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
An unblushing sex farce often so raw it might make even fairly open-minded people feel a bit uncomfortable.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
Stupid yet cogent, High School High is a rapid-fire gag machine that's dopey enough to get belly laughs and smart enough to earn a C-plus as engaging entertainment.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
As a movie, it's far from compelling. As a thrill ride, though, it's a rampaging special effects and animatronics extravaganza that will make small children cringe behind their seats.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
Yet for all its faults and limitations, Swing Kids is not necessarily easy to forget. [05 Mar 1993]- San Francisco Chronicle
-
- Peter Stack
Director Manuel Poirier (Antonio's Girlfriend) is easygoing in the way he uses Paco and Nino to poke through veneers of machismo.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
Rush is dour, and its danger and its spectacle of mind-melting become humdrum. Still, the film is well-acted and is painstakingly accurate in details. [10 Jan 1992, p.C3]- San Francisco Chronicle
-
- Peter Stack
Forgiving its moments of melodrama, Philadelphia makes emotional power punches out of every smile, embrace and tear in its story of a regular guy contracting AIDS and getting booted out of the law firm that once lifted him to glory. [14 Jan 1994, p.C1]- San Francisco Chronicle
-
- Peter Stack
A forced, implausible flick that loses its energy as it tries to gain momentum.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
A wish that there were more Michael Caines and fewer Muppets kept cropping up during The Muppet Christmas Carol, a movie whose mechanical cuteness becomes a too-complicated veil -- and a smothering one -- for the classic Charles Dickens story. [11 Dec 1992, p.C1]- San Francisco Chronicle
-
- Peter Stack
Cute and clever, but hardly an inspiration in animated film making. [6 July 1990, p.E1]- San Francisco Chronicle
-
- Peter Stack
A lovely though stubbornly shallow romp in nostalgia mixed with contemporary adult angst. [23 Apr 1993, p.C7]- San Francisco Chronicle
-
- 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
- Read full review
-
- 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
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
Typical of some of the absurd moments in this film is a long drawn-out fist fight between the hero and Frank, who almost kill each other because Frank is too proud to try on the magic dark glasses. It is completely stupid. [5 Nov 1988]- San Francisco Chronicle
-
- 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
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
A genuine winner in the old-fashioned family entertainment genre.- San Francisco Chronicle
-
- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
The cluttered, surreal, claustrophobic sets and gooey alien creatures look intriguing, sometimes shocking. But the story tries so hard to be imaginative that it congeals and sinks like lead.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- 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
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
The movie is so cleverly entrenched in its sardonic style that Russell's toughest act must have been keeping a straight face. Escape From L.A. is surprisingly effective in picturing a former nirvana clenched in the twisted rubble of its own excess.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- 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
-
- 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
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
It's a lyrical, lulling, beautiful film that children may relish.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
The movie takes on a somber, fitful atmosphere of straining epic proportions. But it strays into an episodic bog that leaves it gasping for dramatic life.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
The jump gimmick sounds as if it might make a cute romantic movie. But If Lucy Fell has so little meat that it plays like a television sitcom that somehow grew into a feature-length movie. It's airy, fluffy and ultimately uninteresting.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- 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
-
- Peter Stack
Highlander: The Final Dimension is no more compelling than the average pile of bricks.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review
-
- Peter Stack
A poetry of love, longing and affirmation bleeds through the music of Cuba, and some of the best sounds the island ever created are captured with embracing humanity.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Read full review