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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- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
The film seems to argue that Rock's real-life manipulation of the race card is little more than exploitation, rather than the essence of his incendiary comic critique.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
An overly mannered film drowning in the symptoms of dysfunction but unable to tap the root causes of this WASPish clan's pain except in the most oblique and cursory ways. This might be Freundlich's point, considering this family deals with its problems through avoidance.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
Despite the lack of zing in Hogan's frequently self-deprecating zingers, director Simon Wincer repeatedly lets scenes dribble on until an awkward silence engulfs everyone onscreen.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
The Jackass boys achieve true genius, however, when they take their penance public. Before stunned, inert onlookers, these skate-punk Situationists transform official zones of work and leisure -- office parks, golf courses, bowling alleys -- into arenas of dangerous stupidity to remind us that, in the end, we’re all just meat.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
It's all part of a larger calculus that the filmmakers hope will translate into a thinking person's thriller. If only they themselves knew how to figure it.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
The first REALLY great mythic film of the summer has arrived.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
The film's larger, surprisingly mature emotional rhythms are strong enough to pull it through.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
What I mean is that to watch The Phantom Menace as a lifelong "Star Wars" fan is to engage in constant, fragile negotiations between a cherished familiarity and the shock of the new.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
The old hands still seem to be having a good time, so why the hell shouldnít we?- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
It's the zippy chatter among the Serenity's wised-up space pirates that gives the film most of its punch, but with only serviceable action sequences and largely cookie-cutter effects, you can still sense the void just outside.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
Ironically, for all the paranoia, York's Defiler and his henchman, an always game Udo Kier, are an oasis of wit in an otherwise parched, self-serious script.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
A hodgepodge of psychosexual horror gimmicks, from the virginal psychic artist to the impotent psychotic actor.- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
He (Berlanti) shoots for bland entertainment and scores.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
These live performances and classic music videos drive home the point that part of the Giants' longevity flows from the fact that they can't be explained, only experienced.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
Whatever the cause, everyone involved takes this blend of slick Verhoeven sleaze and Deliverance-brand musk way too seriously.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
A brutish affair replete with sliced bodies, a diced storyline and enough clanky dialogue to wake the dead.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
Thai director Kaos (a.k.a. Wych Kaosayananda), making his inauspicious Hollywood debut, still can't breathe any life into it. You'll just want to get back to your Game Boy.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
Kessler frames it all with an ironic eye (Stiller's misfit mogul holds court in cheap motels and burger joints) and with enough big-hearted tenderness to keep the humor from going sour.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
The film lapses too often into sugary sentiment and withholds delivery on the pell-mell pyrotechnics its punchy style promises.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
It almost appears like a little thought went into this otherwise grim exercise in soullessness.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
Chop Suey really captivates with surfaces; look away for an instant, and the spell is broken.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
Sabu takes an already wildly original concept and launches it toward brilliance.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
Bowman and production designer Wolf Kroeger do an excellent job of evoking a twice-baked England, while writers Gregg Chabot, Kevin Peterka and Matt Greenberg keep the script devilishly pitched just shy of preposterous (it's McConaughey who stumbles beyond).- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
A film that plays like warmed-over "Cold Mountain."- L.A. Weekly
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- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
Director Ernest -- doesn't skimp on style in a film that bluntly exploits social conscience to pump up its taste for gore.- L.A. Weekly
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- Paul Malcolm
It is, however, Tortilla Soup's cultural transposition that feels most phony. Where Lee brings depth and subtle observation to his middle-class ensemble piece, Ripoll has simply added a thin Latino glaze.- L.A. Weekly
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