Manohla Dargis
Select another critic »For 2,350 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 2.5 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Manohla Dargis' Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 63 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Mulholland Dr. | |
| Lowest review score: | Lolita | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,183 out of 2350
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Mixed: 898 out of 2350
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Negative: 269 out of 2350
2350
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Manohla Dargis
It’s a lot of hooey and might have been at least tolerable if the movie had been rougher, meaner, tighter, and if the filmmakers — the writer is Nicolaas Zwart, the director is Miles Joris-Peyrafitte — had never watched a Terrence Malick movie.- The New York Times
- Posted Nov 12, 2020
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- Manohla Dargis
City Hall runs four and a half mostly engrossing hours, making it one of Wiseman’s longest. That sounds daunting, but I could have watched hours more of people simply talking to one another in auditoriums and across conference-room tables.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 29, 2020
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- Manohla Dargis
Zemeckis improves on the first film adaptation, a 1990 oddity directed by Nicolas Roeg. There’s more heart in the new version and more emotion, qualities which can go missing in those Zemeckis movies that get lost in his technical whiz-bangery.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 22, 2020
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- Manohla Dargis
The true miracle of this film is how Marcello translates both London’s scabrous tone and his lush, character-revealing prose into pure cinema. Lines have been plucked from the novel, yet even at its wordiest, the film is never weighed down by the burden of faithfulness.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 15, 2020
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- Manohla Dargis
Some filmed stage shows die on the screen from a sheer lack of visual energy and invention. Lee, a master of the art, uses cinema’s plasticity to complement this production, making it come alive in two dimensions.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 15, 2020
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- Manohla Dargis
The dirt bikes and their exuberant operators are the saving grace — and joy — of the sincere if overstuffed drama Charm City Kings.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 8, 2020
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- Manohla Dargis
In the past, Coppola’s embrace of ambiguity could feel like a dodge, a way of evading meaning. But in On the Rocks, a wistful and lovely story about finally coming of age, there’s nothing ambiguous about how she makes us see a woman too long lost in life’s shadow.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 2, 2020
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- Manohla Dargis
Pitched artfully between the celebratory and the elegiac, it is an inarguably serious documentary with light, surrealistic flourishes that, at times, veer into exuberant goofiness.- The New York Times
- Posted Oct 1, 2020
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- Manohla Dargis
Like most commercial movies about feminist history, though, it also has a toothless vision of protest and empowerment that’s doomed to fail its subject because its makers don’t (can’t) risk making the audience uncomfortable.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 24, 2020
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- Manohla Dargis
Every faded dress looks attentively fitted, each ramshackle house artfully weathered. If the performances are considerably less persuasive it’s partly because Campos shows no interest in the inner lives of his characters. And while Pattinson’s and Keough’s roles are risible, the actors at least show signs of (comic) life.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 16, 2020
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- Manohla Dargis
There is evil and it helps keep the world running, our clothes and food coming. This is the greatest, most difficult, most unspeakable violence laid bare in Rathjen’s measured, insistently political movie.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 10, 2020
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- Manohla Dargis
It’s lightly funny and a little sad, filled with ravishing landscapes and juiced up with kinetic fights (if not enough of them). It has antiseptic violence, emotional uplift and the kind of protagonist that movie people like to call relatable.- The New York Times
- Posted Sep 3, 2020
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- Manohla Dargis
The scenery is pretty and the actors appealing enough to almost excuse the thinness of the material.- The New York Times
- Posted Aug 26, 2020
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- Manohla Dargis
Here, after the gunfire dies down, terror at times gives way to a melancholy that can be quite affecting even if the message remains familiar: We have met the zombie, and it is us.- The New York Times
- Posted Aug 20, 2020
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- Manohla Dargis
By eliding the Legion’s history and focusing on winning personalities, the filmmakers have made an engaging movie about some kids who — as their jokes give way to debates, stratagems and even shocks — already seem to be drafting their own more interesting sequel.- The New York Times
- Posted Aug 14, 2020
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- Manohla Dargis
The humanity of the leads fills up the hollowness, putting flesh, or at least charm and attitude, on their archetypes.- The New York Times
- Posted Aug 13, 2020
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- Manohla Dargis
There are some very good scenes in the movie’s second half; even so, it’s striking that the most unsettling aspect of “La Llorona” is that history doesn’t simply shape the movie. It also haunts and finally overwhelms it with terrors far more unspeakable than any impressively manufactured shock.- The New York Times
- Posted Aug 5, 2020
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- Manohla Dargis
The movie tries to convince you that Douglas is better than his worst self and can transcend the dehumanizing degradations in which he’s mired. But not even the filmmakers seem convinced, which may explain why they embrace baroque brutality topped by a dollop of audience-mollifying sentimentality.- The New York Times
- Posted Jul 30, 2020
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- Manohla Dargis
Radioactive, a thoughtful, very watchable fictionalized portrait of Marie Curie, tries hard to nudge the halo off its subject. Given her endeavors and accolades — including two Nobel Prizes — this simple, humanizing effort proves tough but also feels necessary.- The New York Times
- Posted Jul 29, 2020
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- Manohla Dargis
This is Garai’s feature directing debut, and it is as satisfying as it is promising, despite an unfortunate wind down. She has a great eye — and a real feel for the power of silence and visual textures — but she stumbles when she explains too much.- The New York Times
- Posted Jul 23, 2020
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- Manohla Dargis
The story gradually emerges through an accretion of details and personal dynamics, often in families that stand in for the larger world. Things happen quietly or offscreen. The drama is measured out in sips, in gazes, gestures, silences, off-handed humor and shocks of brutality.- The New York Times
- Posted Jul 2, 2020
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- Manohla Dargis
Kim works like a pointillist with lots of short scenes and daubs of textured nuance that build the portrait incrementally.- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 25, 2020
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- Manohla Dargis
More than anything, Mr. Jones is an argument for witnessing and remembrance.- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 18, 2020
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- Manohla Dargis
The movie has texture but no depth, tears but no snot. Who are these people, I kept wondering.- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 18, 2020
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- Manohla Dargis
The actors add some filigree to their genre types, but are consistently upstaged by the superb, supple camerawork. With the cinematographer Miguel Ioann Littin Menz, Patterson turns the camera into an uneasily embodied presence and when it takes flight so does the movie.- The New York Times
- Posted Jun 2, 2020
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- Manohla Dargis
No matter how distinct the elements — and how differently arranged — they are of a feverish, profoundly uneasy piece.- The New York Times
- Posted May 28, 2020
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- Manohla Dargis
The “Trip” movies have always been self-aware about their own weightlessness, wringing laughs by needling the men and their vanity. That’s as smart as it is convenient; this time, though, it also feels like a cop-out.- The New York Times
- Posted May 20, 2020
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- Manohla Dargis
It’s always nice to see characters break free, but you need to care whether they do. One insurmountable problem with this story is that Iris just isn’t interesting enough and certainly not developed enough either as a character or in terms of the performance.- The New York Times
- Posted Apr 23, 2020
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- Manohla Dargis
In “Never Rarely,” the hurdles to an abortion are as legion as they are maddening and pedestrian, a blunt political truism that Hittman brilliantly connects to women’s fight for emancipation.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 12, 2020
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- Manohla Dargis
There are different ways to describe Garbus’s telling of this mystery: it’s serious, respectful, gravely melancholic. Yet anger best describes the movie’s atmosphere, its overall mood and its authorial tone.- The New York Times
- Posted Mar 12, 2020
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