LarsenOnFilm's Scores
- Movies
For 906 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 9.5 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: 775 out of 906
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Mixed: 73 out of 906
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Negative: 58 out of 906
906
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Josh Larsen
Plan 9 from Outer Space may not be pure bliss to watch, but you certainly can feel the bliss that writer-director Edward D. Wood Jr. must have experienced while making it.- LarsenOnFilm
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Reviewed by
Josh Larsen
The bitter has not yet overpowered the sweet in this early film from writer-director Ingmar Bergman.- LarsenOnFilm
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Reviewed by
Josh Larsen
Directed by Howard Hawks, Rio Bravo has its fair share of gunfights and saloon showdowns (including a bravura opening confrontation that unfolds with barely any words). Yet the film resembles other Westerns less than it does Hawks’ snappy romances, such as Bringing Up Baby, His Girl Friday, and To Have and Have Not.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
Deep, dark forests; thorny thickets; spiraling castle stairs – every detail seems to envelop us. And then there is Maleficent, voiced by Eleanor Audley and undoubtedly one of the great Disney villainesses. Her transformation into a roaring dragon in the finale is so triumphant you almost want her to win.- LarsenOnFilm
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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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Josh Larsen
Mon Oncle zeroes on in the way we often use our homes as status symbols first, and places of care and comfort second.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
The performances are sweltering...This isn’t a good thing. Yes, it’s fitting for the setting – a humid, suffocating Louisiana mansion where the family of an ailing tycoon (Burl Ives) connives to inherit his fortune – but the overall result is like watching a melodrama in a sauna. It’s just too much.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
What begins as a sympathetic, almost neorealist portrayal of a mentally and physically challenged newspaper peddler named Qinawi (played by Chahine) eventually warps its way into a slasher film, complete with sex-as-death overtones.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
Hardly a flattering portrait of the military machine, Paths of Glory suggests a soldier’s best hope often is to survive the chaos that his or her own army causes.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
Lean stages the events with an expert sense of suspense, then leaves us wondering what to make of the mythologizing that came before. Was all that whistling really the sound of legendary British resolve, or were those soldiers only whistling past their own graveyard?- LarsenOnFilm
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Reviewed by
Josh Larsen
Joanne Woodward won an Oscar for her title performance in The Three Faces of Eve, but what she’s doing here feels like an exercise you’d see at theater camp.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
Suspense mechanics and psychological horror don’t meld quite as seamlessly here as they do in the best Alfred Hitchcock thrillers, but The Wrong Man has more than its share of masterful moments.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
Lust for Life features exhilarating scenes of Van Gogh at work, often set in the locations of some of his most famous paintings and punctuated with close-ups of the original artwork. Like the 2017 animated experiment Loving Vincent, the movie functions not only as a biopic, but as an exercise in aesthetic reinterpretation.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
If anything identifies The Killing as a Kubrick picture, it is the movie’s overall sense of fatalism – even as we watch how carefully things are planned, there is a sense of impending doom.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
Decades before an apologist Western such as Kevin Costner’s Dances with Wolves, The Searchers bluntly addressed this country’s racism toward Native Americans by putting one of Hollywood’s most famous faces on it.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
The genius of Akira Kurosawa’s Ikiru is the way this deeply sentimental film continually deflates sentimentality.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
Director Otto Preminger emphasizes the lurid whenever he can – the neon signs, the smoky interiors, the insinuating bass on the soundtrack – so that the movie plays like a blurry, bleary night-on-its-way-to-morning. Only Sinatra’s talent is clear.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
A curious comedy that neither looks back at Rear Window nor ahead to Vertigo, but rather exists in some goofy space all its own. It’s as if Hitchcock went on vacation, but kept working.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
A model for breezy, bantering filmmaking of the criminal kind, To Catch a Thief has the feel of being made while on a getaway vacation.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
The Night of the Hunter is nearly as demented as its lead villain, and I mean that as a compliment.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
Sansho the Bailiff stands as a humanist landmark alongside something like Satyajit Ray’s Pather Panchali, which would come out a year later.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
Garland and Mason don’t exactly generate sparks as a couple, and her histrionics in the dialogue scenes eventually overwhelm the picture. But early on, this has a a lot of Technicolor/CinemaScope magic.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
Though nowhere near as ambitious an undertaking as his 1967 Playtime, this Monsieur Hulot outing is till a delightful example of the gentle satire of silent clown Jacques Tati.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
In so many monster movies, the pieces show. This creature is seamless.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
Like An American in Paris, which Vincente Minnelli directed two years earlier, The Band Wagon will either strike you as ebullient and exhilarating or aggressive and overwhelming—in both technique and theme.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
All of these sequences have an unshowy effortlessness that represents the pinnacle of Hollywood glamour.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
For all its opulence, it never creates a distinct sense of space like, say, Black Narcissus, where an ethereal version of a Himalayan convent was created on an English soundstage. Yet The Tales of Hoffman is never less than dazzling, given the elaborate, multi-dimensional sets, fanciful costumes, and opulent makeup design.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
Rashomon is a movie of ideas first and foremost. There is little room for subtext here. Matters of truth and human nature are debated in an anguished, grandiose acting style that can be jarring to contemporary, Western eyes.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
From Gene Kelly’s forced grins to its boldly monochrome sets to the horn-heavy George Gershwin music that is the genesis for the picture, An American in Paris is an all-out assault on the senses. If Kelly’s Singin’ in the Rain, which would come a year later, revels in movie-musical joy, this effort’s defining trait is insistence.- LarsenOnFilm
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Josh Larsen
Ophuls’ technique is often on the nose, but it’s still exhilarating.- LarsenOnFilm
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