Matthew Monagle
Select another critic »For 78 reviews, this critic has graded:
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55% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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43% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 3.8 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Matthew Monagle's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 62 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Saint Maud | |
| Lowest review score: | Maneater | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 44 out of 78
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Mixed: 27 out of 78
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Negative: 7 out of 78
78
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Matthew Monagle
Watching Bloodlines is like watching a nature documentary where a woodland creature is ripped to shreds in graphic detail. If you’re someone who roots for the prey over the predators, this might not be the movie for you. Otherwise? Cut loose, friend.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted May 15, 2025
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- Matthew Monagle
Mufasa is a small triumph for Jenkins and a small tragedy for Miranda, which means it’s a fine movie in an ocean of fine movies.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Dec 19, 2024
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- Matthew Monagle
Like every good musical, Emilia Pérez is a movie with big feelings, even if the feelings sometimes (often) outpace the logic.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Oct 31, 2024
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- Matthew Monagle
While some filmmakers fade into obscurity during their time away from the screen, The Bikeriders is a welcome reminder that Nichols’ thoughtful explorations of economic tension and toxic masculinity are more relevant now than ever.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Jun 20, 2024
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- Matthew Monagle
This is Michael Bay for the John Wick generation: bombastic filmmaking at its finest with complex, multi-level action sequences that give the stunts room to breathe.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Jun 6, 2024
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- Matthew Monagle
The Idea of You is an example of the romance novel adaptation done right, an outstanding balance of chemistry and joke density that never talks down to its audience.- The Playlist
- Posted Mar 18, 2024
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- Matthew Monagle
Civil War enflames our discomfort by bringing the conflict to our own backyard.- The Playlist
- Posted Mar 15, 2024
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- Matthew Monagle
The Fall Guy is a wonderful movie about love and collaboration mashed up with an aggressively fine summer thriller.- The Playlist
- Posted Mar 13, 2024
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- Matthew Monagle
If the results are more than a little preachy, it’s only because Patel cares so passionately about the issues he spotlights and the cinematic language of violence he uses to discuss them.- The Playlist
- Posted Mar 12, 2024
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- Matthew Monagle
But just like no sports team can be populated entirely by superstars, there’s certainly a place for high-floor horror that understands its audience, works within the confines of its PG-13 rating, and provides just enough visual and storytelling variety to keep the audience satisfied.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Jan 4, 2024
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- Matthew Monagle
Rustin is filled with powerful performances and compelling speechifying, but it never quite manages to balance the onscreen potential of both man and mission.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Nov 2, 2023
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- Matthew Monagle
The Holdovers is a warm blanket on a sad day – an unconventional Christmas movie that finds reasons to move forward even in the hardest of times. And while students of the dramedy may anticipate its every narrative turn, there’s something magical about a film that encourages empathy, especially when it asks much of us.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Nov 2, 2023
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- Matthew Monagle
There are moments where Fremont can lean a bit too far in the direction of Miranda July-esque eccentricity – admittedly, not always its strongest gear – but Wali Zada is always there to anchor these scenes in a genuine, desperate need for interpersonal connection.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Sep 7, 2023
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- Matthew Monagle
With new animated feature Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem, Nickelodeon proves that this franchise has not lost any flexibility with age.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Aug 1, 2023
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- Matthew Monagle
Anyone who wants to better understand the cultural conditions leading up to the civil rights movement would do well to check out The League. But for those baseball fans who are used to charting the history of America alongside iconic moments in sports history, this one is a real treat.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Jul 17, 2023
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- Matthew Monagle
In a world of blockbuster franchises and micro-budget horror – where movies above a certain budget seem to justify their own expense by adopting a detached irony – The Pope’s Exorcist is the kind of goofball sincerity so many of us hunger for. It’s not going to work for everyone, but if you are the kind of viewer who ends up on its wavelength – by god, what a ride.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Apr 14, 2023
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- Matthew Monagle
We need gentle comedies like this in the world; we certainly need more movies that remind us of why we fell in love with Owen Wilson in the first place. Like the work of Carl Nargle, history will hopefully be very kind to what McAdams has created.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Apr 5, 2023
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- Matthew Monagle
Torres peels back layers of the immigrant story in something packaged as entertainment. It may appear whimsical, but you don’t need to dig too deep beneath the surface to find universal emotions underneath.- The Playlist
- Posted Mar 17, 2023
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- Matthew Monagle
If you are in the market for a movie called Cocaine Bear, all you want to know is that the premise does not jump the shark in the very first act. If nothing else, it seems that Elizabeth Banks has used Cocaine Bear as an excuse to work with several of her favorite television actors of the 2010s – and then kill them off in the most glorious way possible.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Feb 23, 2023
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- Matthew Monagle
It is this combination of maximalism, nationalism, fatalism, and two-dimensional characterization that makes this one of the most enjoyable current franchises.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Jan 20, 2023
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- Matthew Monagle
There’s still a lot to recommend in what is largely a charming little occult thriller, but Cooper still has a way to go before he can fully trust his instincts in horror.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Dec 21, 2022
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- Matthew Monagle
Despite so many pieces that fail to fit together, Emancipation succeeds on entertainment alone.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Dec 8, 2022
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- Matthew Monagle
When the film leans too heavily into violence, it undercuts the comedy; when the comedy takes center stage, it makes for an awkward bedfellow with the hard-R violence that defines the fight sequences. It’s a tricky line to walk for a Christmas movie – even one as unconventional as this – and Violent Night is not above the occasional stumble.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Nov 30, 2022
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- Matthew Monagle
From a soundtrack of First Nations artists – including a score by the award-winning electronic group the Halluci Nation (fka A Tribe Called Red) – and stunning landscape cinematography by Guy Godfree, there are so many dynamic elements in Slash/Back that cause the film to punch way above its weight class.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Oct 19, 2022
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- Matthew Monagle
Even if Medieval occasionally succumbs to its worst biopic influences, it’s still a delightfully confident work from a filmmaking team that knows its way around a sword.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Sep 8, 2022
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- Matthew Monagle
While James Ponsoldt (The Spectacular Now, The End of the Tour) authors a slightly uneven depiction of childhood, Summering still captures the gentle doom of being aware that your life is about change forever.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Aug 11, 2022
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- Matthew Monagle
There is a lot to like about The Phantom of the Open – and just as much to quibble over – but ultimately, the world can easily stomach a few treacle movies if they are this grounded in failure.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Jun 22, 2022
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- Matthew Monagle
There are a handful of filmmakers – Wind River director Taylor Sheridan comes to mind – who carry the torch of the American Western forward into the present. Like Sheridan’s films, Montana Story introduces an element of finality to the American West.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted May 25, 2022
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- Matthew Monagle
With so many video game adaptations being little more than live-action fanfiction, Uncharted stands out by feeling like an actual movie, mostly eschewing fan service in favor of little organic beats between characters.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Feb 17, 2022
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- Matthew Monagle
With a few standout performances and production design that imbues it with a good amount of period shine, it may yet find a receptive audience.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Jan 20, 2022
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- Matthew Monagle
The Last Duel is a thematic gold mine, one that sits nicely alongside some of Scott’s best work to date.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Oct 14, 2021
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- Matthew Monagle
If you can sit through the occasional sermon about the role of police in modern society, you’ll find yourself in the lap of true action greatness.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Aug 12, 2021
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- Matthew Monagle
Free Guy takes the time to create something unique and grounded and make us care about the future of these NPCs. With every reason in the world to fail, Free Guy succeeds. It’s a welcome reminder that sincerity can still play as the basis for a Hollywood blockbuster.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Aug 9, 2021
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- Matthew Monagle
The challenge for the audience is to simply keep up. Jallikattu is such sensory overload – containing so many crowded images and rhythmic cuts – that we almost need a little distance to fully appreciate what the filmmakers have pulled off.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Jun 2, 2021
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- Matthew Monagle
Perhaps this approach makes A Quiet Place II the cinematic answer to downloadable content, a standalone adventure that offers new levels but no new narrative.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted May 26, 2021
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- Matthew Monagle
Final Account is about today as much as yesterday, and that makes it perhaps the most urgent World War II documentary of them all.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted May 20, 2021
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- Matthew Monagle
Wrath of Man may soon occupy the same rarified air as Joe Carnahan’s The Grey, another film anchored by an aging action star that promised revenge and delivered something more.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted May 10, 2021
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- Matthew Monagle
Limbo may be a smiling teardown of any society that actively facilitates the deportation of its most vulnerable inhabitants, but there’s a wildness in the film’s eyes – a darkness Sharrock only feels comfortable approaching through artifice and sentimentality – that betrays the political message underneath.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Apr 29, 2021
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- Matthew Monagle
Anyone who spent the ‘90s in the Action-Adventure section of their local video store will find a kindred spirit in SAS: Red Notice. There’s more than a little Under Siege or Executive Decision in the film’s DNA, a prolonged, wrong-place-wrong-time gunfight featuring a creature of Western foreign policy’s own making.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Apr 15, 2021
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- Matthew Monagle
Only those who have been through this experience – who have cared for a loved one who has dementia – can speak to the accuracy of this approach. For the rest of us, The Father will serve as welcome humanization of those suffering from a most alien disease.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Mar 11, 2021
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- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Mar 1, 2021
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- Matthew Monagle
Tankian has crafted a movie with an overt political ideology and cast himself as the well-intentioned face of a cultural revolution. But none of this takes away from the issues at the center of the film – public recognition of the Armenian genocide for one, the enduring challenges of democracy in post-Soviet countries for another – and the countless people who looked to Tankian and System of a Down to help spread their stories across the world.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Feb 17, 2021
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- Matthew Monagle
With elements of psychological terror, spiritual warfare, and even a dash of repressed sexual urges, Saint Maud is the kind of complicated, slippery horror that fans will talk about for years to come. This is the horror film most A24 titles wish they could be.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Jan 28, 2021
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- Matthew Monagle
Greenland might be a B-movie at heart, but in keeping at least one toe on the ground at all times, the filmmakers craft something that punches well above its weight class. Here’s to one of the more consistently surprising director/actor relationships of our era.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Dec 17, 2020
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