Phil Hoad
Select another critic »For 167 reviews, this critic has graded:
-
37% higher than the average critic
-
13% same as the average critic
-
50% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 4.9 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Phil Hoad's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 61 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Violation | |
| Lowest review score: | Shark Bait | |
Score distribution:
-
Positive: 48 out of 167
-
Mixed: 117 out of 167
-
Negative: 2 out of 167
167
movie
reviews
-
- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 29, 2018
- Read full review
-
- Phil Hoad
Hu provides no easy resolutions, and evidently found none himself. This epic of futility will have to stand as an epitaph for an extremely promising career cut short.- The Guardian
- Posted Feb 20, 2019
- Read full review
-
- Phil Hoad
Deeply caught up in decoding this tradition, perhaps Serra is too beholden to it. If only this admittedly riveting examination of dark human compulsions had found a way to also articulate the perspectives of the animals for whom the arena is a lethal experience.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 1, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Phil Hoad
The issues are fundamentally the same: the enforced invisibility of a class of economic migrants who are now so numerous that many game the system, doubling their exploitation. Sangaré’s exemplary, unfeigned performance helps them speak.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 16, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Phil Hoad
If narrative clarity is obviously not top of Uzeyman and Williams’ priorities, the film always looks amazing: fluorescent dream sequences, glitchy cyberpunk overlays, wild character designs (from costume designer Cedric Mizero and makeup artist Tanya Melendez).- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 1, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Phil Hoad
Ciorniciuc and his co-writer Lina Vdovîi, in allowing events to unfold slowly in front of the camera, have created a beautifully measured portrait of an amazingly resonant topic.- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 22, 2021
- Read full review
-
- Phil Hoad
Hosoda’s delicate, painterly style is perfect for capturing Kun’s evanescent imaginary haven – and conveying the message about the moral courage needed to leave it.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 8, 2018
- Read full review
-
- Phil Hoad
Fully committed to a radical irresolution, this simultaneously alienating and beautiful film bears repeat viewing.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 5, 2025
- Read full review
-
- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 17, 2026
- Read full review
-
- Phil Hoad
There are serious points raised with wry obliqueness here: about police racism, land theft and, more positively, ancestral continuity. (Perhaps to keep the indigenous focus, Endless Cookie skirts the issue of Seth as a white chronicler.) But it’s also equal parts hallucinations in coffee froth of rutting caribous – and a palpably radiating love for community – in this often hilarious spawn of the likes of Fritz the Cat- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 16, 2026
- Read full review
-
- Phil Hoad
Its heartwarming aspect comes framed with real grandeur, and a stark absurdism and tightly wound sentimentality reminiscent at times of Takeshi Kitano.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 26, 2024
- Read full review
-
- Phil Hoad
A halo of kinship, love and the tenacious power of art is gathered around this film.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 23, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Phil Hoad
Retrofitting medieval Noh as a world of guitar gods and cavorting dancers, Inu-oh has its two disabled lead characters make a psychedelic plea in favour of slipping loose from dominant narratives, told in a fecund patchwork of styles by Yuasa that asserts its own outsider credentials.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 28, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Phil Hoad
You will no doubt bail out at some point – but that’s part of the deal. Llinás has done enough to make sure we come back.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 26, 2019
- Read full review
-
- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 9, 2024
- Read full review
-
- Phil Hoad
Something in the Dirt is so high on its own conceptual supply that it doesn’t invest quite enough in the pair’s deteriorating relationship, and consequently starts to drag. But it wrings a mini-cosmos out of next to nothing, its delicately transcendent visuals – courtesy of Moorhead’s photography background – constantly signposting some higher truth just around the next corner.- The Guardian
- Posted Nov 1, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Phil Hoad
This clever thriller teeters on the brink of abstraction, and walks a razor wire between horror and an incredulous absurdity meant to stand for how women must live in the modern world: the daily toll of living in fear of aggression, physical assault and withstanding the misogynistic structures that excuse them.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 1, 2021
- Read full review
-
- Phil Hoad
Amid the current explosion of affirmative diversity-driven film-making, there is a kind of strength in such a self-excoriating and uncompromising point of view. Corbine Jr is one to watch.- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 26, 2021
- Read full review
-
- Phil Hoad
If George Orwell had had a career stint as a Korean estate agent, this is the kind of story he might have turned out.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 5, 2024
- Read full review
-
- Phil Hoad
Gavras has seized his chance, staging this uptempo, carnivalesque crime pic with panache and wit.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 28, 2019
- Read full review
-
- Phil Hoad
James’s sleek telling excels at intertwining the personal and the political with illuminating detail.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 22, 2023
- Read full review
-
- Phil Hoad
A riptide of surrealism runs through Chino Moya’s ambitious debut feature, a fantasy suite of tales that don’t so much interlock as butt into one another and blurt out alarming, dreamlike correspondences.- The Guardian
- Posted May 11, 2021
- Read full review
-
- Phil Hoad
What this solemn and enlivening documentary plunge into the history of Ridley Scott’s sci-fi classic reiterates is the idea of film as a collective art form – not just the wider circle of writers, performers and technicians beyond the director, but in the case of the truly great films, serendipitous access to a deeper collective unconscious to which we all have the keys – even if few know how to use them.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 26, 2019
- Read full review
-
- Phil Hoad
It has a stubborn, almost literary feel for character that accumulates a baleful momentum by the time the finale hits.- The Guardian
- Posted Aug 4, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Phil Hoad
Kōsaka keeps Okko’s quest light and perky, not fully drilling into the vein of childhood trauma-induced fantasy that the best of Ghibli and Pixar hit upon. It proposes attentiveness to others as a means of self-care, but it has the same brisk impatience with real inner conflict that the grandmother has towards Okko’s outbursts.- The Guardian
- Posted Jul 12, 2019
- Read full review
-
- Phil Hoad
Building to a remorseless climax, Sims-Fewer and co-writer/director Dusty Mancinelli brilliantly, and times almost unwatchably, overhaul the rape-revenge movie as something far more realistic, traumatised and noxious.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 24, 2021
- Read full review
-
- The Guardian
- Posted Oct 13, 2021
- Read full review
-
- Phil Hoad
Aguzarova is quietly phenomenal, never more so than in the sex scene where, holding her curled-up hands away from Tamik’s body, she manages to be coy, conflicted, detached, expectant and amused all at once.- The Guardian
- Posted May 22, 2023
- Read full review
-
- Phil Hoad
As for interpreting what it all means, leave that to Burns’s therapist. The flamboyance on display here, though, promises great things.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 11, 2021
- Read full review
-
- Phil Hoad
Forget the adulterated, Communist party-sponsored attempts at blockbusters of the past, self-taught animator Jiaozi’s film is an utterly self-assured pageant of Chinese mythology that, with head-spinning visuals, is a fine technical advertisement for what the country is capable of, in this case on a comparatively small $80m budget.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 20, 2025
- Read full review