Richard Whittaker
Select another critic »For 624 reviews, this critic has graded:
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47% higher than the average critic
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5% same as the average critic
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48% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 0.7 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Richard Whittaker's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 65 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Blindspotting | |
| Lowest review score: | Old | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 443 out of 624
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Mixed: 144 out of 624
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Negative: 37 out of 624
624
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Richard Whittaker
While The Mitchells vs. the Machines has its points to make, it’s also deftly funny, and never didactic. You’ll care about the message because you’ll care about – and probably identify with – the Mitchells.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Jan 12, 2022
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- Richard Whittaker
It’s a fittingly mediocre end to a franchise that has always been OK with being average.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Jan 12, 2022
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- Richard Whittaker
It’s not just that it’s a great thriller. Its importance as a film is that it really weaves the lead character’s disability into the script, in a way that arguably wasn’t equaled in the subgenre until Mike Flanagan wrote a deaf heroine for Hush.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Jan 5, 2022
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- Richard Whittaker
Ultimately, it’s an aspirational and inspirational tale of daring to reach for the stars even when authority figures tell you they don’t exist – and the value of having a friend who believes in you, even if they have an umbrella handle for a nose.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Jan 5, 2022
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- Richard Whittaker
Ultimately, by placing everything within the online adventure, the real-world threats become secondary to the dungeon crawl. Hardened SAO fans may be fascinated by the tweaks in this remaster, but Aria of a Starless Night just feels like a repackaging.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Dec 30, 2021
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- Richard Whittaker
Red Snow does a surprisingly good job of manipulating, and then subverting, your sympathies for these particular devils.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Dec 29, 2021
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- Richard Whittaker
The strange and challengingly charming awkwardness of Alana and Gary, as well as the more entertaining anecdotes, will get you past the somewhat lumpen structure.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Dec 22, 2021
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- Richard Whittaker
All the broad humor of the original film is gone, replaced by clunky and often tasteless gags, and the attempts to extract pathos from genuine tragedies vary from tacky to insulting.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Dec 22, 2021
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- Richard Whittaker
Brimming with cornball humor and overt sentimentality, there’s something compelling within the film’s unyielding commitment to its own idiosyncrasies, not to mention the emotionally cogent backbone.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Dec 21, 2021
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- Richard Whittaker
So often in these big multi-villain events, the hero gets swallowed up, but here he defines the film. If this really is Holland’s last outing, then he leaves having kept true to the spirit of his Spidey.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Dec 17, 2021
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- Richard Whittaker
In a year when there's been great discussion about unlikable protagonists, Colman's creation of Leda as a living, breathing, deeply flawed character who can be both wounded and cruel – and the way Gyllenhaal sympathetically frames this unflattering portrait – is a fascinating reminder that not every film needs to leave us feeling comfortable.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Dec 15, 2021
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- Richard Whittaker
I will admit, the fact that Oklahoma oddball Mickey Reece had recently become the cinematic flavor of the month left me cold and baffled, especially with his breakout festival hit Climate of the Hunter. Yet the excellence of religious chiller Agnes finally means you can mark me as a true believer.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Dec 14, 2021
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- Richard Whittaker
It’s bleak and brutal, and Waugh’s cold tone (a definite throwback to Shot Caller) leaves no one with clean hands. But as a testament to the costs of a noble sacrifice in the face of institutional inhumanity, it’s as vital as any of his earlier films.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Dec 9, 2021
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- Richard Whittaker
Superficially, Wolf may seem like an entry into the queer canon, and it's not hard to see superficial similarities between the facility and a gay conversion therapy facility, or to superimpose transphobia onto Jacob's diagnosis of species dysphoria.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Dec 2, 2021
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- Richard Whittaker
It’s a slow document of stiff upper lips beginning to quiver, and while Knightley excels as the perfect Kensington upper-crust mummy, it’s Goode who personifies that desperate attempt to keep a veneer of control, even as his world is on the verge of devastation.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Dec 2, 2021
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- Richard Whittaker
House of Gucci isn't aggressively bad, but it is undeniably tedious, threadbare, and unengaging.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Nov 22, 2021
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- Richard Whittaker
That's where Kurt Vonnegut: Unstuck in Time is most fascinating, in its exploration of the blurred lines between what who writers (and filmmakers) are, and what they write, and why they write.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Nov 18, 2021
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- Richard Whittaker
Ghostbusters: Afterlife may not change cinema in the way the original did, but it’s a worthy next generation.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Nov 18, 2021
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- Richard Whittaker
Campion and her cast do an extraordinary job of bringing all these characters in midway through their own private traumas, and Dunst brings silent grace and sadness to a woman inherently doubting her own motivation.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Nov 18, 2021
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- Richard Whittaker
The United States of Insanity is as much a portrait of a long-ignored, mocked, and lambasted band, and the subculture that surrounds it, as it is a trip into a deeply disturbing and Kafkaesque assault on civil liberties.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Nov 15, 2021
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- Richard Whittaker
At heart, The Souvenir Part II is a film about filmmaking as art, industry, and identity.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Nov 8, 2021
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- Richard Whittaker
Red Notice barely feels like a film, which is fine. It’s a series of set pieces flimsily bolted together with Reynolds doing the Reynolds thing, Johnson doing the Johnson thing, and Gadot doing the Gadot thing.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Nov 4, 2021
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- Richard Whittaker
Wain's psychosis is shown from the inside, the Victoriana giving way to psychotronic visions that re-create Wain's futurism and dalliances with Cubism.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Nov 4, 2021
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- Richard Whittaker
Sapochnik has delved into bleak futures before, with his 2010 brutal forced-organ-donation capitalist satire Repo Men, but Finch is much closer to last year’s The Midnight Sky, in which George Clooney stared at his own incoming invisible apocalypse.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Nov 3, 2021
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- Richard Whittaker
There’s been an urge to excuse the director and blame the studio, arguing that Zhao just didn’t fit into the strictures of the MCU. Yet that doesn’t explain how weak the script she co-wrote is, or why it’s so insufferably long, or why it almost completely fails to tackle its own core conceits of blind loyalty, of the perils of immortality, of rebellion against faith.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Nov 2, 2021
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- Richard Whittaker
The longer you are immersed in this exchange of stories, of hope dying against darkness but proving its value just by its glimmers, the more it enthralls.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Oct 28, 2021
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- Richard Whittaker
This is definitely one My Hero Academia adventure that should go back to the classroom.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Oct 28, 2021
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- Richard Whittaker
If Villeneuve's grand and epic take evokes any earlier cinematic vision of Dune, it would be the first failed take, which would have seen director David Lean and writer Robert Bolt cross similar wastelands as they did in Lawrence of Arabia.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Oct 20, 2021
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- Richard Whittaker
Mass takes the high school shooting drama out of the exploitation rut into which it has fallen, and instead turned it back into a story of people. It's a simple achievement to name, but an extraordinary one in its impact.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Oct 20, 2021
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- Richard Whittaker
Maybe Halloween Kills will make more sense when the finale of the trilogy, Halloween Ends, gives those themes some context. But as a sequel to the deliciously absurd 2018 resurrection, it’s a ponderous bore, far-too-intermittently broken up by spurts of the franchise’s signature gore.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Oct 15, 2021
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