Richard Lawson
Select another critic »For 512 reviews, this critic has graded:
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50% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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48% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 0.5 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Richard Lawson's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 66 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Roma | |
| Lowest review score: | The Woman in the Window | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 313 out of 512
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Mixed: 159 out of 512
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Negative: 40 out of 512
512
movie
reviews
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- Richard Lawson
Phoenix has always been good at depicting this kind of pathetic tyranny, deftly (and swiftly) shifting from bratty, toothless insouciance to genuine menace. The actor seems to get both the joke and the seriousness of the film, though I wish Scott were better at communicating that tone to the audience.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Nov 14, 2023
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- Richard Lawson
Chasing Summer often plays as the most peculiar Hallmark movie ever made. I want that to be a good thing, but it unfortunately is not.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 28, 2026
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- Richard Lawson
While grandly moving at the close, too much of this Color Purple relies on memories of Color Purples past.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Dec 19, 2023
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- Richard Lawson
Eighth Grade is an exciting directorial debut for Burnham, a precocious teen phenomenon who seems to have grown into a thoughtful adult—one who intimately knows of what he speaks. He’s made an alarmingly perceptive film that only rarely goes for the easy joke or verges toward cliché- Vanity Fair
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- Richard Lawson
Judas and the Black Messiah is missing that deeper personal aspect, some sense of the emotional force yoking O’Neal and Hampton together, dragging them toward ruin. The film is resonant regardless. Still, there’s such an opportunity presented here—to see these two sterling actors really working in harmony—that goes frustratingly unseized. As is, Judas and the Black Messiah is richer and more engaging than a standard biopic, but is not quite the Shakespearean tragedy of double allegiances and backstabbing that it could have been.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Feb 4, 2021
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- Richard Lawson
There needn’t be some deeper theme or intent behind a movie like this, but The Lighthouse is an awfully trying experience to end with such a sneering shrug of the shoulders. I couldn’t shake the feeling that The Lighthouse is simply an exercise, an overeager writing class project from a guy who’s just read Sartre, Beckett, and, I dunno, Stephen King.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 21, 2019
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- Richard Lawson
Little clarity can actually be wrestled out of Cooper’s dank creation, a shallow, dour film that pays rote adherence to the mandate that horror must and should offer profound personal or social commentary.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Oct 25, 2021
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- Richard Lawson
While it certainly stimulated and overwhelmed my senses, Blade Runner 2049 rarely got my mind whirring the way one always hopes this kind of artful, serious-minded sci-fi will.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Dec 9, 2017
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- Richard Lawson
It pains me to say this. I spent a good deal of Us straining to like it, to get on its slightly preening wavelength, to be nourished by its heady stew of tropes. I couldn’t get there, though. As loaded up on stuff as Us is, there’s not enough to grab onto; it’s an alienating idea piece that lumbers away just as it’s about to reveal its true nature.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Mar 20, 2019
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- Richard Lawson
Without the Shakespearean language, this is just an ahistorical story about a king and a battle. ... But it’s nothing fancy, really, nothing newfangled or inventive. This is a pretty straight-down-the-middle period war-king film, a true Boy Movie of respectable pedigree but no real distinction.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 3, 2019
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- Richard Lawson
Overall, there is so little texture to these character arcs that the actors are mostly just working in service of a blandly uplifting message. It’s as if they’ve all been commissioned by a well-funded science museum to lend their bodies and voices to the cause of slickly comestible up-with-people infotainment.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 29, 2026
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- Richard Lawson
Dano shows technical promise as a director, but I hope his taste in material has a bit more range. Now that he’s gotten a rather passionless passion project out of his system, hopefully he’ll lift his gaze up in search of other, more vibrant lives—out there in the vastness, hungry for perfect lighting.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Nov 1, 2018
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- Richard Lawson
A too-close-to-the-case ardor for the material does the film a disservice, as can sometimes happen when a cherished object is adapted.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 17, 2025
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- Richard Lawson
Nosferatu is a sensory pleasure. But on a story level, it leaves much to be desired.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Dec 21, 2024
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- Richard Lawson
Rising to challenge viewers’ qualms about the movie’s existence is Deadwyler, whose stirring performance may be reason enough to see the film.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Oct 1, 2022
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- Richard Lawson
As Nope swerves and reels, it often seems distracted by itself, unable to hold its focus on any one thing long enough for deeper meaning, or feeling, to coalesce.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jul 20, 2022
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- Richard Lawson
Horror movies need not have wholly logical explanations—shivers of ambiguity or contradiction are often appreciated—but Longlegs hurtles past compelling murkiness and lands in the realm of dull nonsense.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jul 12, 2024
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- Richard Lawson
Polley admirably allows her fine performers ample space to bring Women Talking to life. But there are also the bigger needs of the film to be considered—sometimes Polley’s actorly generosity comes at a cost, when the film turns stage-y for a minute and we’re snapped out of its enveloping spell.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 9, 2022
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- Richard Lawson
It is a proper movie, one that probably would have fared decently in theatrical release. I believe there was genuine artistic intent put into the making of the film, which distinguishes Disenchanted from HP2 and so many other chintzy streaming endeavors.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Nov 18, 2022
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- Richard Lawson
Watching Love Lies Bleeding becomes a trial of patience, as the viewer waits for the plot to rise to meet the film’s good looks, or for those stylish aspects to blossom further into elegant abstraction. Instead, the film hobbles along, revealing ever more contrivances.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Mar 12, 2024
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- Richard Lawson
I appreciate that Manners and Battye are trying to add some extra flair to what is otherwise a fairly conventional growing-pains narrative, but too often Extra Geography seems located outside any map of the real world.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 28, 2026
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- Richard Lawson
An action-drama sourced from history (while riffing considerably on that history), The Woman King is a sturdy testament to how renewed a staid form can feel when it’s stretched to include different narratives.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 10, 2022
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- Richard Lawson
The film—structured as an issue of a New Yorker-esque magazine—is fussy and ornately detailed and difficult to grasp. Where Anderson’s past elaborate worlds have invited us in with all their cozy detail, The French Dispatch’s seems to haughtily sniff in our direction; it doesn’t much care if we get it.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jul 13, 2021
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- Richard Lawson
Garland didn’t decide to make this particular movie on an un-sourced whim; its very existence is a response to something hanging in the air. Yet he refuses to connect Civil War with that obvious context—which feels more like a cop out than high-minded restraint or elegant equanimity.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Apr 11, 2024
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- Richard Lawson
Blindspotting never settles into a consistent cadence. This isn’t exactly a problem, in theory—movies can contain multitudes, of course—but in this trio’s overeager execution, all that chaos renders the movie curiously inert.- Vanity Fair
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- Richard Lawson
Bones and All has its merits, but the film is only a decent side dish at the feast of Guadagnino. You’ll likely leave the theater still feeling hungry.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 2, 2022
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- Richard Lawson
With Dune, Villeneuve has the chance to right the wrongs of David Lynch’s 1984 misfire (a misfire according to some, anyway) and truly honor Herbert’s text. But Villenueve can’t help but lacquer it all up into something hyper polished and hard to the touch.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 3, 2021
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- Richard Lawson
There’s great stuff in Joy Ride, the jumbled atoms of a classic comedy all waiting to be gathered into a cohesive whole. If they didn’t quite get it together on this outing, they certainly prove their potential.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jul 7, 2023
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- Richard Lawson
The film never achieves lift-off, drifting instead through a series of scenes that repeat and repeat the movie’s few, basic themes before sputtering to a too easily resolved—and patly rendered—conclusion.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 24, 2020
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- Richard Lawson
The film offers a small bit of emotional rescue at its very end—a graceful tribute to the escapes of memory and fantasy—but by then the dourness of its conclusions has blotted out any rounder sense of meaning.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Mar 11, 2021
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- Richard Lawson
Jordan’s absence from this film leaves a big, leaping void at the center. We’re forced to root for marketing executives instead of the phenomenon being marketed. Without its raison d’etre, there is not enough juice to sustain the film. It all feels a bit silly by the heartstring-tugging end.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Apr 4, 2023
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- Richard Lawson
The Killer is an experiment in economy whose results are lesser than the effort put in. Calculating efficiency is all well and good, but at least some life is required to make meaning of all of this killing.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 3, 2023
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- Richard Lawson
Perhaps if the film was more polished, and had some added depth, it might feel more substantial. As is, Hanging by a Wire is a gripping story not told thoroughly enough.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 31, 2026
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- Richard Lawson
Whatever the truth of Anning and Murchison’s time in Dorset together was, Ammonite could have done whatever it wanted. It chooses instead to do close to nothing, and leaves us, quite like its central pair, helplessly grasping for more.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 12, 2020
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- Richard Lawson
On the whole, though, Mickey 17 tests our patience. While the dispensable clones premise is intriguing, and opens a door to the kind of socioeconomic commentary so signature to Bong, the film quickly grows distracted by other matters entirely.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Mar 8, 2025
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- Richard Lawson
Elio is a spirited, engaging 98 minutes. But its tired attempts at the gentle profundity of old—that Wall-E wallop, that Up uplift—are emblematic of a studio that’s running out of ways to whimsically allegorize human experience. Alien experience, too.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jun 18, 2025
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- Richard Lawson
The film is so busy working through what it’s trying to say that it loses its specific pacing and texture, tumbling toward a finale that subverts its own rules and confuses its argument.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Aug 25, 2021
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- Richard Lawson
The movie is deliberately alienating, but Oldroyd has not done enough to earn our devotion before he pulls the rug out and flashes us a smirk. The movie is a provocative tease that doesn’t have the stuff to back up the joke, try as its game performers might to make it all mean something. I found myself wishing that Eileen was longer. Its fertile territory is woefully underdeveloped—so much of the film’s innate potential goes unutilized. At least there is Hathaway’s glowing star turn, both reminding us of what we knew she could do and introducing us to something new.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jan 24, 2023
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- Richard Lawson
The reality is that there is probably nothing truly novel to be done with Batman at this point. He’s been thoroughly mined for both fun and pathos; try as Reeves and his co-screenwriter Peter Craig might, they can’t squeeze much higher-meaning blood out of a fatally depleted stone. Pattinson, moody and saturnine, does what he can, but he’s not afforded much beyond growling and scowling.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Feb 28, 2022
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- Richard Lawson
What I will say is that director Jon Watts handles this grand convergence of properties old and current with enough verve to almost sustain the long run of the film. But there’s so much brand Frankensteining to be done that there’s really no time for quirk and texture; much of the bounce and sparkle of the past two Holland films is lost.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Dec 13, 2021
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- Richard Lawson
In Day’s magnetism, the film does enough justice to Holiday’s memory that its shagginess is almost forgiven. The rest of the orchestra could use a tune up, but Day, at least, makes for an exciting solo act.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Mar 11, 2021
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- Richard Lawson
The film’s self-seriousness bogs down what should be a mad and skittering thing, jangling us with all its agonizing silence. We should be having more fun as we watch through our fingers.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 27, 2021
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- Richard Lawson
It’s an impressive feat of technical film-making, which has now become a hallmark of DaCosta’s work. But she caves to baser impulses in reinterpreting an old and, some might say, crusty play.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 9, 2025
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- Richard Lawson
The film may have just been a failed stab at inter-gender empathy, were it not for its wretched final act. This is where Men takes an abrupt turn into surreal horror, and when something bad starts glinting just beneath the surface of Garland’s apparent motivations.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 9, 2022
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- Richard Lawson
Anderson rescues his film from oblivion in the end, closing out his story with a disarmingly sweet—and, in some ways, provocative—moral argument.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 18, 2025
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- Richard Lawson
As this process unfolds, Reijn and DeLappe manage some moments of shivery suspense. Reijn makes expressive use of the house, tearing up staircases and down shadowy corridors with giddy abandon. But narratively, the film grows awfully repetitive, some version of the same argument taking place in one dark room after another.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Aug 2, 2022
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- Richard Lawson
Mostly, Tenet is a straightforward caper movie—maximally staged and very, very loud, but flimsy at its heart.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 2, 2020
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- Richard Lawson
On occasion the film is wryly amusing. But too often the humor is strained, playing as meek attempt to laugh through the pain—for the characters, the movie itself, the entire franchise, even.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 1, 2025
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- Richard Lawson
There’s nothing wrong with a good soap opera—and when one looks as bespoke as this one, and has such fine actors in it, it should go down a treat. But Everybody Knows lumbers and frustrates as it goes.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Nov 29, 2018
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- Richard Lawson
Craig is certainly sent off in grand fashion, but it’s a grandiosity that isn’t quite fitting for his run of films.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 29, 2021
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- Richard Lawson
Etzler manages some nasty comedy, sourced from the bracing jolt of watching teacher and student cruelly manipulate one another. And he shows a sturdy technical command throughout.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 8, 2025
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- Richard Lawson
It’s a lot of nervy construction built around very little substance. Driver and Cotillard are admirably committed, and the film does occasionally soar to giddily surreal, big-burst musical highs. Not near often enough, though.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Aug 6, 2021
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- Richard Lawson
The King of Staten Island is about growing and learning lessons—but not much is learned, and there’s little growth.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jun 8, 2020
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- Richard Lawson
There is some flair and wit to be found in Rebirth, and its performances are by and large likable and engaging. There are worse exercises in IP-extension out there in the marketplace. But it is hard to imagine what possible basis there could be for an eighth Jurassic film.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jun 30, 2025
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- Richard Lawson
Mulan is not awful. It’s just inert, a lifeless bit of product that will probably neither satisfy die-hards nor enrapture an entire new generation of fans.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 3, 2020
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- Richard Lawson
There is a fine line between creating a laconic, closed-off character and simply not creating a character at all—a line that Causeway transgresses. Lynsey is a frustrating cipher, seemingly guided more by the beats of the script than by any internal impulse or logic.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Nov 9, 2022
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- Richard Lawson
The story’s themes—fear of death, societal atomization at the dawn of the information age—are clearly stated, but there’s little passion pulsing beneath the thesis. It’s a respectful, and respectable, film to a fault; it’s hard to locate the animating why of White Noise. Despite some alterations, the film seems to exist more as a recitation of the book than its own kind of invention.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Aug 31, 2022
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- Richard Lawson
Maybe the few moments when Mountainhead does take on a chilling relevance—when it seems to pick at something nightmarishly real—are enough to justify the sillier stuff. And, we must sadly admit, that silly stuff may not actually be that silly.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 30, 2025
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- Richard Lawson
The film is trying quite hard to be a bracing and immersive depiction of rehabilitation’s hard toil. But “Steve” is instead a pantomime, an offhanded approximation of work that fails to convincingly show us the actual work.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 5, 2025
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- Richard Lawson
In this grim reality, The Front Runner feels quaint, almost a hopeful thing, crafted in the old ways with a pitiable naïveté.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Dec 16, 2018
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- Richard Lawson
The film looks away from that pure artistry too often, turning instead to its limited, and far less satisfying, view of Swift’s complicated star profile.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jan 29, 2020
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- Richard Lawson
Eddington gradually shifts away from the hyper topical and into a despairing, bleakly amusing look at an America prone to violent fantasy and deed, entrenched in escalating conflict, caught in a terrible entropy. When Aster finally knuckles down and ramps up the action, Eddington takes strange flight.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 16, 2025
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- Richard Lawson
If it hadn’t had someone of Álvarez’s care and attention at the helm, Romulus could certainly have been a lot worse.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Aug 14, 2024
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- Richard Lawson
While I admire the movie’s attempt to more deeply mine the identities of sister-princesses Anna (sweet, non-magical) and Elsa (restless, can control snow and ice), its discoveries are rushed and are served up half-baked.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Nov 14, 2019
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- Richard Lawson
As answers to the film’s big questions begin arriving in slapdash fashion, one loses patience for Tuason’s evasive, cluttered storytelling.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 26, 2026
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- Richard Lawson
Though The Musical may lack a feeling of modernity, it could make up for that elsewhere: with tart humor, with unexpected plot developments, with compelling performances. But, alas, Bonilla and her actors can’t do much to leaven the leaden script they’ve been handed.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 30, 2026
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- Richard Lawson
It’s an odd, lumbering patchwork of a film, occasionally fascinating but otherwise bloated and aimless.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Apr 28, 2023
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- Richard Lawson
Skywalkers might be the first of a new genre: extended vlog (or TikTok, or Instragram reel) as feature film, existing somewhere between fact and fiction and all in service of promoting a brand.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jul 19, 2024
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- Vanity Fair
- Posted Nov 21, 2024
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- Richard Lawson
California Schemin’ is, in the end, a kindhearted film about integrity, about art for art’s sake, about embracing one’s roots.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 11, 2025
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- Richard Lawson
Easy’s Waltz is a harmless, fleeting curio, a piece of ephemera that lilts by like a song that isn’t quite catchy enough to get stuck in your head — it has the decency to do its thing and then leave us alone.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 19, 2025
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- Richard Lawson
Here is an opportunity for a wild and sorrowful confluence of gay dream and national nightmare. Alas, this Kiss of the Spider Woman gives us a competent but glancing rendering of the easier, more palatable aspects of a story that should be anything but.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jan 28, 2025
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- Richard Lawson
Maria is the thinnest of the three, psychologically facile and overly mannered. There is something arbitrary, unspecific about the film.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Aug 29, 2024
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- Richard Lawson
Had the movie pitched itself on a one-way trip into the black, Deutch would no doubt have been up to the task. She’s a squirmy wonder in the film, loathsome and pitiable and, perhaps, grimly relatable. At times, Shephard overstates Danni’s detachment from polite society, but otherwise she and Deutch keep things in frightfully believable bounds.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Aug 2, 2022
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- Richard Lawson
Dumbo... makes a mishmash of less immediately cherished I.P. It’s corporatized sentiment from a director who seems caught between his own fading impulses and the surging ones of capital.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Mar 27, 2019
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- Richard Lawson
Free Guy has moments of dizzying action and offers up some intriguing sci-fi speculation, but it is decidedly not a cool movie.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Aug 11, 2021
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- Richard Lawson
Babylon is unfocussed and overeager, continuously distracted by the burst of a new idea. That could be read as an apt rendering of the manic thought of a cocaine binge, but there is something awfully studied in how Chazelle conjures up that nose-scratching, high-speed verve.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Dec 16, 2022
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- Richard Lawson
The new film This Is Me…Now is a passion project, about passion, that curiously lacks that essential quality.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Feb 16, 2024
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- Richard Lawson
The Lost City has the bad tang of squandered potential, misusing its massively appealing stars and failing the possibility of its premise.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Mar 23, 2022
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- Richard Lawson
What they’ve visually pulled off in Lightyear is stunning stuff. The story, sadly, does not rise up to meet that work.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jun 17, 2022
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- Richard Lawson
In its best stretches—the first hour of the film, let’s say—WW84 sweetly revels in its old-school trappings, its hokey mystery, its goofy villain, its resourceful hero. The film is light on its feet, colorful and playful in a way not seen elsewhere in the DC Universe.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Dec 15, 2020
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- Richard Lawson
I remain as curious as ever to see what Goddard does next. But this film, for all its canny presentation, is a mishmash of compelling narrative premises clumsily fused together. It manages to be both overwrought and under-developed, disappointing less for what it is than for what it could have been.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Oct 13, 2018
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- Richard Lawson
Mitchell has made a stylish, occasionally intriguing film, by turns idiosyncratically funny and downright scary. But he says and shows a lot of bothersome things throughout, which I’m not quite sure how to approach.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 16, 2018
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- Richard Lawson
Though some zesty flair has been added—particularly a new heroine—this hyper-aggro spin-off of a beloved franchise over does it while under-delivering.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jul 31, 2019
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- Richard Lawson
There’s some art to be found here, for sure. But there’s not nearly enough of the pop.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Nov 24, 2021
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- Richard Lawson
Lizzie isn’t a bad film, but it doesn’t accomplish all that it wants to—and all I wanted it to. We’re never as immersed in its psychological swirl as we should be, and every character in it is either such a creep or a flinching headcase that it’s hard to get our emotional hooks in any of them.- Vanity Fair
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- Richard Lawson
The Drama is a handsomely made, sharply performed letdown. It is yet another example of a far too common occurrence: a kicky logline premise having no real structure behind it.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 31, 2026
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- Richard Lawson
Chastain pulls focus whenever she can, operating as one of the film’s main resources of levity and acerbic bite. I wish the movie had more of that energy—McDonagh keeps the proceedings oddly muted given the circumstances—but at least Chastain is there, pepping things up a bit.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 17, 2021
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- Richard Lawson
The movie is, for a good stretch, a troubling and arresting character study, one done with nervy conviction. Eventually, though, Phillips has to more tightly attach this downward spiral to the larger Gotham mythology, which is where the provocative ambivalence of the film gives way to veneration.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Aug 31, 2019
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- Richard Lawson
Cruella is yet another act of co-opting by the biggest entertainment company in the world, an attempt to graft a cheap rebel spirit onto a naked exercise in I.P. synergy.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 26, 2021
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- Richard Lawson
F9’s attempts at classical drama, all its reckoning with dynastic sin, do weigh the thing down quite a bit. Those going to the theater simply for the kicky, bad-joke, MacGuffin charms of F&F may find themselves a little bored and distracted, as I was, by all the turgidity.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jun 23, 2021
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- Richard Lawson
Now 80 years old, Ford still glows with that unique charisma. It’s a shame, then, that Dial of Destiny doesn’t do right by its heroes—both Ford and Dr. Henry Jones, archeologist adventurer.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 18, 2023
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- Richard Lawson
The movie goes all over the place, attempting to map the world of this thing but really just chasing its idea into abstraction. Which is the opposite direction of where it should be going.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 1, 2019
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- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 6, 2021
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- Richard Lawson
In some ways, the film is hallmark Denis, flinty and strange and sometimes inscrutable. But it is also a disappointment, a leaden film whose points Denis has made more convincingly elsewhere.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 12, 2025
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- Richard Lawson
With more patience, and a little rigor, Military Wives could have been a massive crowd-pleaser. As is, it’s only fleetingly charming.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 20, 2020
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- Richard Lawson
Iñárritu has a lot on his mind here, weighing the sins and graces of personal and public history, and attempting to atone for some of it. But as Bardo stretches on and on and on, the film narrows into something solipsistic and meta.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 1, 2022
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- Richard Lawson
Watching Snyder’s intermittently rewarding epic—if nothing else a spectacle of completed vision—stirred up surprising emotions. Not about what happens to the people (and aliens) in the film, but about what happened to its maker, and to the course of human events while Justice League 2.0 wrestled its way into being.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Mar 15, 2021
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- Richard Lawson
Huppert and Jordan are certainly capable of turning up the volume, but for whatever reason they pull back in Greta, getting stuck somewhere between shlockly art and arty schlock. That’s not a good place to be, even if it is a Greta one.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Feb 28, 2019
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- Richard Lawson
Lister-Jones has a lot of good ideas that are given short shrift in this film. The potency of their implications is sapped by, among other things, the film’s seemingly hyper-conscious worry that it might put a foot wrong, especially within such a limited run time. Which may actually be The Craft: Legacy’s most modern dimension: it probably should have been a Netflix series.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Oct 27, 2020
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