Peter Stack
Select another critic »For 424 reviews, this critic has graded:
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62% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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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:
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Positive: 241 out of 424
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Mixed: 130 out of 424
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Negative: 53 out of 424
424
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Peter Stack
A lovely though stubbornly shallow romp in nostalgia mixed with contemporary adult angst. [23 Apr 1993, p.C7]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
A raucous, in-your-face, commando-style action thriller that makes provocative use of Alcatraz as a lunatic's lair and San Francisco as a sitting duck.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Touch of Evil is a savvy starter because Welles' astonishing cinematic invention and his persuasive presence as star are prime noir at tractions. The look, a deftly arranged climate of odd shadows and angles, neon lighting and flawlessly choreographed action scenes, keeps interest piqued through a contrived plot and mannered acting.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Kirikou and the Sorceress is definitely a sunny spot in the mire of frenetic, violent and often dopey cartoon films produced by Hollywood. It's also far more imaginative that most.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
It's impossible to dismiss the attraction of such accomplished actors on the big screen, even with a fits-and-starts script.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
What we get with Geronimo, is very good action long on Western flavor and not especially compelling in the historical sense. [01 Apr 1994, p.C16]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Everything comes up forced and predictable in the nostalgic overload of bongs, Top 40 rock and boys' bluster about sex.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
It's a lyrical, lulling, beautiful film that children may relish.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
A grandiose cinematic invention, cleverly turning the present-day urban American world on its ear.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Jude is knockout Hardy, filled with stormy visual poetry and accompanied by a gorgeous yet simple score.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Though some of the acting has a stilted feeling, the emotional charge and unusual look of the film linger.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Consistently absorbing as the amazing Deneuve reveals, scene by scene, new facets of a fascinating character in a mercantile war that involves equal parts greed and vanity.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
A solid family movie, "Fly Away Home" is a constant feast for the eyes, with rich photography by Caleb Deschanel.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
With convincing in-your-face footage, The Program is certain to be a crowd pleaser for fans who like their football action raw. Some of the roughest action is off the field. [25 Sept 1993, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Coppola infuses her movie with a dreamy poetic tone, and deftly translates the essential metaphors of youth, sexuality and death without sacrificing an earthy humor.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Gorgeous but dark -- not the usual Disney experience. Audiences will find much to embrace in this animated drama, yet they may not walk away humming the kind of catchy tunes contained in Beauty and the Beast, The Lion King or Aladdin.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Writer and first-time director Don McKellar, also one of the film's stars, makes the plot gimmick an inventive jumping-off point for an exploration of humanity in a state of quiet panic.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Full of that wonderful junky, clunky, huggable smartness that has made "Sesame Street'' an enduring phenomenon.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
The movie isn't up to much either, but it has a certain eccentric energy, nicely stitched to rock-and-roll songs and a music track by ex-Police drummer Stewart Copeland. And it draws you in for an agreeably empty-headed ride and thrilling skating scenes. [18 Sept 1993, p.F1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Accomplishes the impossible, maybe the unimaginable -- it makes golf entertaining.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Jack Frost starts out with sweet promise, then loses steam and gets a little too strange for its own good. It also gets cloyingly manipulative, but its heart is in the right place.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Tequila Sunrise is a sharp-looking, tantalizing romantic thriller whose assets overcome a labored plot and several lapses into L.A. hipness that result in sheer inscrutability. [2 Dec 1988, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
My Father, the Hero makes up for its lack of energy with a handful of bright moments created by Depardieu's sheer charm even in a galumphing part. He has to maintain incredulous looks through several long scenes and be the world's most befuddled dolt in others, but he pulls them off, mostly because he's such a likable lunk. [4 Feb 1994, p.C3]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- 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
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- 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
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- Peter Stack
Look Who's Talking plays baby-picture cute almost beyond the limits of the tolerable, but it has enough spark and intelligence to be a very likable, occasionally riotous romantic comedy. [13 Oct 1989, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Ben Stiller seems the perfect actor to play Hollywood writer- turned-junkie Jerry Stahl in Permanent Midnight. He's got that bitter humor, the intense eyes betraying an inner life of pain. And he comes off as pathetic. The trouble is that it's hard to care -- even though the film is well-acted, artfully shot and at times haunting in its bleakness.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
As Westerns go, Silverado delivers elaborate gun-fighting scenes, legions of galloping horses, stampeding cattle, a box canyon, covered wagons, tons of creaking leather and even a High Noonish duel. How it manages to run the gamut of cowboy movie elements without getting smart-alecky is intriguing. But on the important issues, like real character development, Silverado flakes apart. [10 Jul 1985, p.52]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
What more or less saves the movie is not the humor as much as it is the action. City Slickers II, lame as it is, keeps hobbling along in an appealing way through a Wild West landscape. [10 Jun3 1994, p.C3]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
It's going to be easy for some to dismiss the new Touchstone Pictures comedy, Captain Ron, as a leaky boatload of predictable gags. But it's what you can't predict that keeps this stupidly amusing seafaring tale afloat, making it surprisingly fun. [18 Sep 1992, p.C3]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Every hair is in place in writer-director Lawrence Kasdan's epic-length Wyatt Earp. What's missing is a heart. Yet if this large-scale western is a bore, at least it's a beautiful one. [24 Jun 1994, p.C1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
The film is a fairly happy excuse to give the beloved dinosaur some room to do what he likes best -- sing kid-friendly songs and peddle a twinkly message that imagination and kindness are good things.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Mystery Science Theater 3000: The Movie is a tough call to recommend for everyone. But for a goofy time laughing at stupid comedy with otherwise intelligent people, it might be just the ticket.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
RoboCop 3 ought to be a lot more mean and harrowing a sci- fi thriller than it is. Yet it still has a wicked humor underneath its prophetic grin. [05 Nov 1993, p.C3]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
The Next Karate Kid' has all the makings of a terrible movie, but it never quite becomes one. One reason might be that cinematographer Laszlo Kovacs just loves a beautiful picture. [10 Sep 1994, p.E6]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- 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
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- 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
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- 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
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- 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
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
It's not always clear what this film is driving at, but Shiota makes the weirdness visually arresting.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- 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
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
The movie, based on the novel by Simon Brett, tries very hard to make a statement about the feelings of a man who has struggled for years and suddenly finds himself over the hill, a shutout at work and at home. But the tale falters on Caine's character. [23 Mar 1990, p.E5]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Swimming With Sharks, despite its attempt to be wicked and hiply fun, is ultimately just tiring as it pits people against one another.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Curiously mellow for a John Carpenter thriller, Village of the Damned, a full-color, cornball special-effects remake of the 1960 sci-fi favorite, is a trip to a village of the darned tedious.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Shyamalan's story is clearly autobiographical, and he imbued the tender tale with a wistful atmosphere as well as a kindly regard for parochial school, hitting some of the details just right.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Still, it's almost impossible to entirely wreck this great chestnut of Broadway and film. Thanks mostly to the terrific songs, the new version has transporting moments. [20 March 1999, Daily Notebook, p.B1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Father of the Bride Part II is too long, completely predictable and unabashedly immersed in a posh world that is totally out of reach of most people. It's a comfort to see that riches don't keep some guys from being dithering fools when it comes to life's fundamentals.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Viewers may feel let down because the depth promised by the movie's visual artistry is never quite delivered.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Extreme Measures has disturbing moments, and poignant ones, too. It plays a good game of paranoia with its unlikely hero. Once the story gets past Luthan's implausible firing on trumped-up drug charges, it places him alone in a hostile world. Relying only on a determination to solve the medical puzzle, he goes on a desperate expedition into the bowels of the subway system. It's a grim, scary sequence, and Grant seems a million miles away from his stammering comedic style -- an extreme that is surprisingly engaging.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Does have a certain classy charm because of its upscale setting. One could wait for the video.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Could have used more dramatic energy, maybe at the expense of some of that gorgeous scenery.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
It has the simple charm of being mindless fun with nary a worry that there are several pockets of lame gags or far-fetched comedy bits that refuse to register on the giggle meter. [16 Feb 1990, p.E3]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Want a believable plot or acting? Forget it. But if you just want knockout images, unabashed eye candy and a riveting look at a complex world that seems both real and fake at the same time, "Hackers'' is one of the most intriguing movies of the year.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Pathetic yet stupidly entertaining for several minutes of its interminable running time, 3 Ninjas: High Noon at Mega Mountain makes half its cast look like retreads and half like fresh ponies desperately karate-kicking a dud script to see if it has any signs of life.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Vampire in Brooklyn is neither funny nor frightening and comes up a tedious middle-road hybrid from veteran scaremeister Wes Craven, who directed.- San Francisco Chronicle
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