Matt Cipolla
Select another critic »For 37 reviews, this critic has graded:
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18% higher than the average critic
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0% same as the average critic
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82% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 2.3 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Matt Cipolla's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 63 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Days | |
| Lowest review score: | Run Sweetheart Run | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 22 out of 37
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Mixed: 12 out of 37
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Negative: 3 out of 37
37
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Matt Cipolla
While expanding some of its snapshots could’ve helped, the approach works well enough, welcoming a director to watch in the process.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jul 29, 2024
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- Matt Cipolla
As a whodunnit it largely works, save one aspect easy to spot miles away. Stakes-wise it’s high, even if it pulls its punches once or twice on who bites the bullet. As a return to form for Scream, this is a sigh of relief––notwithstanding some key issues VI has a freewheeling sense of lunacy, and it’s way too fun to decry.- The Film Stage
- Posted Mar 8, 2023
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- Matt Cipolla
This one sure is a challenge. Lots of that has to do with how the movie’s successes only become apparent after the fact. Its structure is its story, and it folds in on itself as much as it stacks its pieces on top of one another- The Film Stage
- Posted Feb 25, 2022
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- Matt Cipolla
Karia hasn’t made a deep film or even a particularly unique one, but he’s made one that has enough to get by. It’s not just good—it’s good enough.- The Film Stage
- Posted Aug 25, 2021
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- Matt Cipolla
With Days, Tsai turns the audience into the lonely and makes them see the world from the inside out.- The Film Stage
- Posted Aug 12, 2021
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- Matt Cipolla
There’s often a lack of narrative purpose, and refreshingly so. It follows whatever catches its eye. It, much like Bourdain, is zealous in collecting the excess of surrounding information.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jul 14, 2021
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- Matt Cipolla
While von Horn’s script has trouble fitting its themes and plot together, Magdalena Koleśnik’s performance commands the good and the bad.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jun 18, 2021
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- Matt Cipolla
We’re All Going to the World’s Fair isn’t an exposé on internet culture or social media. Nothing about it is shocking, nor is it meant to be. That’s why it feels so real when it reaches its natural conclusion.- The Film Stage
- Posted Feb 3, 2021
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- Matt Cipolla
As a fully-fledged statement, El Planeta wavers about as much as it succeeds. As observational comedy with a bit of bite, it signals good things for Amalia Ulman as a filmmaker.- The Film Stage
- Posted Feb 2, 2021
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- Matt Cipolla
Dear Comrades! is—to throw an overused word around—timely, but largely in how it observes the conflict between communism and socialism and how modern audiences confuse the two.- The Film Stage
- Posted Dec 31, 2020
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- Matt Cipolla
If anything, Fireball works best as a personification of its own themes. The textbook feeds the truncated, the truncated the tactile. Its own interests and understandings don’t always seem to exist on the same plane, but perhaps that’s okay. They’re still shining. They’ll sort themselves out eventually.- The Film Stage
- Posted Nov 12, 2020
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- Matt Cipolla
It’s dissonant, often hypnotic filmmaking. It’s also rote for stretches, with Petzold’s narrative approach surprisingly straightforward enough to make it just decent overall.- The Film Stage
- Posted Nov 7, 2020
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- Matt Cipolla
Finding Yingying doesn’t plumb the differences between U.S. and Chinese relations as much as the story alludes to, but the sheer emotion of it all largely redeems it.- The Film Stage
- Posted Nov 7, 2020
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- Matt Cipolla
For a look at the life of John Belushi, it’s a fittingly brisk one. For a dive into his career, it’s one that, despite a general lack of originality, mines a few solid points.- The Film Stage
- Posted Nov 7, 2020
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- Matt Cipolla
Msangi pulls off something most filmmakers don’t: She adapts her own short film to a feature without stretching it out.- The Film Stage
- Posted Nov 3, 2020
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- Matt Cipolla
It’s about the many forms of privilege and the intersecting failures they result in. Most of all, it’s about how this United States, this oh so great country of God, can’t understand the difference between liberty and entitlement.- The Film Stage
- Posted Oct 12, 2020
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- Matt Cipolla
A collage of distant memories and the realities that threaten them, Residue is an auspicious calling card for its filmmaker.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 17, 2020
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- Matt Cipolla
Coup 53 isn’t the most coherent in approach or pacing, but its ambition––and overall literacy––ties its knots.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 8, 2020
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- Matt Cipolla
The Mole Agent may stumble through some of its choices at first, but it sticks the landing by finding a cogitative dissonance and refusing to solve it.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 2, 2020
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- The Film Stage
- Posted Aug 27, 2020
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- Matt Cipolla
For a movie that follows a character’s perspective while remaining aware of his shortcomings, The Father marks a modest and involved debut from Zeller.- The Film Stage
- Posted Feb 1, 2020
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- Matt Cipolla
The movie is a myth. It’s also an emblem of the late ‘70s and early ‘80s, a fluid piece with a perspective so spatially and temporally unstuck that its shortcomings don’t hurt it too much.- The Film Stage
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