Robert Abele
Select another critic »For 1,597 reviews, this critic has graded:
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44% higher than the average critic
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6% same as the average critic
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50% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 5.3 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Robert Abele's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 60 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Donbass | |
| Lowest review score: | Detention of the Dead | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 828 out of 1597
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Mixed: 492 out of 1597
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Negative: 277 out of 1597
1597
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Robert Abele
That blend of tones is not always smoothly handled, but there’s enough heart in its express train of ambition, flaws and fallout to allow its leading lady wide berth for a wonderfully committed, soulful, even sexual turn admirably devoid of caricature.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 12, 2021
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- Robert Abele
Where the filmmakers’ approach sets itself apart in these days of image-massaged biographies is in juxtaposing the bookending health catastrophes of Fauci’s career as an especially illuminating lens through which to examine his drive, decisions and personality.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Sep 9, 2021
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- Robert Abele
Who You Think I Am may ultimately be just a corker of a melodrama, but at least with Binoche and a director enamored with the hurt, power, and sensuality she provides, it’s a tingly riff on a very 21st century kind of dangerous liaison.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 2, 2021
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- Robert Abele
What we’re left with is, thankfully, sharp exchanges about loss and conscience, a director’s sincere approach to potentially melodramatic material, and in-the-moment actors like Keaton, who makes the humbling weight of adding up lives into the stuff of compellingly sober contemplation.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Sep 2, 2021
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- Robert Abele
No Man of God may have been written by a man, but you can’t help feeling the reason this umpteenth examination of a modern devil works as well as it does is because, as a woman, Sealey knows where the exploitation traps are and avoids them by focusing on the people in her frame, their exchanges well-paced by editor Patrick Nelson Barnes.- TheWrap
- Posted Aug 27, 2021
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- Robert Abele
Part biopic, part mystery, part exposé, Bob Ross: Happy Accidents, Betrayal & Greed is ultimately a cooled celebration, one eager to acknowledge that gurus are complicated, showbiz is treacherous, and some landscapes hide things.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Aug 25, 2021
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- Robert Abele
In all too many ways, it’s a predictable, tiring wade as both a domestic tale and a pandemic yarn.- TheWrap
- Posted Aug 24, 2021
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- Robert Abele
As it stretches out, it also thins, its Malick-meets-Cassavetes ambitions never rising above clichés of technique and melodrama.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Aug 19, 2021
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- Robert Abele
It’s also worth remembering that someone as complex as Alvin Ailey isn’t going to be captured in any one film. Ailey is, therefore, best absorbed as an elegant, impressionistic primer, a chance to bask in his mastery of movement and dance, as framed by those near enough to him to know what it took out of him to gift it to the world.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Aug 6, 2021
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- Robert Abele
Whether snarling behind shades in uniform or off hours in elegant dresswear, Chen is a rule-breaking hoot, never more so than when she’s gearing up to heap abuse on a near-tears little girl in order to break her.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Aug 1, 2021
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- Robert Abele
Kennebeck’s handling of the labyrinthine narrative is commendable, particularly since the realigning she needs to do in the final act requires a deft touch, like changing the flavor of a dish already prepped, spiced and cooked.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Aug 1, 2021
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- Robert Abele
That dance of performance and being — mindsets committed artists don’t always manage smoothly — is what makes Val an appealing, at times even touching hodgepodge of the actor’s journey.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jul 23, 2021
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- Robert Abele
Fusing exquisitely shot color 16mm footage from 1964 of the team’s training sessions, drone-like music and splices of animation, we get a delirious sense of what these committed women endured six out of seven days a week.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jul 15, 2021
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- Robert Abele
As Mama Weed makes deliciously apparent, where its iconic star goes, we will gladly follow.- TheWrap
- Posted Jul 14, 2021
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- Robert Abele
It’s more of an action gallery, not a blood-pumping story accelerated by its flights of fury.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jul 14, 2021
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- Robert Abele
It’s Klein at his most conservatively verité and least pointedly judgmental — he was a fan of the game and setting, after all — but he still offers up a tapestry of personalities, playing and performing that captures what is ineffably beautiful and edgy about tennis, at a time when it was as popular as it had ever been.- TheWrap
- Posted Jun 17, 2021
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- Robert Abele
What keeps Les Nôtres from being effective, however, is that it rarely makes the transition from coolly observed case study to compellingly messy, resonant human drama.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jun 17, 2021
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- Robert Abele
Ukrainian director Sergei Loznitsa’s clinical and fascinating 135-minute assembly of this priceless archive is a categorically weird, thrillingly immersive distillation of four days of official, cultish pomp and mourning for one of the 20th century’s biggest monsters.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted May 27, 2021
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- Robert Abele
If Swimming Out Till the Sea Turns Blue and its intimate tapestry of peasant fortitude and artistic endeavor won’t be as immediately resonant to audiences outside of China as his expansive masterpieces “A Touch of Sin” or “Still Life” are, it’s still a valuable document.- TheWrap
- Posted May 25, 2021
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- Robert Abele
When juxtaposed against a history of Iranian cinema that has often relied on child-centric allegory and non-specific narrative to make its societal critiques, There Is No Evil practically blisters with the intensity of specifically living in Iran as it exists now, as a state once believed to carry out the most executions of any country outside China.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted May 14, 2021
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- Robert Abele
Less a hand-wringing dispatch from a repressive land than a judiciously glossy nudge toward a better world, The Perfect Candidate isn’t complicated, yet earns its mixed/hopeful conclusion.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted May 12, 2021
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- Robert Abele
Ego-stroking bio docs being a cottage industry these days, Balvin is one of the more disarmingly open figures to get this kind of treatment. But it’s also nice that The Boy From Medellín makes the most of its allotted time with a busy phenomenon to at least dabble in the ins and outs of an artist contemplating his place in the world.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted May 6, 2021
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- Robert Abele
Youthful self-expression is a joyride in a minefield in Danny Madden’s Beast Beast, an adrenalized, tone-shifting indie bringing the technology-fueled lives of three suburban souls of varying circumstances, hopes and concerns into pathways destined to converge.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 29, 2021
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- Robert Abele
It’s off-putting the way Velle bombards us with statistics and warnings and ominous music before settling in to his (mostly white) brain trust of researchers and experts expounding on population growth as the survival topic we shouldn’t be afraid to address.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 22, 2021
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- Robert Abele
Hope isn’t about getting you to cry, even as some of its characters occasionally do, but rather giving you an invigorating, even uplifting sense of what hearts can do under duress; nothing is forcibly tragic here, just experienced fully and openly.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 14, 2021
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- Robert Abele
Between the forced artistry and the confused tones, it leaves this well-intentioned tale of transgressive imagination and transactional humanity more temporary in its effect than permanent.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 8, 2021
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- Robert Abele
Hermanus, as a Black, queer South African, isn’t about to paint Nicholas’ predicament as on a par with apartheid’s true victims. But the emotional intelligence he infuses Moffie with — all the way through its inevitable march to the front line — feels personal nonetheless, and empathetically inquisitive about the kind of masculine indoctrination that fuels oppression through rituals of violence and the criminalizing of identity.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 8, 2021
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- Robert Abele
Poetic and painterly, personal and political.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 1, 2021
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- Robert Abele
Part tribute, part reconciliation, "Tina" makes a beautiful case for why survival sometimes means saying goodbye.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 26, 2021
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- Robert Abele
Restless and bracing, Wojnarowicz gives a notorious life its due. Even at its clunkiest, it leaves you breathless at the heights of personal expression he achieved.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 18, 2021
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