Richard Roeper
Select another critic »For 2,095 reviews, this critic has graded:
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73% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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25% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 5.1 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Richard Roeper's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 71 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | I'm Still Here | |
| Lowest review score: | The Happytime Murders | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,530 out of 2095
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Mixed: 367 out of 2095
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Negative: 198 out of 2095
2095
movie
reviews
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- Richard Roeper
Once in a great while I see a movie I know I’ll be listing as one of my all-time favorites for the rest of my days. So it is with this remarkable, unforgettable, elegant epic that is about one family — and millions of families. It’s a pinpoint-specific and yet universal story.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jul 17, 2014
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- Richard Roeper
Moonlight is gorgeous and yet bleak, uplifting and yet sobering, exhilarating but also grounded in some unshakable realities.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Oct 27, 2016
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- Richard Roeper
This is a film of such dramatic power and innovative comedy and romantic poetry and melancholy beauty that upon exiting a screening, you might well feel the urge to tell everyone in the lobby of the multiplex to delay their plans to check out some mainstream offering because if they truly love cinema, they should see THIS movie, immediately.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Nov 18, 2019
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- Richard Roeper
Cuarón’s artistry yields a film with the pinpoint authenticity of a docudrama, but also the intoxicating and lyrical poetry of memories as filtered through a perfect dream. Sometimes we go to the movies and we’re rewarded with a masterpiece.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 9, 2018
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- Richard Roeper
Thank the cinematic and music gods it was never destroyed or lost, as Summer of Soul is an absolute found treasure of golden onstage moments, interspersed with interviews from participants such as Gladys Knight as well as attendees and cultural commentators, along with celebrity artists such as Chris Rock and Lin-Manuel Miranda.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jun 30, 2021
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- Richard Roeper
Unflinchingly directed by Steve McQueen, led by Ejiofor’s magnificent work, 12 Years a Slave is what we talk about when we talk about greatness in film.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Oct 17, 2013
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- Richard Roeper
This is one of the funniest films about coping with tragedy I’ve ever seen. Not that it’s a comedy, not for a second. It’s an immensely moving and beautifully resonant drama about the walking wounded and how they cope with a horrific event from many years past.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Nov 24, 2016
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- Richard Roeper
This is one of the most stunning visual treats of the year and one of the most unforgettable thrill rides in recent memory.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Oct 3, 2013
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- Richard Roeper
The Scottish writer-director Charlotte Wells’ minimalist masterpiece Aftersun draws us into the lives of a father and daughter on a summer vacation in such a natural and gradual way that we feel like we truly know them as the days and nights go by, and we care deeply about them. And yet it still comes as something of a jolt when the final moments of this movie hit us SO hard, like a sledgehammer to the heart.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Nov 9, 2022
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- Richard Roeper
Director Haynes has a knack for framing his characters with just the right touch. There are no throwaway shots in this film.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 23, 2015
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- Richard Roeper
A rich, smart, funny, sometimes acidic portrayal of a couple who can be spectacular when they’re in tune — and toxic when they’re at each other’s throats.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted May 30, 2013
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- Richard Roeper
Nolan has crafted a tight, gripping, deeply involving and unforgettable film that ranks about the best war movies of the decade.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jul 17, 2017
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- Richard Roeper
This is the best movie of the year so far and one of the best films of the decade.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Nov 6, 2019
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- Richard Roeper
Directed with great flair and pitch-perfect timing, brimming with sparkling visuals, filled with first-rate voice performances, thrilling adventures and unforgettable moments, Inside-Out is an instant classic.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jun 15, 2015
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- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 14, 2017
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- Richard Roeper
I’m not buying every chapter of this Marriage Story, but there’s enough material here to warrant a look.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Nov 18, 2019
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- Richard Roeper
Chazelle’s script is hopeful and sweet and clever and rich. His direction is innovative and captivating.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 15, 2016
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- Richard Roeper
It is smart without being smug, insightful without being condescending, funny without being mean-spirited and genuinely moving. It’s unique and original and fresh and wonderful, and can you tell I loved it?- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Nov 9, 2017
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- Richard Roeper
Uncut Gems is part psychological thriller, part black comedy, part thriller and part dysfunctional extended family drama — and it clicks on all those cylinders.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 26, 2019
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- Richard Roeper
This is a well-crafted look at the American folk music scene of the early 1960s, a sometimes hilarious dry comedy — and oh yeah, the music is terrific.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 18, 2013
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- Richard Roeper
Even as TÁR delivers as an intellectually soaring, elaborately constructed and passionate tribute to the technical AND emotional joys of playing, conducting and appreciating beautiful music, it also becomes a knowing and timely #MeToo fable.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Oct 13, 2022
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- Richard Roeper
It’s not easy to make an emotionally involving film in which some of the most pivotal moments are about phone calls and making copies of documents and a source circling names on a document — but save for a few overly dry moments, Spotlight prevails.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Nov 12, 2015
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- Richard Roeper
It’s film that’ll make you wince at times, and you’ll most likely not want to see twice, but seeing it once is an experience you’ll not soon forget.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Oct 12, 2017
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- Richard Roeper
What it does, and does so effectively, is remind us that the orchestrators of this genocide weren’t one-dimensional, psychopathic creatures out of a horror film; they were something far more terrifying. They were people.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jan 10, 2024
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- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted May 23, 2019
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- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Nov 3, 2016
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- Richard Roeper
Son of Saul is lasting work of art — difficult to watch, impossible to forget.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jan 28, 2016
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- Richard Roeper
Her works as a real romance, and as a commentary on the ways technology connects everyone to the world but also isolates us from legitimate, warm human contact.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 23, 2013
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- Richard Roeper
Through Gerwig’s wonderfully creative prism, it’s as if we’re meeting the March sisters for the very first time, and we’re immediately swept away in a gorgeously filmed, wickedly funny, deeply moving and, yes, empowering story with themes still relevant some 150 years after the time period of these events.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 26, 2019
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- Richard Roeper
Huge, important things happen to characters secondary and primary. Surprises big and small abound. As is the case with all of the “Star Wars” films, where there is evil there is heroism, and where there is bravery there is sacrifice — and sometimes where there is love, there is heartbreak.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 12, 2017
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- Richard Roeper
It is a not a viewing experience one shakes off easily, nor should it be.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jan 2, 2025
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- Richard Roeper
While this period-piece, existential fantasy adventure doesn’t rank with the absolute finest entries in Miyazaki’s iconic canon, it’s still one of the most inventive and creative films, animated or otherwise, of the year.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 6, 2023
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- Richard Roeper
It’s a period piece with a wink. It’s also funny as hell and a true big-screen treat.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 9, 2018
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- Richard Roeper
Even with the occasional stumble and that self-indulgent running time, this is a unique and at times brilliant piece of work.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jan 8, 2025
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- Richard Roeper
With first-rate production values and a gloriously memory-drenched 35mm cinematography, Licorice Pizza is a visual feast brimming with razor-sharp dialogue, hilarious comedic vignettes, brilliant performances from Cooper Hoffman and Alana Haim as well as the veteran, star-studded supporting cast, and some genuine heart. This is one of the very best movies of 2021.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 22, 2021
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- Richard Roeper
The gifted director Kelly Reichardt (“Old Joy,” “Wendy and Lucy,” “Meeks Cutoff”) adds to her impressive canon of minimalist, Oregon-set treasures with an immersive and deceptively simple and uniquely original frontier morality play set in the unforgiving Pacific Northwest of the 1820s.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Mar 11, 2020
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- Richard Roeper
It’s all perfectly, wonderfully, fantastically crazy. Amidst all those ingenious, power-packed road warrior sequences, Fury Road contains a surprising amount of depth and character development.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted May 12, 2015
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- Richard Roeper
Part psychological thriller, part moody thought piece, part romance, “All of Us Strangers” feels like a feature-length update of a classic “Twilight Zone” episode, and we mean that as a high compliment.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jan 8, 2024
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- Richard Roeper
Anderson shoots and paces Phantom Thread almost like a 1950s mystery, and there ARE some dark elements of intrigue in the story — but this is not a Hitchcockian tale of lust and betrayal and murder. It’s a fascinating examination of an obsessive-compulsive, maddeningly self-centered, magnificently talented man .- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jan 9, 2018
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- Richard Roeper
Much of The Souvenir: Part II is about the collaborative process of creating a movie, and how filmmakers can use their art to tell their stories — not as the stories happened, but how they wished or imagined they could have happened.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Nov 11, 2021
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- Richard Roeper
Mangrove is an invaluable work enlightening us on an important chapter in Black history across the pond.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Nov 18, 2020
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- Richard Roeper
Christopher Nolan’s three-hour historical biopic Oppenheimer is a gorgeously photographed, brilliantly acted, masterfully edited and thoroughly engrossing epic that instantly takes its place among the finest films of this decade — an old-fashioned yet cutting-edge work that should resonate with film scholars and popcorn-toting mainstream movie lovers for years and decades to come.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jul 19, 2023
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- Richard Roeper
What a remarkable performance by Laura Dern. It’s a beautifully nuanced portrayal of a smart, accomplished, independent woman who finds the courage and strength to confront the past — and to understand that the demons poking at her subconscious all this time were not of her own making.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted May 31, 2018
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- Richard Roeper
Paterson is a fable, brimming with symbolism and inside literary references and nods to playwrights and authors from decades and centuries gone by — but it’s also authentic and plausible, in its own weird way.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jan 19, 2017
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- Richard Roeper
American Hustle is the best time I’ve had at the movies all year, a movie so perfectly executed, such wall-to-wall fun, so filled with the joy of expert filmmaking on every level I can’t imagine anyone who loves movies not loving THIS movie.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 13, 2013
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- Richard Roeper
The music is brilliant, Chazelle’s writing and directing are something to behold, Teller is really good — and Simmons delivers one of the most memorable performances of the year.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Oct 16, 2014
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- Richard Roeper
The editing is brilliant, as we jump back in forth in time, seeing these three as kids and then as young men, marveling at their skateboard moves and smiling at their rebellious spirit, and wondering if there’s any hope for any of them given all they’ve been through in their young lives.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Aug 31, 2018
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- Richard Roeper
Martin Scorsese’s true-crime American period piece Killers of the Flower Moon is a big, sweeping, glorious, heartbreaking, insightful, powerful and unforgettable epic that serves notice the 80-year-old Scorsese remains at the forefront of innovative and provocative filmmaking.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Oct 18, 2023
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- Richard Roeper
Writer-director Chung and the production team have delivered a sepia-toned memory piece that never sugarcoats the culture clashes in and out of the Yi household and yet remains hopeful in tone throughout, reminding us of the power of family and of the Great American Dream.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Feb 16, 2021
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- Richard Roeper
This is a viewing experience to be treasured. It is one of the very best films of 2019.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jul 17, 2019
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- Richard Roeper
De Niro infuses Costello with a kind of avuncular charm, while Genovese has the fiery temper and paranoid fury to match Jake La Motta in “Raging Bull.” It’s a privilege to witness one of the best actors of all time, still at the top of his game.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Mar 19, 2025
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- Richard Roeper
With Campion’s native New Zealand standing in magnificently for early 20th century Big Sky Country, The Power of the Dog is a study in contrasts between the almost surreal beauty of the mountains and the sky and the vast land, and the nasty, petty and often unspeakably harsh manner in which people will treat one another — even their own kin.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Nov 15, 2021
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- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Aug 6, 2015
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- Richard Roeper
As a record of a kind of everyday Parisian life, the film is superb. We think of the cafes of Paris as hotbeds of fiery philosophical debate, but more often, I imagine, they are just like this: people talking, flirting, posing, drinking, smoking, telling the truth and lying, while waiting to see if real life will ever begin.- Chicago Sun-Times
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- Richard Roeper
Even though it is a highly stylized, stop-motion animation film featuring puppet-like human characters, it is a pinpoint-accurate encapsulation of some of the most banal AND some of the most exhilarating moments virtually all of us have experienced at some point in our lives.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jan 7, 2016
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- Richard Roeper
From start to finish, director/co-writer Armando Iannucci (creator of HBO’s brilliant “Veep”) delivers an audacious and insightful and ridiculous and hilarious send-up that reminded me of the classic Monty Python films of the 1970s and 1980s.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Mar 15, 2018
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- Richard Roeper
Following the path of “Three Billboards” is a little like driving down an unfamiliar road in beautiful but forbidding country late at night, and alternately marveling at the scenery and gripping the steering wheel tightly when yet another steep drop or sudden change of direction presents itself.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Nov 16, 2017
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- Richard Roeper
One of the many wonderful surprises in A Star is Born is how director/co-writer/leading man Cooper strikes the perfect balance between a showbiz fable with emotional histrionics and performance numbers and a finely honed, intimate story with universal truths and experiences hardly unique to the entertainment world.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Oct 3, 2018
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- Richard Roeper
The filmed version of the Broadway sensation makes for immersive, exhilarating, magnificent cinema, almost sure to thrill first-time viewers as well as diehard fanatics who have seen the stage production once or twice or a dozen times.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jul 1, 2020
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- Richard Roeper
This is one of the most painfully realistic depictions of dementia in recent film history, and yes, that means The Father can be a tough viewing experience at times — but how can one be anything but grateful for the chance to see one of the world’s greatest actors doing such enormously moving work past his 80th birthday?- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Mar 10, 2021
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- Richard Roeper
Somehow, the great Almodóvar has managed to weave together these tales of recent birth and long-ago deaths in a way that is unnerving and yet authentic, strange yet relatable.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jan 5, 2022
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- Richard Roeper
With electrifying, graceful direction by David Mackenzie...a rich, darkly humorous and deeply insightful screenplay by Taylor Sheridan...and no fewer than four performances as good as anything I’ve seen onscreen this year, Hell or High Water is an instant classic modern-day Western, traveling down familiar roads but always, always with a fresh and original spin.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Aug 11, 2016
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- Richard Roeper
There’s always room for wholly original and unique stories, as evidenced by the one-two summer punch of “Barbie” and “Oppenheimer.” In that latter category, we can now add Yorgos Lanthimos’ beautifully garish, wonderfully twisted, unabashedly raunchy and at times grotesquely striking Poor Things, and while it might sound clichéd to say you’ve never seen anything like it, trust me: You’ve never seen anything like it.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 13, 2023
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- Richard Roeper
As you’d expect, Ridley Scott’s sweeping, decades-spanning and magnificently filmed epic Napoleon is a stylized and violent interpretation of the life and times of one of the most famous and infamous military commanders and political leaders history has ever known — but it’s also a surprisingly funny indictment of a sniveling brute of a man who is utterly unaware of his shortcomings, so to speak.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Nov 20, 2023
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- Richard Roeper
On a pure pop level, as a piece of big-time mainstream entertainment, let us also celebrate this: Black Panther is one of the best superhero movies of the century.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Feb 13, 2018
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- Richard Roeper
The story in the jungle moves ahead neatly, economically, powerfully.- Chicago Sun-Times
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- Richard Roeper
A great American novel has been turned into a great American film.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 23, 2018
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- Richard Roeper
This is a strange and beautiful and unique film, one of the best movies of the year.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Oct 23, 2014
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- Richard Roeper
At times Can You Ever Forgive Me? is actually quite funny and of course McCarthy is great in those scenes — but she’s equally effective in the darkest, most dramatic moments. It’s one of the finest performances of the year.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Oct 25, 2018
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- Richard Roeper
Almodovar’s stylized and meta slice of self-representation is as visually stunning as it is emotionally effective.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Oct 11, 2019
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- Richard Roeper
“Fallout” just might be the best of the franchise, and what a rare thing that is for a long-running series.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jul 26, 2018
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- Richard Roeper
Boseman is in utter command of his character. It is a beautiful, sad, wonderful, bittersweet thing to behold.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 18, 2020
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- Richard Roeper
With Rolling Thunder Revue, Scorsese remains at the top of his game, and is the perfect filmmaker to tell the story of a unique chapter in the life and career of a fellow creative legend.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jun 12, 2019
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- Richard Roeper
If you miss this film, you are robbing yourself of one of the great movie-watching experiences of your life.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Feb 11, 2021
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- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Oct 24, 2013
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- Richard Roeper
In “Banshees,” Gleeson and Farrell once again are pure movie magic together, with Gleeson’s gruff and rugged and imposing persona the perfect counterpart to Farrell’s handsome and wide-eyed transparency, which at times borders on the, well, the not-too-bright. Earnest, but not too bright.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Oct 26, 2022
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- Richard Roeper
Stillman has done a marvelous job of adapting Austen’s novella Lady Susan and capturing the author’s tart and rapier-sharp sense of humor.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted May 19, 2016
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- Richard Roeper
The shock moments here (including one that might send one or two viewers running for the exit) are truly stunning, and grotesque, and bizarre — and they will stay with you long after you’ve gone home for the night.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jun 7, 2018
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- Richard Roeper
This is an inclusive, diverse, multi-level, multi-layered, funny, warm, cool, richly detailed, lovingly rendered, friendly neighborhood instant classic.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 11, 2018
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- Richard Roeper
American Underdog is a fitting family album for the Warners and solid, safe entertainment for the viewer.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 22, 2021
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- Richard Roeper
It’s one of the most visually striking and leanest versions of “the Scottish play” ever put on film, with blockbuster performances from Oscar winners Frances McDormand and Denzel Washington as Lady and Lord Macbeth, and a brilliant supporting cast.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 23, 2021
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- Richard Roeper
It’s certainly one of the most romantic and one of the most breathtakingly beautiful movies of the year.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 5, 2017
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- Richard Roeper
It’s a blazingly vibrant, emotionally resonant and exhilarating movie musical that does justice to Alice Walker’s iconic 1982 novel and the subsequent stage and movie versions while forging new creative paths and standing on its own as a bold and original work.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jan 2, 2024
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- Richard Roeper
It just might be the most impressive piece of filmmaking I’ve seen in 2015, and it features a great lead performance by a rising star, a memorable supporting role by a familiar veteran — and one of the most amazing acting jobs by a child I’ve ever seen.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Oct 22, 2015
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- Richard Roeper
Shot in beautiful tones of black and white (and silver and gray), Nebraska is steeped in nostalgia, regret and bittersweet moments. Yet it’s also a pitch-perfect cinematic poem about the times we live in.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Nov 21, 2013
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- Richard Roeper
The action sequences are dazzling and innovative, but at least two major set pieces run far too long, to the point where we’re equal parts thrilled and exhausted. Given that this is just the first half of a two-part sequel (“Beyond the Spider-Verse" is scheduled to arrive in theaters next spring), one can’t help but consider if this might have worked better as a multi-part streaming series, with each episode running 45 minutes or so.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted May 31, 2023
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- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 18, 2014
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- Richard Roeper
The Truth vs. Alex Jones is a scathing and well-deserved takedown of the abhorrent hatemonger and huckster whose name is in the title, but the bleating talk show host isn’t the only villain in this story.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Mar 26, 2024
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- Richard Roeper
Such an original and disturbing and haunting and creatively outrageous piece of work that it refuses to drift from your conscience.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted May 8, 2024
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- Richard Roeper
With Samy Burch’s razor-sharp script providing some fantastically flourishing dialogue passages, frequent Haynes collaborator Julianne Moore delivering the latest in a long line of magnificently calibrated and memorable performances, and Moore’s fellow Oscar winner Natalie Portman turning in equally layered work, this is an intricately crafted study of people who are experts at putting on facades and all too skilled in the art of deception.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Nov 16, 2023
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- Richard Roeper
Maggie Gyllenhaal’s The Lost Daughter is a chilling and unnerving psychological horror film brimming with dicey characters who are capable of deeply disturbing behavior. We keep holding our breath because it feels like something awful is about to happen — and our instincts might not be wrong.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 16, 2021
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- Richard Roeper
It is funny and smart and wise and silly, it is romantic and sweet and just cynical enough, and it is without a doubt one of the best romantic comedies I have seen in a long time.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jun 29, 2017
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- Richard Roeper
There are moments in Infinity Pool where it’s a test of wills to keep your eyes fixed on the screen, but beyond all the gruesome violence, Cronenberg’s screenplay is filled with sharply honed observations about culture and class differences, and some wickedly satisfying twists and turns. This is a film that is bat-bleep crazy but knows exactly what it is doing.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jan 25, 2023
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- Richard Roeper
With First Reformed, Schrader delivers his most impactful work in years, with Ethan Hawke’s haunting and brilliant work as Ernst Toller joining the ranks of great lead performances in Schrader films. This is an inescapably memorable and at times almost unbearably sorrowful piece of work.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted May 23, 2018
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- Richard Roeper
It all works. All of it. The music, the performances, the twists and turns in the plot, the sheer energy and life force of the movie.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jun 27, 2017
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- Richard Roeper
Directors LeBrecht and Newnham do a nimble job of threading the stories of a number of campers into a compelling narrative, deftly moving back and forth from the newsreel-style footage from the 1970s and the interviews and life updates on the campers many decades later.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Mar 26, 2020
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- Richard Roeper
This is a smart and accomplished work with a quick wit, a palpable sense of melancholy and genuine heart.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Nov 13, 2024
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- Richard Roeper
The Green Knight contains some beautifully written passages, and cinematographer Andrew Droz Palermo delivers one award-worthy visual image after another.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Jul 29, 2021
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- Richard Roeper
The real star of the film is writer-director Jordan Peele, who has created a work that addresses the myriad levels of racism, pays homage to some great horror films, carves out its own creative path, has a distinctive visual style — and is flat-out funny as well.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Feb 22, 2017
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