Michael Wilmington
Select another critic »For 1,969 reviews, this critic has graded:
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75% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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23% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 7.2 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:
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Positive: 1,505 out of 1969
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Mixed: 305 out of 1969
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Negative: 159 out of 1969
1969
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Michael Wilmington
It's a movie that's almost all style, all technique. It doesn't seem to be inhabited by people, thoughts or feelings, but by great coruscating patterns of light crashing over and over us, repeatedly--almost, but not quite, drowning out a constant buzz of cliches.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
This is an intoxicatingly amusing blend of cynical urbane comedy, slick detection and breezy romance. [24 Jun 2005, p.C6]- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- 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
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- Michael Wilmington
An overblown, overspectacular, oversold movie without an original idea in its head.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Code Unknown is a film you think more than feel. Though each scene is executed close to flawlessly, the cumulative effect is often oppressive. But at the center of the film -- the real reason it was made -- is Binoche, one of the genuinely radiant presences in movies today.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
In the end, grips us precisely because its actors are so utterly absorbed in their roles, so unfettered and nakedly expressive. This is the kind of acting we always look for, but rarely see.- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
An exquisitely realized film; a little gem, it keeps its conflicting or varying themes of tranquility and violence, sacred and profane love, recklessness and wisdom, in almost perfect balance.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
It's an ultra-slick, ultra-flat movie that cuts like a cellophane knife. No edge, no blood.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
A short film with a unique subject matter. But you won't soon forget its people, its places or its sad, surprising revelations about all the sexes.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Maxwell Anderson's poetic-political play about crime and fascism, set in a "Petrified Forest"-style ensemble during a Key West hurricane, was turned by Huston and co-writer Richard Brooks into a crackling thriller. [27 Nov 1998, p.Q]- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Despite some impressive technical achievements, it too looks like a movie with little reason for being.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
It's a moving tale of love and destruction in unexpected places, unexamined lives.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Corny as it may sound though, it's all true-except, of course, for that mythical movie last-second championship bit.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The actors in Nadja seem to be having such a good time that it's a shame the movie doesn't give them more room, and get even wilder and more eccentric.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
The film now seems less urbane and innovative, more coldly flashy and bluntly affected -- full of sound and Furie, signifying little. [2 June 1987, p.Cal-1]- Los Angeles Times
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- 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
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- Michael Wilmington
Campbell and her character are willing to take chances. But Toback's tangled noirish plot, with Vera as a post-feminist femme fatale, isn't particularly clever or original.- Chicago Tribune
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- Chicago Tribune
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- 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
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- Michael Wilmington
Chungking Express is a breezy little Hong Kong movie that has more life, energy, humanity and sheer visual zing than most other shows you'll see in a month or so. And, an hour after watching it, you may indeed be hungry for more. Not necessarily because the show is shallow or unsatisfying, or doesn't leave a strong impression, but because the spontaneity and high energy of it is what's so much fun.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Casual moviegoers may enjoy it, too, if they follow a simple rule: Stop looking for the way out and let yourself get lost.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Carpenter writes his own scripts -- here with past collaborator Larry Sulkis -- and their "Ghosts" screenplay lacks the density, character and humor of a Hollywood genre classic.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
It's a comedy about maniacs: a tasteful murder-comedy, which isn't that laudable a goal.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
But even if Hitchcock’s chase thrillers were the inspiration, with their falsely accused heroes fleeing police through exotic landscapes, the master wouldn’t have approved of this tribute. Logic, character, coherence, psychology--all those vital thriller elements disappear as quickly as the Iowa corn.- Los Angeles Times
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- Michael Wilmington
Possession needs a sharp eye, a wicked tongue, less reverence and much more of its author's voice.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
I liked Flirt better than any of Hartley's films since "Trust." The playfulness he shows here seems better integrated, more meaningful, than the strange narrative whimsies of 1992's "Simple Men" or 1994's "Amateur." [08 Nov 1996]- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
Slick, expensive and filled with good-looking actors flexing muscles, but once it grabs our attention it doesn't really reward it...this movie doesn't have fear -- or sheer wonder and marvel -- enough.- Chicago Tribune
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- Michael Wilmington
This is not an inspirational drama about finding yourself; it's a Hitchcockian comedy about adultery, murder and losing a corpse.- Chicago Tribune