Melissa Anderson
Select another critic »For 371 reviews, this critic has graded:
-
30% higher than the average critic
-
3% same as the average critic
-
67% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 8.3 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Melissa Anderson's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 57 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | The Royal Road | |
| Lowest review score: | Another Happy Day | |
Score distribution:
-
Positive: 142 out of 371
-
Mixed: 175 out of 371
-
Negative: 54 out of 371
371
movie
reviews
-
- Melissa Anderson
Thoroughly researched and packed with phenomenal archival footage, it's a rousing tribute to a mesmerizing performer that forgoes blind hero worship.- Village Voice
- Posted Apr 17, 2012
- Read full review
-
- Melissa Anderson
Though Snitch loudly announces itself as a social-issues movie, its nominal outrage over the severity of our nation's sentencing laws for first-time drug offenders is quickly subsumed by a jacked-up narrative of a father going to extremes to save his son.- Village Voice
- Posted Feb 21, 2013
- Read full review
-
- Melissa Anderson
Referents and identities are always slightly unfixed in Neruda, a film that reaches dizzying, exhilarating velocity by flouting the conventions of its hidebound genre.- Village Voice
- Posted Dec 13, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Melissa Anderson
Stranger abounds with precision and detail, evinced not just in the spectacular visual composition but also in the observation of behavioral codes in carnally charged spaces.- Village Voice
- Posted Jan 21, 2014
- Read full review
-
- Melissa Anderson
Denis quickly immerses us in her voluptuous, allusive mode of storytelling.- Village Voice
- Read full review
-
- Melissa Anderson
The dread and unease that suffuse the film — never has the peal of a rotary phone sounded more terrifying — seem rooted partly in anxiety over second-wave feminism, the cresting of which nearly coincided with the release of this movie, one that centers on its heroine’s profound ambivalence about growing emotionally attached to a man.- Village Voice
- Read full review
-
- Melissa Anderson
Plunging viewers into the thick of chaos, Leviathan explodes the antiquated paradigm of the documentary or ethnographic film, whose mission has traditionally been to educate or elucidate, to create something that seizes us, never letting us forget just how disordered the world is. This may be the greatest lesson any nonfiction film can teach us.- Village Voice
- Posted Feb 26, 2013
- Read full review
-
- Melissa Anderson
McKay's bumptious movie awkwardly combines fourth-wall-breaking gimmickry and flaccid indignation with the goofball energy that defines his comedies.- Village Voice
- Posted Dec 8, 2015
- Read full review
-
- Melissa Anderson
Sometimes you just can't fight the funk; as much as you might resist the film's more maudlin scenes, not succumbing to the band's signature tune, "Head Wiggle," is impossible.- Village Voice
- Posted Sep 20, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Melissa Anderson
Daughters of the Dust abounds with stunning motifs and tableaux, the iconography seemingly sourced from dreams as much as from history and folklore. But however seductive and trance-inducing, the visual splendor of Dash's film is never vaporous.- Village Voice
- Read full review
-
- Melissa Anderson
Guggenheim's insistence on not engaging with the injustices that children of certain races and classes face outside of school makes his reiteration of the obvious-that "past all the noise and the debate, nothing will change without great teachers"-seem all the more willfully naïve.- Village Voice
- Read full review
-
- Melissa Anderson
Though The Sleeping Beauty ends ambiguously, it remains consistent with the logic that Breillat has laid out: A girl's childhood and adolescence are often culturally sanctioned confinements. But the prisoners aren't always victims; the jails can be escaped through the courage to "go alone into the world."- Village Voice
- Posted Jul 5, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Melissa Anderson
His gift-and the film's-is to transform the seemingly banal relationship between pet and owner into something singular, inimitable, sacred.- Village Voice
- Posted Jan 15, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Melissa Anderson
Sweetgrass reminds us of the stupefying magnificence of its setting—beautiful for spacious skies and mountain majesties—while never letting us forget its formidable perils.- Village Voice
- Posted Jul 9, 2013
- Read full review
-
- Melissa Anderson
A triumph of maximalist filmmaking. And you won't look at your watch once.- Village Voice
- Read full review
-
- Melissa Anderson
Hawkes and Hunt nobly tackle the physical demands their roles require.- Village Voice
- Posted Oct 17, 2012
- Read full review
-
- Melissa Anderson
Terrified of alienating those who were raised on the originals, The Muppets panders to them instead, constantly blasting or restaging Top 40 hits from the past three-plus decades, continuing the cheap strategy that worked well on YouTube two years ago with the Muppets' cover of "Bohemian Rhapsody."- Village Voice
- Posted Nov 22, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Melissa Anderson
The first 10 minutes of Dee Rees's funny, moving, nuanced, and impeccably acted first feature, in which coming of age and coming out are inseparable, sharply reveal the conflicts that 17-year-old Alike (Adepero Oduye) faces.- Village Voice
- Posted Dec 27, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Melissa Anderson
When Guadagnino focuses solely on the primal, the effect is spellbinding. Only the words get in the way.- Village Voice
- Read full review
-
- Melissa Anderson
Conveying, with a light touch, important lessons for kids on the necessity of civic engagement, the perils of edit-ad conflicts, and the need to honor difference, Miss Minoes is also an ailurophile's dream, featuring a fantastic array of tabbies, calicos, and Birmans that always hit their marks.- Village Voice
- Posted Dec 20, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Melissa Anderson
In equal parts mesmerizing and disorienting, Over Your Cities (the title comes from the biblical story of Lilith) plunges viewers into the earth, wind, and fire of Kiefer's massive-scale projects.- Village Voice
- Posted Aug 9, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Melissa Anderson
The quick-witted malcontent, a Morristown, New Jersey, refugee who arrived at Port Authority in 1969, is the best kind of New Yorker: one with a long memory who's averse to nostalgia.- Village Voice
- Posted Feb 22, 2011
- Read full review
-
- Melissa Anderson
Despite the nonstop banality, Johnson remains the sole source of allure: Her sleepy eyes suggest nights devoted to pleasure inconceivable to James.- Village Voice
- Posted Feb 10, 2017
- Read full review
-
- Melissa Anderson
In his sympathetic and intelligent Dickinson biopic, A Quiet Passion, Terence Davies honors his subject by remaining true to this observation from the poet herself: "To live is so startling, it leaves but little room for other occupations."- Village Voice
- Posted Apr 12, 2017
- Read full review
-
- Melissa Anderson
Watching this taciturn man grow close to mother and child - close enough that he experiences twinges of jealousy and abandonment toward the end of Las Acacias - is one of the most satisfying spectacles in a movie this year, a time-lapse of emotions rendered perfectly.- Village Voice
- Posted Sep 4, 2012
- Read full review
-
- Melissa Anderson
When one goes to see Kristen Stewart — among the most quicksilver of her generation's performers — in Olivier Assayas's Personal Shopper, a shape-shifting, resolutely of-this-moment ghost story that features her in nearly every frame, one goes not to watch her act but refract.- Village Voice
- Posted Mar 9, 2017
- Read full review
-
- Village Voice
- Posted Jun 5, 2012
- Read full review
-
- Melissa Anderson
A funky, nonfiction tribute to the great avant-garde saxophonist Ornette Coleman, Ornette upends the staid portrait-of-the-artist formula, and it tinkers with and discards the conventions of the bio documentary just as its pioneering musician subject exploded those of jazz.- Village Voice
- Posted Aug 28, 2012
- Read full review
-
- Melissa Anderson
Clinical in the extreme, Evolution aims for open-endedness, but the film, unlike its pint-size protagonists, remains impenetrable.- Village Voice
- Posted Nov 22, 2016
- Read full review
-
- Melissa Anderson
What's riveting and attention grabbing in Jarecki's recapitulations of failed policy are some of the talking heads he has assembled, including "The Wire" creator David Simon and historian Richard Lawrence Miller.- Village Voice
- Posted Oct 2, 2012
- Read full review