Stanley Kauffmann
Select another critic »For 471 reviews, this critic has graded:
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39% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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59% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 0.7 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Stanley Kauffmann's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 65 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind | |
| Lowest review score: | Hulk | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 274 out of 471
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Mixed: 152 out of 471
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Negative: 45 out of 471
471
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Stanley Kauffmann
All four of the roles are written with pungency. There is even an implication that the two adults realize the triteness of the situation and that they--the characters, not Baumbach--want to speak from inner sources, not from a script. Baumbach pulls this off with some sting and wit.- The New Republic
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- Stanley Kauffmann
But for those who can summon up the talismanic "what if," The American President provides chuckles and tingles, even a few sobs. [18 Dec 1995, p.28]- The New Republic
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- Stanley Kauffmann
All political thrillers, good or less good, have moral implications...Walk on Water, one of the better ones, has grave moral implications and does not ignore them or merely utilize them.- The New Republic
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- Stanley Kauffmann
The screenplay, by Lowell Ganz and Babaloo Mandel, based on a French film, has enough sharp gags and plot twists to sustain it, with an ending that manages to be nice.- The New Republic
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- Stanley Kauffmann
Admittedly, the setting does heighten interest, but this film is much more than an ideational travelogue.- The New Republic
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- Stanley Kauffmann
The cast is so good that a kind of counterpoint arises between the riskily lachrymose story and the firm verity of the acting.- The New Republic
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- Stanley Kauffmann
The most pleasant aspect of the picture is its relish of the moment in which it is set. Deville doesn't omit mention of the anti-Semitism in postwar France; still, this little tailoring shop is a good place to have reached after the preceding years.- The New Republic
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- Stanley Kauffmann
Overall Nina's Tragedies is another instance of a subject discussed here lately--a foreign film that is seen one way at home and another way abroad.- The New Republic
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- Stanley Kauffmann
It is the two leading performances that make the film seem almost to reach down and embrace us.- The New Republic
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- Stanley Kauffmann
LaBute's dialogue reminds us that, along with that of such others as Hal Hartley and Jim Jarmusch and Whit Stillman, the sheer writing, these days, of some American films is remarkably fine. LaBute has cast his film to match, with people who can handle his dialogue neatly. [31 August 1998, p. 28]- The New Republic
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- Stanley Kauffmann
Leigh's directing is lean and tight. In Imelda Staunton as Vera, he has an actress who can make her only two emotions interesting.- The New Republic
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- Stanley Kauffmann
A bit scattery, but it simmers with Shicoff's intensity in lending his faith and being to the role.- The New Republic
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- Stanley Kauffmann
Beatty himself is high wattage, revved up, sharp in his comic timing, gleaming with eagerness to put his film across. As director, he carries on from where he left off in “Reds;” he is sure and fluent, and occasionally he tips his hat to the past. [June 8, 1998]- The New Republic
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- Stanley Kauffmann
Nolte and Coburn are so powerful that they distort what, we are told, is the story's theme. [Feb. 1, 1999]- The New Republic
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- Stanley Kauffmann
The story of the film is a quiet local tale; the directing is sophisticated.- The New Republic
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- Stanley Kauffmann
Ford would probably have grumbled about some things in this picture--some moments of confusion about who is who--but he might have been pleased to see that his influence, so marked in many countries' films, had reached China and Tibet.- The New Republic
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- Stanley Kauffmann
The present film-makers have retained the essences of the plot and characters but have moved the ambience toward the next stylistic era, romanticism.- The New Republic
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- Stanley Kauffmann
The picture tries hard for addictive mystery, but it is full of scenes that promise insight and don't deliver.- The New Republic
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- Stanley Kauffmann
Substantively there is no content. Everything we see or hear engages us only as part of a directorial tour de force. That force is exceptional, but since there is not much more to the picture, it leaves us hungry.- The New Republic
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- Stanley Kauffmann
Especially in the moving moments, this film prods us into a kind of reproof. Kushner is now fifty, a prime writing age, and we want more.- The New Republic
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- Stanley Kauffmann
If only Cantet and Robin Campillo (who based their screenplay on stories by Dany Lafèrriere) had balanced the sexual and political elements more acutely, the result could have been searing.- The New Republic
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- Stanley Kauffmann
Sympathy for a pedophile is difficult, but surely comprehension may be possible, and Bacon evokes it.- The New Republic
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- Stanley Kauffmann
The result is glib, often funny, sometimes bumpy, and ultimately depressing.- The New Republic
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- Stanley Kauffmann
Burman is particularly good at the tiny details that become recognition points in daily patterns.- The New Republic
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- Stanley Kauffmann
The performance that comes closest to capturing the Waugh elixir is Fenella Woolgar's as madcapping Miss Runcible, who ultimately commandeers a racing car.- The New Republic
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- Stanley Kauffmann
Caouette has opened up a case history vividly, but he has left us without any conclusions, not even with much enlightening empathy. Something more than truth--dare one say "mere truth"?--is needed.- The New Republic
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- Stanley Kauffmann
Unusually for a soap-bubble film, Après Vous runs almost two hours and very nearly sustains its length. Five minutes of condensation toward the end would have benefited it. But Salvadori floats everything, hammers nothing, and gets maximum buoyancy out of Camille Bazbaz's jaunty music.- The New Republic
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- Stanley Kauffmann
As with much art of our time--music, painting, sculpture, theater--Caché in a certain way affronts us. Its deliberate contravention of our expectations, and not necessarily stodgy expectations, is part of its intent.- The New Republic
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- Stanley Kauffmann
Cuadron, at the helm, wanted to pitch his film in a terrain accessible to modern sensibility yet different from what that sensibility is generally fed. And he might have succeeded, except for his casting. [2 March 1998, p. 26]- The New Republic
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- Stanley Kauffmann
The Oxford English Dictionary says that an allegory is "an extended or continued metaphor." And to think that this definition was coined when a French film called Innocence was still very far in the future! But how aptly this film proves the point.- The New Republic
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