LarsenOnFilm's Scores
- Movies
For 907 reviews, this publication has graded:
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48% higher than the average critic
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4% same as the average critic
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48% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 9.6 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 75
| Highest review score: | The Damned Don't Cry | |
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| Lowest review score: | Friday the 13th |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 776 out of 907
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Mixed: 73 out of 907
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Negative: 58 out of 907
907
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Josh Larsen
The Heartbreak Kid is a war of the sexes comedy that leaves no side unscathed, thanks largely to the combined sensibilities of screenwriter Neil Simon and director Elaine May.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
Ash Is Purest White starts as a crackerjack, Bonnie and Clyde-style crime movie, then slows down into something more akin to Antonioni’s L’Avventura. It eventually ends as a mesmerizing mood piece about personal alienation and national dislocation. That’s quite a shift, but writer-director Jia Zhangke (A Touch of Sin, Mountains May Depart) finesses it effortlessly.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Nov 8, 2019
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Josh Larsen
Like Shinkai’s metaphysical body-switching fantasia Your Name, Weathering with You works on multiple levels: as eco-fable, social commentary, and teen romance.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Jan 13, 2020
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Josh Larsen
A pileup of technology, population movement, and dehumanization, traffic is a natural subject for writer-director-star Jacques Tati, whose perceptive pratfall comedies are often concerned with how our humanity gets lost in the particulars of “progress.”- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
This is either the worst time for a movie like Jojo Rabbit or the best time. I lean toward the latter. I’m perfectly willing to concede that the film may come across as gauche in the coming years, but in November 2019—as an irreverently comic middle finger to idiotic, irrational tribalism—wow, does it feel good.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Nov 8, 2019
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Josh Larsen
Wong captures this in his usual, expressive style, employing black and white at times and staggering the frame rate to accentuate heightened moments (including an aching slide into slow motion as the two men share a cigarette).- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
The Secret of Roan Inish is mostly a story about storytelling, and how folk tales and real life can intermingle.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
Reggae music is a through line in almost all five installments of Steve McQueen’s Small Axe anthology, but in Alex Wheatle, it’s a lifeline.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Dec 10, 2020
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Josh Larsen
Barry Lyndon is a costume epic that pokes fun of other costume epics even as it outdoes them.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
Witheringly funny and willing to explore her own (her character’s?) flaws, Blank brings a vibrant brand of comic honesty to the screen.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Dec 19, 2020
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Josh Larsen
The Truffle Hunters has a great subject—aging Italian foragers and their dogs, carrying on the storied tradition of searching forests for the rare fungi—but its true strength is in its compositions.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Dec 19, 2020
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Josh Larsen
The widescreen Tohoscope compositions offer ample opportunities for dramatically staged standoffs, yet Kurosawa also employs them for laughs.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood is a twilight film in more ways than one.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Jul 24, 2019
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Josh Larsen
By making Frank the quiet focus of the movie, Mangrove becomes a document of both history and humanity—the story of a man rightly radicalized by the institutions oppressing him.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Dec 10, 2020
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Josh Larsen
With Zama, Martel no longer hints at that past, but actively exhumes it, unleashing ghosts in the process.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Jul 25, 2018
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Josh Larsen
By its bittersweet ending, Nomadland delicately suggests that Fern’s experience is a choice, but one born out of hardship. The “choice” represents the potential of the United States. The “hardship” is the nation’s capitalist curse.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Dec 19, 2020
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Josh Larsen
Even here, in a calling-card genre exercise, the Coens are clearly interested in existential, quasi-spiritual concerns about guilt, justice, revenge, and violence. All that good Old Testament stuff.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
So familiarity is certainly part of my outsized affection for this 1989 Joe Dante satire of suburban America. But I also think the movie has wider significance in the way it presents suburban expansion as a cheerier version of manifest destiny—an unstoppable force that gobbles up land and then quickly sets about circling the wagons.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
Moss shifts into another gear for the truly disturbing finale, when those eyes flicker with thoughts of revenge and events unfold in a way that remind us that Whannell’s big break was as the screenwriter of Saw. The Invisible Man ends on a nasty note, but then again the 1933 film was nasty too. Given the omnipotent power of invisibility, humans apparently do their worst.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Mar 1, 2020
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Josh Larsen
Despite the casual quality of its title, It Was Just an Accident—the latest film from dissident Iranian director Jafar Panahi—carries serious moral weight.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Nov 11, 2025
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Josh Larsen
McCabe & Mrs. Miller is less a deromanticized Western than an emasculated one. It’s a de-pantsing, really, of the strong, silent men who have long dominated the genre. Drop a stronger, louder woman into their midst, and they’re done.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
Watson is reliably sturdy in the lead role—you can see her panicked conscience in her eyes—but it’s Franciosi who grabs the film by its shoulders and turns it into a searing, singular experience.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Oct 2, 2022
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Josh Larsen
Detractors might call it navel-gazing, but to me The Souvenir: Part II is introspection to adroit, therapeutic purpose.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Nov 5, 2021
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Josh Larsen
There’s only one word for the power games going on between the two main characters in May December: delicious.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Dec 11, 2023
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Josh Larsen
This is a work that thrums equally with Dada despair and do-the-right-thing agitprop, while somehow still managing to culminate in liberating exuberance. If American Utopia paints a doomsday scenario of the state of the union, it also offers joyous hope for a national rebirth.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Oct 13, 2020
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Josh Larsen
At its worst, Pigeon and its predecessors seem to say, life is cruel. At its best, life is meaningless. But that doesn’t mean we can’t have a laugh.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Jul 26, 2020
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Josh Larsen
Intricate blocking keeps these early scenes visually engaging, but there’s no doubt High and Low takes off once the exec agrees to pay and we’re treated to an elaborate money-drop sequence, with the kidnapper staying one step ahead of the police.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
It’s a thrill to watch Stanwyck go to work and assert her dominance.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
Perhaps my preference is best explained this way: I’d rather live in the world of You, the Living. Songs from the Second Floor is the one I’d rather watch.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
Slate gives Marcel a bit of wit along with that gentleness (I love when he teases Dean), but it’s the openness of heart you hear in the voice that defines the character—without ever making him mawkish.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Jul 6, 2022
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Josh Larsen
A gory, violent consideration of end-times theology, the absence of God, and demonology, Bone Temple moves the franchise from the zombie genre into something closer to religious horror.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Feb 5, 2026
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Josh Larsen
It’s not just the historical footage that makes the documentary special, however; it’s also what Questlove and his filmmaking team do with it.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Jul 6, 2021
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Josh Larsen
Figuring everything out isn’t necessary to enjoying The Lighthouse; it’s staggering simply as an audiovisual feast.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Oct 30, 2019
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Josh Larsen
Turning Red is a wonder in the way 13-year-old girls can be: monstrous one moment, heart-melting the next.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Mar 24, 2022
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Josh Larsen
Shoplifters definitely goes after your heartstrings, yet especially after some third-act revelations put this family in a larger social context, the movie earns any tears it gets.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Dec 5, 2018
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Josh Larsen
The Deer King offers the personal touch of a hero’s journey alongside a more expansive vision of how to live in community. It’s a stunner.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Jul 12, 2022
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Josh Larsen
A very particular sort of camera is at work in Hale County This Morning, This Evening. It peers from unconventional angles, lingers on images longer than they at first seem to deserve, and generally offers a perspective that is at once unremarkable, given the everyday subject matter, and revealing.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Dec 5, 2018
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Josh Larsen
This is a movie that has the courage of its own convictions, but also the playfulness to wear them lightly on its ridiculously embroidered sleeves.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Nov 1, 2024
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Josh Larsen
It’s Farrell who truly makes the dialogue sing, polishing off the punchlines (or responding to them) with facial reactions that add a few more laughs to every scene. Then, as the seriousness sets in, Farrell brings a deep sadness to the performance that’s staggering.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Oct 21, 2022
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Josh Larsen
If you can get on its moodily monstrous wavelength, the movie will have you asking why we let some animals sleep on our beds and put others in pens.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Oct 15, 2021
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Josh Larsen
With Chi-Raq, Spike Lee is vital again. This isn’t to say I agree with all of the movie’s politics or that he’s made a perfect film. What I mean is that he’s once again brought something necessary to the screen in a way that no other director could.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Jun 21, 2020
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Josh Larsen
If all of this skewed romance doesn’t hook you, Park’s filmmaking choices likely will, including inventive transitional techniques that make this two-hour-plus movie unfold like a fluid dream.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Oct 21, 2022
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Josh Larsen
Blitz gets a little preachy at times (perhaps another Dickens influence), but there is also a stark honesty about the dread and difficulty of living as a civilian under siege—as a person of color or not. And of course McQueen manages instances of jaw-dropping imagery.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Nov 1, 2024
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Josh Larsen
As a director, Jia constructs sparsely edited scenes built upon long, single takes—nothing showy, just patient, uninterrupted attention given to the characters in a way that feels empathetic and mournful.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Feb 1, 2020
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Josh Larsen
It’s the moral imperative of the found-footage formalism that sets REC apart, transforming Angela’s camera from a visceral instrument of voyeurism into a tragic, last-gasp tool of truth and justice.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
Priscilla is one of Sofia Coppola’s “moments movies” — stories told not necessarily via plot, but via the textures, sounds, and accessories that combine to create an indelible 30 seconds or so, seconds which say as much about a character and their experience as endless pages of dialogue could.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Nov 8, 2023
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Josh Larsen
Ballooning. Biking. Swimming. Parachuting. The Great Muppet Caper represented a giant leap for Muppetkind, in only their second big-screen outing.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
Already, the younger Panahi has a firm command of the (largely) fixed camera; an eye for incorporating dramatic landscapes into the mise en scene (the family’s goodbye, a long shot against drifting clouds, is a heartbreaking stunner); a penchant for stylistic flourishes (including a magical flight into the stars); and an affinity for performance.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted May 25, 2022
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Josh Larsen
A collage of religio-goth gestures, Mother Mary never adds up to quite as much as it promises. But the movie has a somnambulant pull, thanks to its woozy imagery and cloistered, two-hander structure, in which Anne Hathaway and Michaela Coel circle each other like figures in a hazy dream.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Apr 30, 2026
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Josh Larsen
It has an optimistic charm all its own, as well as strong performances throughout—especially from White and Buckley.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Nov 10, 2023
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Josh Larsen
This is a movie that’s honest about night coming on, but it also reminds us of the small things that will get you through that night, until the morning dawns.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Aug 26, 2018
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Josh Larsen
As long as the movie remains a lightly comic meditation on aging, relationships, and time—say, a junior Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind—it’s fantastic and frequently moving. But large chunks veer into television-drama territory, where the movie operates in a more generic register.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Nov 14, 2024
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Josh Larsen
Splendor in the Grass may seem quaint, even silly. But anyone who’s thrown – or endured – a teenager’s temper tantrum will recognize the anger and confusion on the screen as genuine. In that sense, Splendor will never be out of touch.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
Rex, meanwhile—an actor and former VJ with a brief early stint in adult entertainment—delivers an unequivocally great comic performance. Simultaneously sweet and icky, he gives the character a light, even gentle spirit that’s at odds with the materialist manner with which he thinks about and engages in sex.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Dec 1, 2021
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Josh Larsen
Sophie delivers three “confessions” over the course of the film, each delivered by Streep with what can only be called a commanding fragility.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
Sure, Risky Business is partially an adolescent fantasy, but it’s even more about how the prosperity pressures placed upon Joel Goodsen have frayed his nerves to the point that he can’t even bring his erotic dreams to fruition.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
After a bumpy, Mr. Mom-style start, director Robert Benton settles the film into a quietly observed depiction of the challenges and rewards of single parenting, anchored by a Hoffman performance that mostly shakes off his gesticulating instincts in favor of a relational rootedness (he’s particularly good with young Justin Henry as the boy).- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
Just Mercy is a testament to what talented actors can do with material that might otherwise be stifling.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Feb 19, 2020
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Josh Larsen
While the baby Ochi is something of a Grogu-Gizmo hybrid, the use of puppetry and animatronics gives it an idiosyncratic scruffiness. It feels as if you’re encountering a new species, not watching a digitized fantasy film.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Apr 23, 2025
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Josh Larsen
Turner and Douglas have great chemistry—in their best moments, they recall Claudette Colbert and Clark Gable on the road in It Happened One Night—helped by the fact that Douglas is willing to be undercut by both Turner and the screenplay.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
As 1917 goes on and the pair face a series of logistical challenges (navigating a collapsing bunker, crossing a bombed-out bridge), the film’s form begins to resemble that of a video game—only without the user interaction that makes games so compelling.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Dec 3, 2019
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Josh Larsen
The movie is, mostly, interested in Adele’s interior life more than her exterior features. And in those moments where the reverse is true (they’re there), Exarchopoulos rightly refocuses the attention with an extraordinarily evocative performance of a confused, conflicted teen.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted May 7, 2019
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Josh Larsen
Throughout human history, there has been something in our broken nature that resists community and seeks conflict. Eddington captures this, particularly the way it was fomented by the historical circumstances of 2020 America.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Jul 25, 2025
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Josh Larsen
Bottoms—which puts a queer spin on teen sex comedies like Revenge of the Nerds, American Pie, Superbad, and (the partially queer) Booksmart—is at its best when it is at its most anarchic.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Aug 22, 2023
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Josh Larsen
Thanks to Larson, Parris, and Vellani, The Marvels feels like a breath of fresh air.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Nov 13, 2023
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Josh Larsen
James and the Giant Peach is a wondrous interpretation of Dahl’s book that revives the magical possibilities of film while liberating our own imaginations as well.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
Bait functions on a subliminal level. A concoction of illogical insert shots, mismatched sound, and nonlinear edits, it has little regard for a cinematically conventional sense of time and space.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted May 25, 2023
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Josh Larsen
Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One is stingy with the stunts—though it only feels that way because the movie, in keeping with its bloated title, runs nearly three hours.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Jul 16, 2023
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Josh Larsen
An efficient thriller with eco-political ambitions.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Apr 1, 2023
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Josh Larsen
There are laughs aplenty in this lawless, arbitrary, mythological Old West, but a feel-good yarn it ain’t.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Nov 19, 2018
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Josh Larsen
It’s gutsy and largely works, though something about the theatricality of it all kept me at a distance.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Dec 5, 2025
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Josh Larsen
I’m sure there’s a definitive explanation, but Enys Men strikes me as a puzzle that’s more enthralled with its individual pieces than any picture they might complete.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted May 25, 2023
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Josh Larsen
The doc works best when Mitchell, who narrates, gets past the facts and lets his acutely observant critical voice merge with his memories, as when he recalls seeing Spook on the big screen with friends as a teenager in Detroit. His education then, is ours now.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Nov 23, 2022
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Josh Larsen
Good Boy is a harrowing experience for dog lovers—or possibly anyone who’s noticed an animal staring at something you can’t quite perceive—yet the movie never quite unearths the subterranean chills of the most potent horror.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Dec 5, 2025
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Josh Larsen
Stunning on every account, however, is the cinematography by Claire Mathon (Portrait of a Lady on Fire, Saint Omer). Working with an autumnal setting, Mathon manages to give each tree its own light, while also allowing the dark, mysterious undergrowth to add an unsettling darkness. Such shots are the most troublingly beautiful element of the movie.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Dec 5, 2025
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Josh Larsen
Nine Days is slow going at first—it sometimes feels as if the title is a reference to its running time—but eventually this pensive, existential thought experiment blossoms into something more cinematic.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Aug 16, 2021
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Josh Larsen
As with Knives Out, Johnson takes care to add a bit of political bite to the proceedings. This is a movie interested in unmasking killers, yes, but also emperors who wear no clothes.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Nov 23, 2022
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Josh Larsen
Kudos to her and her team for finding a way—through imaginative production design and backup dancers who essentially serve as supporting characters—to make her music feel both intimate and anthemic, something like a diary entry meant not to be hidden under a bed, but chanted by the masses.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Apr 10, 2024
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Josh Larsen
When experimenting with his own techniques—Shackleton gets ingenious mileage out of slow zooms and pans in those location shots—Zodiac Killer Project works as a provocative, meta consideration of the genre’s form. When dumping on other films and the genre in general, the movie comes across as a bit hypocritical and smug.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Dec 5, 2025
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Josh Larsen
With After the Thin Man, the best thing about the series remains the playful, boozy, flirtatious repartee between Powell and Loy (even if Nick seems a bit bossier this time around).- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
Mostly a work of stop-motion, the movie boasts expansive, intricately detailed sets that the eye can’t help but want to explore, despite the horrors that take place among them.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Sep 9, 2022
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Josh Larsen
If the movie, at times, feels exhausting, there are also painterly details to savor, like the flowing locks of a dragon or the shimmer of a seascape at sundown.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Aug 18, 2025
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Josh Larsen
No, Toy Story 4 isn’t necessary. Yes, Toy Story 4 is fun. Does it end in a way that’s worthy of the series, and Woody in particular? We’ll get there.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Jun 19, 2019
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Josh Larsen
Overall, Corsage doesn’t reinvent the royal-as-trapped-canary subgenre (it also glorifies Elisabeth’s ultimate fate in a slightly uncomfortable way), but the film style and attitude, much like Krieps’ empress, make a scene.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Dec 19, 2022
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Josh Larsen
In this early feature, which he co-wrote and co-directed with Shih-Ching Tsou, Sean Baker displays a soon-to-be-familiar instinct and affection for characters existing on the edges of society. If his eye for casting and sense of narrative drive isn’t finely honed yet, you can still sense a unique cinematic perspective being brought to bear on an overlooked milieu.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
I laughed a great deal at the bad-boy banter during Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw. I also thought the action stood up alongside anything else in the franchise. But the thing I enjoyed the most about this riotously ridiculous movie is that way it functions as a near-brilliant exercise in cinematic parallelism.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Aug 1, 2019
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Josh Larsen
Directed by James Whale, The Invisible Man is missing the gothic poeticism of his Frankenstein films, but offers its own sense of unease, especially when the invisible Griffin smashes another cop’s head with a bench. The effects in these trick shots are incredibly sophisticated for the era, as are the moments when Griffin unravels his bandages to reveal … nothing.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
Whenever someone wants to downplay historical atrocities, Descendant suggests, it’s because they’re also trying to cover up injustice in the present day.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Dec 19, 2022
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Josh Larsen
Director Joe Dante provides a loving, detail-filled snapshot of youthful camaraderie and creativity – I love how their cockpit is a Tilt-A-Whirl – before indulging in the sort of bizarre satire that can be found in most of his films (especially Small Soldiers and Gremlins).- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
A Big Bold Beautiful Journey won’t work for everyone, but hearts of a certain shape may treasure it.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Oct 2, 2025
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Josh Larsen
It’s a lot, and only becomes more so, but something about the movie’s central idea—as well as the black streak of humor Fargeat brings to the proceedings—kept me hooked.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Sep 17, 2024
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Reviewed by
Josh Larsen
Part poetry slam, part dance performance, part survivalist nightmare, Night of Kings imagines narrative as a saving grace, even in the darkest place.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Feb 24, 2021
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Reviewed by
Josh Larsen
Kaufman’s last film as director, the stop-motion Anomalisa, was a meditation on misery that comforted viewers, if not itself, with its astonishing artistry. i’m thinking of ending things, while arresting in its own way, offers no such consolation. It’s depressing in form and function.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Sep 3, 2020
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Josh Larsen
Now this is how you reheat a piece of pop culture. Nearly 20 years after The Matrix Revolutions, which left its two main characters dead, director Lana Wachowski returns to the series with enough self-aware wit, narrative ingenuity, and filmmaking prowess to more than justify the endeavor.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Dec 21, 2021
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Reviewed by
Josh Larsen
There’s no denying that Cage and Travolta are having a blast with what is essentially an acting thought experiment. They’re both fantastic.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
During the many fight sequences, the action has a brightness and clarity—in terms of line work and movement—that should be studied by anyone working on the effects side of American superhero movies. There is admittedly too much plotting; in fact, you could argue that a final-act twist isn’t even necessary.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Aug 20, 2025
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Josh Larsen
If Some Came Running survives its dated gender politics, that’s all due to MacLaine. Her Ginnie—overly made up and yet disheveled, with hamburger bun crumbs on her sparkly cocktail dress—is the only one to lend the movie an authentic sense of dignity.- LarsenOnFilm
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Reviewed by
Josh Larsen
As an adaptation of Great Expectations, this is scattershot and unsatisfying, but as a fever dream you might have after reading it, the movie mesmerizes.- LarsenOnFilm
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Reviewed by
Josh Larsen
Even for a 1933 movie musical, Flying Down to Rio is a vaudeville show shamelessly trying to pass for a feature film. Thank goodness, then, that it can get by on sheer showmanship.- LarsenOnFilm
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Reviewed by
Josh Larsen
You’re guaranteed to come away with new respect for the octopus as a species and astonishment at the intimate connection Foster experiences.- LarsenOnFilm
- Posted Mar 25, 2021
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