Hitfix's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 361 reviews, this publication has graded:
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72% higher than the average critic
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1% same as the average critic
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27% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 6.9 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 72
| Highest review score: | Hunt for the Wilderpeople | |
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| Lowest review score: | Seventh Son |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 246 out of 361
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Mixed: 88 out of 361
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Negative: 27 out of 361
361
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
Prisoners pulls no punches, and it wants to leave a mark on you, and it is a testament to all involved that it manages to accomplish those things so well.- Hitfix
- Posted Nov 9, 2016
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Reviewed by
Gregory Ellwood
The characters are so well drawn (and the relatively young cast steps up to the plate) that combined with the material’s natural tension you’ll find yourself riveted to the proceedings.- Hitfix
- Posted Sep 24, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
The movie is as good a Blair Witch film as anyone could have faithfully delivered.- Hitfix
- Posted Sep 17, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
Snowden has a secret weapon, and it’s one that I wasn’t expecting: a fully-engaged and on-his-game Oliver Stone.- Hitfix
- Posted Sep 15, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
Southside With You is quietly romantic, but more than that, it burns with a deep sense of optimism.- Hitfix
- Posted Aug 25, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
Kubo works because it is so direct, so honest about the emotional story it’s telling. Knight may have epic ambitions, but he keeps the stakes very personal.- Hitfix
- Posted Aug 18, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
Our best fables and fairy tales are the ones that speak truth, and this version of Pete’s Dragon easily takes its place on any short list of the great films for young audiences as a result.- Hitfix
- Posted Aug 16, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
By making this look like the sort of film that studios think of when they think of animation, but subverting the very nature of those movies, Sausage Party is more than funny. It’s downright revolutionary.- Hitfix
- Posted Aug 8, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
The Mind's Eye is straight-up sincere, earnestly played and honestly intentioned. This is exploitation fare without any wink attached. These guys aren't trying to elevate the genre… they just want to make a psychic wars horror film and blow up some heads.- Hitfix
- Posted Aug 4, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
Suicide Squad is not the darkest mainstream superhero comic book movie ever made, nor is it even the darkest live-action film featuring Batman ever made. However, it is gleefully nihilistic, and it takes a different approach to what has become a fairly familiar story form at this point, right at the moment when it feels like superhero movies either have to evolve or die.- Hitfix
- Posted Aug 2, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
There’s a brisk sense of invention to the film, and it feels like it is breathlessly told, something that is due in large part to Justin Lin, who has been developing a very particular approach to blockbuster filmmaking. Yes, he’s fine with the big action mayhem that is par for the course with these films, but he understands that the thing that makes any of it interesting is making sure the audience really enjoys spending time with these characters.- Hitfix
- Posted Jul 17, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
The original Ghostbusters will always be a classic that means something special to me. The good news is, there’s a whole new generation that’s about to feel that way about this one. And more power to them.- Hitfix
- Posted Jul 10, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
Like any comedy that throws 1000 jokes at you, some land and some don’t, but it’s the confident, cheerful energy of the humor that carries the day.- Hitfix
- Posted Jul 7, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
While Hunt For The Wilderpeople is very funny, what makes it stick is the way Waititi allows the relationship between Hec and Ricky to develop slowly, and how nimbly he sets the emotional stakes for both of the characters.- Hitfix
- Posted Jun 23, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
The Neon Demon’s going to frustrate anyone who goes in looking for a conventional film or a thriller that has any interest in actually scaring you. This is a ride, a carefully crafted experience, and it is precisely because it is so immersive and controlled that I would recommend it.- Hitfix
- Posted Jun 23, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
Central Intelligence manages to be a far more coherent comedy than I would have expected, and it’s a worthy representation of the genre.- Hitfix
- Posted Jun 20, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
Say what you will, but Pixar understands innately that making their audience feel something deeply is the greatest magic trick in movies, and all of their work as technicians and artists are always focused on making that happen. Finding Dory may be familiar magic, but there’s magic in it all the same.- Hitfix
- Posted Jun 16, 2016
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Drew McWeeny
If you’re in the mood to laugh until various parts of you hurt for a multitude of reasons, then I have a feeling Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping will accomplish the goal. And then some.- Hitfix
- Posted Jun 9, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
With a rich supporting cast, a smart script, and an ensemble that is put through their paces in some intense physical scenes, The Conjuring 2 is that rare horror sequel that stands toe to toe with the original, possibly even improving on it.- Hitfix
- Posted Jun 9, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
DePalma emerges as a charming storyteller, funny and slightly wicked, and he offers up some terrific anecdotes about his casts, his process, and his choices over the years.- Hitfix
- Posted Jun 9, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
The movie suffers from being the same shape as so many modern blockbusters, and the plot in the second half of the film is basically another riff on the “reach the glowing doodad on a roof to prevent the end of the world” structure. But the focus on the Turtles and the film’s overall amiable sense of goofball humor carries the day.- Hitfix
- Posted Jun 2, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
It is an easy sit, a big fat slice of smart entertainment. Constantly funny, startlingly violent, and oddly heartfelt, The Nice Guys is a grown-up delight, a perfect antidote to the nonstop barrage of effects spectacle that normally marks the summer movie season.- Hitfix
- Posted May 19, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
Jodie Foster deserves credit for orchestrating things with a nimble wit and a relentless energy.- Hitfix
- Posted May 18, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
I enjoyed the energy of the film, and the cast is pretty solid throughout, but there’s a big problem that is inherent to the idea that we have to make these films bigger and bigger to outdo things that have come before.- Hitfix
- Posted May 9, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
Captain America: The First Avenger is one of the finest movies yet from Marvel Studios, and a big departure in tone and storytelling from most of the films they've made so far. It is a strong indicator that the more willing the studio is to experiment, the more exciting the payoffs can be.- Hitfix
- Posted May 8, 2016
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Visceral action (including an opening sequence that masterfully sets the tone for the rest of the film); a sharply written and directed script; rich, dynamic characters; and, as promised, the world’s cutest cat (other than yours if you have one) combine to create a gut-busting, endearing, salty-sweet, and highly re-watchable comedy.- Hitfix
- Posted Apr 25, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
What makes Captain America: Civil War such a terrific accomplishment is the way it takes what could have been the most crass and overcrowded story to adapt as a film and instead transforms it into an examination of just who these heroes are and what impact they’ve had on the world around them, and vice versa.- Hitfix
- Posted Apr 18, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
If you enjoy thrillers, Flanagan expertly turns the screws here, and Kate Siegel makes a very appealing and capable hero.- Hitfix
- Posted Apr 13, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
It’s mind-boggling that this entire thing was shot on soundstages using greenscreens. Favreau’s jungle feels like a real place, but it’s heightened and stylized and it feels like a perfect fit for the talking animals who make up the majority of the cast.- Hitfix
- Posted Apr 12, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
Everybody Wants Some!! offers a mature and crystal-clear voice, a filmmaker of enormous muscle who makes it all look ridiculously easy.- Hitfix
- Posted Apr 6, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
Whiskey Tango Foxtrot is a film of modest pleasures, but what I liked about it, I liked a lot. I hope more filmmakers figure out how to write to Fey's strengths, because she's really engaging here.- Hitfix
- Posted Apr 3, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
While it’s doubtful any film could match the weird giddy energy that made Pee-Wee’s Big Adventure a classic, this movie honors and expands his legacy, and should prove to be a pleasure for anyone who has ever loved this character.- Hitfix
- Posted Mar 22, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
This is a very raw, sad, and beautiful film about faith and fatherhood, and it feels just as grounded and big-hearted as the other films Nichals has made.- Hitfix
- Posted Mar 16, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
Economically told from the start, the film moves beautifully.- Hitfix
- Posted Mar 11, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
As crazy as the design of the world is, Zootopia ends up feeling like a genuine place. There's a vibrancy to it that runs through everything from the pace of the storytelling to the background details of the world in which the story takes place.- Hitfix
- Posted Mar 1, 2016
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Reviewed by
Daniel Fienberg
What Gideon's Army does is make a respectful case on the behalf of a profession that too often gets maligned.- Hitfix
- Posted Feb 16, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
It is almost preposterous how little "plot" there is in the film...What it has in spades is attitude, and right up until the moment the film began, I was afraid It was going to be so juvenile and filthy that I would end up annoyed by it. Instead, from the very beginning of the opening credits, it is clear that director Tim Miller and screenwriters Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick have crafted something deeply silly that isn't remotely interested in playing by the conventional rules of what we've come to think of as "the superhero genre."- Hitfix
- Posted Feb 6, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
Even when they're silly, Joel and Ethan Coen are as smart as any filmmakers working, and Hail, Caesar! is a clever cartoon filter through which they examine some very sincere spiritual ideas.- Hitfix
- Posted Feb 3, 2016
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Drew McWeeny
What is most impressive about the final film, adapted for the screen and directed by Burr Steers, is that it gets the Pride and Prejudice side of things right, and that's what matters most.- Hitfix
- Posted Feb 3, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
The Dirties feels authentic all the way through, and it carries a bitter punch. It is a slight movie in terms of actual events that happen, but it grapples with some giant ideas and emotions in a very effective way.- Hitfix
- Posted Jan 31, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
It's impressive to see how Johnson manages tone in the film, as things go from sort of giddy and fun at the start to increasingly paranoid and then eventually taking a turn into a sort of brutal sadness.- Hitfix
- Posted Jan 31, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
Kenneth Lonergan's Manchester By The Sea is an extraordinarily wise and well-observed film about what can happen to someone when life gives them more than they can handle, and Casey Affleck's lead performance is, simply put, the model of what great film acting should look like.- Hitfix
- Posted Jan 27, 2016
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Drew McWeeny
This film puts Nat Turner and his moral journey dead center, and it asks you to take an unflinching look at how an inhuman system broke the human beings trapped in it.- Hitfix
- Posted Jan 26, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
While there is an untruth at the heart of the film, it's in service of illuminating any number of smaller truths, and I find that approach fascinating.- Hitfix
- Posted Jan 24, 2016
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Reviewed by
Gregory Ellwood
Dunn demonstrates an impressive ability to bring his unique interpretation of the coming out process to life.- Hitfix
- Posted Jan 4, 2016
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
Beautifully photographed to take full advantage of the corners of a 2:76:1 aspect ratio, often hiding key character details in the background of shots in a way that demands a second viewing, this is a gorgeous piece of filmcraft all the way around.- Hitfix
- Posted Dec 22, 2015
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
It must have seemed like a nearly-impossible task when JJ Abrams and his collaborators set out to bring "Star Wars" back to life, but they've more than done it. They've made something honest and beautiful and, above all, fun, and I find myself energized by the movie and by the promise it represents.- Hitfix
- Posted Dec 16, 2015
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
It is as impressive as any movie released this year, but the storytelling falters in some fundamental ways that keep me from completely adoring it. Innaritu dreams big, and he has the muscle to back it up. The Revenant may not be his best film yet, but it's hard to imagine many filmmakers who are working at a higher level than he is these days.- Hitfix
- Posted Dec 9, 2015
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
The Good Dinosaur is fine. I found myself moved by it on a very direct level. Technically speaking, it's a gorgeous film in many ways, but I'm still not a fan of the super-cartoony style of the characters over the photo-realistic world, which is genuinely jaw-dropping.- Hitfix
- Posted Nov 26, 2015
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
This may be one of the most subversive blockbusters I can name, and I respect just how raw Francis Lawrence and his team play things. Even the "action" in the film is grim and painful and rarely thrilling.- Hitfix
- Posted Nov 20, 2015
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
The Hunger Games: Catching Fire more than makes the case for this as a franchise that's going to get better as it goes, and I am genuinely excited to see how they wrap it up.- Hitfix
- Posted Nov 20, 2015
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
It is a thrilling, intelligent, deeply-felt movie that does not play by the typical rules of franchise building in modern Hollywood.- Hitfix
- Posted Nov 20, 2015
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
By the time Coogler wraps things up, his film manages the difficult trick of looking back with earned nostalgia and standing alone as a genuinely strong dramatic piece.- Hitfix
- Posted Nov 18, 2015
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
It may be overstuffed the point of bursting, but there's much to like here.- Hitfix
- Posted Nov 17, 2015
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Drew McWeeny
It sounds far sexier, just based on the synopsis, than it actually plays, though, so hopefully people aren't sold the wrong movie. For those in the mood for a throwback to the doomed romanticism of mid'60s art films, this feels like about as sincere an homage as anyone could produce.- Hitfix
- Posted Nov 11, 2015
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Drew McWeeny
Despite the very real threat and the personal stakes and the grim weight given to things, director Sam Mendes manages to pay sophisticated, sincere homage to the conventions that define the Bond series while remembering that one of the things that makes the series such an enduring presence is fun.- Hitfix
- Posted Nov 5, 2015
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
Frequently very funny, undeniably aimed at younger audiences, and true to the source material, The Peanuts Movie is too mild-mannered to win over brand new audiences, but it's going to please people who were already fond of the underlying property, and it should be a big nostalgia-driven hit for the studio.- Hitfix
- Posted Nov 3, 2015
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Gregory Ellwood
It’s simply a very well done movie that features Maggie Smith’s best work in years (and, yes, she’s better here than any of her years on “Downton Abbey”).- Hitfix
- Posted Oct 20, 2015
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Gregory Ellwood
The film is at its best when the storyline gets dangerously real and Bullock’s character struggles to justify the back room king making of a campaign with the needs of the country’s poor majority.- Hitfix
- Posted Oct 20, 2015
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Drew McWeeny
I was pleased to see that "Spies" is not a thriller so much as an ode to both American diplomacy and the tradition of moral movie fathers along the lines of Atticus Finch.- Hitfix
- Posted Oct 16, 2015
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Drew McWeeny
This is a film of tactile decadence, such a rich sensory experience that it's almost suffocating.- Hitfix
- Posted Oct 13, 2015
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Drew McWeeny
There's not an ounce of fat on the film. It feels like it moves forward in every single scene, and while it's a little mechanical about how it follows three-act structure, it's almost charmingly old-fashioned about it.- Hitfix
- Posted Oct 6, 2015
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Drew McWeeny
When you're watching something Zemeckis made, anything can happen, and reality is up for grabs. In this case, he's used his powers for good, and the end result is stirring and spectacular at times, with a devastating, if subtle, final line of dialogue.- Hitfix
- Posted Sep 26, 2015
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Drew McWeeny
It's a very direct film, a lovely portrait of family and strength and just how far one voice can carry.- Hitfix
- Posted Sep 24, 2015
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Drew McWeeny
Wheatley is all about control of tone and how he's using this big obvious metaphor. His film is alive with human behavior, heightened at times and stylized as hell, but alive and identifiable and crackling with a wicked energy.- Hitfix
- Posted Sep 24, 2015
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Drew McWeeny
Meyers wants this to be all sort of amiable and charming and a big warm bath of a film, and it is.- Hitfix
- Posted Sep 22, 2015
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Gregory Ellwood
Hands down one of the best films of the year, Sebastian Schipper has directed a one-shot film that is truly a captivating cinematic experience.- Hitfix
- Posted Sep 21, 2015
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Drew McWeeny
Anomalisa is an extraordinarily wise film about the reasons we turn to other people and the enormous difficulty of doing so.- Hitfix
- Posted Sep 18, 2015
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- Hitfix
- Posted Sep 15, 2015
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
If you can get past the witlessness of the world itself, there is some very good work in Equals, and fans of the cast will be no doubt pleased with the connection they have in some of the movie's best moments.- Hitfix
- Posted Sep 14, 2015
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Gregory Ellwood
Considering Redmayne’s achievement it’s almost shocking that you can argue Vikander gives the more memorable performance.- Hitfix
- Posted Sep 13, 2015
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Drew McWeeny
It takes a genuine master craftsman to take something as complex and difficult as this and make it look easy, but it also takes an artist with a great ear to take something as dense with exposition as this is and make it practically sing.- Hitfix
- Posted Sep 12, 2015
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Drew McWeeny
Just on a technical level, the film represents such a big jump forward for Saulnier that you should expect the studios to immediately start arguing over which giant soulless franchise should occupy his time in the near-future.- Hitfix
- Posted Sep 11, 2015
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Gregory Ellwood
This sort of storyline could go wrong very quickly, but thanks to some fortuitously funny moments, Vallee’s assured direction and Gyllenhaal’s spectacular performance it’s surprisingly compelling. And, let’s be absolutely clear: it’s Gyllenhaal who keeps it all together.- Hitfix
- Posted Sep 11, 2015
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Gregory Ellwood
Fukunaga not only directed the film but also co-wrote the screenplay and served as director of photography. His efforts have resulted in a brazenly confident piece of cinematic art where every image immerses you deeper and deeper into Agu’s horror.- Hitfix
- Posted Sep 9, 2015
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Gregory Ellwood
Despite Depp’s seemingly flawless efforts, less may have been more in conveying just how bloodthirsty Bulger was. Where “Mass” excels is with a stellar cast whose spot on performances keep your interest as the film moves along.- Hitfix
- Posted Sep 8, 2015
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Gregory Ellwood
Sorkin’s voice dominates the discourse and the film rarely has a chance to catch its collective breath. While you have to give the duo credit for attempting an unconventional structure, it’s a choice that arguably only works thanks to the contributions of a stellar ensemble.- Hitfix
- Posted Sep 6, 2015
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Gregory Ellwood
Room is simply a movie about mother and son trying to adapt to the outside world after years of forced captivity. And the surprise is how succinctly it captures this drastic life change from the perspective of five-year-old.- Hitfix
- Posted Sep 5, 2015
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Gregory Ellwood
Like any creative endeavor a film is the sum of its parts. In the most elementary terms it needs a screenplay as a base, a cast to bring the script to life and a director to orchestrate the pieces into something of considerable impact. Excuse the hyperbole, but Tom McCarthy's Spotlight is an example of when all those pieces fit together almost perfectly.- Hitfix
- Posted Sep 5, 2015
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Gregory Ellwood
What makes “We Are” worth your time is Joseph’s skill in conveying the euphoria of dance music in the context of an actual movie.- Hitfix
- Posted Aug 27, 2015
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Gregory Ellwood
The fact Tomlin is so good also highlights the film's biggest problem. Too much of what works in Grandma comes from the subtle touches Tomlin, Elliott and Harden bring to their characters, not Weitz’s script.- Hitfix
- Posted Aug 20, 2015
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Daniel Fienberg
Clement is the reason that Will is tolerable, because if you look at the character's on-the-page actions, he's not an especially well-developed man-child.- Hitfix
- Posted Aug 19, 2015
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Drew McWeeny
If you have a fondness for the genre and a particular love of '60s pop, The Man From UNCLE is the summer's big fizzy drink, all bubbles, and while it may be gone the moment you walk out of the theater, the smile it puts on your face will likely linger.- Hitfix
- Posted Aug 10, 2015
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Gregory Ellwood
If you’re wondering whether you’ll believe Streep is a convincing rock musician, please. It’s Meryl Streep here. She sounds like she’s ready to open for Bruce Springsteen.- Hitfix
- Posted Aug 4, 2015
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Gregory Ellwood
For all of Heller's impressive direction, she could have delivered something soulless without Powley's contributions.- Hitfix
- Posted Aug 3, 2015
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Drew McWeeny
I think Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol is the most consistently entertaining, most laser-focused entry in the series so far, and while I would argue that it is very much a sequel to the third film and not just a disconnected piece of a flexible franchise, it is also a great rollicking self-contained spy movie adventure on a grand scale, and it's preposterous fun.- Hitfix
- Posted Aug 2, 2015
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Drew McWeeny
Both of its time and of the moment, Straight Outta Compton is potent and largely successful, and makes a hell of a case for why this was a story worth telling.- Hitfix
- Posted Jul 31, 2015
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Drew McWeeny
I would argue that this may be the funniest of the films overall, and with Robert Elswit shooting it, it's absolutely gorgeous, with crisp, clean action choreography that you can actually see.- Hitfix
- Posted Jul 24, 2015
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Reviewed by
Daniel Fienberg
Even though The Amina Profile works as a cyber-thriller of sorts, I think it's much more wide-reaching than that, a story about online identity, but also about the danger of media-constructed narratives, one that manages to salute both citizen journalists, but also establishment outlets like NPR.- Hitfix
- Posted Jul 23, 2015
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Gregory Ellwood
Edgerton, who also wrote the screenplay, shows a masterful touch in playing with conventional expectations.- Hitfix
- Posted Jul 22, 2015
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Drew McWeeny
Ant-Man has its own voice, no doubt thanks to all of the talent involved, and it stands as a surprisingly sturdy success for the studio, a delightfully weird little movie that has no business working this well.- Hitfix
- Posted Jul 9, 2015
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Reviewed by
Drew McWeeny
It is rowdy at heart, but smart about it, and it is one more reminder that Channing Tatum is really not like anyone else working in movies right now. It is also celebratory in the way that the first film was sad, concerned more with self-acceptance than running from something.- Hitfix
- Posted Jun 30, 2015
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Gregory Ellwood
Minions lives and dies on its sight gags and luckily for Coffin and Balda they are almost non-stop.- Hitfix
- Posted Jun 24, 2015
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Drew McWeeny
Trevorrow seems to be genuinely enjoying what he's doing, and it's that sense of someone having fun behind the camera that ultimately won me over.- Hitfix
- Posted Jun 10, 2015
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Gregory Ellwood
There is a faith that the story and characters will keep the audience engaged, even if there isn’t a bright and shiny thing to distract them in a every single scene.- Hitfix
- Posted Jun 4, 2015
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Drew McWeeny
The way an Entourage story works is that they establish what it is that Vinnie and his friends want, they challenge them a little bit, and then they get what they want. And while that's something I find unsatisfying, it is the exact reason that fans watch the show and it's why they'll watch the film.- Hitfix
- Posted Jun 2, 2015
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Drew McWeeny
The reason you go see San Andreas is to see what the state of the art looks like when you destroy an entire state, set piece after set piece, and Brad Peyton delivers on that.- Hitfix
- Posted May 27, 2015
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Gregory Ellwood
In terms of filmmaking prowess, "remarkable" may not do Laszlo Nemes' holocaust drama "Son of Saul" justice.- Hitfix
- Posted May 24, 2015
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Gregory Ellwood
Beyond the performances, this new “Macbeth” benefits from Kurzel’s inspired eye, the increasingly impressive talents of cinematographer Adam Arkapaw (“True Detective”) and Fiona Crombie’s period-loving production design. The world they have created for this tragedy may overwhelm, but it's certainly impossible to forget.- Hitfix
- Posted May 24, 2015
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Gregory Ellwood
Sicario starts and ends with Blunt’s impassioned performance (and she's spectacular in her final scene), but it’s Del Toro who is the real standout.- Hitfix
- Posted May 23, 2015
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