Rodrigo Perez
Select another critic »For 485 reviews, this critic has graded:
-
51% higher than the average critic
-
2% same as the average critic
-
47% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 1.1 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Rodrigo Perez's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 64 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Captain Phillips | |
| Lowest review score: | The Babysitter: Killer Queen | |
Score distribution:
-
Positive: 282 out of 485
-
Mixed: 130 out of 485
-
Negative: 73 out of 485
485
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
-
- Rodrigo Perez
"Billie Eilish: Soft & Hard” is thrilling as a concert film, but its force comes from how carefully it maps the machinery behind the magic—the lighting choices, stage movements, emotional calibration, hidden pathways, and private moments of anticipation. It is vivid, immersive, and unusually personal, a portrait of a performer who understands the scale of her platform and still wants every person in the room to feel seen. For a film this massive, its most impressive trick is how close it comes to witnessing everyone.- The Playlist
- Posted May 8, 2026
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
The Drama remains a vital, bleak, and admirably mean-spirited look at the cost of being known and, more expensively, the price of trying to save face. It doesn’t fully cash in on the nastiness of its best idea, but it is funny, queasy, and wholly willing to make everyone miserable for your amusement. In an era of soft, therapeutic romantic storytelling, that alone gives it biting validation.- The Playlist
- Posted Apr 9, 2026
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
It’s disturbing and engrossing. It doesn’t fully grapple with every moral, political, or philosophical consequence of the AI rush, and there are moments when it arguably lets some of its most powerful interview subjects off the hook too easily. But it still lands because it understands the essential terror at the center of this conversation: not simply that we are building intelligence at breakneck speed, but that wisdom—human, moral, civic—may be arriving nowhere near fast enough.- The Playlist
- Posted Apr 8, 2026
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
While the documentary may not offer a startling new thesis, it still lands in its own subdued way. What lingers is not simply the ugliness of the rhetoric, but the banality of the scam.- The Playlist
- Posted Mar 24, 2026
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Fennell leans into excess not as provocation, but as emotional truth, letting obsession swell until it becomes the only language the film speaks. The feeling cuts here not as poetry, but as pressure—barbed wire wrapped tight around a heartbeat. In all its wildness, Fennell seals the film with an embrace and a bruise, then lands the kiss like a sudden dagger to the ribs.- The Playlist
- Posted Feb 10, 2026
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Send Help is pure Raimi: a survival thriller that disguises itself as corporate satire before mutating into something far nastier and more fun. It’s ridiculous by design, walking a razor’s edge between menace and mockery, and it thrives in that instability.- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 28, 2026
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Carnahan may be the real MVP here. “The Rip” isn’t a masterpiece, and it can be blunt and workmanlike by design, but it’s brawny, confident, and it moves.- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 15, 2026
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
The Bone Temple does have plenty on its mind about illness and outbreaks—perhaps the sickness that is mankind and the freakshow we doomscroll witness every day— it simply buries those thoughts under layers of bloody viscera and wreckage. That’s the movie’s defining tension: beauty against barbarism, hush against havoc, and the fleeting possibility of grace pressed up against the certainty of carnage.- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 13, 2026
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
By the end, the movie’s harshest argument isn’t only that the government lies—it’s that ecosystems are built to manage the damage of those lies, from intelligence agencies to newsrooms to corporate interests that fear the truth like it’s an extinction event.- The Playlist
- Posted Dec 22, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Marty Supreme isn’t a moral fable about discipline and sportsmanship; it’s a portrait of ambition as a living, breathing necessity—something Marty must manifest into existence, from his lips to God’s ears. Throughout the madness, Safdie finds an unexpectedly human pulse within the chaos, transforming it into an ecstatic, white-knuckle rollercoaster ride.- The Playlist
- Posted Dec 18, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
The film’s anger is muted but unmistakable. “Thoughts & Prayers” is about a nation that would rather teach children how to hide, how to bleed, how to die — than pass even the most modest gun reforms. It’s about an America that keeps choosing adaptation over prevention, ritual over change, and performative sorrow over meaningful protection.- The Playlist
- Posted Nov 21, 2025
- Read full review
-
- The Playlist
- Posted Nov 7, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Love+War doesn’t canonize Addario. It throws the audience into her contradiction: the duty to record history versus the duty to be present at home. It doesn’t answer whether those responsibilities can coexist, and that’s the point.- The Playlist
- Posted Oct 30, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Is This Thing On? isn’t perfect. It stumbles where it should soar. But it’s alive with feeling, and that counts for something.- The Playlist
- Posted Oct 14, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
To see Daniel Day-Lewis reemerge under his son’s daring direction is more than a comeback; it’s a cinematic conflagration, a collision of legacy and reinvention that feels historic.- The Playlist
- Posted Oct 3, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
By the end, Are We Good? transcends its conventional biographical trappings to land somewhere soulful. Dragging us through the wreckage of grief and out the other side, it suggests that Maron’s legacy isn’t merely acerbic stand-up or podcast milestones, but the more complex work of becoming human in public.- The Playlist
- Posted Oct 1, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Fierce and unrelenting, Paul Thomas Anderson’s “One Battle After Another” burns as both an incendiary action epic and a tender family drama, alive with humor, conviction, and revolutionary spirit. And amid all its pandemonium, Sergio’s reminder that “freedom is no fear” lingers as the film’s quiet truth, a mantra passed down like a torch. Few films this year feel so vital, so breathtaking in scope and soul. Viva la revolución, indeed.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 17, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Peck’s genuine admiration for the sharpness and clarity of Orwell’s writing, combined with the rich tonality of Damian Lewis’ narration, gives the author as grandly respectful a presentation as “I Am Not Your Negro” did for James Baldwin. If “Orwell: 2+2=5” gets one more person to discover Orwell’s work for themselves, then its job will have been accomplished.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 12, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Ultimately, the film is not only about children who refused to surrender, but also about a country that, for a brief moment, managed to put aside divisions in service of something greater. Like the best of Vasarhelyi and Chin’s work, it transforms an extraordinary true story into something more universal: a tale of endurance, release, and the desperate search for light.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 11, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Good Fortune is a refreshing comedy that audiences haven’t seen in a while, a movie with a message that both advocates for a cause and entertains.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 10, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Despite some creative missteps, there’s still some fight left in “Christy” and Sweeney to make it to the next round.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 7, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
If you’re seeking an escapist popcorn-like thriller, Caught Stealing should do the trick. But if you’re yearning for something more substantive, you may end up feeling slightly swindled. Still, credit Aronofsky for picking your pocket with a deft touch, and stealing a base with style.- The Playlist
- Posted Aug 29, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Weapons underscores how in command Creeger is of his entire movie, the mise-en-scène, the craft, tone, mood and sweaty, ominous, dread-inducing atmosphere. Its final act is batshit crazy and climaxes in a jaw-dropping wave of exhilarating, terrifying feeding frenzy of satisfying comeuppance. Weapons will leave you thrilled, aghast, horrified and wowed.- The Playlist
- Posted Aug 5, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
The Baltimorons is terrific and features an excellent mix of humor, sweetness, hijinks, hilarity, warmth, wistful melancholy, and charisma that’s off the charts, both in the actors and the movie itself.- The Playlist
- Posted Jul 22, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
The film’s real revelation is that 14-year-old Alfie Williams. For all of the names in the picture, it’s an ensemble built around him, and Williams proves his mettle and will undoubtedly have a long and prosperous career after this film.- The Playlist
- Posted Jun 19, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
It’s something of a miracle that F1 remains as compelling as it is, mainly thanks to its cast and the visceral nature of Kosinski’s filmmaking.- The Playlist
- Posted Jun 19, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
As an perceptive story about desireability, our collective value as people or romantic partners, what we’re worth, what we’re willing to compromise for happiness and love and how the courtship market makes us treat one another as casual, often throw-away commodities, it’s an insightful, if imperfect, piece worthy of your affections.- The Playlist
- Posted Jun 19, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
More of a treasured time capsule for die-hard fans than a primer for newcomers, nevertheless, It’s All Gonna Break remains an authentic portrait of a radiant, messy, and ultimately triumphant collective that defied the odds and stayed alive.- The Playlist
- Posted Jun 1, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
The Phoenician Scheme, for all its involved branches, never really comes together deeply or meaningfully. Still, it remains charming and entertaining nonetheless.- The Playlist
- Posted May 18, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Friendship is awe-inspiringly twisted by the end, a jaw-droppingly comical tale of tragedy, even. But it is masterfully rendered; the rare movie seemingly built from a sketch series turned into a genuinely riotously amusing and f*cked movie that still has the sense to comment on the dark and totally warped corners of the human condition.- The Playlist
- Posted May 15, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
‘Final Reckoning’ might not be the perfect note to end this elaborate action symphony on, but as a sustained chord of passionate peril, intrigue, friendship and the wrenching expenses of keeping the world safe, hell, you could still do a lot worse.- The Playlist
- Posted May 15, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Thunderbolts* isn’t an MCU game-changer, by any stretch, but it’s not aspiring to be either. Is it a two-hour therapy session about self-compassion, being kind to ourselves, and giving ourselves a break from all the transgressions we have tortured ourselves about, wrapped up in a comic book movie? Maybe, but it’s got a big heart, a strong emotional point of view, a good sense of humor when needed, and has something touching to say about forgiving ourselves enough to transform our pain into something that can do good, and that feels like a small but meaningful victory to me.- The Playlist
- Posted Apr 30, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Evans at least provides enjoyable pandemonium in Havoc, which is not a perfect film by any means, but certainly more worthy than some of the Netflix originals that aren’t delayed and are delivered at your streaming front door immediately.- The Playlist
- Posted Apr 25, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
All of the elements of impressive craft blend to make a wholly unique concoction, a bloody, eerie, creepy and yet thoughtful and emotional exploitation movie about demons, ghosts, black magic and haunted things.- The Playlist
- Posted Apr 17, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
At the very least, the skillful film generally doesn’t insult the audiences intelligence and generally is a lot smarter and sharper than most mainstream moves in cineplexes these days.- The Playlist
- Posted Apr 11, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Pulpy and silly, while still having Hitchcockian levels of taut tension and suspense, this first-date-gone-wrong thriller may not be logically coherent, but it’s still self-aware of itself enough and its outrageous moments that it still manages to be a relatively fun diversion despite its inherent inanities.- The Playlist
- Posted Apr 11, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Warfare may sharply communicate what it’s like to be under fire, and those looking for bruising action will be exhilarated by the electricity it generates. But anyone asking for some complexity beyond these are the boys that answered the call to go to war will be left decidedly SOL.- The Playlist
- Posted Mar 28, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Perhaps the biggest achievement of The Threesome is how it manages to remain real, grounded and tender but still succeeds in finding opportune moments of comedy in an undoubtedly absurd situation.- The Playlist
- Posted Mar 12, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
‘Sly Lives!’: should we file it under good doc? Sure, it’s very watchable. But does it really unpack the burden of black genius? Well, that is a thing, to be honest. The culture moves on fast and the standards to which black artists are held are always way more ruthless and higher. I’m just not entirely convinced it lands this thesis as well as it hopes it does.- The Playlist
- Posted Feb 6, 2025
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Mufasa: The Lion King could have been a very great and worthy ‘Lion King’ successor, but thanks to the perceived requirements of what this franchise demands, it’s only just a good one, which is a shame, given its regal and majestic potential.- The Playlist
- Posted Dec 17, 2024
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Carry-On works because it keeps it simple, because of its no-fuss-no-muss approach and two actors who can really elevate compelling material. Sometimes that’s enough.- The Playlist
- Posted Dec 16, 2024
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Mangold has crafted the definitive portrait of this era and the poetic, aspiring, rebellious kid who refused to be pigeonholed, held down and defined.- The Playlist
- Posted Dec 10, 2024
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Rohirrim is told with great fervent conviction, and no true ‘LOTR’ fan will complain about that.- The Playlist
- Posted Dec 9, 2024
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Bloodcurdling to the last delicious drop, Nosferatu is extraordinarily compelling, one of the best films of the year, and an unforgettable, phantasmagoric experience for theaters that will astonish.- The Playlist
- Posted Dec 2, 2024
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Saulnier’s overall mise en scene is impressive. Everything from precision camera work, rigorous composition, framing and blocking, nimble, tight editing, and stress-inducing music, Rebel Ridge kicks ass in the best possible sense, entertaining, thrilling, and always captivating.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 4, 2024
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Shyamalan’s crafts a deceptively simple experience. The plot is rather ingeniously straightforward, at first, but the fraught journey of a father and killer trying not to upend and upset the carefully constructed delusional fabrication of his life—and how the two identities crash into each other on one fateful day— is exhilaratingly multifaceted.- The Playlist
- Posted Aug 1, 2024
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
The overall shape of the movie can sometimes be akin to F-word abuse for comedy. It can be thrillingly funny at first, especially coming out of the mouths of heroes you don’t typically hear such foulness from (not Wilson, obviously), but by the 90th time you hear an F-bomb, it starts to lose its value and power. Still, despite all its flaws, ‘D&W’ humorously diverts in the moment, but as a durable movie or even a long-lasting MCU film, it’s no slam dunk. Nostalgia doesn’t necessarily cause deep self-harm in the picture, but it arguably doesn’t help the aim to create a memorable and enduring movie either. LFG? Sure, I guess.- The Playlist
- Posted Jul 23, 2024
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Eventually, the comedy coalesces enough to chalk up a small win. Mind you, Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F isn’t reinventing the wheel, and low expectations might help. But it does make a remarkable transition from something that initially feels dire to something that eventually lights up, pleases, and produces some foul-mouthed ‘Beverly Hills Cop’ energy to feel familiar in the best sense.- The Playlist
- Posted Jul 3, 2024
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
The trio of Nicole Kidman, Zac Efron, and Joey King create an interesting dynamic; the ultimately well-intentioned film has some interesting things to say about late-in-life love, the many facets of self-absorption, and the way we use the notion of protecting the ones we love under the guise of selfish self-interest.- The Playlist
- Posted Jun 28, 2024
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
No one tries to reinvent the wheel, and everyone plays the greatest hits, steering things right off the cliff into explosive, slow-motion ecstasy, where ‘Bad Boys’ thrives and survives best.- The Playlist
- Posted Jun 4, 2024
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
As outlandish as Timestalker is, Lowe’s film holds its idea together well with style, wit, resourceful imagination, great lovelorn music, the sincerity behind heartbreak and deep yearning, and hilarious, sharp laughs to boot.- The Playlist
- Posted Mar 15, 2024
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
There’s great craft, impressive creature design, a lugubrious, eventually-soaring score by Max Richter, an excellent Paul Dano nailing the childlike tenor of his inquisitive creature, and low-key Adam Sandler sitting in the pocket, enjoying the chill ease of never overdoing it.- The Playlist
- Posted Feb 22, 2024
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Immense, remarkably captivating, imposing, and right on the edge of overblown, filmmaker Denis Villeneuve’s “Dune: Part Two” is a spectacular blockbuster epic in the grandest sense of the tradition.- The Playlist
- Posted Feb 21, 2024
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
It’s a compelling, lovely little journey about friends reconnecting and rediscovering each other in a portrait that’s tender, humorous, considerate, and more than deserving of your attention and care.- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 27, 2024
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
If Suncoast ultimately lacks major insights, it is hard to argue that it at least combats its slenderness with a poignant sense of empathy and compassion for draining emotional hardships.- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 23, 2024
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Aesthetically detached, clinical, and with murderousness always happening in broad daylight, Veni Vidi Vici might arguably be more clever than laugh-out-loud funny or insightful. Still, some of the facetious formalism goes a long way.- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 23, 2024
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
It’s a sublime little travelogue, deceptively simple, engaging, and thoughtful.- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 22, 2024
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Make no mistake, Exhibiting Forgiveness can be painful but rewardingly so; it’s complex, unresolved ending all the more honest and true.- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 22, 2024
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Ultimately, Between The Temples is achingly, evenly deceptively sweet and from the heart. It’s a dexterously comic but moving examination of a life interrupted, seemingly demolished, and a life of unfulfilled dreams, clashing, colliding, and perhaps finding a tender togetherness that suggests second chances and no term limits on coming of age- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 21, 2024
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Flawed but still engaging, “The Kitchen,” at least, has good intentions about togetherness and brotherhood and is a promising debut for Kaluuya and Tavares.- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 18, 2024
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
While “Frida” does show signs of promise, especially when it leans into the distinctive, and Kahlo’s penchant for magical realism, it’s never as vibrant as her. One wishes the doc could similarly unshackle itself, match the artist’s radiant spirit, and push itself into the next innovative frontier.- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 18, 2024
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Ambitious, impressive, and genuine, with a great sense of vast scale and awe, as its title suggests, Society Of Snow is not only a three-dimensional cinematic feat of wonder, terror, and emotion-stirring courage but a deeply felt portrait of togetherness, brotherhood, and survival, poignantly commemorating the painful memory of indescribable loss and tragedy.- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 3, 2024
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Leave The World Behind isn’t as perfect as its best-written moments —the ones that are somehow expertly frightening, funny, stressful, and cleverly observational, all at the same time—and the movie even f*cks up its Chekov’s gun tease. But as a wicked, playful, tension-filled, and alarming treatise on humanity, its deep flaws, and how fragile, questionable, scattered, and thus vulnerable we are to attack?- The Playlist
- Posted Dec 22, 2023
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
[Clooney's] out-of-current-fashion movies can feel quaint in some ways, but more power to the filmmaker who can make whatever the hell they want and do it well and do so on their own terms.- The Playlist
- Posted Dec 18, 2023
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
“You Have to See It to Believe It” is a well-worn movie cliché, but trust that it applies to this utterly bananas corporeal bath of cinema in all its glorious sound and vision. As the film ratchets up to its batshit, gnarly, and beautifully mutilated conclusion, man, prepare yourself for how transgressive and hypnagogic it gets.- The Playlist
- Posted Oct 13, 2023
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
As an intriguing and complex portrait of humanism vs. idealism (to be civil about it), there’s also a fine line between faith and madness, and to their credit, The Mission filmmakers leave it up to the audience to decide where they stand; perhaps the sign of sharp filmmakers hoping to leave their viewer hashing it out for hours afterward (something that doc certainly engenders).- The Playlist
- Posted Oct 12, 2023
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
As imitative as Edward’s movie can be, it’s an undeniably impressive piece of work. Its concept and plot are easily identifiable, but the grand sci-fi dimension works well with a personal tale of love, heartache, parenthood, surrogate children, and consideration of humanity for all things living, breathing, or connecting data points with something that may even resemble a soul.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 27, 2023
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
In the end, Widow Clicquot is a drama about turning heartbreak and tragedy into something brighter, richer, and spilling over into good fortune. And it’s tastefully made too.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 18, 2023
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
The aspiration itself—what seems to be the clear desire to elevate a conventional murder drama to something greater—feels unmistakably tangible. And ambitious attempts are often intriguing even if they don’t always land.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 15, 2023
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Holland has made a righteous, masterful work, arguably her best since “Europa Europa,” but it’s not for the faint of heart or those inclined to turn a blind eye to suffering. And again, that’s the point.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 12, 2023
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
If this E6 portrait gets anything right it’s the chaotic creativity that seemed to burst out of many of its members like exploding sunlight their bodies could not handle as if something out of a kooky sci-fi film.- The Playlist
- Posted Aug 25, 2023
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Crafted with stillness, empathy, and clever drollness, “Fremont” is so striking it will simply and calmly demand your attention. So seemingly introverted, humble, and unassuming, it’ll force you to lean in, listen and heed all the humorous words of wisdom in its many little moments of providence.- The Playlist
- Posted Jul 18, 2023
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Largely exhilarating across the board, ‘Dead Reckoning’ is easily the best installment thus far (at least for this writer who has desperately wanted that aforementioned pulse), and perhaps precisely because the movie is actually about something this time.- The Playlist
- Posted Jul 5, 2023
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
It’s a striking and intimate piece of cinema, a heartrending tale of living with and battling neurological disorders, the love necessary to endure it, and the anguished dolor of remembrance.- The Playlist
- Posted Jun 30, 2023
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
The filmmakers should take pride in what they’ve achieved, how they’ve earned it, the story they’ve told, and the impeccable, thrilling animation craft that’s collaged, fragmented, and leaps off the screen into your eyeballs. For that alone, they should take a bow.- The Playlist
- Posted Jun 1, 2023
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
The minor problem of it all is while what Anderson is trying to say can be read across the sky like a beautifully glistening moonbeam; it does often lack the craterous depth of feeling we know he’s capable of when doing his best creative and emotional astrography.- The Playlist
- Posted May 23, 2023
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
The Covenant is so self-assured in its noble filmmaking values and beliefs. It makes a knowing nod between two men— and the heroically punishing sacrifices they risked for one another— one of the most moving moments on screen this year.- The Playlist
- Posted Apr 20, 2023
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Ultimately, Aster just unleashes his inner freak and vomits it all on the screen, with anxious flop sweat, jittery bodily fluids, squishy terror, paranoia, and some gut-busting laughs that prove this writer is deeply troubled in the best and most complicated odd way possible.- The Playlist
- Posted Apr 13, 2023
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Throughout its trials and tribulations, Wild Life softly asks the question: what kind of life do you want to live? What kind of legacy do you want to leave behind? And these kinds of inspired actions certainly move the heart and soul and prove that the best of humanity has their heart in the right place at the very least.- The Playlist
- Posted Mar 15, 2023
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Stutz in the end isn’t revelatory per se, but it is deeply heartfelt, intimate, nakedly honest, and engaging.- The Playlist
- Posted Nov 16, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Potent with ideas and feelings, ‘Wakanda Forever’ ultimately triumphs nonetheless through heart, soul, grit, and a great sense of visceral urgency.- The Playlist
- Posted Nov 8, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
It’s an audacious odyssey that buckles under the weight of all its ornate and flights of quirky fancy. But if you’re a cynical optimist that’s disgusted with the rise of despotism, absolutism, rancid lies, revolting white supremacist beliefs but still wants to believe in humanity, hope, and the goodness of people, it might just strike a major chord.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 28, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
It’s a beautiful tribute and a wonderful farewell to a legend, father, and artist.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 28, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Unpretentious and unassuming, but effective, Corbijn creates his own cozy, sleeve for these trailblazers to get their due and creates a must-watch for rockologists everywhere in the process.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 16, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Rich, layered, and full of beautiful shapeshifting emotional depth—at times laugh-out-loud funny, and then stopping on a dime to turn melancholy, heartrending, and or horrifying—The Banshee of Insherin will surely unsettle audiences trying to pinpoint blame or ascribe a hero or villain to the piece. Its morality and personal sympathies are purposefully opaque.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 5, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
It’s a classic “Predator” film in many ways, subverting the paradigm slightly by featuring a new context: a Native American female warrior at its center, Naru (a persuasive Amber Midthunder, full of conviction). But as fresh as Prey does feel in this new warpaint on the surface, the film does feature a lot of inherent, built-in limitations.- The Playlist
- Posted Aug 3, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Thor: Love & Thunder can be enjoyable in spots, but disposably and inconsequentially so.- The Playlist
- Posted Jul 7, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Like the discreet, uncluttered canvass of her works— minimalist, spare, and with just enough inviting details to inspire your curiosity—Reichardt leaves generous space and room for the viewer to contemplate. And I would argue the captivating and delicately considered Showing Up leaves much to consider about why we make art and what we’re trying to say while making it.- The Playlist
- Posted May 28, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Wistfully looking back on the past with a mix of affection for those we have lost, a melancholy yearning for the more tender age of innocence, and anxiety and regret for our trespasses, Gray’s stripped-down drama is a clear-eyed and emotionally intelligent work of great empathy.- The Playlist
- Posted May 19, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
As much as “Top Gun: Maverick” whips from a technical, visceral, thrill-making, supersonic-level, the entire endeavor and every little moment of introspection, suffering and determination is all the more accentuated, strengthened and fist-pumpingly good because you care so damn much about the story, the people and their very human concerns.- The Playlist
- Posted May 12, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
For all its emotional horrors—witnessing the worst of ourselves and hoping for the best versions of ourselves eventually triumph over our inherent faults—Multiverse of Madness is arguably lacking the humanity, the heart, and soul of Marvel that works so well when balanced with humor and spectacle.- The Playlist
- Posted May 3, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Resurrection is emotionally searing, wildly unhinged and maybe even a little batshit crazy. However, as anchored by its two fiercely committed and convincing lead performances (Rebecca Hall and Tim Roth), a menacingly disquieting tone, and a frightening ambiguity about a disintegrating mental state, Resurrection is a deeply distressing and compelling drama that will shock and shake you to your core.- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 28, 2022
- Read full review
-
- The Playlist
- Posted Jan 23, 2022
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Spider-Man: No Way Home is maximalist, chock full of familiar characters and callbacks, and sometimes all that greatest-hits reminiscing is diverting and and entertaining. But it’s also not very necessary, making for a very regressive, fan-service-y ‘Spider-Man’ legacy-sequel that’s overly nostalgic for its heydays.- The Playlist
- Posted Dec 13, 2021
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
If you’re open to its unconventional, idiosyncratic flavors, Licorice Pizza is a wonderfully wistful and evocative ode to youth, done by a masterfully poised filmmaker who doesn’t really care if this ain’t your bag. All our welcome and invited, of course, but PTA’s mellow and balmy effort feels like it’s enjoying itself too much to care if you haven’t caught on to its whole-hearted drift.- The Playlist
- Posted Nov 15, 2021
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
When it rides off into the sunset, what you’re left with is a diverse, reimagined fable of iniquity, holy retribution, and comeuppance that is as entertaining as it is surprisingly soulful.- The Playlist
- Posted Oct 6, 2021
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
What makes The Guilty good is the way it tacitly communicates so much about the character without ever having to speak his issues out loud.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 11, 2021
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Those who find Villeneuve to be a self-serious, humorless, and pretentious bore likely won’t be changing their minds anytime soon after “Dune,” but that just might be their loss. Whether Warner Bros. accepts the call to make a sequel in a climate of dismal box-office returns remains to be seen. But that’s not our concern at the moment; Dune is undeniably impressive, spellbinding, and evocatively immense, regardless.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 3, 2021
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
Poetic and bittersweet, Cmon Cmon is a special film, one that asks us to recognize the mistakes we make, the people we wound, the feelings we hurt, and to maybe give ourselves a break in the process and hold on for what better future tomorrow may bring.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 3, 2021
- Read full review
-
- Rodrigo Perez
It’s truly a wild, blazing ride if you get on the movie’s bruising, mesmeric wavelength, a tragic but deeply moral film about a righteous, transactional man who has truly weighed and considered the cost of the wicked transgressions committed against his country, his fellow man, and his own soul.- The Playlist
- Posted Sep 2, 2021
- Read full review