Sarah Ward
Select another critic »For 97 reviews, this critic has graded:
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64% higher than the average critic
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8% same as the average critic
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28% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 6.1 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Sarah Ward's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 72 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Dead Souls | |
| Lowest review score: | The 5th Wave | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 75 out of 97
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Mixed: 20 out of 97
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Negative: 2 out of 97
97
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Sarah Ward
This is a mostly gripping film where no one ever knows where they truly stand, but everyone eagerly and stubbornly pretends otherwise. Smartly, Yu lets that juxtaposition guide much of the story, and the movie’s tone.- Screen Daily
- Posted Dec 14, 2022
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- Sarah Ward
A gripping crime thriller that also makes a sharp political statement, Just 6.5 paints a bleak picture of Iranian law enforcement’s attempts to deal with the country’s flourishing narcotics trade.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 27, 2022
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- Sarah Ward
Digger’s loyalties always reside with Nikitas, his quest to keep his home and his devotion to the woodlands; yet Grigorakis shows an environment- and economic-fuelled tragedy, too.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 20, 2022
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- Sarah Ward
This is an unsettling rebuke of government control and ideological manipulation — as well as a sharp cry against compliance with the prevailing status quo.- Screen Daily
- Posted Feb 25, 2022
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- Sarah Ward
[Speer’s] damning answers to Birkin’s questions might have threatened to become repetitive if they didn’t paint a horrifying yet bleakly fascinating picture of a man doing something that remains thoroughly relevant today: spinning fake news.- Screen Daily
- Posted Nov 2, 2021
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- Sarah Ward
It’s a visually rich and moodily atmospheric film with a keen sense for the unsettling, even if it boils together a mélange of somewhat familiar ingredients.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jul 8, 2021
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- Sarah Ward
While the Chilean-Spanish writer/director weighs down every second of Blanco En Blanco with tension and solemnity, its big moments continually hit their marks – including the devastation and absurdity of its prolonged final sequence.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jul 1, 2021
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- Sarah Ward
Its ambitions might exceed its execution — there’s no shortage of stories to tell among these Corrientes teens, as the film makes plain — but One in a Thousand remains a potent, defiant feature.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jun 15, 2021
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- Sarah Ward
Bringing a children’s favourite to life with vividly realistic visuals and appealing production design simply proves superficial when it lacks the heart and charm that has endeared its source material to readers for more than a century.- Screen Daily
- Posted Mar 24, 2021
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- Sarah Ward
The atmospheric revenge-thriller marks the feature filmmaking debut of actor/writer/director Leah Purcell, who plays the titular matriarch with steely resolve, rousingly adapts her own play and book, and delivers an impassioned film with an unflinching Indigenous and feminist perspective.- Screen Daily
- Posted Mar 21, 2021
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- Sarah Ward
It’s the central performance by feature first-timer Mahayni that best demonstrates the picture’s overall charms.- Screen Daily
- Posted Mar 16, 2021
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- Sarah Ward
One of the most astute aspects of Morales and Duplass’ script is how it captures the twists and turns of a new friendship that is buoyed by excitement and yet remains tentative, and how it navigates the constant shifts that come with both fresh and established relationships.- Screen Daily
- Posted Mar 3, 2021
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- Sarah Ward
Observational yet authoritative in its approach, Li’s film first paints an inspiring picture, then a dispiriting one.- Screen Daily
- Posted Feb 28, 2021
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- Sarah Ward
Indeed, the fact that the movie’s youthful lead will have to say goodbye to his childhood might be inevitable, but it never feels as standard as it sounds. Assisting immensely are some naturalistic performances, particularly from Yasan.- Screen Daily
- Posted Feb 26, 2021
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- Sarah Ward
While little here eschews genre conventions, Bana’s weathered performance and striking work by DoP Stefan Duscio ensure that this is a gripping-enough watch, even as it ticks a torrent of familiar boxes.- Screen Daily
- Posted Feb 25, 2021
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- Sarah Ward
The notion that lives and loves are forged and defined in everyday moments isn’t unique; however it feels both accurate and earned here.- Screen Daily
- Posted Feb 16, 2021
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- Sarah Ward
Demonstrating a light touch — underscored by a whimsy-leaning score and overtly comic moments, but never delving into flimsiness or farce — Yan handles her chosen topic, and the tapestry of tales it’s woven through, with care.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 20, 2021
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- Sarah Ward
An intimate film tackling an expansive subject — the treatment of refugees around the globe, and the way the world processes the traumas that lead to such urgent, widespread immigration — this is a poignant and morally complex drama.- Screen Daily
- Posted Nov 17, 2020
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- Sarah Ward
Once the recipient of the country’s top portraiture prize for his likeness of David Wenham, the provocative painter Adam Cullen is now the recipient of a blistering, no-holds-barred cinematic portrait that, like his artwork, relentlessly flouts convention, inspires questions and courts a strong, complicated reaction.- Screen Daily
- Posted Nov 5, 2020
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- Sarah Ward
Finding its genial, quirky groove early, John Sheedy’s family film flirts with tweeness but ultimately bubbles with the same spark as its can-do protagonist.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 17, 2020
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- Sarah Ward
Diving deep into dark material yet always remaining afloat, it’s a potent feature debut from Australian filmmaker Rodd Rathjen.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 10, 2020
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- Sarah Ward
As fascinating as the film’s production process proves, it’s the results of their creative labours that entrance and enchant.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 11, 2020
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- Sarah Ward
For a film so tied to a thoroughbred showcase, this broad crowd-pleaser blatantly relies on well-worn parts.- Screen Daily
- Posted Mar 12, 2020
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- Sarah Ward
In its most poignant, resonant moments, the film feels both devastatingly personal and affectingly revelatory: a simultaneously forceful and tender piece of existential contemplation that’s intricately tied to Wilczynski’s life but still universal in its themes. But when it meanders, which is perhaps more often than it should, it requires serious commitment from its audience.- Screen Daily
- Posted Feb 28, 2020
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- Sarah Ward
The Gentlemen is a disposable crime caper on autopilot. Propped up by an all-star ensemble, particularly the sturdy Charlie Hunnam and scene-stealer Colin Farrell, Guy Ritchie reclaims the genre that brought him to fame but does little more than shuffle battered parts into an intermittently entertaining configuration.- Screen Daily
- Posted Dec 19, 2019
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- Sarah Ward
Never making an obvious move, like its subject, the end result veers close to avant-garde. That’s a term that Cunningham himself famously and continually shunned; however Kovgan clearly doesn’t share the same concern.- Screen Daily
- Posted Dec 12, 2019
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- Sarah Ward
Angel of Mine isn’t without its bumps, but its equally challenging and cathartic payoff is worth the journey.- Screen Daily
- Posted Aug 29, 2019
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- Sarah Ward
If any colour represents the long-term impact of war, it’s the blend of beige and grey that fills The Load’s quietly powerful frames.- Screen Daily
- Posted Aug 28, 2019
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- Sarah Ward
In pairing the aftermath of a natural disaster with the minefield that is female adolescence, it proves its own surreal, savage and superbly performed creation.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jul 29, 2019
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- Sarah Ward
While the narrative’s dramas feel paper-thin, even as they touch upon timely themes of equality, multiculturalism and the treatment of refugees, the feature’s optimism always shines.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jun 20, 2019
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- Sarah Ward
An energetic, irreverent, autobiographically inspired affair filled with key swapping, children running amok and a rotting 200-tonne whale, the film proves a mixed bag but, given the era on display, its messiness always feels appropriate.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jun 20, 2019
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- Sarah Ward
If the film didn’t rest on such composed performances, it might have conjured melodramatic disbelief, but the excellent Fehling and Montgomery play their pivotal figures with the requisite nuance.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jun 3, 2019
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- Sarah Ward
The feature’s heart is in the right place, especially in advocating that age shouldn’t be a barrier. But Poms is a by-the-numbers feature which couples its empowering message with routine gags and muddled conflict.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 9, 2019
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- Sarah Ward
Unrelenting as its tone may be, the feature proves a delicately layered, deftly shot work that makes an incisive statement about the prevalence of apathy, arrogance and egotism in contemporary China and beyond.- Screen Daily
- Posted Feb 20, 2019
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- Sarah Ward
Petrunya is careful to maintain the ideal balance, parodying the ridiculous response to its protagonist but never downplaying its realism.- Screen Daily
- Posted Feb 14, 2019
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- Sarah Ward
Mascaro’s striking aesthetics give the film a texture and atmosphere that aligns the audience firmly with its protagonist; she’s seeking transcendence, and the movie she’s in approximates it one lustrous frame at a time.- Screen Daily
- Posted Feb 1, 2019
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- Sarah Ward
The Breaker Upperers might suffer from a too-neat third act, but it wins hearts and hearty guffaws along the way.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 25, 2019
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- Sarah Ward
[An] earnest, entertaining and imaginative old-meets-new adventure.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 18, 2019
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- Sarah Ward
In addition to the obviously authentic rapport between the quietly compelling Hill and impressive first-timer Perham, populating the feature’s frames with as many non-actors as possible also adds detail and texture.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 9, 2019
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- Sarah Ward
The film’s coming-of-age story might remain familiar, its emotional arc may be broad, and its messages about self-belief and taking chances fall into the tried-and-tested camp, but DeBlois still builds an engaging, sincere and tender world brimming with depth and detail.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 2, 2019
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- Sarah Ward
Grimly upbeat rather than merry, and relentless rather than frenetic, the film’s gritty zest is splashed across the screen with momentum, but also to the point of overuse. It serves a late heist set piece well, yet wears thin in a sea of training, thieving and fighting montages elsewhere.- Screen Daily
- Posted Nov 20, 2018
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- Sarah Ward
As predictable as their tale may be, Chaplin, Tena and Verdaguer serve their characters well, with the former and latter particularly impressing with the material.- Screen Daily
- Posted Nov 15, 2018
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- Sarah Ward
Though the film doesn’t scrounge too deeply, offbeat gags, ample emotion and parallels with human nature all go hand-in-hand.- Screen Daily
- Posted Oct 18, 2018
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- Sarah Ward
Distinctive 2D animation mixes graffiti-strewn, street-level realism with playful stylisation...for an aesthetically striking, instantly immersive and highly memorable end result.- Screen Daily
- Posted Oct 8, 2018
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- Sarah Ward
Try as he might, Rowan Atkinson’s slapstick pratfalls and rubbery expressions can’t stretch over the feature’s brazen attempt to rehash past glories.- Screen Daily
- Posted Oct 2, 2018
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- Sarah Ward
It’s a playful inversion of the bigfoot legend, cautioning against unthinking compliance, championing curiosity and encouraging putting oneself in another’s shoes (or feet). Still, this all-ages affair is as blunt as it is busy; children will warm to the movie’s ceaseless energy, but parents might take longer to thaw.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 19, 2018
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- Sarah Ward
Writer/director Anthony Maras largely sticks to the dramatisation playbook, but does so in an effective, affecting and empathetic fashion.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 12, 2018
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- Sarah Ward
This essential documentary is necessarily, unflinchingly grim; the cinematic equivalent of walking in the survivors’ shoes, and a complex, challenging but crucial viewing experience that burrows its immense sorrows deep into the audience’s bones.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 8, 2018
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- Sarah Ward
If The Nun leaves a haunting impression, it’s of a missed opportunity to capitalise upon a visually distinctive antagonist within an existing hit series. The end result feels like an exercise in joining obvious franchise dots and paving the way for future films.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 6, 2018
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- Sarah Ward
It offers an astute perspective on the immigrant experience, multicultural communities, and trying to reconcile traditional and modern cultures — all while telling a tale of love and life that’s authentic, affectionate and amusing.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jun 4, 2018
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- Sarah Ward
Unsettlingly perceptive as well as absurdly comedic, Under the Tree chronicles domestic tensions left to fester; when grudges branch out like a leafy tree in a suburban backyard, everyone suffers.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jun 1, 2018
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- Sarah Ward
Though the script rarely makes an unexpected choice, it’s the way that the film dissects its many underlying complications that matters more than eschewing predictability. Calmly, but filled with feeling, Graizer lets his protagonists’ actions and choices subvert the norm.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 25, 2018
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- Sarah Ward
Aping sporting conventions, The Workers Cup relates a riveting underdog tale about a quest for glory, while simultaneously probing the reality faced by the poorest people in the world’s wealthiest country.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 25, 2018
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- Sarah Ward
Like taking a dip in alluring yet choppy surf, as its characters do often, it’s equally vivid and calm, swelling with emotion yet still in its approach.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 25, 2018
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- Sarah Ward
If human resilience remains paramount in zombie films, Cargo goes a step further; here, recognising and redressing the divisive mistakes of the past is more important than merely surviving.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 17, 2018
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- Sarah Ward
Flitting between demonstrations, recorded addresses and interviews from both sides gives rise to highly relevant observations and intriguing asides — and even when they’re obvious, they’re astute.- Screen Daily
- Posted Apr 19, 2018
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- Sarah Ward
Reaching wide but grasping tight is where After Louie fares best; while the film looks broadly at the contemporary gay community, it’s the combination of intimacy and authenticity that makes the biggest impact.- Screen Daily
- Posted Mar 26, 2018
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- Sarah Ward
When the film works — or, whenever de Palma brings relatable spirit and charisma to her centrepiece role — it’s a slice of undemanding fluff, serving up an underdog fantasy that probes the difference between the haves and the have-nots without daring to dig too deep.- Screen Daily
- Posted Mar 19, 2018
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- Sarah Ward
Instances of alchemy abound in the narrative — walls are converted into projectiles, brick courtyards into hungry beasts — but the same magic can’t improve soap opera-like theatrics, the overuse of expositional dialogue or an eagerness to flit between action scenes.- Screen Daily
- Posted Mar 6, 2018
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- Sarah Ward
Even when the lines uttered sound more like a statement than an actual conversation, Sen remains a master of everything he controls as Goldstone slowly inches towards its bullet-riddled finale.- Screen Daily
- Posted Feb 23, 2018
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- Sarah Ward
Freak Show’s formula, fabulousness and feel-good messaging doesn’t sparkle so much as soak up the glow of its obvious predecessors.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 11, 2018
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- Sarah Ward
What The Commuter lacks in nuance, depth, surprises, logic and serviceable dialogue...it can’t make up for in its effective single-location tension or well-choreographed action, though both rank among the film’s modest highlights.- Screen Daily
- Posted Dec 29, 2017
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- Sarah Ward
Whether quietly watching Nanami gain her sense of self scene-by-scene, or plunging into more dramatic territory whenever Amuro or Mashiro appear, the end result slowly builds, grows and blossoms into an astute, insightful, multi-layered character study.- Screen Daily
- Posted Nov 9, 2017
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- Sarah Ward
Touching on the pressures of living in a patriarchal society, as well as exploring attitudes towards nationality and sexuality, the film unpacks a raft of parallels in its three stories, leaving seemingly disparate characters with the same choices.- Screen Daily
- Posted Oct 29, 2017
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- Sarah Ward
Thankfully never taking itself too seriously, the latest Jason Blum-produced comedy-thriller is happy to carve out its spot as the horror-themed, millennial-focused Groundhog Day, and to have fun doing so. A dynamic lead performance and a willingness to keep things short and snappy also ensure viewers won’t mind venturing into rehash territory.- Screen Daily
- Posted Oct 11, 2017
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- Sarah Ward
Affecting as well as perceptive in how it intimately depicts the awkward blossoming of youth, Heartstone wades into the crowded coming-of-age genre with just the right amount of confidence, compassion and clear-eyed style.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 25, 2017
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- Sarah Ward
A feature that might not always surprise in its story, but succeeds in its authenticity.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 14, 2017
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- Sarah Ward
Indivisible peers and probes, offering a sensitive, insightful and sometimes even dream-like rumination on the cost of seeking and subverting normality.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 12, 2017
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- Sarah Ward
It’s a breezy trip for the star, making ample use of his usual charisma, urgency, grin and gift of the gab, though the late ’70s/early ’80s-set film doesn’t completely hit the mark.- Screen Daily
- Posted Aug 17, 2017
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- Sarah Ward
It might be fitting that a film about a film made under a censor-heavy regime is better to look at than engage with, but it also says much about the slight and stretched The Queen of Spain.- Screen Daily
- Posted Aug 14, 2017
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- Sarah Ward
Much of the movie’s success stems from Contreras, his regular cinematographer Tonatiuh Martínez and the rest of the technical team’s handling of its spiritual musings, with a beguiling mood as crucial as the underlying backstory.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jul 24, 2017
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- Sarah Ward
Convincing portrayals aside, this conventional story is further bolstered by Power’s sparse approach. Brutal as many scenes may be, the filmmaker imparts a sense of aesthetic restraint, knowing that waiting is often more unnerving than blustering straight ahead.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jul 20, 2017
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- Sarah Ward
This is a beautiful, heart-swelling animated movie, to be certain, but it’s also one that knows that such picturesque sights and pleasant sensations are only part of the equation.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jun 20, 2017
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- Sarah Ward
The film’s insights into the isolation evident in the relationships most take for granted — marriages, parent-child connections and long-term friendships — don’t merely hit their targets; they smash them with a sledgehammer.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jun 13, 2017
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- Sarah Ward
Promised Land deftly flits from biography to impact study to cinematic essay on the boom and bust of happiness-peddling myths, drawing a clear line from the music king to the current US leader.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 28, 2017
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- Sarah Ward
Makala takes the observational approach to the hardships of Congolese life, charting a tough but insightful journey.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 28, 2017
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- Sarah Ward
Gabriel and the Mountain offers a moving look at the transformative nature of travel, both on those hopping around the world in search of a new perspective and those they encounter along the way.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 28, 2017
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- Sarah Ward
In its style as well as its psychological focus, Hounds of Love marks Young as a filmmaker to watch, though he’s not the feature’s only standout. His trio of leads has rarely been better.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 1, 2017
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- Sarah Ward
It might be with a child’s eyes that Summer 1993 relates the efforts of a six year-old trying to cope with grief, but it is with maturity, empathy and heartfelt emotion that it conveys the uncertain reality that follows.- Screen Daily
- Posted Mar 29, 2017
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- Sarah Ward
What might have been a bleak account of not quite trying and therefore never really failing actually becomes an unlikely and engaging missive of hope and of choice, albeit steeped in reality.- Screen Daily
- Posted Mar 16, 2017
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- Sarah Ward
Pondering imbalances of power is always timely, and here, it adds an extra layer of urgency and commentary to an already potent and perceptive offering.- Screen Daily
- Posted Feb 18, 2017
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- Sarah Ward
An amiable, average-at-best caper-like quest remains just that, even with recognisable talent, and even more so when its combination of elements is clearly stretched.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 23, 2017
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- Sarah Ward
Collateral Beauty never manages to shake off its all-too-deliberate air or willingness to follow the easiest path. Its life lessons are packaged with cloying, overt mawkishness which aren’t quite the feel-good home run Frankel seems to expect.- Screen Daily
- Posted Dec 14, 2016
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- Sarah Ward
Going in guns blazing and attempting to set pulses racing might not feel wholly appropriate given the facts at the heart of the film, but it does suit Lam’s usual style — not to mention audiences looking for non-stop thrill ride of a movie.- Screen Daily
- Posted Nov 1, 2016
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- Sarah Ward
Collin attempts to do more than recount facts; if he can’t always wholly capture the figures at the film’s centre, he can convey a sense of the time and place that Lee and Helen inhabited.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 16, 2016
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- Sarah Ward
Myers crafts an effervescent yet astute splash of teen life that delights the eyes, warms the heart and tickles the funny bone in equal measures.- Screen Daily
- Posted Aug 17, 2016
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- Sarah Ward
The film’s destination might be apparent, but the trek through past regrets, race relations and the central subject itself never feels drawn out.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jun 9, 2016
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- Sarah Ward
Low-key performances by the conflicted Lahti and the radiant Airola prove the final knockout hit, with The Happiest Day in the Life of Olli Mäki at its best when it’s lingering upon the nuanced expressions on their faces, or highlighting the way their portrayals so convincingly convey their characters’ affections.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 22, 2016
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- Sarah Ward
The end result proves commanding and fascinating, even if it’s not wholly satisfying from start to finish.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 21, 2016
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- Sarah Ward
Conjuring up a serving of visual magic is one thing, of course; bringing Kipling’s characters and narrative to life is another.- Screen Daily
- Posted Apr 3, 2016
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- Sarah Ward
As audience-friendly as they may be, the cast is left wading through the middle ground between the unengaging narrative and over-emphasised aesthetics.- Screen Daily
- Posted Feb 24, 2016
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- Sarah Ward
Like many films designed to double as opening chapters in ongoing screen sagas, The Fifth Wave always feels padded, its focus on establishing a springboard for future sequels rather than satisfactorily exploring its own narrative.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 14, 2016
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- Sarah Ward
What The Daughter lacks in narrative surprises, however, it works hard to make up for in its confident approach.- Screen Daily
- Posted Oct 25, 2015
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- Sarah Ward
Sherpa swiftly proves as grippingly human and political as it does visually spectacular.- Screen Daily
- Posted Oct 2, 2015
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- Sarah Ward
Deftly made and diverting for young audiences but unlikely to linger, with any vibrancy tempered by the familiarity of the tune.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 19, 2015
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- Sarah Ward
Nicchiarelli brings broader contemplations that help lift the film beyond the usual run-through of sex, drugs, rock ’n’ roll, regrets, righting past wrongs, carving out meaningful relationships with those previously neglected along the way, and facing the future on one’s own terms.- Screen Daily
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- Sarah Ward
Grass demonstrates a fresh type of playfulness from the prolific filmmaker. It’s a movie filled with his usual intimacy, but it’s also one that’s purposefully more concerned with the bigger picture than the individual details.- Screen Daily
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