William Arnold
Select another critic »For 1,340 reviews, this critic has graded:
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65% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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33% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 0.8 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
William Arnold's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 66 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Where the Day Takes You | |
| Lowest review score: | The Musketeer | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 866 out of 1340
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Mixed: 356 out of 1340
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Negative: 118 out of 1340
1340
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- William Arnold
Its motif is self-pity, Steers displays no particular way with a scene, and, as Igby, Culkin exudes none of the charm or charisma that might keep a more general audience even vaguely interested in his bratty character.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- William Arnold
The script keeps to the point, the performances sparkle with originality, the direction of Jean-François Pouliot mostly has the right touch and the film ultimately generates some of the distinctively eccentric appeal of a classic Ealing Studio comedy of the 1950s.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- William Arnold
The exception is Matt Dillon, who goes all-out to be arrogant and despicable. Indeed, building on his scary performance earlier this year in "Crash," he's shaping up to be quite the movie villain: definitely someone you love to hate.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- William Arnold
Fernando Meirelles's MTV-grandstanding worked for "City of God," but it's just not necessary for, and gets in the way of, a script this literate and solid. In the end, The Constant Gardener works in spite of, not because of him.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- William Arnold
The film is downright repulsive in places, and otherwise pushes the envelope for an art film, but it's a dazzling piece of filmmaking that wins us over with its boldness and artistry.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- William Arnold
It wants to be both an art-film homage and a rollicking, outrageous sex farce, and it's not really enough of either to make an impression.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- William Arnold
As near as I can tell, it's the smallest-scale, lowest-budget, most experimental film Friedkin has ever made, as well as the most thoroughly unpleasant and off-putting -- though it builds a grisly, masochistic fascination as it powers along.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- William Arnold
There are a handful of laughs, and maybe three solid scenes. Otherwise, it's an unfunny, relatively charmless, ultimately grueling excuse for a comedy that often plays like a 105-minute public service ad on why it's not a good idea to have children. [20 Dec 1996]- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- William Arnold
Loaded down with gritty Glasgow atmosphere and authenticity, and works so well as an ensemble piece- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- William Arnold
The film's single downside is a certain nagging sense of deja vu: the fact that so many of the elements of the story -- the dark force, the all-empowering object, etc. -- have been usurped over the years (by "Star Wars" and others) that you feel as if you've been down this road many, many times before.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- William Arnold
It's not an instant classic, but it's imaginatively drawn, full of charming characters, alive with action sequences and blissfully free of the snickering scatology and endless pop-culture references.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- William Arnold
Gradually and inexorably, the small crises of the children assume a poignant dramatic profluence, and the soothing patience of the teacher begins to have an almost hypnotically balming effect on the viewer.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- William Arnold
This harmless but mediocre enterprise was doomed to failure from the start. Hollywood magic can do a lot, but it can't raise the dead.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- William Arnold
It's bleak, credulity straining and often stomach-turning, but it definitely works as a heart-tugging character study, and Rourke's performance as the has-been title character is golden.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- William Arnold
It's an ambitious, eye-filling and thought-provoking work, but it manages to be frustratingly uneven and doesn't really represent Bertolucci at his most fluent. [27 May 1994]- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- William Arnold
Harris genuinely seems to be at one with the character, and his movie is eerily alive.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- William Arnold
It is Ferrell's best movie and the summer's funniest comedy so far.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- William Arnold
"James" is both genuinely exciting as an adventure and genuinely charming as a fantasy, plus it doesn't look quite like anything we've seen before. [12 Apr 1996]- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- William Arnold
The script consists largely of goofy little scenes in which various groupings of the four characters banter in that nervous, Woody Allen-ish, never particularly funny or endearing or believable dialogue style of the '90s dating movie.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- William Arnold
It would be very possible for a reasonably intelligent person to sit through its tidal wave of imagery and not get this vision at all.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- William Arnold
An exhilarating piece of epic filmmaking that it pulls you in, sweeps you up and works very much as its own thing.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- William Arnold
Its concept is gutsy, its script is literate and intelligent, its visuals and cinematic craftsmanship are mouth-dropping, and its vision of the insanity of various religions vying to dominate the real estate of the Holy Land comes through with great power.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- William Arnold
The filmmakers have wildly miscalculated the chemistry these real-life lovers generate on film.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- William Arnold
Imparts its fair share of laughs but bogs down after a solid start and never makes anything special out of its premise.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- William Arnold
This is still Reiner's worst movie since 1994's "North." Wilson is lackluster, the film's depiction of the collaborative process is (unlike "Adaptation") tortuously false, and it's so disrespectful to the realities of writing and publishing that it has no satiric bite.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- William Arnold
Works best of all as a vehicle for Richard Gere, who has simply never looked better or held the screen more securely.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- William Arnold
Baldwin and Broderick each click in their roles and consistently rise above their material in every scene. But the movie around them falls flat and can't begin to sustain its premise.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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