Rita Kempley
Select another critic »For 1,005 reviews, this critic has graded:
-
42% higher than the average critic
-
1% same as the average critic
-
57% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 9.6 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Rita Kempley's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 56 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | City Hall | |
| Lowest review score: | Boxing Helena | |
Score distribution:
-
Positive: 432 out of 1005
-
Mixed: 329 out of 1005
-
Negative: 244 out of 1005
1005
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
-
- Rita Kempley
A Dry White Season is political cinema so deeply felt it attains a moral grace. A bitter medicine, a painful reminder, it grieves for South Africa as it recounts the atrocities of apartheid. Yes, it is a story already told on a grander scale, but never with such fervor.- Washington Post
- Read full review
-
- Rita Kempley
Diane Keaton's kooky sensibilities as a director are ideally suited to the sweet madness of Unstrung Heroes.- Washington Post
- Read full review
-
- Washington Post
- Read full review
-
- Rita Kempley
Amadeus isn't meant to be a biography of the composer's life, but a bawdy, black fantasy, a fiction based on a few curious facts. [21 Sep 1984, p.23]- Washington Post
-
- Rita Kempley
The potential for hokum is there, but Duvall and co-star James Earl Jones capably avoid the sticky pitfalls of Tom Epperson and Billy Bob Thornton's sugar-cured script.- Washington Post
- Read full review
-
- Rita Kempley
Happily, Pfeiffer and Clooney, now officially a movie star, not only click, they send off sparks.- Washington Post
- Read full review
-
- Rita Kempley
The movie is as visually inventive and wildly eccentric as the Coens' earlier movies, but it lacks the emotional maturity and moral clarity of 1996's "Fargo."- Washington Post
- Read full review
-
- Rita Kempley
Preposterous, predictable, but excessively entertaining, this frenzied thriller draws both story and characters from such action classics as "The Fugitive," "Die Hard," "The Dirty Dozen" and "The Silence of the Lambs."- Washington Post
- Read full review
-
- Rita Kempley
Though its attitudes are decidedly French, this intelligent film goes a long way toward explaining America's obsession with Martha Stewart Living, fake designer labels and TV talk show makeovers.- Washington Post
- Read full review
-
- Rita Kempley
Local Hero is as gentle as Capra corn and as magical as the Misty Isles. An insightful, international commentary -- badly named, but beautifully drawn -- takes us roaming in the gloaming and questing among stars. [01 Apr 1983, p.19]- Washington Post
-
- Washington Post
-
- Washington Post
- Read full review
-
- Rita Kempley
Though shot in four weeks on a low budget, Stephen King's Children of the Corn, while not on a par with "Carrie," sure beats "Christine," "Cujo" and "Dead Zone." It's terse, tense and the sound is effective as auditory terror.- Washington Post
- Read full review
-
- Rita Kempley
A downright entertaining combo of mystery, melodrama and action adventure.- Washington Post
- Read full review
-
- Rita Kempley
A captivating comic allegory about daring to be different in the face of conformity.- Washington Post
- Read full review
-
- Rita Kempley
Grounded in a good cause but never puffed up or preachy, the father-daughter drama transcends the issues.- Washington Post
- Read full review
-
- Rita Kempley
It is a gripping adult drama, as erotically violent as it is intellectually satisfying. [9 Nov 1984, p.27]- Washington Post
-
- Rita Kempley
A case of art imitating the electorate, it's a comedy that rides in on Clinton's coattails, bringing with it a landslide of laughs.- Washington Post
- Read full review
-
- Rita Kempley
Michael Keaton's the live wire and Henry Winkler's the deadbeat in director Ron Howard's new hit, Night Shift, a whorifying undertaking that solicits its laughs by pairing the quick and the dead.- Washington Post
- Read full review
-
- Washington Post
- Read full review
-
- Rita Kempley
The chatty, romantic roundelay takes a lighthearted look at the misadventures of six in the city.- Washington Post
- Read full review
-
- Rita Kempley
It's not the monotonous, neurotic's ego trip you'd imagine, but a karate-chop crawl against a rising tide of complacency.- Washington Post
- Read full review
-
- Rita Kempley
A flurry of stunts, close shaves and deeds of desperate daring, it easily transcends its television origins to become a stylish pacemaker-buster.- Washington Post
- Read full review
-
- Rita Kempley
And you will laugh till your ribs ache -- not because director Chris Columbus of the "Home Alone" movies has a gift for farce, which he does, but because Williams is to funny what the Energizer Bunny is to batteries. He keeps going and going and going.- Washington Post
- Read full review
-
- Rita Kempley
With its droll underpinnings, Robocop does for cyborgs and Detroit what "Blade Runner" did for androids and L.A.- Washington Post
- Read full review
-
- Rita Kempley
Roberts and Richard Gere costar in this bubbly scamper, which goes to the head like champagne -- the cheap, sweet kind that leaves you with a throbbing head. And yet this monstrously derivative romance is great giddy fun.- Washington Post
- Read full review
-
- Rita Kempley
007's latest, The Living Daylights, a snazzy spy thriller, is all the more alluring for its new conservatism. It's right up there with the early Bonds, though not in the league with Goldfinger. But oh, what a difference.- Washington Post
- Read full review
-
- Rita Kempley
Poltergeist proves closets are full of skeletons and scurrying ids. Hooper and company arouse childhood fears, teasing away adult defenses, making us hunker in our seats as the kids dive under the "Star Wars" sheets. It gives us the jeebies, third stage, without letting up, but spiritually, it's uplifting. [4 June 1982, p.13]- Washington Post
-
- Rita Kempley
Lethal Weapon, that BMW of buddy movies, spawns Lethal Weapon 2, a blacktop-blistering bad-guy-getter that's nearly twice as much fun.- Washington Post
- Read full review
-
- Washington Post
- Read full review