joseph is interested in answering questions, one reason that “BLKNWS” can feel like an invitation. He wants to open your mind and maybe blow it (he succeeds on both counts) in a work that, among many other things, interrogates memory, history and the archive.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 2, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
For his latest knockout, The Secret Agent, the Brazilian filmmaker Kleber Mendonça Filho embraces a freewheeling sensibility, and finds laughter amid the terror.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 26, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Despite its unsettling political resonance, “Wicked” is finally most convincing as a story of an intense, soulfully nurturing female friendship.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 20, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
There’s nothing wrong (or incorrect!) about either Wright’s desire to please or the righteousness, and at times you can sense a bit of anger wafting off the screen, even if Wright and Powell mostly seem to be having a very good time.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 13, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Watching it again, I recognized that Linklater’s film is itself an expression of a certain approach — a consciousness — toward cinema’s pleasures and possibilities, one that at once embraces the art’s past and insists on its future.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 13, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Trier’s lightness of touch makes a striking contrast to the film’s emotional weightiness. Death haunts this movie, as it does other of Trier’s features, and while “Sentimental Value” has bursts of pure comedy (it can be very funny), it’s steeped in melancholy.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 6, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
In the end, what is most surprising about Predator: Badlands is also the most obvious, which is that filmmaking matters even to formulaic, apparently indestructible franchises.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 6, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Bonitzer evinces an appreciable warmth toward his creations that you feel even from the analytic distance he establishes.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 30, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Jude is an interesting, admirably unorthodox filmmaker who likes to push his viewers. Here, he simply punishes us.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 30, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
The great surprise of Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere — a solid, very likable, very affecting drama about an anguished period in the life of the young Bruce Springsteen — is that it doesn’t shy away from soul-deep pain.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 23, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Like the overall movie, the character opens up incrementally to quiet, meaningful effect.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 17, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
It’s a cry from the heart, a comic howl in the dark and one of the year’s essential movies.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 15, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Bigelow’s work here is superb. She puts the many moving parts into coordinated place and keeps them coherently spinning even as she switches out some elements and introduces others; she doesn’t drop a single plate. The script occasionally gets in her way, which sometimes happens in her work.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 9, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
There is, of course, enormous pleasure in watching Daniel Day-Lewis, an actor of extraordinary sensitivity whose ability to convey a character’s interiority — the delicacy and the violence — can seem almost mystical. The problem is that as Anemone continues, the strength of the actor’s performance lays bare the banality of the writing, and Ray’s grip on your imagination loosens even as Day-Lewis’s remains fixed.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 2, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Densely packed, the movie is a whirlwind of ideas and images, by turns heady, enlivening, disturbing and near-exhausting. It’s a work of visceral urgency from Peck, who’s best known for his 2017 documentary “I Am Not Your Negro,” about James Baldwin.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 2, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Paul Thomas Anderson’s One Battle After Another is an exciting, goofy and deadly serious big-screen no — a no to complacency, to oppression, to tyranny. It’s a carnivalesque epic about good and evil, violence and power, inalienable rights and the fight against injustice; it’s also a love story.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 25, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Greengrass knows how to shoot and cut, but The Lost Bus is at once too high-minded and too exploitative to work. However skilled the cinematography and editing, there is no saving a movie predicated on looming death with badly written characters and such a frustratingly narrow point of view.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 18, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
It’s almost always pleasant to hang out with old friends, particularly when no one overstays their welcome. The good news about “Spinal Tap II” is that everyone involved seems to have understood the assignment, which makes for a genial 83 minutes of soft jokes and jowls.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 11, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Veiel’s documentary is a welcome addition to the historically grounded rebukes to Riefenstahl and her apologists, including bad feminists.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 4, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
For whatever reason here, Aronofsky always remains at a frustrating remove from Hank, which flattens the emotional and psychological stakes that Butler works so hard to raise.- The New York Times
- Posted Aug 29, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Relay, a slick, sneaky thriller that’s elevated by both the actor and the director, David Mackenzie, makes it clear that Ahmed also has a silent-era performer’s gift for feverish stillness.- The New York Times
- Posted Aug 21, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Like many sequels, this one ramps up everything, including the body count. The fight sequences here are well-staged, shot and cut, more elaborate than in the earlier movie and at times gleefully grisly, with skewered and barbecued flesh.- The New York Times
- Posted Aug 14, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
The most appealing character in Suspended Time is Assayas, a hovering offscreen presence who delivers the confessional, gracefully digressive narration.- The New York Times
- Posted Aug 14, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Washington’s most successfully sustained sparring partner is Jeffrey Wright, who plays Paul, the family’s chauffeur. He comes into focus through his beliefs, his attire and salient details (including a banner for the Five Percenters, an offshoot of the Nation of Islam), though primarily through Wright’s discreet, moving performance.- The New York Times
- Posted Aug 14, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Weapons may not be about anything much other than Cregger’s talent, but the guy knows how to slither under your skin — and stay there.- The New York Times
- Posted Aug 7, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
An Officer and a Spy is well-crafted; Polanski’s movies generally are. Its contribution to cinema’s role in historical storytelling, though, seems largely as an allegory about Polanski.- The New York Times
- Posted Aug 7, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Taken individually, a lot of the jokes might not work, but when you’re in a blizzard you don’t notice each snowflake.- The New York Times
- Posted Jul 31, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
An enjoyably arranged collection of all the visual attractions and narrative clichés that money can buy, “F1” is very simply about the satisfactions of genre cinema and the pleasures of watching appealing characters navigate fast, exotic cars that whine like juiced-up mosquitoes. It’s also about the pleasures of that ultrasmooth performance machine, Brad Pitt.- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 26, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Before long, the fleetingly liberated child and the filmmakers’ imaginative playfulness are boxed up, and the whole thing turns into yet another superhero adventure.- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 19, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
These nods at a past that’s by turns historic and romantically mythic, feed an undercurrent of tension that Boyle builds on, one kill at a time.- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 19, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Sex is a curious movie, with a mix of moods and intentions that are, by turns, inviting and seriously off-putting.- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 12, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Is heterosexual romance doomed, is the romantic comedy? Those questions swirl with light, teasing provocation in Celine Song’s “Materialists,” a seductive, smartly refreshed addition to an impossibly, perhaps irredeemably old-fashioned genre that was once a Hollywood staple.- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 12, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Ejiofor fills in Marty with dabs of personality and a sense of decency that suggests that while humanity is lost, not every individual is. It’s too bad the movie doesn’t stick with Marty, who warms it up appreciably.- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 5, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
"Final Reckoning” is flat-out ridiculous, but it’s a model example of blockbuster entertainment at its most highly polished, and I enjoyed it thoroughly, despite its clichés, extravagant violence and gung-ho militarism.- The New York Times
- Posted May 14, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
A tour de force that is at once an affecting portrait of a people in flux and a soulful, generous-hearted autobiographic testament from one of our greatest living filmmakers.- The New York Times
- Posted May 8, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
What is undeniable is that because Rust looks as good as it does, every time riders on horseback appear against a florid sky, it isn’t the characters you think about — it’s Halyna Hutchins.- The New York Times
- Posted May 2, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
The only sure thing is that Pugh deepens the material, investing Yelena with real feeling and a lightly detached ironic sensibility that’s reminiscent of Downey’s Stark. Pugh is the best thing to happen to Marvel in a while.- The New York Times
- Posted May 1, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
April is easy to admire, but Kulumbegashvili’s use of art-film conventions can be wearyingly familiar, especially when the leisurely pace turns to a crawl.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 24, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
All that counts in The Accountant 2 is that it’s adroitly paced, unburdened by narrative logic (there are almost as many coincidences as corpses) and buoyed by its well-synced, charismatic leads.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 24, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Ryan Coogler’s Sinners is a big-screen exultation — a passionate, effusive praise song about life and love, including the love of movies.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 17, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
The highest praise I can offer Warfare, a tough, relentless movie about life and death in battle, is that it isn’t thrilling. It is, rather, a purposely sad, angry movie, and as much a lament as a warning.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 10, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
A sleek, modestly scaled entertainment about families, secrets and obligations, it features fine performances and some picture-postcard Burgundian locations.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 4, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
There’s an amusing, low-fi thriller here amid what prove to be too many twists and thickets of cinematic allusion.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 3, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
The low-key charms of the coming-of-age story Holy Cow emerge gradually but steadily.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 27, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Here, at least, the performers — who include Téa Leoni as Odell’s wife, the very funny Will Poulter as the Leopold son and Anthony Carrigan as a put-upon servant — have the kinds of ductile faces, rubber-band moves and vocal dexterity that can keep even sluggish material moving.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 27, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Zegler has enough charm and lung power to hold the center of this busy, overproduced movie with its mix of memorable old and unmemorable new songs.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 20, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Lesage’s characters may talk a lot, but because he avoids exposition, he ends up overloading the story with dramatically heightened episodes. These keep things simmering, but they often overstate the obvious as much as any telegraphing dialogue might.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 13, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
By the time Pierce Brosnan shows up, you may find yourself giggling at the whole meta deliciousness of this enterprise. You may also find yourself feverishly hoping that when it comes time to revive the Bond series, someone has the brains to call Koepp and Soderbergh.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 13, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
[Nyoni] says all she needs to with each lapidary image, with every resonant silence and with the undaunted power of Shula’s gaze.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 6, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Bong keeps things zipping along, and with such nimbleness that the movie’s heavier ideas never weigh it down. He jabs rather than pounds as he takes on targets — authoritarianism, comic-book heroics, the vanity of power — while playfully mixing moods and acting styles.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 6, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Everyone is engaging, the art is magnificent and the whole thing pleasant, if overly cozy and hagiographic. That’s too bad. Then again — with “Maus” and his other work — Spiegelman has already produced his definitive biography.- The New York Times
- Posted Feb 20, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Tregenza is the kind of authentic independent who’s always worth seeking out; when he is behind the camera, he holds you rapt from the get-go.- The New York Times
- Posted Feb 6, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
“A Truly Terrific Absolutely True Story” is a largely enjoyable, cozily intimate movie that plays like it was made by a fan.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 23, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Presence is another ideal trap to trip for a filmmaker who enjoys challenges and changing it up artistically as much as Soderbergh does.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 23, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
Modestly scaled and loosely plotted, it is an unusually tender movie and an ideal vehicle for Coppola’s gift for expressing the intangible and the ephemeral.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 9, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
While I don’t remember seeing any fingerprints dotting their forms this time around, the tender care that went into fashioning each of Wallace’s toothy expressions and Gromit’s quizzically raised brow remains palpable. The love, well, that you feel, too.- The New York Times
- Posted Jan 3, 2025
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- Manohla Dargis
For her part, Kidman takes “Babygirl” to its breaking point with a performance that risks your laughter and which — as she dismantles her character’s perfection piece by piece — exposes a raw vulnerability that can be shocking. It’s the rawest thing in this movie, and it’s bliss.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 25, 2024
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- Manohla Dargis
Chalamet proves an ideal conduit in A Complete Unknown because the music and its maker have such power. As with any great cover band, it’s the original material that carries you through the night.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 25, 2024
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- Manohla Dargis
Many movies offer up a slice of reality; true to the architectural aesthetic that its title invokes, this one offers a slab.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 20, 2024
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- Manohla Dargis
The overall results are generally pretty, mildly diverting, at times dull and often familiar, despite a few unusually sharp, brief departures from Disney’s pacifying formula.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 19, 2024
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- Manohla Dargis
It’s a serious movie unburdened by self-seriousness, its own and that of the profession it explores with cool, analytic dispassion.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 12, 2024
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- Manohla Dargis
Part of what makes Nickel Boys striking is how Ross stays true to the novel but with his own voice, his own narrative and visual style, and how he uses moments in time and freighted images — faces, hands, flashing police lights, an alligator in a class, a mule in a hall — to build the story.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 12, 2024
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- Manohla Dargis
With deep feeling and lacerating and gentle words, Leigh creates a world that, like the vast, mysterious one hovering outside its frame, can seem agonizingly empty if you can’t see the people in it.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 6, 2024
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- Manohla Dargis
Adams is a performer whose emotional transparency can make her characters seem unguarded and appealingly vulnerable, and the movie works as well as it does in great part because of her.- The New York Times
- Posted Dec 5, 2024
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- Manohla Dargis
[Lee] may have been Guadagnino-ized, and much about what makes him tick, his past and his art, remains obscured. Yet in Craig’s ravaged charisma you do see someone who’s ready to blow open other doors of perception.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 28, 2024
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- Manohla Dargis
Like Scott’s filmmaking in this pleasurably immersive spectacle — with its foreign ancients and mentalities, exotic animals and equally unfamiliar calls to human nobility — Washington’s performance has skill, intensity and absolute confidence.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 21, 2024
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- Manohla Dargis
Despite its bumps, the movie is consistently amusing simply because it is “The Wizard of Oz” and it’s fun watching colorful, off-kilter characters singing, dancing and sometimes flying through the air (without a superhero suit).- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 21, 2024
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- Manohla Dargis
One of the pleasures of Kapadia’s filmmaking is that she’s inviting you to discover her characters on their terms, which means embracing the inner and outer rhythms of their lives.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 14, 2024
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- Manohla Dargis
Eastwood has explored systemic injustice before, including in “Changeling” and “Richard Jewell.” This is a stronger movie than those two by far, and if this one proves, as rumors have it, that it’s his last as a director, he is going out with a bang.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 14, 2024
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