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
It’s a low-fi rumination on inexplicable and gradually more threatening loneliness — the sort of childhood trauma typically explained to death by horror movies less interesting than this one.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jan 11, 2023
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- Michael Phillips
It’s the junky, janky mid-winter Liam Neeson thriller we used to get with that first flip of the calendar, only this one stars Gerard Butler, and is directed by Jean-Francois Richet, whose two-part gangster biopic “Mesrine” was pretty juicy. This one’s more pulp than juice, but it’s enjoyable.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jan 11, 2023
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- Michael Phillips
A pleasantly nutty thriller about a crafty, high-end toy, M3GAN exploits a child’s grief for the greater good of the killer-doll genre. That may be enough for 100 minutes of your early January.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jan 6, 2023
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- Michael Phillips
Not all the anachronisms work, but Corsage works anyway because Krieps makes Elisabeth a dimensional woman for all seasons.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Jan 6, 2023
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- Michael Phillips
The actors and director Lemmons accomplish what the screenplay does only partially: make us believe the circumstances and the behavior.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 22, 2022
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- Michael Phillips
I love what The Whale is doing for Fraser’s career. But not since John Wells blanded out the movie version of “August: Osage County” has a well-regarded play looked quite so at sea on screen.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 20, 2022
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- Michael Phillips
Loosely entwining a half-dozen major characters, though two or three get disappointingly short shrift, “Babylon” thins out all too quickly, settling for a strenuous ode to the dream factory and its victims and exploiters, who occasionally make wondrous things for the screen.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 20, 2022
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- Michael Phillips
The film is a gem — a supple, unpredictably structured and deeply personal portrait of its primary subject, the photographer, visual artist and activist Nan Goldin.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 16, 2022
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- Michael Phillips
As with most Cameron blockbusters, “The Way of Water” has a way of pulling you in, surrounding you with gorgeous, violent chaos and finishing with a quick rinse to get the remnants of its teeny-tiny plot out of your eyes by the final credits.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 13, 2022
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- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 10, 2022
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- Michael Phillips
As written by Field and modulated, brilliantly, by Blanchett, Lydia becomes a rhapsody in contrasts, controlling, fastidious, witty, steely, imperious, hubristic. It’s a huge, showy role, and the beautiful paradox — one among many here — is that Blanchett has never been subtler.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 10, 2022
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- Michael Phillips
Emancipation is never dull, but it’s rarely without its box office instincts for falsification front and center, alongside its star. And while it has been built on the scarred back of a real man, the movie is too busy with the business of entertainment to focus on the “real” part for long.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 2, 2022
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- Michael Phillips
Diop is a reactive wonder as well as an exceptional scene partner as she strategizes, subtly, how to work with or around or deflect the microaggressions coming from her “new family” and, more happily, her few friends in this strange new land.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 1, 2022
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- Michael Phillips
I found Violent Night to be a joyless slay ride, not to mention verbally witless. There’s not much kick in seeing an R-rated version of “Home Alone,” and even that owed its home-invasion nastiness to Sam Peckinpah’s “Straw Dogs.”- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Dec 1, 2022
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- Michael Phillips
This filmmaker has earned the right to make a movie about why he makes movies the way he does. And with Williams and Dano, especially, he gets performances that can match the technique.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 23, 2022
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- Michael Phillips
I hoped for a movie relatively free of Hollywood hogwash and melodramatics, and got it. What I didn’t expect was the calm brilliance of scenes such as Jennifer Ehle and Samantha Morton, playing two of Weinstein’s 1990s targets, telling their stories so truthfully, with such economical emotional punch, that it’s both heartbreaking and enough to make you seethe.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 18, 2022
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- Michael Phillips
Part “Seven,” part haute-cuisine “Saw,” part reality cooking show, director Mylod’s film finally isn’t sure of how far to push the effrontery. It helps, however, to have Fiennes in the kitchen and a Nordic smokehouse out back.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 18, 2022
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- Michael Phillips
[Mitchell’s] celebration of these films is seriously entertaining.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 17, 2022
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- Michael Phillips
Most films would take pains to spell out the answers, eventually. “Aftersun” works more obliquely and poetically, leaving prosaic touches to other filmmakers.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 11, 2022
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- Michael Phillips
I do think “Wakanda Forever” has plenty of what the enormous “Black Panther” fan base wants in a “Black Panther” sequel. There’s real emotion in the best material here. The loss of Boseman was enormous. So is the skill level of the actors, returning and new, who make the most of a pretty good sequel.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 8, 2022
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- Michael Phillips
The movie has a sense of humor, but its sense of dread, micro and macro, overrules it.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 4, 2022
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- Michael Phillips
Wendell & Wild may not succeed, but I took heart from this: At least it doesn’t succeed in unconventional ways. That’s a sign of serious talents struggling with two of the most dreaded and unavoidable words in commercial cinema: “story problems.”- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 1, 2022
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- Michael Phillips
Decision to Leave, director and co-writer Park Chan-wook’s dazzling, confounding, gorgeously crafted variation on a dangerously familiar film trope, takes its component parts and comes up with something no one has ever built before.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Nov 1, 2022
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- Michael Phillips
The result is McDonagh’s most fully realized work since his breakthrough play, “The Beauty Queen of Leenane,” a generation ago. “Banshees” has its limitations; it’s pretty glib, like everything McDonagh writes, in its mashup of blackhearted laughs and occasional sincerity. He’s akin to the Coen brothers in that regard. He’s also a formidable craftsman and his best lines are pearls.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 26, 2022
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- Michael Phillips
It’s a premise for a pitch, not a screenplay, at least not a sharp-witted or interesting one. I’m not fussy. I’m not looking for the most interesting romantic comedy in history with this one. But I do wonder if some writers are so determined to stick to a formula so slavishly, they forget to make the characters funny, or to make characters rather than vaguely delineated personae in the Clooney vein or Roberts vibe.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 20, 2022
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- Michael Phillips
All I can tell you is this: It’s more than movie enough to justify the theatrical experience.- Chicago Tribune
- Posted Oct 14, 2022
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