Tom Russo
Select another critic »For 366 reviews, this critic has graded:
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55% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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42% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 7.3 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Tom Russo's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 58 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Richard III | |
| Lowest review score: | The Food of the Gods | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 200 out of 366
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Mixed: 113 out of 366
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Negative: 53 out of 366
366
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Tom Russo
The film is slow going with its mix of stilted political discourse and restless village folk just looking to celebrate life and dance. At times, it’s like “Footloose” gone didactic.- Boston Globe
- Posted Jul 16, 2015
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- Boston Globe
- Posted Jul 9, 2015
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- Tom Russo
But, oh, the action. Tommila and Jackson have a couple of escape sequences that are exhilaratingly choreographed, never mind that one employs a meat freezer as its key prop. Kids should dig these bits. After all, off-kilter as Helander’s sensibility continues to be, he’s got a passion for popcorn-movie energy that can be contagious — especially when he’s not trashing Santa.- Boston Globe
- Posted Jun 25, 2015
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- Tom Russo
These promising themes aren’t given much more than surface treatment, making for a movie as conveniently tidy as some coming-home schmaltz on basic cable.- Boston Globe
- Posted Jun 25, 2015
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- Tom Russo
The character is sweetly sympathetic — less “Tammy” than “Mike & Molly” — and the laughs and chaos are all the more infectious for it.- Boston Globe
- Posted Jun 4, 2015
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- Tom Russo
It’s simultaneously silly and progressive, a familiar movie moment reserved for the girl you’d least expect.- Boston Globe
- Posted May 14, 2015
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- Tom Russo
An Australian crime yarn with a solid cast and tone, but not enough freshness — or enough of Pegg’s waggishness — to be memorable.- Boston Globe
- Posted Apr 9, 2015
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- Tom Russo
Finally, a movie with at least some coherence despite its sadly challenging circumstances.- Boston Globe
- Posted Apr 2, 2015
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- Tom Russo
Jim Parsons brings his own irrepressible energy to DreamWorks’ 3-D animated Home, segueing from almost-alien misfit Sheldon Cooper on “The Big Bang Theory” to alien misfit, period.- Boston Globe
- Posted Mar 26, 2015
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- Tom Russo
Audiences are going to want to brace themselves, too – for a movie that refuses to recognize when it’s going too far, with its wince-eliciting jokes about jailhouse rape in particular.- Boston Globe
- Posted Mar 26, 2015
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- Tom Russo
It’s a sequel that sticks to more routine territory of action, angst, and dystopian gloom — mostly a sound approach, thanks to the consistent strength of franchise lead Shailene Woodley and a mix of intended and inadvertent surprises.- Boston Globe
- Posted Mar 19, 2015
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- Tom Russo
The story loses its convincingly scaled sense of jeopardy in the late going, and it ultimately unravels.- Boston Globe
- Posted Mar 12, 2015
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- Tom Russo
Chappie boasts so many entertaining elements, particularly the lead motion-capture performance by Blomkamp’s go-to guy Sharlto Copley, its shortcomings don’t sink the movie.- Boston Globe
- Posted Mar 5, 2015
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- Tom Russo
Director Tomm Moore (the 2009 Oscar contender “The Secret of Kells”) crafts a traditionally rendered feature whose doe-eyed characters faintly echo Miyazaki yet offer a beauty all their own.- Boston Globe
- Posted Feb 26, 2015
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- Tom Russo
This chronicle of an ’80s high school cross country coach leading a team of Mexican farm laborers’ kids to competitive glory may be based on a true story, but the forced drama doesn’t help it to feel that way.- Boston Globe
- Posted Feb 19, 2015
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- Tom Russo
Compared with last time, the returning team of director Steve Pink and writer Josh Heald practically doodle the gang’s motivations and worse, their surroundings.- Boston Globe
- Posted Feb 19, 2015
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- Tom Russo
It’s also a movie that further establishes Vaughn as one of the edgier and more underrated genre voices of the moment, and that makes us wonder why Colin Firth hasn’t indulged in an action sideline all along.- Boston Globe
- Posted Feb 12, 2015
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- Tom Russo
There’s no redeeming this softcore nonsense, which plays like a script that “Storage Wars” stumbled across in Joe Eszterhas’s old locker.- Boston Globe
- Posted Feb 2, 2015
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- Tom Russo
Unfortunately, Mann also leans on ill-fitting story elements that he might easily and smartly have avoided, and the movie’s rhythms and credibility pay for it.- Boston Globe
- Posted Jan 15, 2015
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- Tom Russo
Seeing Ben Stiller, the late Robin Williams, and their magically roused gang together again, this time in London, is initially all about indulgent, nostalgic smiles rather than new wows. But then comes the movie’s exceptionally clever and fresh final act, which delivers genuine surprise along with many laughs.- Boston Globe
- Posted Dec 18, 2014
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- Tom Russo
It’s a movie content to stay within the show’s comfort zone, changing things up mainly with flashier, 3-D visuals, a couple of which are dazzlers, and a theme that doesn’t connect in any notable way.- Boston Globe
- Posted Nov 25, 2014
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- Tom Russo
A new misadventure whose negligibly refined formula somehow ends up being more consistently entertaining.- Boston Globe
- Posted Nov 25, 2014
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- Tom Russo
Unfortunately, as the story builds toward tenderness, it’s undercut with slathering tongues and bare-chested stud-muffin shots.- Boston Globe
- Posted Nov 13, 2014
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- Tom Russo
The dialogue also reflects the material’s stage origins in ways that don’t always translate well.- Boston Globe
- Posted Nov 6, 2014
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- Boston Globe
- Posted Nov 6, 2014
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- Tom Russo
The movie’s one big pitfall, really, is that Reeves’s character is so intently focused, he takes care of business a bit too quickly. Some final skirmishing and a tonally false sign-off feel like unconvincing bids to stretch the story to a more legit feature length.- Boston Globe
- Posted Oct 23, 2014
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- Tom Russo
It’s an engrossing portrait not only of government intrigue and crusading after the truth, but of media and their tangled motivations. Engrossing enough, in fact, that Cuesta needn’t try as hard as he occasionally does to heighten the drama and give it added flash.- Boston Globe
- Posted Oct 9, 2014
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- Tom Russo
What the filmmakers come up with is a modestly likable mix of zany and gently warmhearted, even if they overdo both elements at times.- Boston Globe
- Posted Oct 9, 2014
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- Tom Russo
As tiresome as the relentless, indulgent inscrutability and lack of story momentum can be, it says something for the movie’s visceral power that there isn’t an urge to quit on it.- Boston Globe
- Posted Sep 18, 2014
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- Tom Russo
The problem with this adaptation of Lawrence Block’s detective yarn isn’t that it casts Neeson in a role we’re seeing him play again and again. It’s that no one else in the movie makes a character feel nearly as broken-in and fully inhabited as he does.- Boston Globe
- Posted Sep 18, 2014
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- Tom Russo
Some angst away from the dolphin tank feels like padding, but there’s enough bona fide narrative to please tomorrow’s marine biologists and their parents.- Boston Globe
- Posted Sep 11, 2014
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- Tom Russo
It’s an idea that could make for decent genre viewing, if only its cast had some range, and its indie reach didn’t exceed its mainstream-polished grasp.- Boston Globe
- Posted Sep 4, 2014
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- Tom Russo
The idea that documentarian Jeffrey Radice would make the episode both the hook and the opener for his film is to be expected — it’s an attention-grabbing story. But a hook is all it is.- Boston Globe
- Posted Sep 4, 2014
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- Tom Russo
Lem’s story is merely a springboard for Folman’s wildly sprawling meditations on what the advent of virtual performance means — for artistic integrity, creative spirit, celebrity culture, human identity, even our hold on reality.- Boston Globe
- Posted Sep 4, 2014
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- Tom Russo
The cast does capable work, but you’ll wish the movie concentrated more on the comedy, which has some zing, rather than the straighter elements, which quickly start to drag.- Boston Globe
- Posted Aug 28, 2014
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- Tom Russo
It makes for a structurally glitchy inspirational exercise whose climax carries all the goosebump-making drama of a Pats preseason game.- Boston Globe
- Posted Aug 21, 2014
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- Tom Russo
You could argue that the only thing that’s automatic about A Dame to Kill For, really, is some of the firepower that its hardcases are packing.- Boston Globe
- Posted Aug 21, 2014
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- Tom Russo
It’s a preposterously overstuffed strategy that, go figure, not only works, but even cures a thing or two that ailed the previous movies.- Boston Globe
- Posted Aug 14, 2014
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- Boston Globe
- Posted Aug 14, 2014
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- Tom Russo
The repartee, as ever, is weak. Even with all the extra layers of digital detail, it’s still tough to keep these four straight. And the CG characters’ slimy rendering and motion-capture expressiveness could go down with “The Polar Express” as a study in inadvertent, technologically misguided screen creepiness. Wackier would have been OK, guys — it’s the Ninja Turtles.- Boston Globe
- Posted Aug 7, 2014
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- Tom Russo
Taking its title from the site where Christ was crucified, the controversy-courting film has a lot of Catholic church business (and doctrine) on its mind, and veers from poetically eloquent to jarringly blunt in hashing it all out.- Boston Globe
- Posted Aug 7, 2014
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- Tom Russo
The motley crew’s repartee makes for comedy that’s surprisingly consistent, yet freewheeling and sharp enough to pinball from Kevin Bacon to Jackson Pollock and back.- Boston Globe
- Posted Jul 31, 2014
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- Tom Russo
Green and his cast deliver a wonderful surprise. Echo himself, a generically precious alien, is the least of it. The funny, moving, authentic bond among the kids in the movie is the unadvertised draw.- Boston Globe
- Posted Jul 1, 2014
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- Tom Russo
How to Train Your Dragon 2 recaptures those lyrical highs. But returning writer-director Dean DeBlois also aims to layer on more poignancy for Baruchel and his castmates to play. At points, we’re left feeling a little detached.- Boston Globe
- Posted Jun 12, 2014
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- Tom Russo
While this is Jolie’s show, obviously — and she’s terrifically arch — the surprising dearth of other compelling characters doesn’t offer much distraction when things get off track.- Boston Globe
- Posted May 29, 2014
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- Tom Russo
Funny thing, though: The sunnier that Barrymore gets in her scenes with Sandler, the more the iffy elements and leaden bits seem to just melt away.- Boston Globe
- Posted May 22, 2014
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- Tom Russo
Best, probably, to appreciate the movie for what Slattery, Hoffman, and the cast do most effectively: craft a pervasive atmosphere of tired people trudging through tired circumstances that only seem to grow more, well, tiring.- Boston Globe
- Posted May 15, 2014
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- Tom Russo
An uneven spectacle that can’t sustain its solid first-half character moments. But the movie can also flash a surprising, often clever sense of legacy, and is intermittently capable of thrilling us.- Boston Globe
- Posted May 15, 2014
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- Tom Russo
This is mythology that’s famously transportive in every sense, but the animators struggle to take us anywhere truly captivating, or even clearly defined.- Boston Globe
- Posted May 8, 2014
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- Tom Russo
The thematic stuff, while well-intentioned, is also clunky, and ultimately beside the point. Action, obviously, is what you’re after.- Boston Globe
- Posted Apr 24, 2014
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- Tom Russo
As with all of Disneynature’s features, there’s astonishing documentary work on display in Bears — but a leaner, less conspicuously structured view of the wild might have had even greater impact.- Boston Globe
- Posted Apr 17, 2014
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- Boston Globe
- Posted Apr 10, 2014
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- Boston Globe
- Posted Apr 10, 2014
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- Tom Russo
The animals are so magically entertaining to watch here (helped by some gently mischievous narrative assists), the educational treatment is a fun time in its own right.- Boston Globe
- Posted Apr 3, 2014
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- Tom Russo
The well-worn plot basics are dressed up nicely by the film’s consistently clever humor, as well as a celebrity cameo roster that’s stacked even by Muppet standards.- Boston Globe
- Posted Mar 20, 2014
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- Tom Russo
In the film’s sharpest visual sequence, they land in ancient Egypt, with the filmmakers entertainingly cribbing from “Indiana Jones” and “The Wizard of Oz” to get them out of tight spots.- Boston Globe
- Posted Mar 6, 2014
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- Tom Russo
It’s a brutal bit of screen poetry that’s matched too infrequently by the aching human stories director Fedor Bondarchuk is so anxious to tell.- Boston Globe
- Posted Feb 27, 2014
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- Tom Russo
Once again, the most resonant drama here is all about conveying a self-loathing born of inescapable circumstances.- Boston Globe
- Posted Feb 20, 2014
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- Tom Russo
Anderson’s stab at rendering the Mount Vesuvius catastrophe with a 3-D “Titanic” gloss.- Boston Globe
- Posted Feb 20, 2014
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- Tom Russo
Eckhart doesn’t really do any of that classic grunting as Frankenstein 2.0, but maybe he should have.- Boston Globe
- Posted Jan 26, 2014
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- Tom Russo
The plot doesn’t take clever turns, the visual thrills aren’t all that thrilling, and you’re ultimately left to get your heist-movie kicks elsewhere.- Boston Globe
- Posted Jan 16, 2014
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- Boston Globe
- Posted Jan 16, 2014
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- Tom Russo
Stallone and De Niro simply don’t generate enough combative spark to make this anything more than an amiably mediocre diversion.- Boston Globe
- Posted Dec 25, 2013
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- Tom Russo
However well-intentioned the movie may be, it spills over with flat cutesy humor, making a slog out of an experience that should be filled with wonder.- Boston Globe
- Posted Dec 19, 2013
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- Tom Russo
Boston University product Gary Fleder (“Kiss the Girls”) directs the action with grungy efficiency, and the movie does hook us with a certain lurid anticipation of just how far things might escalate.- Boston Globe
- Posted Nov 27, 2013
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- Tom Russo
Frozen could also leave its mark as the next step in the Disney Princess feminist revisionism championed by last year’s “Brave.” Where that film staunchly pushed a men-don’t-define-me theme throughout, here it’s the requisite fairy tale ending that gets tweaked.- Boston Globe
- Posted Nov 27, 2013
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- Tom Russo
At an hour and a half, the action in Free Birds gets stretched thin. It’s Thanksgiving fare, sure, but it only partly satisfies our hankering.- Boston Globe
- Posted Oct 31, 2013
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- Tom Russo
A scene between Yoni and Fahed in the pilot’s makeshift holding cell is a microcosm of everything that’s right about the movie, and not quite right.- Boston Globe
- Posted Oct 24, 2013
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- Tom Russo
This one has more in common with Scott’s “Thelma & Louise” in the memorable way it escalates, inevitably but also unexpectedly, into a spin through wilder country, and a meditation on bigger themes.- Boston Globe
- Posted Oct 24, 2013
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- Tom Russo
First-time director Nick Ryan isn’t entirely up to the challenge in The Summit, but he does deliver some dramatic and visual highs in the attempt.- Boston Globe
- Posted Oct 17, 2013
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- Tom Russo
It’s clear To is striving to keep the action gripping and creative. Modestly inspired is more like it.- Boston Globe
- Posted Oct 17, 2013
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