Peter Stack
Select another critic »For 424 reviews, this critic has graded:
-
62% higher than the average critic
-
2% same as the average critic
-
36% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 0.1 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Peter Stack's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 65 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | The Wild Bunch | |
| Lowest review score: | Baby Geniuses | |
Score distribution:
-
Positive: 241 out of 424
-
Mixed: 130 out of 424
-
Negative: 53 out of 424
424
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
-
- Peter Stack
Intelligence and beauty -- and teasing romance -- shape Mansfield Park into a gorgeous, enchanting experience.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
Jumbled and stupid plot, bad acting and a few predictable gags that fall flat.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
Though this film's considerable warmth derives from dalmatian puppies and other animals who take charge of their fates, Close steals the show.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
The richness of characters make this movie shine. It's just that, somehow, a certain sense of fire is missing.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
The Island of Dr. Moreau ought to have been a great film in these times of gene splicing and DNA research and all the moral, ethical and practical questions those developments raise. But director John Frankenheimer and screenwriters Richard Stanley and Ron Hutchinson's attempt to update Wells yields only a maddening mess of empty gestures.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
Two If by Sea should have been titled "Two at Sea." It's adrift. Stars Sandra Bullock and Denis Leary have no chemistry together, and a perfectly good story is wasted on a really bad script.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
The dragging pace is one of several agonizing defects in this bloated sci-fi action drama.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
SubUrbia is depressing comedy -- the more so because director Richard Linklater's satirical picture of youthful alienation rings painfully true.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
This wacky buddy road film... has a brilliant glow of intelligence behind the stupidness. It's easily the funniest movie of the year.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
This British film also mocks the rave culture it celebrates, and it's charming in a way that is hip but surprisingly down to earth.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
Muppet Treasure Island is an elaborate, juicy eyeful. The film is an impressive maze of visual scale and perspective that lets humans and puppets interact as a single species. The overall effect is a wonderful sense of the fantastical. But simplicity might have helped where the movie often stagnates with gimmicks.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
Problem Child is a beautiful example of what junk entertainment can be with a smattering of brains behind it. While it hangs there as a monument to audience idiocy, it also lets you have a wallow in fun. You leave thinking there have been worse things on which to spend your time and money. [28 July 1990, p.C3]- San Francisco Chronicle
-
- San Francisco Chronicle
-
- Peter Stack
Heart and Souls stands up beautifully as a heart- tugging testament to the importance of taking care of the sometimes complicated business of being a decent, loving person before some fateful bus crash robs you of the chance. [13 Aug 1993, p.C1]- San Francisco Chronicle
-
- Peter Stack
Mulholland Falls is a provocative crime drama with a limp script and a forced feeling. But star Nick Nolte is a ticking time bomb as a brutal Los Angeles police detective with a hulking, gasping sense of pain and meanness. He gives the film an odd, askew tone that keeps it tough and alive.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
It's not a great film, but Event Horizon produces an intense sense of visual involvement. The hallucinatory, almost 3-D-like scenes stick in the mind.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
For a big, floppy, silly movie that is in many ways the epitome of throwaway entertainment, Twins has its charms. Arnold Schwarzenegger and Danny DeVito make it seem they had so much fun making this flabby comedy that the fun becomes infectious.- San Francisco Chronicle
-
- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
Violent, gritty and probably too intense for very young children, but for anybody between the ages, say, of 10 and 10, it's certain to be a crowd pleaser with fascinating dark tones and menacing undercurrents that are quite a contrast from Saturday cartoon fare. [30 Mar 1990, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
-
- Peter Stack
It's not always clear what this film is driving at, but Shiota makes the weirdness visually arresting.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
It's not a deep film, but there is a certain poignancy in Luke's situation and in the earnestness with which the burly Sinbad approaches the boy. Simms has a warm style and lets Luke know he's not a nut for feeling the need to explore the world a bit.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
Using documentary-style Super 16 film and staged cutaway interviews with friends and family, James and his photographer and co-producer, Peter Gilbert, fashioned a movie with an affecting, candid look.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
It's the kind of movie you may approach with a show-me attitude, only to be won over to its hip sense of fun and a gentle humanity that lets you walk away with a glow. [1 Oct 1993, p.C1]- San Francisco Chronicle
-
- Peter Stack
This thick, leaden production starring Bob Hoskins and Patricia Arquette - and an uncredited Robin Williams - has a sophomoric air, even though it faithfully follows the book.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
Turning the comic game slightly on its ear and injecting it into a romantic Western setting, Maverick, inspired by the old TV show, plays its ace for all it's worth. Ace, in this case, is fun. [20 May 1994, p.C1]- San Francisco Chronicle
-
- Peter Stack
It's a shame Arnold is stuck on the loudmouth clod schtick, because there are moments he's downright pleasant on screen. But in Carpool, these moments are kept to a minimum.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review