Steve Davis
Select another critic »For 530 reviews, this critic has graded:
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35% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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63% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 10.2 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Steve Davis' Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 55 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | 12 Years a Slave | |
| Lowest review score: | I Am Sam | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 265 out of 530
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Mixed: 163 out of 530
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Negative: 102 out of 530
530
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Steve Davis
In her sophomore film, director Fastvold, assisted by painterly cinematographer André Chemetoff, has envisioned a softer version of the American frontier, still untamed but capable of hope. It’s a befitting vision of a world to come, one in which forbidden love will one day finally find its name.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Feb 11, 2021
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- Steve Davis
With these two actors in command, Supernova doesn’t just dare to speak the name of a love between two deeply committed men facing an untenable situation. It shouts it from the rooftops.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Jan 28, 2021
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- Steve Davis
Aside from Segel’s grounding performance, the pleasures of Our Friend lie in some of its observational specifics about human behavior.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Jan 21, 2021
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- Steve Davis
As improbable as Valerie’s endgame seems once revealed, it plainly demonstrates she’s nobody's chump. It’s not exactly a feminist reading, but one that gives Fatale a little backbone.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Dec 18, 2020
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- Steve Davis
The two leads are watchable enough, but the script keeps their characters emotionally separated, so you never see anything remotely like chemistry between them.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Dec 11, 2020
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- Steve Davis
Thanks to funding provided by Jane Fonda and the Hollywood Foreign Press Association, the documentary – once thought to be lost – has been digitally restored to its original length and color quality under the supervision of Greaves’ widow. We should be grateful for this gift.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Nov 27, 2020
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- Steve Davis
As Monsoon unhurriedly paces towards an open-ended conclusion, you sense Kit will be in a better place than the one he occupied when he first stepped off the plane.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Nov 12, 2020
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- Steve Davis
Apart from the nowhere storyline devoid of any interesting character development or conflict, the movie feels vaguely exploitative.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Nov 5, 2020
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- Steve Davis
Every so often, a spark in Marinelli’s mesmerizing blue-gray eyes flickers and you can imagine the passion that drove the man to his madness. In those moments, Martin Eden subtly flames, if only briefly.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Oct 15, 2020
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- Steve Davis
The ho-hum practical jokes the two inflict upon the other can be described as Home Alone lite: No concussion-inducing swinging paint cans or burn-inducing doorknobs inspired by Looney Tunes violence here. Which, of course, takes all the fun out of it.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Oct 9, 2020
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- Steve Davis
There’s little juicy about his life, except for maybe when he briefly left his stalwart, long-time male lover and business associate, André Oliver, for the sultry French actress, Jeanne Moreau. While House of Cardin devotes a few more than a glancing minute to this intriguing episode, perhaps it’s a worthy topic for another documentary at another time.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Aug 26, 2020
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- Steve Davis
Rebuilding Paradise speaks to the resiliency of human beings, and maybe something about the American can-do spirit.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Jul 30, 2020
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- Steve Davis
Nearly three hours in length, the movie becomes an endurance test with each heartless act, relentless in its depiction of a Hobbesian state of humankind, in which life has little innate value.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Jul 16, 2020
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- Steve Davis
Director Porter has done an excellent job assembling archival footage and interviews to tell Lewis’ story; she has the markings of a great storyteller.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Jul 1, 2020
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- Steve Davis
This gloriously messy celebration of New Orleans’ musical legacy is a savory gumbo of uniquely American ingredients – jazz, blues, soul, rock ‘n’ roll, gospel, funk, hip-hop – generously seasoned with love and respect for the largely African-American artists who forged that heritage over the past three centuries.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted May 14, 2020
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- Steve Davis
While admirably eschewing any "God’s Little Acre"-like sensationalism, the movie has little compelling dramatic energy. While the near-absence of emotional commotion doesn’t hobble Bull, there’s no question it keeps it tied down.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Apr 16, 2020
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- Steve Davis
Though the movie’s raison d’être is unmistakable from the outset, the most compelling moments come not when God’s name is being invoked out loud and with great frequency, but rather when the loving symbiosis between two young people facing adversity and caring for each other is tenderly communicated without uttering any words, conveyed in something as simple as the direct gaze between two pairs of locked eyes. Now that’s the notion of a higher power in which we can all believe.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Mar 11, 2020
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- Steve Davis
It’s a scrummy omelette of a movie, a dish that’s off the menu. The ingredients are unorthodox, but they come together in an uproarious way. As a Dubliner would say, it’s absolute gas.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Mar 4, 2020
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- Steve Davis
At least the heroic Buck remains the focal point here, unlike in other less faithful screen incarnations that mainly trade on the familiar title.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Feb 19, 2020
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- Steve Davis
To its credit, Downhill strives to remain character-driven rather than devolve into a jokey take on a delicate premise.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Feb 12, 2020
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- Steve Davis
Movies shouldn’t have to meet a PC checklist so they won’t offend – who wants that kind of cinema? – but when they poke you in the eye one too many times, it’s fair game to poke back.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Jan 22, 2020
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- Steve Davis
Aside from the committee-written script with no coherent perspective, the trouble with Like a Boss is that it never crudely outrages. It’s a bust in so many ways. The halfhearted gender and cultural political incorrectness of Hayek’s ridiculous character makes for halfhearted laughs, and that’s being generous.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Jan 8, 2020
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- Steve Davis
It’s Hauser who keeps the movie from tilting over, even though Eastwood and Ray initially seem to patronize the character. The knuckleheaded scene-stealer from "I, Tonya" and "BlacKkKlansman" has the chance here to play a fuller, more rounded character for a change, and he’s unexpectedly up to the task. The performance is an eye-opener. With a little refinement and polish, we may have found our long-awaited Ignatius J. Reilly.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Dec 11, 2019
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- Steve Davis
The movie’s wit and energy hold your interest, but they don’t spark the pleasure of the unexpected, the thrill you felt in "Laura," "The Last of Sheila," "Chinatown," "The Sixth Sense," or the 1974 adaptation of Christie’s "Murder on the Orient Express" (not Kenneth Branagh’s inept remake), movies whose big reveals surprise you in their elegant simplicity.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Nov 27, 2019
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- Steve Davis
While Scandalous ultimately touches upon the tabloid’s plausible impact on the present-day state of affairs, it’s a killjoy way to begin a movie that’s so engagingly lively.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Nov 13, 2019
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- Steve Davis
It’s the rare movie that doesn’t trivialize a platonic male relationship with buddy film tropes.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Nov 13, 2019
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- Steve Davis
This mirthless comedy about a manly crew of smokejumpers helplessly babysitting a trio of rescued brats has more dead air in it than a radio broadcast hosted by a narcoleptic disc jockey.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Nov 6, 2019
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- Steve Davis
Like a classroom history lesson, the script by director Lemmons and Gregory Allen Howard dutifully recounts the life of this extraordinary person. The movie feels prosaic, although Tubman’s occasional intonation of a timeless spiritual in lieu of dialogue is an unexpected lyrical touch enhanced by the purity of Erivo’s voice.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Oct 30, 2019
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- Steve Davis
Well-researched and candid, this documentary will not change anyone’s perception of Cohn or rehabilitate his character in any way. Although his self-loathing insecurities may slightly humanize him, he will always be one-dimensionally evil.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Oct 9, 2019
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- Steve Davis
Be forewarned: Anthropocene is often an overwhelming experience. The human accountability on display can be tough to swallow.- Austin Chronicle
- Posted Oct 2, 2019
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