William Arnold
Select another critic »For 1,340 reviews, this critic has graded:
-
65% higher than the average critic
-
2% same as the average critic
-
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:
-
Positive: 866 out of 1340
-
Mixed: 356 out of 1340
-
Negative: 118 out of 1340
1340
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
-
- William Arnold
Philip Messina's claustrophobic sets and Cliff Martinez's elegantly creepy score add to the film's distinction and work off Clooney's performance and Soderbergh's staging to create an hypnotic spell and suggest a cosmos full of spiritual possibility.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- William Arnold
A gracefully subtle, sweet-spirited French parable of the brotherhood of man that was nominated for a Golden Globe, won Omar Sharif a César Award for best actor and has been a surprise hit in Europe.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- William Arnold
A powerful experience, filled with dazzlingly executed action sequences that generally avoid the rock music and drugged-out conventions of "Apocalypse Now," and even exude a certain core of humanity.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- William Arnold
It's funny, touching and crammed to the rafters with clever dialogue, splashy production numbers and stiff-upper-lip charm.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- William Arnold
The film is an across-the-board charmer that should appeal to children as well as their parents, aficionados of animation and old-movie buffs who will be challenged to sort out the blur of seemingly hundreds of classic film references.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- William Arnold
With so much going for it, it's sad that Red Eye goes into such a third-act tailspin and cliched slasher-flick finale.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- William Arnold
But it also works as a compelling thriller and whodunit; as a powerful political metaphor (the reservation is a kind of microcosm of the Third World and America's relationship to it); and as a piece of environmental mysticism, celebrating - like so many recent films - the psychic purity and spiritual superiority of its aboriginal characters. [3 Apr 1992]- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
-
- William Arnold
Dillane gives such a layered, detailed, utterly convincing performance as a man struggling with an inescapable and suffocating burden of guilt that he quickly makes us forget that he's too old for the part.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- William Arnold
Above all, the film is just wonderfully ... well, Fellini-esque. It looks like nothing the cinema has seen since then.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- William Arnold
Hayek throws herself into this dream Hispanic role with a teeth-clenching gusto. She strikes a potent chemistry with Molina and she gradually makes us believe she is Kahlo.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- William Arnold
A suspenseful, fascinating movie that milks the premise for all it's worth.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- William Arnold
I loved it...Without trying very hard, Farnsworth commands a unique and immensely appealing screen presence that could be called "a compilation of all the great western heroes of the movie past."- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- William Arnold
An absorbing, exciting costume drama that works as a historical romance, a family tragedy and a showcase for its young stars.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- William Arnold
Despite a few weak points, the most heavily dramatic Sandler vehicle to date is a striking, genuinely touching, meticulously well-acted friendship parable, and a big audience pleaser.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- William Arnold
Moves like a bullet and, even if they're overblown, the action sequences are still mostly exhilarating and hypnotic. Moreover, the film's human dimension and character development is richer and more rewarding than the genre requires, and its philosophical underpinning more intellectually audacious and seductive: The film is more of a mind-trip than I expected.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- William Arnold
Culturally, the film is a fascinating document because it's so obviously a conscious amalgam of Hollywood gangster movie conventions, reflecting the retro sensibility of writer-director Melville, an incorrigible fan of American culture. [25 Apr 1997]- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
-
- William Arnold
First-time director Ali Selim does an exceptional job throughout, his movie has the balance, uncluttered leanness and emotional impact of a Willa Cather short story, and it's no surprise that it has been nominated for Best First Feature in the 2007 Independent Spirit Awards.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- William Arnold
The casting also works. As the Khan, Japanese actor Tadanobu Asano ("Zatoichi") is all effortless charisma, and Chinese actor Honglei Sun (as his best friend-turned-enemy) and Mongolian actress Khulan Chuluun (as his faithful wife, Borte) are just as effective.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- William Arnold
It's a tough, tight, no-nonsense action melodrama filled with irresistibly hard-boiled dialogue and a large cast of engagingly hard-boiled characters. All and all, it's one of the better of the many recent Hollywood remakes of classic film noir. [21 Apr 1995]- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
-
- William Arnold
Movie is so hip-swingingly infectious and leaves us with such a high that it's hard not to suspect that -- handled right -- it could well become the fall version of "My Big Fat Greek Wedding."- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- William Arnold
While careful not to denounce the religion, the film fires a powerful broadside at fundamentalist Islam in general and revolutionary Iran in particular. [11 Jan 1991]- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
-
- William Arnold
Too bad they didn't skip the gags and one-liners, along with the songs, and go the distance in making this an authentic dinosaur world.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- William Arnold
Another harrowingly cynical dirty-cop movie in the recent tradition of "Training Day" and "Narc." Yet it's so much more complex, engrossing and satisfying than those films that the comparison is not entirely fair.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- William Arnold
A gripping, terrifying, profoundly touching human drama that's definitely worth seeing.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- William Arnold
It has a terrific retro style, it's well-directed and it makes an engrossing showcase for its trio of stars.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- William Arnold
Mesmerizing and curiously satisfying idyll that gradually, slyly maneuvers us into a whole new way of looking at the delicate relationship between man, art and Mother Nature.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- William Arnold
Jewison handles this rich tapestry of non-linear scenes with the skill of the old pro he is, and carefully modulates the drama to create the maximum emotional impact.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Read full review
-
- William Arnold
This one transcends the subgenre to be a respectful and very funny horror spoof. [11 Feb 1999]- Seattle Post-Intelligencer