Monica Castillo
Select another critic »For 381 reviews, this critic has graded:
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50% higher than the average critic
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5% same as the average critic
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45% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 2 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Monica Castillo's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 64 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Belfast | |
| Lowest review score: | City of Dreams | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 244 out of 381
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Mixed: 68 out of 381
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Negative: 69 out of 381
381
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Monica Castillo
Despite its rough edges, Fisher Stevens’ Palmer is a gentle drama. It doesn’t go as deep into Palmer’s emotions or mindset, but instead keeps them closely guarded in Timberlake’s gruff performance.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Jan 29, 2021
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- Monica Castillo
The film is just as much about politics as it is a family working out the demands of a politically active life with the demands of the home.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Jan 28, 2021
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- Monica Castillo
Identifying Features has a subtle frantic quality, a kind of restraint in bearing witness to the unspeakable horrors facing countless others who must stay silent.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Jan 22, 2021
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- Monica Castillo
Between its amateurish direction, pedestrian cinematography, and overly plotted script, the narrative and visuals don’t coalesce into a story that feels restorative, cathartic, or even joyful.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Jan 13, 2021
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- Monica Castillo
Thankfully, it’s Kirby’s performance that makes Pieces of a Woman memorable.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Dec 31, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
One thing that comes across so clearly in Finding Yingying is the ripple effect the disappearance of a loved one has on their family and friends. It’s a waking nightmare of uncertainty that stretches for years. A grief that’s always just on the surface waiting to unleash itself once again.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Dec 14, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
Writer and director Ekwa Msangi constructs this nontraditional narrative with an attention to detail for each of these characters. Just as important as their conversations is their body language and how it shifts around one another.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Dec 14, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
Because of the movie’s uneven story and characters, it’s a bumpy ride no matter which route you take.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Dec 9, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
The lack of a solid narrative means Stardust cannot compensate for the production’s modest budget, which lacks a noticeable amount of Bowie songs and includes many scenes filmed on the cheap.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Nov 27, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
While much of this Black Beauty strays from the original, the spirit of empathy and combatting animal cruelty remain intact.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Nov 27, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
As with the many trend pieces complaining about millennials spending too much money on avocado toast over home mortgages, Echo Boomers gets a lot wrong about the generation it wants to discuss. Maybe the filmmakers should have listened more.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Nov 13, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
The movie is so much more nuanced and bold than the first wave of outrage charged. With Cuties, Doucouré announces herself as a director with a keen visual style who’s unafraid to explore these cultural and social tensions.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Sep 10, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
Based on the Shakespeare play of the same name, Paul Ireland’s Measure for Measure is filled with drama, although perhaps not the kind you’d expect from the Bard. No, this is a modern-day adaptation—one grappling with xenophobia, drug addiction, and gun violence. There are no period costumes here, but there’s a stone-faced Hugo Weaving to make up for it.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Sep 4, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
The Garden Left Behind works best as a message movie, not for the community it’s set in but for everyone else.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Aug 28, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
A sweet but ineffective comedy that cashes in on drag culture’s new mainstream fame. While the movie brings up a handful of important topics, the way it handles issues like drug addiction and physical abuse ultimately feel superficial and hollow. Fortunately, a few sparkling performances salvage the show from becoming too maudlin.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Aug 21, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
Heading into the homestretch of this year’s election, Represent feels like a balm. A reminder that, win or lose, there’s something to be gained by reigniting people’s interest in civil engagement, especially at the local and state level.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Aug 14, 2020
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- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Aug 7, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
This version of La Llorona finds new emotional ground. It’s not just a creepy story, but a painful reflection of injustice.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Aug 6, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
The Cuban pulls together music, romance, loss, and memory into an emotional tale that spans cultures and generations. One thing connects them all: Cuban music.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Jul 31, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
You can soak in the movie’s basic premise and overacting just as long as you know this pool’s shallow.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Jul 24, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
If A Nice Girl Like You would have stayed the course of the book it’s based on, Ayn Carrillo-Gailey’s 2007 memoir Pornology, it might have been an interesting enough premise. Instead, Andrea Marcellus’ screen adaptation whitewashes the main character and moves the narrative into a more conventional territory, one centered on love over lust, tame over the risque.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Jul 17, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
Archive is a somewhat unwieldy sci-fi thriller to get into. The plot twists are many, and so are the cliches.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Jul 10, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
Welcome to Chechnya is both astonishingly groundbreaking in its use of technology, and difficult to watch.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Jun 30, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
There’s a quiet intensity that runs throughout The Audition. Although most of it feels like a subtle family and teacher drama, sharp anxious pangs occasionally disrupt the film’s otherwise gentle pace. Eventually, these feelings spin the film’s main character out-of-control into a truly baffling conclusion that feels neither right nor earned. It’s almost as if it were the ending of another movie entirely.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Jun 26, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
There are gentle surprises in the trip’s unexpected turns and setbacks, and thankfully, Simon-Kennedy knows where she’s going.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Jun 16, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
In the case of Merland Hoxha’s The Departure, my first note was “why does this movie exist?” An hour and change later when the credits rolled, I still couldn’t answer my own question. My best guess to explain this vile movie is that it’s based on some nasty relationship drama, and we’re all invited to watch Hoxha work his way through some still-lingering resentment.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Jun 12, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
Dreamland is a half-remembered nightmare. It’s full of incomprehensible flashes of striking imagery, most of which won’t make sense in the morning. But in the moment you’re watching Dreamland, you’ll feel the restlessness of its messy story, the fitful starts-and-stops of its erratic editing and the leaden quality of its action sequences, which has all the grace of someone who took a Benadryl pill too early.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Jun 5, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
Complemented by the eerie work of sound designers Johnny Marshall and David Rosenblad and music by Erick Alexander and Jared Bulmer, The Vast of Night sells its mystery as a package deal, firing on all sight-and-sound cylinders to immerse its viewers in its story.- TheWrap
- Posted May 28, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
The film gets teasingly close to bringing up some hefty conversations about women in the music business, but in the end, those notes stay flat, playing more like a melody that doesn’t stick around for long.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted May 28, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
Carroll’s film never loses sight of Kennedy. It would be almost impossible to do so. She’s a prickly character, an energetic curmudgeon who wields her sharp tongue as readily as she cuts tomatoes with a knife. She will not suffer fools asking her to change recipes or vendors trying to sell her items that don’t meet her high standards. She’s an intimidating presence, even in her old cooking shows from decades ago, who seems unforgiving of mistakes.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted May 22, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
As Alice, Piponnier is phenomenal, putting in a meticulously reserved performance in what could very well have been a melodramatic role.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted May 15, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
There is more in How to Build a Girl that works than doesn’t. It’s charming and sweet, and even in its more serious moments, the movie never loses its sense of humor.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted May 8, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
Following the stylish mountain man as he reverts to his base, feral nature, the movie itself feels sparse, almost minimalistic. It’s stripped down to its barest essentials, just a crazed individual under the influence of the illusion of masculine power.- TheWrap
- Posted May 4, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
Daniel H. Birman’s Murder to Mercy: The Cyntoia Brown Story is what happens when a crime documentary loses sight of its focus.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Apr 30, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
The movie practically sparkles in scenes at Melanoff’s candy factor, where the rainbow motif is woven throughout the space and even onto Melanoff’s commander jacket, which is topped off with candy buttons and cupcakes on his shoulders.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Apr 22, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
From the moment Selah is shown on her wicker chair throne off-campus, Selah and the Spades is impressively filled with style. Through the lens of cinematographer Jomo Fray, the film is vibrantly colorful yet moody, dripping with teen angst.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Apr 17, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
Our characters here are not so much stuck in a time loop, as they are in a very lazy movie filled with cliches and middle school-level humor, and which starts over half-way through the events for no reason. The joke is on anyone who mistakes this movie for entertainment.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Apr 10, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
As wonderful as The Other Lamb appears on screen and its cast embodies the story’s tension, it feels as if there is missing something from the final picture. The movie is slight in its exploration of dark subjects like cults, inter-generational dynamics and abuse, without coming to any kind of conclusion or closure.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Apr 2, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
While the documentary has the feel of a scrappy passion project, the message itself remains powerful. Given the chaotic times, There’s Something in the Water also serves as a stark reminder that not all governments have their citizens’ best interests at heart.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 27, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
Much of the movie is dedicated to the hard science behind the discovery of CRISPRs that has opened a whole new Pandora’s Box of possibilities both terrible and great, but I wish there were more of the human element in Human Nature.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 13, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
No matter, after much sound and fury the movie is more of a molehill than a mountain. Betty Gilpin deserves better and so do we.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 11, 2020
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- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 6, 2020
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- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 6, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
What really sets The Burnt Orange Heresy ablaze is the chemistry between Bang, Debicki and Sutherland. Each of their characters functions as a sort of walking puzzle, their motives slowly revealing themselves only as the story develops.- TheWrap
- Posted Mar 4, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
The story, the jokes, even Hank’s imaginary pill-shaped friends, and an expensive trip to the curador/local shaman are cheap tricks for a hollow laugh. Better to savor the few carefree moments of Camil’s stellar performance and the poignant lessons to learn about love, health and communication.- TheWrap
- Posted Feb 21, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
Should you surrender yourself to the film’s beautiful cinematography and whispered musings, you’ll find a breathtakingly gorgeous movie about love, death and immigration.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Feb 21, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
Despite its feel-good title, The Kindness of Strangers is a rather bleak movie, one so tied to the miseries of its characters that it’s difficult to see the point of it at all.- TheWrap
- Posted Feb 14, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
Through cinematographer Mark Schwartzbard’s lens, The Photograph feels like a gentle throwback to romantic movies that left their audiences in good spirits as they filed out of the theater.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Feb 14, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
Overall, Franz and Fiala perhaps play things a little too safe with The Lodge, not straying too far from a formula they know has already worked before. “The Lodge” is more disturbing than scary, with its eerie ambiance and chilling plot handling most of the scares.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Feb 7, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
Thanks to Mulligan’s electric performance and Fennell’s packed script, the movie never feels as if it lags, but it doesn’t go far enough to smooth over the choppy changes between the film’s witty moments and its stomach-churning dramatic scenes. However, there’s still a lot of promise in Fennell’s film, both in its message, its rape-revenge-influenced riff, and the boundaries it wants to push.- TheWrap
- Posted Jan 28, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
The movie is front-loaded with exposition, but once the action gets going and the narrative pieces fall into place, “Bad Hair” is a creepy movie with thoughtful political twists and thrilling supernatural turns.- TheWrap
- Posted Jan 28, 2020
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- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Jan 17, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
While Bloch's emotions and thoughts about the Holocaust and the Israeli occupation are deeply felt, the documentary’s finer points are a little less clear.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Jan 10, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
The cast can’t cure all the movie’s problems, from its abrupt ending to a random acid-test scene, but it’s not without its curious appeal as a star-studded failed “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest” experiment.- TheWrap
- Posted Jan 8, 2020
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- Monica Castillo
Aïnouz’s Invisible Life reflects the kind of love story we rarely see on-screen, and it’s a gem worth discovering for yourself.- TheWrap
- Posted Dec 20, 2019
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- Monica Castillo
The Death & Life of John F. Donovan is rife with melodramatic moments and insufferable characters.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Dec 13, 2019
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- Monica Castillo
Although Kristen Stewart pulls off Seberg’s short haircut, she hardly embodies any of the presence or persona of the French New Wave “It” girl. Stewart’s monotonous delivery makes her character sound uninterested and bored.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Dec 13, 2019
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- Monica Castillo
Although it’s stuffed with many cliches, The Aeronauts can feel like a rather enjoyable bit of historical fantasy.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Dec 6, 2019
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- Monica Castillo
The movie’s few bright spots feel unintentional, like mistakes left in because no one else noticed the absurdity of some scenes or the comic potential in others.- TheWrap
- Posted Dec 5, 2019
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- Monica Castillo
Mickey and the Bear is an impressive feature debut from Attanasio, one that shows a lot of promise in the way her movie explores characters and uncomfortable stories. When coupled with Morrone’s deft performance, Attanasio gives her lead character so much life and vibrancy.- TheWrap
- Posted Nov 30, 2019
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- Monica Castillo
As with Morgan Neville's documentary "Won't You Be My Neighbor?", the tears may flow freely due to nostalgia or from some subjects hitting too close to home, but A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood fits as a companion piece. Where the documentary offers a more complex view of the man in the red sweater and tennis shoes, Heller’s movie is more about the cultural impression Rogers left behind.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Nov 22, 2019
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- Monica Castillo
In watching so many films in a given week, month, or year, it’s rare to find one that sustains its thrills throughout its runtime, matches its gorgeous imagery with a compelling story, and defies easy categorization. Mati Diop’s haunting narrative feature debut Atlantics is one such movie. It’s unlike few other movies you’ll see this year or possibly this decade.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Nov 15, 2019
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- Monica Castillo
If the documentary starts to feel like a blur, that’s exactly how a member of Lil Peep’s entourage describes the experience of living beside someone who rose and fell so quickly.- TheWrap
- Posted Nov 14, 2019
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- Monica Castillo
Lady and the Tramp scratches an itch for dog lovers and may satisfy the young viewer’s curiosity when digging through the family’s new Disney+ subscription. However, so much of the movie is just fine when not feeling rushed or stilted, but doesn’t offer new surprises to stand on its own.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Nov 11, 2019
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- Monica Castillo
As a documentary, The Apollo is an illustrative tour through its hallowed backstage, its history and an exploration into its current mission as a cultural institution. It’s a place whose present will always be tied to its past and to how we preserve that history for future generations.- TheWrap
- Posted Nov 3, 2019
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- Monica Castillo
Harrill, who wrote and directed the film, isn’t as interested in the supernatural elements in the film as he is with the story’s few players. There’s a lot of room for emotions to breathe and wash over its characters, but never does it tip over into excess.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Nov 1, 2019
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- Monica Castillo
Paradise Hills wants so badly to be a sci-fi movie with a message for right now — perhaps to tap into the feminist anger out there now or to cash in on the interest in women filmmakers — but it feels like a rushed draft. There are a few good ideas, a few good twists at the end but not enough to make up for the rookie mistakes that undercut its potential.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Oct 25, 2019
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- Monica Castillo
In a sea of so much tragedy, it’s a marvel to stop and consider each individual’s experience fighting the tide.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Oct 18, 2019
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- Monica Castillo
Zombieland: Double Tap continues the original’s cheeky tone and irreverent humor, while it also acknowledges that it’s a series a little out of place and time with the current political age. But if all you’re looking for is “Shaun of the Dead,” but American, then this is the movie for you.- TheWrap
- Posted Oct 16, 2019
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- Monica Castillo
Tragically, Maleficent: Mistress of Evil does not give Jolie and Pfeiffer nearly enough time to face off against each other.- TheWrap
- Posted Oct 15, 2019
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- Monica Castillo
Although the title is confounding and perhaps the movie’s worst misstep, it’s Byrne’s digitized and stilted delivery that earns the biggest laughs.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Oct 11, 2019
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- Monica Castillo
Director Ivie, one of the co-founders of Arbella Studios, focuses on faith and social justice, and “Emanuel” perhaps best embodies those two tenets without seeming like it’s proselytizing. But the movie is strongest when it just lets its subjects talk with no agenda at hand.- TheWrap
- Posted Oct 10, 2019
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- Monica Castillo
Imagine “Office Space” with forgettable characters and nothing to say about this next bleak phase of the business world.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Sep 20, 2019
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- Monica Castillo
What Hawley has delivered is a garden variety bad movie, proving the TV wunderkind of “Fargo” and “Legion” was not quite ready for the big screen.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Sep 18, 2019
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- Monica Castillo
As played by Renée Zellweger, this Judy is painfully and visibly anxious. Or, perhaps this is her idea of drug-induced twitching. Either way, there are spots in the movie where Zellweger’s affected manners become too distracting and overshadow everything else around her.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Sep 17, 2019
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- Monica Castillo
This is a movie I’ve grown to admire more than I enjoy. Landes’ and Wolf’s imagery is stunning to watch at even if his script with Dos Santos leaves off much of the text.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 12, 2019
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- Monica Castillo
A disappointingly standard biopic, one whose technical flaws and paint-by-numbers clichés threaten to overshadow its subject’s compelling story.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 11, 2019
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- Monica Castillo
Ms. Purple is a gorgeous film about one of the worst moments of many people’s lives, but isn’t the act of living just learning how to survive these irreplaceable losses?- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 5, 2019
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- Monica Castillo
Far from being just a simple comedy about fitness and weight loss, Brittany’s journey includes the healing and forgiveness it takes to really meet those goals.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Aug 23, 2019
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