Marsha McCreadie
Select another critic »For 12 reviews, this critic has graded:
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41% higher than the average critic
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8% same as the average critic
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51% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 0.2 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Marsha McCreadie's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 66 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Hannah Arendt | |
| Lowest review score: | Arthur Newman | |
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Marsha McCreadie
Guggenheim may not be news to the art world, but for the rest of us the film might stir wishful nostalgia for a breakthrough time in cultural history.- Village Voice
- Posted Nov 3, 2015
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- Marsha McCreadie
[Loach] and his longtime scriptwriter Paul Laverty combed Irish history to find a figure you might see as Loach's intellectual double; maybe this accounts for some of the speechifying dialogue as various political positions are explained, jarring at times in a film of action shots and escaping out windows.- Village Voice
- Posted Jul 2, 2015
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- Marsha McCreadie
Traditional coming-of-age films like A Borrowed Identity don't often come from Israel, which is one of the film's points.- Village Voice
- Posted Jun 30, 2015
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- Marsha McCreadie
Alicia Vikander (Ex Machina), simultaneously poignant and powerful as Vera Brittain, the writer who fought her way into Oxford then chucked that to go to the front as a nurse, gives another indelible performance.- Village Voice
- Posted Jun 2, 2015
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- Marsha McCreadie
To play Marie today, Améris found the non-actor Ariana Rivoire at the Institute for the Deaf. And Rivoire is a revelation — showing what it's like to be in, and then break out of, a world of total darkness and silence.- Village Voice
- Posted Apr 28, 2015
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- Marsha McCreadie
Interior scenes focus theater-like on the dining room table-as-vortex: Threats and insults whip about, but, finally, so do forays of friendship.- Village Voice
- Posted Apr 14, 2015
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- Marsha McCreadie
The film is so unabashed in showing the place of passion in a bourgeois world, how a missed connection can screw up a life forever, that plot implausibilities are forgiven.- Village Voice
- Posted Mar 10, 2015
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- Marsha McCreadie
The writer-philosopher Hannah Arendt is brought to life by a mesmerizing Barbara Sukowa in Margarethe von Trotta's film.- Village Voice
- Posted May 28, 2013
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