Michael Wilmington
Select another critic »For 1,969 reviews, this critic has graded:
-
75% higher than the average critic
-
2% same as the average critic
-
23% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 7.1 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Michael Wilmington's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 73 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Sweet Sixteen | |
| Lowest review score: | Repossessed | |
Score distribution:
-
Positive: 1,505 out of 1969
-
Mixed: 305 out of 1969
-
Negative: 159 out of 1969
1969
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
-
- Michael Wilmington
As we watch, we can sense, once again, the eye of a painter, the dreams of a poet and, tying them together, the vision of a master.- Chicago Tribune
-
- Michael Wilmington
This landmark movie's madcap humor and terrifying suspense remain undiminished by time.- Chicago Tribune
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Tribune
- Read full review
-
- Michael Wilmington
It's a nail-biter and knuckle whitener of the first rank: a super real life techno thriller that reduces the fantasies of Tom Clancy and his clones to ground zero.- Chicago Tribune
-
- Michael Wilmington
El Dorado is essentially a darker remake of Rio Bravo, with Wayne, Robert Mitchum, Hunnicutt and James Caan as the now archetypal quartet. But, though the situation is the same, the mood is crisper, tenser, with a heightened sense of pain, loss and death underlying the humor and action.- Chicago Tribune
- Read full review
-
- Michael Wilmington
Totally original and personal, this is a vast modern comic/poetic epic, lyrical, austere and strange. Despite its failure, Playtime is now regarded by many critics as one of the century's film masterpieces. [09 Jan 1998, p.M]- Chicago Tribune
-
- Michael Wilmington
The things that make me love the movie are the mood, the hardboiled but good-hearted morality, Hawks' consummately professional eye-level style and those wonderful characters. [28 Jul 2006, p.C7]- Chicago Tribune
-
- Michael Wilmington
Kurosawa's 1958 classic samurai comedy adventure; George Lucas used it as the model for Star Wars, in which Mifune and the two squabbling farmers are transformed into Han Solo, C-3PO and R2-D2. [03 Mar 2006, p.C5]- Chicago Tribune
-
- Michael Wilmington
Magnificent to look at, thrilling, ingenious, spellbinding and superbly done on every level, this is not just one of the best films of the year or the decade, but of all time.- Chicago Tribune
- Read full review
-
- Michael Wilmington
Some scholars may scowl, some lowbrows may scoff. But, like wordwise Will, these filmmakers know how to win a crowd -- from the queen down to the groundlings, from the sky above to the stage below. Bravo! [5 December 1998, Friday, p.A]- Chicago Tribune
-
- Michael Wilmington
This is a romance with minimal physical contact and sex--and that's part of what makes it work so well as a love story.- Chicago Tribune
- Read full review
-
- Michael Wilmington
The protracted scenes of eating, cooking and cleaning carry neo-realism to its end point -- and to a violent climax which emerges logically and terrifyingly from the welter of daily trivia preceding it. [24 Oct 1997, p.L]- Chicago Tribune
-
- Michael Wilmington
Sumptuously exciting, glowing with expertise, seething with life, gorgeously designed and thrillingly articulated.- Chicago Tribune
- Read full review
-
- Michael Wilmington
Made after Visconti's second paralyzing stroke, in darkly splendid Roman interiors, this is a somber, meditative, confessional work about corruption and mortality, the ways the world and desire batter down even the most protected doors. [17 Oct 1994, p.5C]- Chicago Tribune
-
- Michael Wilmington
The film is truly special, truly different -- a wondrous talky roundelay about and for people who love life.- Chicago Tribune
- Read full review
-
- Michael Wilmington
An amazing celluloid poem by a filmmaker whom Ingmar Bergman called "the greatest." He very nearly was. He was also, perhaps, too pure a creator and reckless a citizen to survive unscathed.- Chicago Tribune
- Read full review
-
- Michael Wilmington
The suspense is pulse tearing, but Hitchcock, in a movie made explicitly for the war effort, gives it an extra edge. Also, in his favorite and most ingenious cameo role, Hitch solves the problem of appearing in a film with no extras -- the cast consists only of the other shipwreck survivors -- by having himself photographed before and after losing 100 pounds on a special crash diet. [15 Nov 2005, p.C3]- Chicago Tribune
-
- Michael Wilmington
It is a story of eerie beauty, overpowering fear and almost no solace at all -- save perhaps for a few jazzy chords on the night club piano and the chirp of the bullfinch in that empty, empty room. [06 Jun 1997, p.C]- Chicago Tribune
-
- Michael Wilmington
You may not like Beau Travail - which is, after all, a quintessential "critic's film" - but I think you'll have to admit it's been almost perfectly executed.- Chicago Tribune
- Read full review
-
- Michael Wilmington
The script is by Anthony Shaffer (Sleuth) and the mixture of dry wit and terror is expert. Hitchcock, who was 73 when he directed, demonstrates all his old skill and romantic pessimism. [26 Nov 1999, p.A]- Chicago Tribune
-
- Michael Wilmington
A beautiful and genuinely spirit-lifting film about poverty and education.- Chicago Tribune
- Read full review
-
- Michael Wilmington
One of the great, outrageously irreverent American movie comedies. [27 Sep 2005, p.C3]- Chicago Tribune
-
- Michael Wilmington
Days of Heaven is the grand climax of the whole "Bonnie and Clyde"-"Badlands" tradition of outlaw-lovers-on-the-run movies. Shot by Nestor Almendros and the uncredited Haskell Wexler, it's a cinematographic masterpiece. [20 March 1998]- Chicago Tribune
-
- Michael Wilmington
An adaptation of Rudyard Kipling's tale of the follies of adventure--beautifully directed and shot (by Oswald Morris) and perfectly cast. [11 July 2003, p.C5]- Chicago Tribune
-
- Michael Wilmington
A movie I loved on first sight and, even more important, love in remembrance. Taken all in all, there's only one last thing to say about it. Go.- Chicago Tribune
- Read full review
-
- Michael Wilmington
A great, haunting film; it affects us in ways we're not used to...it is capable of both lifting our hearts and chilling us to the bone.- Chicago Tribune
- Read full review
-
- Michael Wilmington
Brando made Don Vito something we rarely see in movies: a tragicomic villain-hero, a vulnerable hood. The don is so close to a comic character -- the movie itself is so close to comedy -- that Brando's capacity to move us in the role is doubly impressive. At the end, it is the older Godfather's tenderness and sagacity we recall. [21 Mar 1997, Friday, p.A]- Chicago Tribune
-
- Michael Wilmington
A film that can tear you apart emotionally; it's both one of the great movie soap operas and a powerful indictment of racism. Sirk's cool, elegant style--smooth as silk on top, jagged and hot with feeling below--has rarely been joined to a more perfect subject. [05 May 2006, p.C9]- Chicago Tribune
-
- Michael Wilmington
Romero's newest is a horror movie for hard-core fans of the gory and the gruesome and a classic genre film for genre aficionados.- Chicago Tribune
- Read full review
-
- Chicago Tribune
- Read full review