Paul Malcolm
Select another critic »For 173 reviews, this critic has graded:
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34% higher than the average critic
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4% same as the average critic
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62% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 17.5 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Paul Malcolm's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 48 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | X | |
| Lowest review score: | Black Knight | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 50 out of 173
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Mixed: 70 out of 173
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Negative: 53 out of 173
173
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Paul Malcolm
Why Crop Circles now, if not to ride the hype of M. Night Shyamalan's "Signs" to some quick cash? The movie’s rambling, slapdash, repetitious nature suggests as much.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
The rough, watercolor washes of its city backdrops mark the film with nostalgia while its story carries us along at an amiable, buoyant pace.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
While Stiller and De Niro can play hilariously off one another, the film -- despite its happy ending -- feels unresolved.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
Temple doesn't just highlight the contemporary relevance of Coleridge's liberated words and themes, he shows us how high they still soar.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
Hyams ("End of Days," "Timecop"), who is his own cinematographer, has no idea how to shoot or compose Xiong's wired choreography.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
Nemesis never feels true to itself, its energy never fully engaged. Even with Earth on the line in its climactic space battle, the film seems embarrassed that it couldn't have found a better way to work through its issues.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
While Slums of Beverly Hills may sound like a downer, Jenkins tempers the family's downbeat circumstances with sympathetic humor, a quirky camera style and lo-fi retro flavor.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
Kazantzidis struggles for the flavor of classic romance, with a string of standards on the soundtrack to little avail.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
Consistently undermined by a script that swings between the duller side of quirky and facile sentiment.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
Maquiling offers us the unexpected pleasures of taking the side streets in a film about how even minor-key adventures can make a life stuck in low gear something to look back on.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
It's finally a hilarious and cuddly flashback from the dog's point of view, to his training as a pup, that marks the moment when the film finds its sweetly moronic legs.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
Sympathy is disturbingly cast aside so we can wallow in the pathetic. It’s a bad trip, man.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
Performances that are natural yet weighted with history and frequently heart-wrenching.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
Both funny and furious -- on why black people are different from white people.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
At times, both swans and humans appear oddly out of sync with their flat backgrounds, while the film's few musical flights of fancy never achieve visual liftoff.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
With a brisk pace and satiric blend of nostalgia and violence, it's the sharpest, funniest comedy so far this year.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
It's a refreshing change from the self-interest and paranoia that shape most American representations of Castro. At the same time, Bravo anticipates that such a view will drive some nuts.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
Written by a team of three, the script is more plagued by groupthink than is the film's future Earth.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
Torem drifts into formula and his initially promising film goes unbearably soft.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
It's abundantly clear that Lozano and company have been re-watching "Pulp Fiction" for the last decade, pausing long enough to pick up the fluid rhythms of "Y Tu Mamá También" and "Amores Perros" while completely missing those films' social and political edges.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
What makes the film compelling is the filmmakers' ability to blend a studied (occasionally academic) dissection of cultural and sexual decadence with a potboiler plot.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
Within a few minutes of the film's frenetic opening set piece, however, it's obvious that director David Kellogg and screenwriters Kerry Ehrin and Zak Penn have no idea how to capture the spirit of the source material.- L.A. Weekly
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