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
Intelligence and beauty -- and teasing romance -- shape Mansfield Park into a gorgeous, enchanting experience.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- 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
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- 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
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- 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
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- Peter Stack
If it all sounds rather heady for a Disney movie, well, it is. And it is one of the curious delights of The Lion King that a moralistic patriarchal drama can be played out in a Darwinian setting and still emerge shining in a dream coat of Hollywood entertainment values. [24 June 1994, p.C1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Beautiful in both its brevity and its vision of contemporary Indian culture, the film abounds in easygoing humor.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
It's a stunning, delightful image adventure like nothing done before on the big screen.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Not every moment of the film is as potent as the book (which is noted for passages of passion and impassioned eloquence), but Cry, the Beloved Country overcomes its own limitations to become a glorious tribute to the workings of a faith that does not blind but opens up the human spirit.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
A wildly funny sex farce that smartly combines big-time silliness with sophisticated wit.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
One of the year's most fascinating flicks.... Brilliant performances by Jeff Daniels, Melanie Griffith and a newcomer named Ray Liotta give sparkle, and shadows, to Something Wild. [7 Nov 1986]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
The most entertaining movie of the year. Funny and action-packed, it's also got that rare thing, heart.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Kiss of Death was directed by Barbet Schroeder ("Single White Female") in the fashion of a creepily smirking cat toying with a particularly appealing mouse.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
It takes a while for this powerful, funny movie to grab you, but once you get hooked, it feels like you're swimming in a wonderful stream of humanity, bathed in intimacy, romance and, not a little bit, delicious fun. Fried Green Tomatoes is as likely as any film around to carry your heart away and leave you with a wonderful glow. [27 Dec 1991, p.D1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
What is astonishing about this movie is how all the elements are so deftly mixed - the technology of real sets and people interwoven with the cartoon world, and yet Zemeckis hardly sacrifices a beat in laying out a curlicuing '40s-style thriller. [22 June 1988]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
An extraordinary entertainment that personalizes the world of insects and other invertebrates and leaves audiences with an itching conviction of the poetry of nature.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Delightfully comic - and the funniest moments are rich in meaning - A Man of No Importance is laced with memorable scenes.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
The all-time great talking-pig movie, a lovely, intelligent gem of G-rated entertainment that is also rib-tickling funny.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
One of the great movies -- a triumph of storytelling and character development, and a whole new ballgame for computer animation. Pixar Animation Studios has raised the genre to an astonishing new level.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Burns has created an endearing gathering of people we all know, and every one of them is so much fun that leaving the theater at the end elicits a touch of regret.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
An inspiring translation of biblical grandeur, turning the story of one of history's greatest heroes into an entertaining, visually dazzling cartoon.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Heart and tenderness are rare in cartoon movies. But in an age of frenetic children's fare, the new animated adventure The Iron Giant dares to show a lot of both, and it comes up a winner.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Intelligent and crackling with crisp, provocative visual energy, Copycat, the new thriller starring Sigourney Weaver and Holly Hunter, is so creepy and dangerous-feeling that it's like a knife edge pressed against the jugular.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Robert Redford's exceptionally handsome and provocative Quiz Show manages a trick that few films even dare try -- to take a hard look at personal and public moral issues and still provide dazzling entertainment.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Stone's feisty, intensely personal style of film making is well-known. With Born on the Fourth of July we are treated to a poignant, spirited and captivating - for the broken heartedness of it all - performance by Tom Cruise. [25 Dec 1989, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Brother's Keeper is a thoroughly engaging examination of the whole curious affair by two New York City-based film makers, Joe Berlinger and Bruce Sinofsky, who document with a distinctive underlying humor and a feeling for contrasts between urban and rural America. Sometimes that contrast is touching, sometimes painfully hilarious, and often a little gloomy as the film delves into the lives of the surviving brothers to reveal a community with genuinely humane values, but one ripe for exploitation by the big city media. [16 Oct 1992, p.C4]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
Walt Disney Pictures' Beauty and the Beast is an enchanting feast of extraordinary animated film making that magically revives the classic Disney style with genial humor, memorable music, fluid grace in its drawings, and compelling romance. [15 Nov 1991, p.C1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Peter Stack
A beautiful work that could easily have turned into a four-hour-long affair but, at just a tad over two, is enticingly rich and shines with humanity. [8 Sept 1993, p.D1]- San Francisco Chronicle