Michael Snydel
Select another critic »For 57 reviews, this critic has graded:
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40% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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57% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 0.5 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Michael Snydel's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 66 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Only Yesterday (1991) | |
| Lowest review score: | Vice | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 35 out of 57
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Mixed: 17 out of 57
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Negative: 5 out of 57
57
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Michael Snydel
Presented as multiple chapters that cloak a structure of two discrete halves, the problem is less the film’s fiendish compulsion to shock its audience with sudden body horror or its corkscrewing narrative than its design being seemingly reverse engineered to complete that purpose.- The Film Stage
- Posted May 24, 2019
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- Michael Snydel
Unfortunately, Pilon’s performance is by far the most engaging part of the film, a restless but ultimately familiar crossbreeding of coming-out experience, after school special, and sports achievement story.- The Film Stage
- Posted Mar 5, 2018
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- Michael Snydel
In nearly everything other than its visuals, Early Man feels as ancient as its time period, a forgotten relic hibernating in development until its belated release. But coming from a studio and director who’ve repeatedly found new ways to reinvent the wheel, it’s extra disappointing to see them release something so primitive.- The Film Stage
- Posted Feb 16, 2018
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- Michael Snydel
Morgan struggles to make even a single fight between two people not look like it was edited with a shredder.- The Film Stage
- Posted Aug 30, 2016
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- Michael Snydel
While the first half meditates on the inconsistency of intimacy and the ways that small things (e.g. close ex-girlfriends) grow to be daggers, the second half adopts a psychological severity that makes My King feel imbalanced.- The Film Stage
- Posted Aug 25, 2016
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- Michael Snydel
Jacquot’s Diary of a Chambermaid ultimately feels beholden to art-house dictates, especially with an ending that’s less confounding than poorly articulated.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jun 15, 2016
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- Michael Snydel
In a Valley of Violence feigns to be a revisionist western, but it’s frustratingly stuck in a place of inevitability in the last half. It’s an excellently-made imitation, but coming from a director whose made a career of tilting the familiar, it’s a disappointing detour.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jun 15, 2016
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- Michael Snydel
The Next Cut is a love letter to Chicago, and a plea for a better city, but it’s a sermon when it should have been a conversation.- The Film Stage
- Posted Apr 27, 2016
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- Michael Snydel
First Monday in May gathers together some of the most influential and radical contemporary figures in fashion, offers a comprehensive view into the creation of a groundbreaking fashion exhibition, and profiles one of the most exclusive figures in the world. And yet, somehow it all feels incredibly familiar.- The Film Stage
- Posted Apr 27, 2016
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- Michael Snydel
There’s no doubt Hockney deserves appreciation for his artistic influence, but this documentary is less a reflection of his singular presence than the result of haphazardly mashing together a fascinating life.- The Film Stage
- Posted Apr 27, 2016
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- Michael Snydel
There’s a potentially good story to be mined here, probably most likely with the mother, but every time it starts to find fertile emotional ground, it can’t help but become distracted and search for another surface.- The Film Stage
- Posted Apr 14, 2016
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- Michael Snydel
Whiskey Tango Foxtrot is a galling, casually offensive, and deeply unsatisfying film.- The Film Stage
- Posted Mar 3, 2016
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- Michael Snydel
While the film becomes a constant test to outdo itself, the raw ambition isn’t nearly enough to make up for the content of the actual film: an ungainly, ugly, nearly interminable monstrosity.- The Film Stage
- Posted Feb 26, 2016
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- Michael Snydel
Even at its most transparently manipulative, Risen doesn’t feel punishing. It’s universally good-natured without feeling too conniving.- The Film Stage
- Posted Feb 19, 2016
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- The Film Stage
- Posted Feb 18, 2016
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- Michael Snydel
As a study of grief, it’s moving, featuring authentic performances and a keen understanding of the receding hibernation that comes with losing a cornerstone person in one’s life. As a romance, it’s slow-going but believable. And as a look at the unfair mythos attributed to the dead, it’s nuanced and incisive. But in attempting to balance these complementary parts, Tumbledown is buried by its own ambitions.- The Film Stage
- Posted Feb 9, 2016
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- Michael Snydel
There’s a very good love story here, but it needed to be about one relationship, not the nature of romance itself.- The Film Stage
- Posted Feb 5, 2016
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