Vincent Canby
Select another critic »For 925 reviews, this critic has graded:
-
43% higher than the average critic
-
3% same as the average critic
-
54% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 4.9 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Vincent Canby's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 61 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Victor Victoria | |
| Lowest review score: | Revolution | |
Score distribution:
-
Positive: 405 out of 925
-
Mixed: 405 out of 925
-
Negative: 115 out of 925
925
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
-
- Vincent Canby
Miss Duvall is superb - genteely ladylike one minute, a woman of volcanic passions the next.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Vincent Canby
One of the nicer things that can be said about The Fox and the Hound is that it breaks no new ground whatsoever. This is a pretty, relentlessly cheery, old-fashioned sort of Disney cartoon feature, chock-full of bouncy songs of an upbeatness that is stickier than Krazy-Glue and played by animals more anthropomorphic than the humans that occasionally appear.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Vincent Canby
It is absurd, sentimental, pretty, never quite as funny as it intends to be, but quite acceptable, if only as a seasonal ritual.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Vincent Canby
Though Psycho II is essentially camp entertainment, Mr. Perkins plays Norman as legitimately as possible, and sometimes to real comic effect. His new Norman doesn't seem as much rehabilitated as reconstituted, but as what? That's the point of the film.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Vincent Canby
A perfectly adequate though not really comparable - sequel to Stanley Kubrick's witty, mind- bending science-fiction classic, ''2001: A Space Odyssey.'- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Vincent Canby
Desert Hearts has no voice or style of its own. It's as flat as a recorded message from the telephone company.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Vincent Canby
The biggest, longest, most expensive Leone Western to date, and, in many ways, the most absurd... Granting the fact that it is quite bad, Once Upon the Time in the West is almost always interesting, wobbling, as it does, between being an epic lampoon and a serious hommage to the men who created the dreams of Leone's childhood. (Review of Original Release)- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Vincent Canby
Though publicized as a breakthrough into adult comedy for Mr. Reitman (''National Lampoon's Animal House,'' ''Meatballs,'' ''Ghostbusters''), this new film is less a true adult comedy than a teen-age comedy populated by adults who are functioning in an adult world.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Vincent Canby
Though the movie looks beautiful, the elegant style occasionally works against it, showing it up. This happens in a striking close-up of Miss Keaton, sitting alone on a photogenically windswept ocean beach as she is supposed to be thinking sensitive poet-type thoughts. Yet the image is empty. It's not the actress. It's not the director, whose close-ups of Miss Keaton in Annie Hall burst with love, pride and affection.The movie that contains the image fails to invest it with any associations whatsoever.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Vincent Canby
From the opening frames of John Frankenheimer's film version of Eugene O'Neill's The Iceman Cometh, you get the feeling that you're being taken on a guided tour of one of the greatest American plays ever written, instead of seeing a screen adaptation with a life of its own.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Vincent Canby
Peter Weir’s The Year of Living Dangerously is a good, romantic melodrama that suffers more than most good, romantic melodramas in not being much better than it is.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Vincent Canby
Though the language is vulgar, the macho posturing absurd and some of the plotting inscrutable, Raw Deal has a kind of seemliness to it. It delivers every punch it promises.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Vincent Canby
Miss Kinski and Mr. McDowell are most effective - eerie and damned -and Mr. Heard is stalwart and self-effacing as the mere human who stumbles onto the truth and forever guards the secret.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Vincent Canby
Poison, which won the grand prize as the best fiction work at this year's Sundance Film Festival, is an imaginative film that, like the infectious Tom Graves, is eventually overwhelmed by its ambitions. The movie needs to evoke more than the ghost of Genet to give it resonance.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Vincent Canby
If you can imagine a remake of Steven Spielberg's Poltergeist in which the spirits of the dead have been shoved aside by equally loud, unruly plumbers and carpenters, you'll have some idea of The Money Pit.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Vincent Canby
The highway is alive with the sound of a loud musical score, spectacular car crashes, pursuits, sudden breakdowns and jokes, practical and impractical. Some of it is ingenious, and all of it is breathless...The Cannonball Run is inoffensive and sometimes funny. Because there are only a limited number of variations that can be worked out on this same old highway race, don't bother to see it unless you're already hooked on the genre.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Vincent Canby
Within the limits and cliches of utterly predictable material, Mr. Coppola is still finally able to make this one from the heart.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Vincent Canby
Last Action Hero is something of a mess, but a frequently enjoyable one. It tries to be too many things to too many different kinds of audiences, the result being that it will probably confuse, and perhaps even alienate, the hard-core action fans.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Vincent Canby
Like an old electric automobile, the movie rolls forward, without surprises, steadily and almost soundlessly, except for the bomb explosion on the soundtrack. It's never as funny as it looks, but it's a pleasant enough ride if you like your companions.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Vincent Canby
Though the new movie has its share of blood and gore, it is mostly creepy and, considering the bizarre circumstances, surprisingly funny.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Vincent Canby
Although its aspirations are high, the film works only fitfully when Mr. Singleton exercises his gift for vernacular speech, for finding the comic undertow in otherwise tragic situations, and even for parody.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Vincent Canby
Mr. Almodovar's comic invention runs out too soon, leaving the audience to giggle weakly in anticipation of the big laughs and disorienting shocks that never arrive.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Vincent Canby
An elaborate, expensive‐looking, ludicrously jingoistic historical‐adventure that comes out so firmly in favor of Teddy Roosevelt's “Big Stick” policy, 70 years later, that it could also be a put‐on.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Vincent Canby
If Striking Distance were a book, it could be called a good read. Instead, it's a painless watch.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Vincent Canby
All of the performances are limited by the material and, in the case of Mr. Stoltz, by Michael Westmore's quite spectacular makeup. The exception - and the film's best sequence - occurs when Rusty's very middle-class, well-meaning parents, played by Estelle Getty and Richard Dysart, come to visit. In these few, brief minutes, Mask becomes specific and interesting. Otherwise it's the kind of story that would work better as a television feature.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Vincent Canby
One-fourth of the film is so brilliant—and so brilliantly acted by Dustin Hoffman—that it helps cool one's impatience with the rest of the film, which is much more fancily edited and photographed but no more profound than those old movie biographies Jack L. Warner used to grind out about people like George Gershwin, Mark Twain and Dr. Ehrlich.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Vincent Canby
More problematical is the tone of the film, which attempts to be both compassionate and goofy, though the events are funny only if they are seen as farcical.- The New York Times
- Read full review
-
- Vincent Canby
A cheerful, inoffensive fantasy in which such attractive live actors as Steve Guttenberg and Ally Sheedy play second fiddle to machinery that, in this case, means No. 5, designed by Syd Mead and engineered and realized by Eric Allard.- The New York Times
- Read full review