Phil de Semlyen
Select another critic »For 490 reviews, this critic has graded:
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51% higher than the average critic
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4% same as the average critic
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45% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 5.2 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Phil de Semlyen's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 71 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | The Lost Daughter | |
| Lowest review score: | Stuber | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 284 out of 490
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Mixed: 201 out of 490
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Negative: 5 out of 490
490
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Phil de Semlyen
Possibly the most uplifting film ever made about a time of unending violence, Kenneth Branagh’s Belfast comes with a bruised heart and an unquenchable spirit of optimism.- Time Out
- Posted Jan 13, 2022
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- Phil de Semlyen
There’s something deeply moving, almost tragic, about a good man being slowly enveloped by the dark times around him. Munich captures it nicely.- Time Out
- Posted Jan 6, 2022
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- Phil de Semlyen
The Lost Daughter expertly juggles tone, hopscotching between timelines and slipping from tender to tense and back again, always challenging the viewer’s judgments and preconceptions in unexpected ways.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 31, 2021
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- Phil de Semlyen
What happens when you haul all the trappings of a genre rooted in post-war cynicism and lay them out raw for modern-day moviegoers? You end up with something like Guillermo del Toro’s Nightmare Alley, a heady, fleeting pleasure that prioritises craft over moral complexity, with themes of class friction and fraudulent spirituality that would once have landed like haymakers packing much less punch today.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 21, 2021
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- Phil de Semlyen
There’s a touch of diet Brando about Elgort’s reformed bad boy-turned-lovebird, but Zegler brings a lovely brand of innocence and conviction to Maria. And don’t be surprised to see Moreno winning another Oscar. Or, for that matter, Spielberg.- Time Out
- Posted Dec 2, 2021
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- Phil de Semlyen
What a clever, haunting way to show art’s power to articulate the hurt we find hard to express.- Time Out
- Posted Nov 22, 2021
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- Phil de Semlyen
This San Fernando Valley palimpsest is so buoyant and bubbly, it practically floats off the screen. It’s the giddiness that grabs you in the Californian’s latest gem, and the dizzying sense of possibility and innocence. It left me with a contact high.- Time Out
- Posted Nov 15, 2021
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- Phil de Semlyen
A movie that knows exactly what its audience wants and dishes it out in big ectoplasmic dollops, Ghostbusters: Afterlife manages to be full of surprises and completely unsurprising all at once.- Time Out
- Posted Nov 5, 2021
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- Phil de Semlyen
By whatever metrics you measure a Bond movie – tight plotting, gnarly villains, emotional sincerity – Craig’s final outing is a rip-roaring success.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 28, 2021
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- Phil de Semlyen
The big challenge for The Last Duel is to depict a world in which women are marginalised and disempowered without doing the same thing to its female characters. Maybe it should have ceded more of its cold stone floor to Marguerite.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 27, 2021
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- Phil de Semlyen
A busier proposition than its HBO forefather, this sets up more than it can pay off. But it does manage to balance fan-service with plenty of rich, original, complex material.- Empire
- Posted Sep 21, 2021
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- Phil de Semlyen
If the ending is signposted, Youri’s earthbound journey to the stars offers a stirring escape from an unjust reality. Like his Russian sorta-namesake, he’s a hero we can all get behind.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 20, 2021
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- Time Out
- Posted Sep 18, 2021
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- Phil de Semlyen
The ending offers only a slightly clichéd vision of emancipation that leaves the picture not much clearer. After showing how hard life can be, it feels a little bit too easy.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 18, 2021
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- Phil de Semlyen
If awards season gets up your nose, with its self-congratulatory speeches and luvvie back-patting, this playful and wildly entertaining Spanish satire on the filmmaking process is the perfect antidote.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 10, 2021
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- Phil de Semlyen
It all feels so rote and old-school, especially during such an exciting era for the genre (thanks to Jennifer Kent, Ari Aster, Jordan Peele, Rose Glass and co). Never mind the fact its once-sturdy beats have been spoofed, homaged and riffed a thousand times. In the era of Netflix’s Fear Street and The Haunting of Hill House, big-screen horror surely has to work harder than this.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 8, 2021
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- Phil de Semlyen
[Villeneuve] has nailed it where, in different ways David Lynch, Alejandro Jodorowksy and Ridley Scott all floundered. His Dune is sprawling, spectacular and politically resonant in its critique of colonialism and exploitation.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 7, 2021
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- Phil de Semlyen
Amirpour’s career to date offers a triptych of stories of women navigating men’s worlds, and needing all their nous and resources to survive in them – and this is her most straight-up enjoyable survivor tale yet. It’s a feminist parable that may not linger as long as in the mind as her more provocative debut, but it’s irresistible fun in the moment.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 7, 2021
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- Phil de Semlyen
If the pay-off aims for the gut and misses, the journey to that point provides a searing microcosm of a corrupt and degrading system.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 7, 2021
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- Phil de Semlyen
It all makes for an immersive evocation of time and place, and a more sober, if still stylish, filmmaking flex from Wright. Gone are the trademark crash zooms and whip pans, and the hairpin cuts of his recent action thriller Baby Driver. Gone, too, the comforting cameos and goofy banter of the Pegg and Frost trilogy – in ice-cream parlance, this one is more Twister than Cornetto – and that unmooring from the director’s previous work makes this an especially satisfying trip into the unknown. Like its eerie Soho back alleys, you’re never sure what’s around the next corner.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 4, 2021
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- Phil de Semlyen
Things in The Hand of God are often funny and sad – all at the same time.- Time Out
- Posted Sep 2, 2021
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- Phil de Semlyen
As a piece of watch-through-your-fingers outdoors filmmaking, The Alpinist stands right up alongside the Oscar-winning Free Solo.- Time Out
- Posted Aug 31, 2021
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- Phil de Semlyen
Long-time fans will love it, even if its charms wear a bit thin for anyone who doesn’t already have Kurupt FM on their dial.- Time Out
- Posted Aug 18, 2021
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- Time Out
- Posted Aug 13, 2021
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- Phil de Semlyen
Many actors hold their secrets and their craft close; Kilmer throws his out to the universe.- Time Out
- Posted Aug 2, 2021
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- Phil de Semlyen
Don’t expect anything on the sames scale as Cumberbatch’s last spy thriller, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, because this is a film of claustrophobic interiors and snatched exchanges that eventually tapers down into a man’s quest for survival. If you’re on the hunt for an old-fashioned spy flick, through, The Courier has just enough le Carré-ish thrills to get by.- Time Out
- Posted Jul 27, 2021
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- Phil de Semlyen
What separates the ensuing mayhem from a thousand generic thrillers out there is an impish streak and writing that smartly juggles big ideas, mad gun battles and guilty laughs.- Time Out
- Posted Jul 23, 2021
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- Phil de Semlyen
It’s an exercise in mindfulness that asks you to give yourself over to it lock, stock and barrel. If you’re willing to do that, you can cancel that meditation course.- Time Out
- Posted Jul 19, 2021
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- Phil de Semlyen
Mamoru Hosoda’s cyber fairy-tale is basically wall-to-wall bangers, all backdropped by virtual worlds that wash over you in waves of world-building so detailed and epic, they’d make William Gibson’s eyes pop.- Time Out
- Posted Jul 16, 2021
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- Phil de Semlyen
It’s not judgy or lecturing, and there’s nothing too didactic here – and maybe not a lot to linger over either. But if you’re looking for a couple of hours of sexy Parisians hooking up, falling out and finding their feet again, all set to pulsing electro and with a baked-in romanticism that makes a built-up corner of Paris feel like Casablanca, Audiard and his co-writers have made the perfect film.- Time Out
- Posted Jul 15, 2021
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