Michael Phillips
Select another critic »For 2,578 reviews, this critic has graded:
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56% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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42% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 1 point higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Michael Phillips' Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 67 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | The Third Man | |
| Lowest review score: | Did You Hear About the Morgans? | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,779 out of 2578
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Mixed: 510 out of 2578
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Negative: 289 out of 2578
2578
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Michael Phillips
The film is about bargains made and broken and re-negotiated. You watch it in an anxious, protective state, regarding the fate of these characters, and this fallout.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Feb 28, 2020
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- Michael Phillips
The latest film version loosely adapting the Wells story exploits it both ways, subtly and crassly. It works, thanks largely to a riveting and fearsomely committed Elisabeth Moss mining writer-director Leigh Whannell’s stalker scenario for all sorts of psychological nuance.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Feb 27, 2020
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- Michael Phillips
The latest “Emma,” marking the feature directorial debut of Autumn de Wilde, is a little edgier, driven by a more ambiguous and emotionally guarded portrayal of the blithe young matchmaker played by Anya Taylor-Joy.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Feb 25, 2020
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- Michael Phillips
Not much music finds its way on the soundtrack, but what’s there is crucial. Vivaldi’s “Violin Concerto in G Minor," heard twice and strategically, ends up crystallizing the love story in ways we don’t see coming.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Feb 19, 2020
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- Michael Phillips
Seriously, the running time of Fantasy Island should be listed as “sometime tomorrow."- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Feb 14, 2020
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- Michael Phillips
The Photograph treats all its characters with some decency and understanding, in a genre where straw villains and cardboard adversaries typically run rampant. The plaintive, jazz-inflected musical score by Robert Glasper establishes the right vibe and level of drama, which is to say: more like life and less like the movies.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Feb 13, 2020
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- Michael Phillips
Besides being the best American film of our new year, writer-director Kitty Green’s drama The Assistant confounds expectations and has the strange effect (on me, anyway) of simultaneously chilling and boiling the viewer’s blood.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Feb 5, 2020
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- Michael Phillips
The movie is made well, if you’re buying what it’s selling, and if you don’t consider a story or a script as crucial to the quality of a thriller.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jan 29, 2020
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- Michael Phillips
It’s not straight-up realism; nor is it the usual moralizing, candy-coated melodrama. It’s just very, very good, and the scenes between Tenille and Perrier are very, very easily among the plaintive screen highlights of this new year.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jan 16, 2020
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- Michael Phillips
The problems begin and end with the script, credited to three writers. “Dolittle” turns its title character into an eccentric and wearying blur of tics, tacked onto a character who comports himself like a bullying, egocentric A-lister rather than someone who, you know, actually enjoys the company of animals.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jan 15, 2020
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- Michael Phillips
Bad Boys for Life may be a frantic visual blur but it’s razor-sharp thematically. Its mission, should you choose to accept it, is to make a jaded 2020 audience glad to see these guys again. The movie’s not the point. The boys are the point.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jan 15, 2020
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- Michael Phillips
Conceived and developed shortly after Haddish scored, deservedly, with “Girls Trip,”” the movie is a mechanical series of witless yeast infection jokes, or thereabouts. While director Miguel Arteta has made some interesting work in the past, including “The Good Girl” and “Beatriz at Dinner,” his way with low physical comedy here is pretty artless.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jan 8, 2020
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- Michael Phillips
What’s missing, I think, is a sense of human complication within an inhuman judicial sphere. While Foxx works wonders, especially in his scenes with Jordan, Just Mercy rarely gets under the skin or behind the eyes of McMillian.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jan 6, 2020
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- Michael Phillips
The latest nerve-shredder from Josh and Benny Safdie is worth seeing, even if it’s not their finest two hours, and even if half of any given audience will resent the hell out of it. Adam Sandler’s excellent.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 21, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
Is it the worst film of 2019, or simply the most recent misfire of 2019? Reader, I swear on a stack of pancakes: “Cats” cannot be beat for sheer folly and misjudgment and audience-reaction-to-“Springtime for Hitler”-in-“The Producers” stupefaction.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 18, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker does the job. It wraps up the trio of trilogies begun in 1977 in a confident, soothingly predictable way, doing all that cinematically possible to avoid poking the bear otherwise known as tradition-minded quadrants of the “Star Wars” fan base.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 18, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
However freely fictionalized, I like my docudramas with as much moral complication and human shading as filmmakers can provide. Years from now, it’d be wonderful to look back at something more than good actors, with or without wizardly prosthetics, taking our mind off what’s not quite right with the stories at hand.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 16, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
A different editing rhythm (and a less narcotic musical score) would substantially change the personality of this movie, for better or worse.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 12, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
Richard Jewell is a sincere and extremely well-acted irritant from 89-year-old director Clint Eastwood. It’s destined to get under the hides of different moviegoers in radically different ways.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 4, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
The second half’s a letdown — the audience knows where the movie’s going, and gets there before the movie does. Nonetheless it bodes nicely for longtime horror producer Travis Stevens, here making his feature debut behind the camera.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 3, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
I doubt Gerwig read the 1868 Tribune classifieds, but her film is, in fact, fresh, sparkling, natural and full of soul.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 2, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
It’s reassuring to see Hopkins return to form, after several years of authoritative coasting. As for Pryce, his affinity for morally comprised men of high achievement (“The Wife,” etc. ) keeps his portrayal of the film’s clear moral paragon from hardening into sainthood.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 2, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
There’s not much justice and very little peace for the characters portrayed by Kaluuya (terrific) and Turner-Smith (more of a novice, but often affecting, and a singular camera subject). Does it overreach? Here and there.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 22, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
Before long in 21 Bridges, the extent of the corruption becomes the top line of a vision test — far too easy to spot from a distance.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 21, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
Even with some padding, it’s a whodunit canny enough to take the human stakes inside the artifice seriously. And that allows a fine ensemble of side-eye champs the leeway to make Knives Out funny, too.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 20, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
The picture’s gliding energy is something to behold, and when Tyler’s predicaments turn to panic, and then worse, the suspense becomes nearly oppressive. In the second half, it’s a different style and a different focus entirely. There’s a scene in that half, a reconciliation of sorts between father and daughter, that’s just about perfect. And that scene is not alone.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 19, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
But Hanks, especially, keeps the trolley on the rails, and everything Heller is after in this film comes together in a remarkable final shot depicting Rogers alone in the TV studio, having made another friend.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 18, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
Everything about it flows and pays off better than the ’84 original.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 16, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
The movie itself occasionally gets lost in those woods, but finds its way back out again.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 15, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
Ford v Ferrari works as a stylish, enjoyable mash note to its era, and the need for speed and all that.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 13, 2019
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