Steve Pond
Select another critic »For 318 reviews, this critic has graded:
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64% higher than the average critic
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5% same as the average critic
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31% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 8.8 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Steve Pond's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 74 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Asako I & II | |
| Lowest review score: | The Greatest Beer Run Ever | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 268 out of 318
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Mixed: 46 out of 318
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Negative: 4 out of 318
318
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Steve Pond
For a while, you think this is a test to see how long the film can extend the trick. But by the half hour mark, you realize that it’s not a trick, it’s the whole damn movie, which relies on the fact that action heroes like John should mostly shut up and that viewers know the beats of these films well enough to do without non-visual exposition.- TheWrap
- Posted Apr 28, 2026
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- Steve Pond
Driver’s Ed is mildly amusing at best. It’s a good-natured and good-hearted film without much of the edge or hilarity the Farrelly brothers brought to Dumb and Dumber or There’s Something About Mary.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 17, 2025
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- Steve Pond
John Candy: I Like Me, made with the cooperation of Candy’s children and his wife, feels like a tale told by friends, but friends who are less interested in promoting idolatry than in showing you why they loved the man.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 13, 2025
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- Steve Pond
It’s still the story of an anguished man grappling with death, transplanted to a different world and a different time but still exerting a powerful pull on our imaginations. In one way, it’s an abbreviated “Hamlet,” but in another way, it’s a pumped-up one.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 13, 2025
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- Steve Pond
The film takes a situation that could be milked for wrenching drama and outrage, an elderly woman whose daughter tries to sell her mother’s longtime home out from under her, and treats it with lightness and charm.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 13, 2025
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- Steve Pond
Designed as a horror movie for the entire family, the film has its scares, but it’s just too wacky and too much fun to be disturbing.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 12, 2025
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- Steve Pond
EPiC is Elvis through the Baz lens, where big and bold is always preferable to straightforward and where going over-the-top is never considered a bad thing. If it’s not revelatory for people who’ve seen the existing films from the era, it’s the most imaginative, generous and entertaining look at a time in which Elvis’ comeback still had real life to it.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 12, 2025
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- Steve Pond
Below the Clouds is a tone poem paying tribute to a region that is suffused with beauty and haunted by loss. It wanders, to be sure, but in a way that’s the point.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 7, 2025
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- Steve Pond
The tonal juggling act isn’t always seamless, but in a way, the contradictions are what give Roofman its life. It’s a sad movie, really, but it’s also a lot of fun. And if that doesn’t make sense, maybe it’s the whole point.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 7, 2025
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- Steve Pond
The film has its twists, turns and resets, simultaneously giving the audience more information while also keeping it off balance. It can be riveting and at times repetitive, but it does what it sets out to do: It drops you in the middle of a crisis and it keeps you there.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 2, 2025
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- Steve Pond
In some ways, Safdie’s approach seems casual and grounded rather than pumped up, though it’s also raw both physically and emotionally.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 1, 2025
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- Steve Pond
The Wizard of the Kremlin is a loud, bold film that is held together by the quiet performance at its center.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 1, 2025
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- Steve Pond
Any time a logical explanation (or even an illogical one) seems imminent, Lanthimos pulls the rug out from under his audience’s expectations.- TheWrap
- Posted Aug 30, 2025
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- Steve Pond
Del Toro’s Frankenstein is a remarkable achievement that in a way hijacks the flagship story of the horror genre and turns it into a tale of forgiveness.- TheWrap
- Posted Aug 30, 2025
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- Steve Pond
For a film at least partly about music, Deliver Me From Nowhere makes effective use of silence, especially in the moments when Springsteen finds himself adrift rather than inspired.- TheWrap
- Posted Aug 30, 2025
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- Steve Pond
Buoyed by the performance by Hardy and by newcomer Jason Patel as Aysha, Unicorns pleads for understanding but does it in a way that at its best is contemplative rather than histrionic.- TheWrap
- Posted Jun 24, 2025
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- Steve Pond
Orwell: 2+2=5 is an artful balancing act, one that dips in and out of Orwell’s life and work, but also uses a broad array of reference points as it swings from history to art to the most current of events.- TheWrap
- Posted May 24, 2025
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- Steve Pond
The action meanders, but there’s always an undercurrent of dread. And while many of the episodes are down to earth, the filmmaking lets things flow from image to image with lines that search for deeper truths but don’t advance the plot.- TheWrap
- Posted May 24, 2025
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- Steve Pond
There’s nothing showy about Amrum, but it can leave an audience shaken. Akin has fashioned a rare film that relies on the power of simplicity to tell a story that is anything but simple.- TheWrap
- Posted May 23, 2025
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- Steve Pond
The bracing thing about It Was Just an Accident is that it has married Panahi’s wit and humanism with real anger; if many of his previous films lulled you into realizing his points about oppression and injustice, this one is downright confrontational.- TheWrap
- Posted May 21, 2025
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- Steve Pond
The movie seems to be trying to be quirky, but it’s never quirky enough, and it’s hard to feel much for the characters or feel that there’s much in the way of healing going on. But it’s breezy enough to be mildly diverting and gently nostalgic.- TheWrap
- Posted May 21, 2025
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- Steve Pond
The film moves slowly but relentlessly, with each new moment showing just how dangerous the lead character’s idealism really is.- TheWrap
- Posted May 20, 2025
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- Steve Pond
Renoir is a coming-of-age story that doesn’t care much about lessons learned or milestones reached. Instead, it meanders for its two-hour running time, filled with lyrical moments that are belied by grim undercurrents.- TheWrap
- Posted May 19, 2025
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- Steve Pond
Sirât is bold in its depiction of a decaying world in which some people can still find release. But its insistent brutality feels less bold than exhausting, and the question asked by one of the characters – “Is this what the end of the world feels like?” – has an easy answer: Hell, yeah.- TheWrap
- Posted May 19, 2025
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- Steve Pond
Its messiness is part of its charm and part of the point; a film that took itself more seriously than this one wouldn’t let a climactic gun battle turn into an almost cartoonish grand guignol splatter-fest.- TheWrap
- Posted May 19, 2025
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- Steve Pond
The filmmakers have managed to make a bracing, scattered and somewhat revelatory look at a period that’ll go down as a misstep in which the Smart Beatle was fumbling to figure out what to do and intermittently coming up with a satisfactory answer.- TheWrap
- Posted Mar 31, 2025
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- Steve Pond
The film is big, brutal and beautiful — over the top at times and stirring at others.- TheWrap
- Posted Jan 16, 2025
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- Steve Pond
It’s hard to watch September 5 without feeling some serious ambivalence – but in a way, that’s one of the strengths of the film, because it embraces that ambivalence as a necessary part of the story.- TheWrap
- Posted Nov 12, 2024
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- Steve Pond
The images are vivid, but the storytelling remains elusive and elliptical, exploring the title character from different perspectives without ever pinning him down.- TheWrap
- Posted Nov 6, 2024
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- Steve Pond
Time and again, Stewart clams up or shuts down when she’d prodded on sensitive subjects; you get the feeling she’s humoring her filmographer with only slightly more restraint than she might show to a kitchen helper who uses the wrong knife to cut an orange.- TheWrap
- Posted Oct 23, 2024
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- Steve Pond
Ground zero here – for the characters, for the nations, for the filmmaker – is futility. Nabulsi drops us on that ground and doesn’t let us pretend it’s anything else.- TheWrap
- Posted Oct 21, 2024
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- Steve Pond
The subject matter is already horrifying; we hardly need to see its fictional illustration staged for maximum impact and set to insistent and foreboding music.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 17, 2024
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- Steve Pond
The pacing is far from what you’d expect in a Hollywood movie with this much action, which can make the film feel longer than its 116 minutes. But that rich languor and love of words is earned, and do you really want to tell Ralph Fiennes and Juliette Binoche to hurry up? No. You. Do. Not.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 14, 2024
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- Steve Pond
Road Diary takes a Springsteen concert as a template of sorts, which means it mixes joy and dread and love and regret and exuberance and silliness and seriousness; it’s intoxicating and it’s sobering, and it rocks like hell but confronts what’s been lost during Springsteen’s 74 years on the planet.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 13, 2024
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- Steve Pond
The film is bookended by quiet scenes between a man and a woman, by beautifully understated performances by Bloom and Balfe. Understatement in a boxing movie? If you look past the savagery of the middle hour, that could be the craziest thing about this new take on an old genre.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 13, 2024
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- Steve Pond
It’s unexpectedly touching and even lovely, a grandly sad benediction to people who don’t need no stinkin’ test to tell them who their soulmate is.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 13, 2024
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- Steve Pond
There are things to admire in the visual design and in the way a small group of accomplished actors submit to this quiet horror show, but cold, begrudging admiration is about all the admittedly stylish film is designed to elicit.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 13, 2024
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- Steve Pond
In a movie whose setup that almost inevitably leads to rampant sentimentality, Pugh and Garfield are enormously charming actors who are also skilled at undercutting their own charm; they commit to the sentiment without yielding to it, making We Live in Time a truly charming and surprisingly rich film.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 7, 2024
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- Steve Pond
That’s Hard Truths, in a nutshell: people. People you won’t forget, courtesy of a handful of remarkable actors and a singular director who at the age of 81 remains a true treasure.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 7, 2024
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- Steve Pond
In truth, the movie can be pretty ridiculous, too, with its wild ambition sometimes coming across as a little foolhardy. But overreaching might be the whole point of The End, which offers an end-times prescription for living: Hold the fantasy together as long as you can. And when in doubt, sing.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 1, 2024
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- Steve Pond
The Friend juggles the happy, the sad and the bittersweet while somehow managing not to lose the lightness that has kept it afloat.- TheWrap
- Posted Aug 31, 2024
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- Steve Pond
In a movie that is stately on the surface and stormy underneath, Jolie’s drawn, almost architectural features and air of enforced restraint is ideal for Larraín’s vision of Callas. She’s a glorious, luminous wreck, looking for peace but drawn inexorably to a world of grand artifice.- TheWrap
- Posted Aug 29, 2024
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- Steve Pond
Caught by the Tides is an elegy of sorts, at times angry and abrasive but more often gentle and reflective.- TheWrap
- Posted May 24, 2024
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- Steve Pond
You could argue that Sorrentino is treading water after the deeply personal explorations in “The Hand of God,” but these are rich and mysterious waters to tread. “Parthenope” is a work of casual mastery; you could say that it’s great and it’s beautiful.- TheWrap
- Posted May 21, 2024
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- TheWrap
- Posted May 21, 2024
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- Steve Pond
The Shrouds is sober, serious and profoundly sad Cronenberg. It’s still a hell of a ride, but it’s going down a road where there’s a heavy toll.- TheWrap
- Posted May 21, 2024
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- Steve Pond
The Apprentice is amusing at times and disturbing at others, but it’s hard not to think that Ali Abbasi could have done something weirder, wilder and more satisfying if he’d found a way to bring in more magic and less MAGA.- TheWrap
- Posted May 20, 2024
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- Steve Pond
Henson and Howard are a fine match, and the sort of film you’d expect Ron Howard to make – straightforward, skillful, honest and sympathetic – is pretty much the kind of movie you’d want about Jim Henson.- TheWrap
- Posted May 20, 2024
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- Steve Pond
The film can be confusing, but it’s not meant to be pinned down. And despite the occasionally surreal touches, it’s an examination of how the beauty of tradition can also be an opponent to justice and humanity.- TheWrap
- Posted May 18, 2024
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- Steve Pond
Wild Diamonds is a character study both of Liane and of the culture that has spawned her, and a film that manages to be both empathetic and unforgiving. It won’t make you think she’s making smart choices, but you’ll understand why she’s making bad ones.- TheWrap
- Posted May 18, 2024
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- Steve Pond
So tip your the greasy, dusty, battered hat to George Miller, who is pulling off some kind of ridiculous feat by turning these grungy action movies into a grand saga.- TheWrap
- Posted May 15, 2024
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- Steve Pond
The Second Act is little more than an amusing trifle, as meta as that trifle may be.- TheWrap
- Posted May 15, 2024
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- Steve Pond
It wouldn’t be a Western if it didn’t include some kind of showdown, and “The Dead Don’t Hurt” gives us one that is bloody and satisfying without being what you’d expect. Mortensen twists the tropes until the end.- TheWrap
- Posted Apr 25, 2024
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- Steve Pond
The Contestant wants you to be entertained and it wants you to feel bad about being entertained. It pretty much succeeds on both counts.- TheWrap
- Posted Mar 21, 2024
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- Steve Pond
At a breezy 90 minutes, Copa 71 makes its case succinctly, dropping interesting tidbits while letting the event itself serve as a revelation.- TheWrap
- Posted Mar 14, 2024
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- Steve Pond
The film is defiantly unconventional even if it does provide enough of the usual beats to give its audience a solid footing.- TheWrap
- Posted Jan 23, 2024
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- Steve Pond
American Symphony is about the creation of art in the face of pressure, tragedy and heartbreak, and about the tension between the glory of creation and the pain of living. It manages to capture the glory but it never ignores the price.- TheWrap
- Posted Nov 22, 2023
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- Steve Pond
Evolution is less about healing than about haunting; it’s an odd, small and moving work that asks disquieting questions about identity after decades of trauma.- TheWrap
- Posted Oct 18, 2023
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- Steve Pond
In its happiest moments, The Movie Teller is glorious and yes, a little corny; in its darkest ones, it’s still lovely and sad.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 18, 2023
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- Steve Pond
The gender-driven power struggles in Widow Clicquot are in some ways the most conventional part of the film, which can soar in one moment and feel routine in the next.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 18, 2023
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- Steve Pond
There’s nothing flashy about the way these stories are assembled or told, but the cumulative power becomes overwhelming.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 18, 2023
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- Steve Pond
Things come to a head in a way that is simultaneously slapstick-y and touching, and entirely in keeping with a movie that has never lost its sense of charm through an hour and a half of twists and turns and engaging mountain escapades.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 18, 2023
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- Steve Pond
Mixing familiar stories with fresh insights, Zimny’s film is a portrait in restlessness, a picture of a man who has been both wildly successful and thoroughly dismissed — sometimes simultaneously.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 18, 2023
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- Steve Pond
Knox Goes Away is a character study of a disappearing character or maybe a thriller that stays away from actual thrills. However you label the film, it’s low key but satisfying.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 13, 2023
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- Steve Pond
The movie leans into the melodrama, taking its time and milking the situation for all its worth.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 13, 2023
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- Steve Pond
The result is a wide-ranging dialogue that manages to be both philosophical and playful, a personal portrait that goes exactly as deep as Cornwell wants it to go but never feels as if the author is getting away with obfuscation.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 11, 2023
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- Steve Pond
Kendrick manages to make her film both weirdly entertaining and thoroughly disturbing.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 10, 2023
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- Steve Pond
There’s no real tonal conflict between the lightness of the comedy and the import of the issues it is addressing; American Fiction runs on serious conversations that are never bogged down by being treated too seriously.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 10, 2023
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- Steve Pond
Quiz Lady spends most of its time being loud, broad and silly. That’s sort of the point, but it can also wear thin when the second most heartwarming scene in the movie comes from Will Ferrell.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 10, 2023
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- Steve Pond
Arcel has created a film that is big, bold and over-the-top, but it has the right guy at its center to hold everything together – and, in a touch we didn’t know we needed, that guy has the right person by his side.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 8, 2023
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- Steve Pond
The film is as exhausting as it is disturbing, and it’s relentlessness is in many ways the whole point as viewers spend 212 minutes looking at circumstances in which these young people, most in their late teens and early twenties, spend their daily lives.- TheWrap
- Posted May 26, 2023
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- Steve Pond
Throughout, Kaurismäki shows his usual complete control of a delicate tone that could easily go awry if it didn’t work so well.- TheWrap
- Posted May 25, 2023
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- Steve Pond
Paints a rich picture of full lives using little more than pauses, glances and a frozen landscape that says volumes without speaking.- TheWrap
- Posted May 23, 2023
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- Steve Pond
It looks amazing, of course, but it might well be the least involving movie he’s ever made, with an amazing cast providing little but momentary distraction.- TheWrap
- Posted May 23, 2023
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- Steve Pond
There’s not a lot of clarity here, but there is a terrible, strange beauty in the film’s mixture of ritual, magic, faith and the dark side of colonialism. By the end New Boy has a name, but his identity remains elusive.- TheWrap
- Posted May 23, 2023
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- Steve Pond
Part thorny family story, part whodunit, part courtroom drama and part meditation on the nature of truth and fiction, Justine Triet’s Anatomy of a Fall takes two hours of conversations and makes them both provocative and propulsive.- TheWrap
- Posted May 22, 2023
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- Steve Pond
Impressive in its single-mindedness, this is nonetheless a movie that dares you to try and like it – and most likely, few will take Sauvaire up on that dare.- TheWrap
- Posted May 21, 2023
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- Steve Pond
At an hour and 27 minutes, the film has the feel of an exquisite miniature, succinct and evocative.- TheWrap
- Posted May 21, 2023
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- Steve Pond
If this is the final Indiana Jones movie, as it most likely will be, it’s nice to see that they stuck the landing.- TheWrap
- Posted May 19, 2023
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- Steve Pond
Despite its access to the words of its subject, this is a low-key, stylish film of interest mostly to Kubrick devotees – but since that includes an awful lot of the people who have any interest in the art of film, there should be an audience who want to hear what the guy had to say.- TheWrap
- Posted Mar 24, 2023
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- Steve Pond
Kiss the Future is a portrait of a city and a people who used culture to fight back; it’s also the story of a rock ‘n’ roll band exploring the limits of how its music can impact the real world. Above all else, though, it’s a rich and moving chronicle of the use of art as both a weapon and a means to salvation.- TheWrap
- Posted Feb 23, 2023
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- Steve Pond
It’s both a tour de force for a cast led by Thomasin McKenzie and a sign that Oldroyd hasn’t lost his unsettling touch in the seven years since his last film.- TheWrap
- Posted Jan 24, 2023
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- Steve Pond
There’s an austerity to the film, but also a sense that this interesting couple in this interesting environment is going over the same territory with only minor changes.- TheWrap
- Posted Jan 23, 2023
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- Steve Pond
It is not artful. It is urgent and ruthless and horrifying, and it shows the unspeakable.- TheWrap
- Posted Jan 22, 2023
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- Steve Pond
There are times when the narrative approach of “Still” — throwing a barrage of film clips at his bio — can become distracting rather than entertaining, but it’s always a kick.- TheWrap
- Posted Jan 22, 2023
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- Steve Pond
Neugebauer, Lawrence and Henry deliver an unhurried gem that might feel slight but always feels right.- TheWrap
- Posted Jan 6, 2023
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- Steve Pond
The devastation caused by those Russian soldiers is on full display in “Freedom on Fire,” which can be hard to watch. But the film is less a catalogue of horrors than a tribute to the people who look for strength despite those horrors; it continually finds moments of grace, humanity and even beauty that seem almost unfathomable in these circumstances.- TheWrap
- Posted Dec 14, 2022
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- Steve Pond
It’s a self-conscious film, to be sure, driven by a combination of passion and guilt. It’s also a scattershot one that could have viewers wondering if it’s a film about the Walt Disney Company or a film about American capitalism.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 23, 2022
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- Steve Pond
The juxtaposition of jubilance and misery is the film’s modus operandi, however jarring it may seem.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 18, 2022
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- Steve Pond
This is a war movie from the perspective of the losers, visually spectacular but by turns infuriating and heartbreaking. “All Quiet” is excessive, but it probably needs to be; the screenplay by Berger, Lesley Paterson and Ian Stokell takes a dark story and makes it even darker.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 16, 2022
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- Steve Pond
A treat for anyone with a taste for rock, for rock imagery and for the glories that can be found in that piece of cardboard wrapped around a record. Anton Corbijn knows those glories well, so his movie’s got a good beat and a good look.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 16, 2022
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- Steve Pond
The early scenes are at times surprisingly awkward – and while things get better when Chickie gets to Vietnam and Russell Crowe shows up to (briefly) ground the movie with his quiet gravity, “Beer Run” still lurches from silliness to preachiness in a way that’s rarely satisfying.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 14, 2022
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- Steve Pond
It feels a little too light and even occasionally uncertain in the early going, but picks up steam, becomes deeper and more moving and absolutely nails the ending.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 11, 2022
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- Steve Pond
Does it have moments of hilarity? Sure does. Does it run out of steam at times? Hell, yes. Is Appel a workmanlike director who mostly stays out of the way and lets his cast deliver the laughs? Yep, though he does try to get fancy a few times, with mixed results.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 9, 2022
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- Steve Pond
Where “The Father” was subtle and twisty, this drama is more agitated and restless, even melodramatic at times – but that’s a directorial decision that certainly fits the dark and troubling subject that the film explores but doesn’t exploit.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 7, 2022
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- Steve Pond
Aftermath is the work of a stronger and more assured director. It drops mind-boggling revelations about the extent of Russian doping and the lengths to which Vladimir Putin’s administration will go to silence dissidents and whistleblowers, but it’s also a deeply touching portrait of a man whose life was shattered because he got tired of being part of a system that ran on lies.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 6, 2022
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- Steve Pond
The Banshees of Inisherin is lovely and disturbing in equal measure, turning its darkest urges and blackest humors into a touching and evocative portrait of a time, a place, a community and a pair of crazy men.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 5, 2022
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- Steve Pond
It feels as if there’s a better movie in here somewhere, lost beneath the wild-eyed freneticism and the unsatisfying exposition.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 5, 2022
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- Steve Pond
Director Jono McLeod’s filmmaking itself is inventive and odd, and that’s almost enough – emphasis on the word almost – to make up for the fact that the story itself is something of a letdown.- TheWrap
- Posted Jul 22, 2022
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- Steve Pond
Kusijanovic isn’t interested in tipping her hand as this coming-of-age story turns into one more cinematic journey by a young woman through an inhospitable world.- TheWrap
- Posted Jul 14, 2022
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