Steve Pond
Select another critic »For 318 reviews, this critic has graded:
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63% higher than the average critic
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5% same as the average critic
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32% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 8.7 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
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- Steve Pond
As the movie turns more conventional, it struggles to retain the freshness it once had.- TheWrap
- Posted Aug 21, 2020
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- Steve Pond
A Hidden Life is certainly the director’s best movie since his 2011 Palme d’Or winner “The Tree of Life” — it’s his most monumental film since then, and perhaps his most sentimental film ever. And it is also slow and meditative, requiring viewers to sink into and surrender to that particular Malick style that some find maddening.- TheWrap
- Posted May 22, 2019
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- Steve Pond
It’s hard to say that any WWII film can feel fresh after decades of documentation, but Apocalypse ’45 finds a way to trade in the typical war-doc toolkit for something more personal and more striking.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 8, 2020
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- Steve Pond
A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood finds a gentle state of grace and shows the courage and smarts to stay in that zone, never rushing things or playing for drama.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 7, 2019
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- Steve Pond
Commendably inclusive, Desert One is still one of Kopple’s most conventional documentaries – and it’s one that, like “Coup 53,” occasionally bogs down in details.- TheWrap
- Posted Aug 21, 2020
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- Steve Pond
As much as the film celebrates his creativity and gazes unflinchingly at his failings, it also functions as a valedictory, almost a requiem of sorts. Think of it as the film version of the final albums made by Leonard Cohen and David Bowie, who made wrenching final statements that they likely knew would be their last.- TheWrap
- Posted Feb 1, 2019
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- TheWrap
- Posted Oct 15, 2021
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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
Dolphin Reef is a satisfying entry in the Disneynature slate, albeit one where the dolphins in the title are upstaged by some of their supporting cast, and the reef itself is even more spectacular than the creatures who get the most screen time.- TheWrap
- Posted Apr 2, 2020
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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
Jagged and disorderly, confounding and charming and sometimes irritating — just like the man at its center.- TheWrap
- Posted Jan 19, 2021
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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 Painter and the Thief is a fascinating, perplexing, occasionally annoying but always involving chronicle of a truly crazy relationship.- TheWrap
- Posted May 21, 2020
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- Steve Pond
If you’re trying to follow it without having read the book, it may not make a lick of sense – and even if you have, Kaufman goes in directions that Reid never did. But as funhouse meditation on who we are and how others figure into our identities, it trots out many of Kaufman’s old obsessions in a way that feels fresh and weird.- TheWrap
- Posted Aug 27, 2020
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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
Three Faces is typical of the canny director’s output in the way it’s modest but profound, leisurely but urgent, a portrait of a country disguised as a meandering road movie.- TheWrap
- Posted May 21, 2018
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- Steve Pond
You can love “Gloria” and still think that Gloria Bell is an admirable reimagining that stands on its own while paying tribute to the original.- TheWrap
- Posted Nov 19, 2018
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- Steve Pond
It’s a history lesson you can dance to, and at times it’s an unexpectedly mournful and moving portrait of a city that has an intimate relationship with death and damage.- TheWrap
- Posted May 4, 2022
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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
My Darling Vivian is an unmistakably loving and sensitive portrait, an imperfect but impassioned attempt to makes the case that the easy Johnny Cash narrative is missing an important figure, that the shadow his legend casts left at least one person in the darkness who ought not to be there.- TheWrap
- Posted Apr 29, 2020
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- Steve Pond
The film skims over much of MacGowan’s post-Pogues career and doesn’t include any old bandmates talking about him. It’s not the Shane MacGowan chronology; it’s the Shane MacGowan experience. And that’s a tough, heartbreaking and inspiring experience.- TheWrap
- Posted Dec 13, 2020
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- Steve Pond
Iannucci has fun with the classic serial-turned-novel and throws in a bit of defiant color-blind casting for kicks, but it takes some getting used to a gentler, less biting Iannucci.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 10, 2019
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- Steve Pond
Affecting at times and downright tear-jerking at others, their story is tied to the saga of gay life in America over the past 70-plus years. Still, it ends up feeling less like a history lesson and more like a universal acknowledgment: growing old with some kind of grace and peace should not be this hard.- TheWrap
- Posted Apr 29, 2020
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- TheWrap
- Posted May 1, 2019
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- Steve Pond
"The Story of Film" is long (though not by Cousins’ standards), it’s infuriating at times (entirely by design) and it overstates its case with defiant glee (again, it meant to do that), but you can’t love movies and not love a good chunk of what Cousins puts on the screen.- TheWrap
- Posted Jul 14, 2021
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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
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
Clara Sola mixes religion, mysticism and sexuality in a way that feels simultaneously odd, disquieting and richly rewarding. It starts out beautifully restrained and ends up somewhere else entirely, but it’s all the more interesting for its split personality.- TheWrap
- Posted Aug 31, 2021
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- Steve Pond
For its combination of ambition and audacity, this is a glorious piece of cinematic insanity.- TheWrap
- Posted Sep 13, 2017
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- Steve Pond
As Zappa makes clear, Frank Zappa spent his whole career keeping himself unique, often to his credit and occasionally to his detriment. Winter’s movie does the same, in a way that does justice to a guy who’s not easy to do justice to.- TheWrap
- Posted Dec 13, 2020
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