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 movie’s good even when it goes in too many directions at once, because it gets the kids right.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Aug 8, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
This material, though, is damn thin. Like so many films derived from the pictures and words of a graphic novel, The Kitchen feels perfunctory and sterile and under-detailed.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Aug 7, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
Not everything here is perfect; the musical score, by Norwegian composer John Erik Kaada, favors ambient sonic wanderings that smooth over the conflicts on screen. But by the end, you feel as though you’ve truly gotten to know a full range of Kabul residents through their daily routines, joys, recreational diversions (kite-flying, slingshots, the international language of soccer) and bone-deep skepticism about the future.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Aug 7, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
Brian Banks proceeds non-chronologically, toggling between high school years and Banks’ post-prison life. This helps keep the audience on its toes. But it’s the actors who complicate things most fruitfully.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Aug 6, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
Vanessa Kirby of “The Crown” and “Mission: Impossible — Fallout” is the primary reason “Hobbs & Shaw” rises above pure formula and borderline-contemptible familiarity.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jul 31, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
Writer-director Tilman Singer casts a trancelike swirl incorporating elements of hypnosis, demonic transference, memories of sexual abuse and one of the furthest-out, least by-the-book police procedurals put on film.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jul 30, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
A determinedly easygoing comedy about the Israeli-Palestinian divide, Tel Aviv on Fire gets by on the low-keyed assurance of its cast and its medium-grade amusements.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jul 29, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
The results? More evocative than provocative. But evocative is not nothing.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jul 23, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
A glass three-fifths full, writer-director Lynn Shelton’s affable comedy Sword of Trust gets by on the improvisational wiles of its cast.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jul 16, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
Crucially, Wang and company found all the right actors to populate a semi-autobiographical tale of familial deception.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jul 15, 2019
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- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jul 12, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
The new music helps, a little. But the movie is a karaoke act, re-creating the original movie’s story beats beat-by-beat-by-beat.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jul 11, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
It’s good. It’s fun. It goes out of its way to salute the visual effects armies that have made the MCU what it is today, for better or worse.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jun 27, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
Pugh excels throughout. The movie works best, I think, as a black-comic treatise on what can befall a garden-variety passive-aggressive mixed blessing of a boyfriend if he’s not careful.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jun 25, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
Set in 1973, amid a forest of shag carpeting, Annabelle Comes Home is a nice little summer surprise, and quite unexpectedly the freshest of the three “Annabelle” movies spun off from the larger “Conjuring” galaxy of horror films.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jun 25, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
The stars, it must be said, are slightly more interesting than the characters, which is another way of saying Rogowski and Huller amplify what’s there on the page.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jun 19, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
How did an apparently sincere tribute turn into such a weirdly clueless vanity project?- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jun 17, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
While we all, as moviegoers, experience franchise and sequel fatigue on our own unpredictable timetables, this film brightens the summer without simply going through the motions.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jun 13, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
The musical score by Emile Mosseri of the band The Dig, is very fine stuff, supple and surprising in its blend of classical, jazz and pop strains. It adds to the otherworldly quality established and sustained so well by Talbot, and by the actors.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jun 12, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
Men in Black: International isn’t bad; it’s an improvement over “Men in Black II” (2002) and “Men in Black 3” (2012), sequels that even its makers may have forgotten.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jun 12, 2019
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- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jun 11, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
Though jarringly violent at times, the film becomes a wash of low-keyed comic attitudes thrown into the works of a crime story.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jun 6, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
I mean, whatever with the “X-Men” movies. It’s hard to even rent an opinion on the discrete strengths and weaknesses of a franchise that has devolved to the point of Dark Phoenix, a lavishly brutal chore nearly as violent as the Wolverine movie “Logan,” and a movie featuring more death by impalement and whirling metal than all the “Saw” movies put together.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jun 4, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
It moves with confidence; it’s vivid; it pulls off a riskier, full-on musical fantasy version of one pop superstar’s story.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted May 30, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
In every good way, thanks primarily to Wong and Park and their chemistry, Always Be My Maybe is pure commercial product, yet it feels authentically alive where it counts.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted May 30, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
The script’s quippy streak could’ve used better jokes. But this is one franchise that doesn’t feel fished out or exhausted or exhausting.The monsters, Toho studio classics redesigned but faithfully so, are pretty swell and monumentally destructive.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted May 28, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
It plays as a comedy in its structure, and a drama in the margins, on the sidelines. Minor, clever, wonderfully acted, Non-Fiction makes room for jokes about “Star Wars,” Michael Haneke’s “The White Ribbon” and, at one point, Binoche herself. It’s funny that way.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted May 24, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
Mainly, Booksmart works because Kaitlyn Dever and Beanie Feldstein are so magically right together.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted May 22, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
As stand-alones, some of these work better than others. Director Jon Favreau’s “The Jungle Book” came off as a real movie unto itself, as did Kenneth Branagh’s sincere, well-acted “Cinderella” (I was in the minority on that one). Aladdin, though, feels pointless. It’s cinematic karaoke. It’s an ice show without the ice.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted May 22, 2019
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- Michael Phillips
The movie’s sleekly assaultive aesthetic owes everything to the gaming world, but the amalgamation of practical, physical effects and digital flourishes, most evident in a motorcycle chase on the Verrazzano Bridge, take the movie out of an earthly realm entirely.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted May 14, 2019
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