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 0.6 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
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Richard Lawson
The Father is an act of understanding, radical in its toughness and its generous artistry.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Feb 1, 2020
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- Richard Lawson
There’s a host of great performances too, from Evans’s sad and weary nonagenarianism to Johansson’s watery mettle to Brolin’s lumbering and alluring villainy.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Apr 23, 2019
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- Richard Lawson
Mills makes this genre feel new and insightful, as if he’s one of only a few filmmakers who has tackled the complex dynamic between adult and child.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 8, 2021
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- Richard Lawson
The Favourite is a pleasure to watch. It’s weird without being alienating, dirty without being cheap. And you’d be hard-pressed to find a better acting trio this fall. What fun The Favourite is, while still striking a few resonantly melancholy chords here and there.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 4, 2018
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- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jun 12, 2023
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- Richard Lawson
Granik works simply, but she doesn’t forego artistry. She’s made a film of grace and power, a story of people lost and found in America that often shows us at our noble and humble best. How rare and refreshing that is these days.- Vanity Fair
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- Richard Lawson
Queer is meant to be prickly, withholding, enigmatic. To want anything more from it might simply be repeating Lee’s mistake, grasping for something that could never be ours.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 4, 2024
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- Richard Lawson
The wonderful thing about Skate Kitchen is how inviting it is, welcoming you into its community and showing you around with cheery spunk. Skate Kitchen is a warm movie.- Vanity Fair
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- Richard Lawson
Mann’s film is all the more pleasurable for its thoughtfulness and restraint.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Aug 31, 2023
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- Richard Lawson
There’s a bracingly alive quality to The Tale, as if it’s sentient and thinking in real time, giving the piece a gripping immediacy.- Vanity Fair
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- Richard Lawson
Nickel Boys is perhaps a rebuke to the idea that violence must be plainly stated in order to be understood. Here, it is palpably present in every negative space. What Ross instead affords these young men is the dignity of a point of view, drawing the viewer into the bracing immediacy of mind and body.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 27, 2024
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- Richard Lawson
It’s not a demure film, by any measure, nor does it shy away from hard truths. What it does is allow the Riches the loveliness and grain of their individual being, and lets that be enough. The rest of the film’s mission, then, is what we in the audience do with what Bradley, and Rich, have graciously shown us. Time appeals to heart and mind. It also, hopefully, convinces us of their capacity for action.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Oct 8, 2020
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- Richard Lawson
With weary humor, Blank details how hard it is to sustain an actual, decades-long career in the arts, when the twin forces of public appetite (and money) and personal obstacle conspire to derail or deaden what was once so exuberant, so teeming with possibility.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Oct 8, 2020
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- Richard Lawson
Its universality, if you want to call it that, can only be so headily conjured because The Farewell is about exactly what it’s about: this family and their city, their culture, and their complicated bonds. That’s where the film’s beautiful, affecting honesty is sourced: in its million grains of truth, generously offered up. What an honor it is that Wang has invited us in.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jul 20, 2019
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- Richard Lawson
Fair Play is a film responsive to internet discourse but not acting in service of it. It’s a grim, dynamic thriller, one that sets workplace and home crashing into one another in a small symphony of beautiful disharmony.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jan 22, 2023
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- Richard Lawson
I found myself reluctantly taken by the movie, and the way Scorsese uses it to maybe, just a little bit, atone for some of his own past blitheness about violence. In The Irishman, a merry darkness slowly becomes an elegy, ringed with guilt. And what could be more Irish than that?- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 27, 2019
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- Richard Lawson
Sentimental Value is yet another rich and humane look at existence from a filmmaker wise to the endless nuance of being a person in the world, for better or worst.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 22, 2025
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- Richard Lawson
Yes, it is the cool stripper-robber movie with the awesome cast. But it’s also a true movie for our era, teeming with the confusion and yearning and risk of life right now. It’s a deeply humane film, one that finds celebration, and illumination, in the dark spaces where so many grind.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 11, 2019
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- Richard Lawson
Holofcener weaves these people and their problems together in delicate fashion, guiding us toward her thematic conclusions in a way that never feels starchy, didactic, too lesson-oriented. She’s got a light touch, a humane one too.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jan 23, 2023
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- Richard Lawson
McQueen has made a film that’s sleek and muscular, a polished product that has a barb-wire ribbon of tenacious political fury running through it. It’s somehow both heavy and light, a giddy entertainment that still urges at deep social ills.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 11, 2018
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- Richard Lawson
The beauty of Pillion is that those of us watching on the sidelines are not voyeurs, but rather witnesses to something powerfully complex and human.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 20, 2025
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- Richard Lawson
The Force is, to me, still silly Star Wars mumbo jumbo, but Johnson finds a way to underscore it with humanity, with a classical Greek rumble of true pathos. On that front, The Last Jedi is a pure success, accessing the molten core of its drama and grappling with it in nuanced ways.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Dec 12, 2017
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- Richard Lawson
I’ve seen the film twice now, and while I enjoyed it the first time, on second viewing I found it nearly profound.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 3, 2018
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- Richard Lawson
It’s an oddly moving film, this bright and quite literally stagey curio involving an extraterrestrial. At its best, Asteroid City evokes the memory of what it was to first see a Wes Anderson film, surprised and delighted by its singular vision of life on Earth.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 23, 2023
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- Richard Lawson
A chewy, handsomely staged novel of a movie, Sorry Angel (whose much better French title translates to Pleasure, Love, and Run Fast) contains moments of piercing intelligence and heartbreaking beauty. It’s an epic diptych look at two lives converging, one in many ways just beginning, the other faltering to a close. I was absolutely in love with it—until the very end.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 19, 2018
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- Richard Lawson
In ragged times, the sophisticated derring-do of Fallout is a welcome gift, a slick and studio-polished adventure that nonetheless has the undermining wink of transgression. The movie’s nerve and moxie successfully make us forget its corporate overlords, and all those other oligarchs grinding millions of American lives into nothing.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jul 12, 2018
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- Richard Lawson
What Park creates from the tension between this joyful, exciting present and a seemingly ominous future is rather marvelous, a big and sincere sentiment about the risk and reward of life, a message that is just as worthy for a middle-ager as it is for a kid.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jan 22, 2024
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- Richard Lawson
It’s a piercing and often very funny character piece, a study of narcissism masked, at least in part, by bourgeois, Millennial understandings of progressive coupling. But Sachs, who is in his 50s, has not made some condemnatory thinkpiece about what’s wrong with a generation. The people of Passages could, in some senses, be from any time; mercurial partners have existed forever.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Aug 10, 2023
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- Richard Lawson
It sounds strange to say of a film about such impossible sorrow, but Mass is thoroughly entertaining. Or maybe engrossing is a better word. Its incisive dialogue and nuanced performances demand our attention, inviting us into a roiling weather system of guilt and sadness. The experience proves oddly nourishing, clarifying.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Oct 9, 2021
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- Richard Lawson
There’s a deep, and never pandering, empathy at work here, an allowance of confusion and moral error that keeps Monster from the smarmy and didactic lows of so many social-issues films.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 19, 2023
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