For 6,576 reviews, this publication has graded:
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41% higher than the average critic
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5% same as the average critic
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54% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 2.2 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 63
| Highest review score: | London Road | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | Melania |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 2,493 out of 6576
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Mixed: 3,764 out of 6576
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Negative: 319 out of 6576
6576
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
There is no law that says a movie like this has to be funny exactly, and it needn’t be something in the style of Booksmart – but there is something rather solemn about it.- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 4, 2020
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Reviewed by
Cath Clarke
Weirdly prudish about the intimacy scenes, the sex addiction storyline is a cheap attempt to spice up the romcom formula, but this movie is as vanilla as they come.- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 4, 2020
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Reviewed by
Benjamin Lee
While it doesn’t have the same tense grip of Spellbound, it’s an amiable enough diversion.- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 4, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
This is like an over-chewed piece of gum: flavourless.- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 4, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
Here’s a movie that tells us that the days of summer, like the boys of summer in Don Henley’s song, are going to get outlived by the love they inspire. It’s what happens in this thoroughly sweet-natured, charming and unassuming British film.- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 4, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
With great style and technical bravura, the film takes us on a fairground ride, running on rails right up to the final question.- The Guardian
- Posted Jun 1, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
There are some comedies that seem to have been rubbed all over with an anti-funny, anti-romance Kryptonite. This is one. It’s the cinematic equivalent of elevator muzak – a festival of glam-smug with zero chemistry between any of its three leads.- The Guardian
- Posted May 29, 2020
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Reviewed by
Benjamin Lee
What propels us past the cliches of Intuition is a desire to see just how it all ties together, an assumption that a story as busily plotted as this must have an ace up its sleeve. But the last act is all fizzle, played out predictably with a mundanity that no amount of sweeping aerial shots can disguise.- The Guardian
- Posted May 28, 2020
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Reviewed by
Cath Clarke
If you’re looking for a definitive Dalai Lama documentary, this narrow-focus film about his lifelong passion for science probably won’t cut it.- The Guardian
- Posted May 28, 2020
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Reviewed by
Benjamin Lee
While it’s far from the firestarter it could have been, there’s more to this than its release would suggest, an angry, slickly directed thriller that still manages to generate enough of a spark.- The Guardian
- Posted May 28, 2020
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Reviewed by
Leslie Felperin
The period trappings – which must have cost a bomb – are lush and smartly deployed without being heavy-handed, and the two young leads are very watchable.- The Guardian
- Posted May 28, 2020
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Reviewed by
Cath Clarke
Here’s a true story about a young soldier’s exceptional bravery and sacrifice made into a pretty average war movie, insubstantial and TV-ish despite the appearance of some decorated Hollywood veterans.- The Guardian
- Posted May 28, 2020
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Reviewed by
Cath Clarke
If you’re a parent whose screen-time rules have crumbled in lockdown, under no circumstances watch this film until normal service resumes.- The Guardian
- Posted May 28, 2020
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Reviewed by
Leslie Felperin
Sometimes a seemingly unprepossessing genre film comes along that has finer qualities than you would expect. Such is the case here.- The Guardian
- Posted May 21, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
It’s an amusing and diverting film that, with a series of ellipses and jumps, finally takes us to an unexpected world of fear and grief – and then back again, to stylised unseriousness. An engaging debut, which Sendijarević will follow up with more substance to go with the style.- The Guardian
- Posted May 21, 2020
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Reviewed by
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- Critic Score
At times it really does feel a lot more like an SD card dump than an exercise in storytelling.- The Guardian
- Posted May 21, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
Nanijani and Rae work well together, although “chemistry” is perhaps a stretch.- The Guardian
- Posted May 20, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
It comes from the age of Straw Dogs and A Clockwork Orange, but none of those movies can match the sheer hardcore shock of the Australian New Wave nightmare Wake in Fright from 1971.- The Guardian
- Posted May 15, 2020
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Reviewed by
Benjamin Lee
While a younger audience might be enthralled by the fast pace and bright colour palette, those understandably curious adults sitting nearby will find themselves watching in horror, a deep, sorrowful howl emerging.- The Guardian
- Posted May 15, 2020
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Reviewed by
Leslie Felperin
This dorky, silly sci-fi feature offers a weird blend of high-grade craftsmanship (especially from the visual effects, cinematography and music departments), and guileless ineptitude, especially in the crucial realms of screenwriting, acting and editing.- The Guardian
- Posted May 14, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
It’s an interesting film, which Trank tops off with a contrived finale of bizarre, spectacular (and contrived) violence, yet the woozy slipping-into-dementia-fantasy sequences, although striking, mean sometimes that the visual impact of what we are seeing is sometimes lessened, as we wait to see if it is really happening or not.- The Guardian
- Posted May 11, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
It is commonplace to say that some films are scary and mad. But this really is scary and mad.- The Guardian
- Posted May 7, 2020
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Reviewed by
Cath Clarke
The story has the makings of a gripping adventure, but something is lacking.- The Guardian
- Posted May 7, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
The narrative focus is frustratingly split between Ben’s family and Abbie’s, and the result is a non-frightening muddle.- The Guardian
- Posted May 7, 2020
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Reviewed by
Adrian Horton
The film’s spareness has lasting power – as Skylar and Autumn boarded the bus home, I realized I had been clenching my jaw the whole movie. It’s a testament to Hittman’s portrayal of fear and frustration in navigating American reproductive healthcare as a teen. I just wish her characters had more to say about it.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 9, 2020
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Reviewed by
Mike McCahill
Onwubolu avoids the usual flash and posturing in favour of a careful, rooted storytelling, finding subtly different perspectives on gang life, and offering his characters as many ways out as there are ways in.- The Guardian
- Posted May 5, 2020
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- The Guardian
- Posted May 5, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
I would have loved to hear Kennedy on the tricky subjects of fusion cuisine or cultural appropriation. But there’s more than enough here to get your teeth into.- The Guardian
- Posted May 4, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
It’s a study in anger and emotional hurt that feels like a work in progress, an unfinished script the director has put before the camera before its complete development. Yet it is absorbing and challenging, as everything from this film-maker always is.- The Guardian
- Posted May 4, 2020
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Reviewed by
Benjamin Lee
All Day and a Night is a weightier alternative to the average Netflix original and while imperfectly realised and scrappily plotted at times, it’s another promising sign that, away from the easy-to-digest content, there’s room on the platform for much much more.- The Guardian
- Posted May 1, 2020
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Reviewed by
Benjamin Lee
It’s pacy enough to secure at least our divided attention, competently trotting along in the background revealing surprises that aren’t really that surprising, like a pulpy, well-worn airplane novel that you guiltily devour in a day.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 30, 2020
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Reviewed by
Benjamin Lee
The Half of It is a strong, warm-hearted and quietly progressive addition to the expanding Netflix teen movie pack which treats its target audience with the respect they deserve.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 30, 2020
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Reviewed by
Benjamin Lee
Barnaby’s colonialist take on the formula is far from subtle, and at times a little too bluntly on the nose, but he’s a film-maker with both something to say and the skillset to say it in a distinctive way, offering up an initially engaging alternative to mere guts and shock tactics.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 29, 2020
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Reviewed by
Mike McCahill
Offering a set-piece every 10 minutes, a twist every 30, it’s pure pulp, but Vega knows how to sell it, and there are pearls of wisdom amid the nastiness. You’ll flinch, you’ll squirm, you’ll learn how to increase your survival chances should you be doused in gasoline and set alight.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 23, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
The film’s plausibility-level isn’t perhaps as high as all that (it really works best as a period piece from the pre-2008 crash) but Kross brings to it a jaded, corrupted glamour.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 23, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
Extraction is a little bit hokey and absurd, and the very end has an exasperating cop-out – but it has to be admitted that, in terms of pure action octane, Russo and Hargrave bring the noise.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 22, 2020
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Reviewed by
Leslie Felperin
It takes a good hour or so to get going, but then it builds up some watchable spectacle – although Gray goes way overboard with the moody, fireside lighting, and the rousing orchestral score gets all ceilidh-cutesy for the happy montages.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 21, 2020
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Reviewed by
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Reviewed by
Benjamin Lee
While The Willoughbys might not boast the slick structure or beating heart of a Pixar animation, there’s enough offbeat charm to make it an easily digestible watch and for any concerned parents, the practice of “orphaning” involves so much work, your kids will likely be scared off.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 20, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
Why Don’t You Just Die! is an accomplished film that makes the very most of its limited sets, without seeming constricted or stagey.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 20, 2020
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Reviewed by
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
This film is a time capsule of the 1980s: an era that was crass and excessive in so many ways, but now seems weirdly exotic.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 20, 2020
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Reviewed by
Benjamin Lee
The sweeping, full-throated romance of the last act might not work for some, who could conceivably argue its dominance leaves gaps in Sérgio’s professional life, but it makes for an emotionally satisfying ending.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 16, 2020
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Reviewed by
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
For all its fantastical vein, this movie has an interesting grasp of what high school is really like – not a Hollywood narrative, neither funny nor tragic, and certainly nothing like that most unreal of genres, the coming-of-age drama. Rather it’s messy, downbeat and inconclusive, without teachable moments – like everything else in real life.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 16, 2020
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Reviewed by
Cath Clarke
Here’s a modestly entertaining stop-motion family film with a fuzzily retro homemade aesthetic and a warming gentle Englishness: decent enough, but stretched perilously thin.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 16, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
The writing is utterly involving; with lines like tiny, imagist poems. A rich and delicious movie treat.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 16, 2020
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- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 16, 2020
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Reviewed by
Phil Hoad
The opportunistic genre-welding holds together thanks to vivid performances. Bolger makes a slightly implausible character arc completely convincing, graduating from panicky improvisation to grim determination.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 16, 2020
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Reviewed by
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Reviewed by
Benjamin Lee
The film’s drunken lurch into earnest romance near the end, after leaning on bawdy humour for the most part, requires us to see these characters as something other than farcical chess pieces, an uphill battle for all involved.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 10, 2020
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- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 10, 2020
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Reviewed by
Cath Clarke
The Grand Bizarre is a film that will alienate many with its video-artiness but the focus here on looking and looking again with wonder at the everyday stuff around us may strike a chord at the moment.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 9, 2020
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Reviewed by
Benjamin Lee
It’s a low-budget effort with high ambitions, something that’s hard not to admire, and while it often feels like the teaser for a bigger and better movie, it’s perhaps a sign that Hardiman is setting sail for Hollywood next.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 8, 2020
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Reviewed by
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
It's been a while since I've seen a silly baddie get the seat of his trousers set on fire, run around squawking, and then sit down in a water trough with an ecstatic sigh.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 6, 2020
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Reviewed by
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
There is something absolutely robotic about Trolls World Tour: the voices, the design, the dialogue, the plot progressions, the break-up-make-up crisis between Poppy and Branch, everything. It’s chillingly efficient, like a driverless car going round in circles.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 6, 2020
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Reviewed by
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Reviewed by
Benjamin Lee
It’s a strange movie that can seem mildly interested in tackling bigger issues before swiftly backing down.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 3, 2020
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Reviewed by
Benjamin Lee
Gliding close to genre tropes but moving more comfortably as an uneasy drama about the alarming power of blind faith, The Other Lamb is an intriguing mood piece, strikingly made and well-performed if not quite as powerful as it could have been.- The Guardian
- Posted Apr 2, 2020
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Reviewed by
Benjamin Lee
It’s a gentle, predictable film that doesn’t exactly put any steps wrong in its depiction of adolescence but Orley doesn’t quite do enough right for it to linger in the memory for longer than the credits.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 31, 2020
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Reviewed by
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
I find myself admiring his visual and compositional sense, while being a bit exasperated by the provisional and coyly non-committal nature of his storytelling.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 31, 2020
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Reviewed by
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Reviewed by
Benjamin Lee
Lost Girls is sorely lacking and, ironically, one wonders what a Garbus docuseries could have found instead.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 31, 2020
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Reviewed by
Cath Clarke
The film is, I think, just as Cunningham would have wanted it: cerebral, highbrow and mildly frustrating, with nothing so conventional as talking heads or context.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 31, 2020
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Reviewed by
Mike McCahill
Lowish-level titters are in evidence – mostly care of Kristen Schaal as Dave’s tech aide – while an analogue finale on a scrappy-looking airfield offers passing respite from the multiplex’s usual VFX-bloated city smashing.- The Guardian
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Reviewed by
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- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 31, 2020
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- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 31, 2020
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- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 31, 2020
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Reviewed by
Mike McCahill
There are baffling shunts from town to country, while the middle stretch tosses up scenes with no real function or punchline.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 31, 2020
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- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 31, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
The Perfect Candidate is the sort of film I can imagine getting a remake in contemporary America or Britain, with not as many changes as we might assume.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 31, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
It’s a technically impressive work with some lovely images — and a bit of a sugary taste.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 30, 2020
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Reviewed by
Benjamin Lee
The formula is so well-trodden that it needed a sparkling jolt of energy to justify Penny traipsing his way through it again. Uncorked isn’t exactly corked but it’s definitely flat.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 28, 2020
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Reviewed by
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Reviewed by
Benjamin Lee
It’s as involving as it is necessary, a rare ray of sunshine on yet another cloudy day.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 24, 2020
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Reviewed by
Benjamin Lee
There’s a brutal efficiency to the storytelling, swiftly, heartlessly propelling us up and down the building, forcing us to bear witness to a great many horrors.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 20, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
The film is at its most intriguing in its earlier half, when it simply takes you through the growing excitement within the scientific community as the reality of Crispr emerges.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 12, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
I was sometimes captivated but often frustrated by this epic essay-film, a meditation on Germany and his own family history that is stark, fierce, austerely cerebral and almost four hours long.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 12, 2020
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Reviewed by
Charles Bramesco
Aside from the singular brawn of its leading man, this would-be springboard has nothing much worth launching. It’s a stack of wormed-over action tropes, and to make matters worse, the movie knows it – and yet does not know enough to spare us its missteps in the first place.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 11, 2020
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Reviewed by
Adrian Horton
In making the worst stereotypes of America’s political poles as extreme as possible, and America’s divide as literal and violent as possible, The Hunt feigns a viewpoint rather than actually having one. It takes aim at everyone, redeeming no one. Which feels circular, and queasy, and right back where we started: some empty talk about a divided nation, and a film thats probably not worth this much conversation.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 11, 2020
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Reviewed by
Benjamin Lee
A clumsy, unfunny adaptation of a much-loved literary crime series- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 6, 2020
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Reviewed by
Benjamin Lee
An odd attempt at genre-surfing that ends up well out of its depth.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 6, 2020
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Reviewed by
Steve Rose
Beneath the bro-friendly, fantasy-art trappings, Onward finds a little bit of that old Pixar magic.- The Guardian
- Posted Feb 21, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
Oprah Winfrey, Angela Davis and Morrison herself explore her work and legacy in this fascinating documentary completed shortly before the Nobel-winning author’s death.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 5, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
Kristin Scott Thomas and Sharon Horgan saddled with a by-the-numbers script in a well-meaning but hackneyed Brit flick.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 5, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
Vitalina Varela stars as herself in Pedro Costa’s bleak but beautiful film about a woman discovering the hidden life of her late husband.- The Guardian
- Posted Mar 5, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
It is a watchable, insouciant love story with some great incidental performances, although there is a sense of the shark being jumped 30 minutes from the end.- The Guardian
- Posted Feb 28, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
It is possible to come away from the film less than convinced, but very impressed by the sheer force of Petzold’s film-making talent (recently so stunning in his drama Transit) but which has been here deployed for something which is a bit flimsy and silly.- The Guardian
- Posted Feb 28, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
Charlatan is a film that does not quite satisfy the curiosity it arouses.- The Guardian
- Posted Feb 28, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
It is a deeply personal drama about culture, family, community and what it means to represent – though it can also be self-indulgent and even a bit self-involved, though this is arguably a function of the story.- The Guardian
- Posted Feb 28, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
Minamata is a forthright, heartfelt movie, an old-fashioned “issue picture” with a worthwhile story to tell about how communities can stand up to overweening corporations and how journalists dedicated to truthful news can help them.- The Guardian
- Posted Feb 28, 2020
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Reviewed by
Benjamin Lee
Haley, who last directed the sweet and underseen Hearts Beat Loud, gives the film a stronger aesthetic than most Netflix teen offerings, and Fanning and Smith work hard at charming us into submission, but their hard-to-buy relationship isn’t quite the immersive ride-or-die love connection it needs to be, given the melodrama of the last act.- The Guardian
- Posted Feb 28, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
For all that this film has something exasperatingly opaque and inert about it, it has an uncompromising insistence that ideas matter. These people’s thoughts, although debatable, are not simply presented as absurd. Malmkrog is a long, demanding experience – a real festival event. But that bizarre dreamlike eruption lives on in the mind.- The Guardian
- Posted Feb 28, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
This is not animation which is there to exalt, or soothe, or celebrate human loveliness: it is animation which takes a fiercely miserable satirical stab at the world and itself, a language which is unreconciled, unaccommodated.- The Guardian
- Posted Feb 28, 2020
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Reviewed by
Cath Clarke
The whole thing looks as if it was dreamed up under the influence of a quality batch of LSD. I laughed out loud at the hokiest bits. But I’ve got to admit I was sucked in and genuinely scared, too.- The Guardian
- Posted Feb 27, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
Dark Waters is a movie that works marvellously well within its own generic terms, and perhaps after the fey disappointment of Todd Haynes’s previous, rather insufferable fantasy Wonderstruck, this tough, clear movie was what Haynes needed to clear his creative palate.- The Guardian
- Posted Feb 27, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
What DAU. Natasha shows is the bizarre way that, in totalitarian societies, the normal and the abnormal, the banal and the grotesque, and the human and the inhuman live together side by side.- The Guardian
- Posted Feb 26, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
As ever with Miike, the sheer profusion of material, the torrent of wacky creativity, means that there is always something to hold the attention. It’s bizarre and very unwholesome. But weirdly inspired.- The Guardian
- Posted Feb 26, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
Somehow Lorentzen shows that it is not the Ochoa family who are the bad guys, but the whole rotten system.- The Guardian
- Posted Feb 26, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
I’m not sure that I was completely on board with this film, which appears to have smoothly carpentered its narrative in the edit. Is it almost too good to be true?- The Guardian
- Posted Feb 26, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
It is a film with its heart in the right place, but the dialogue and characterisation are both plonkingly unconvincing.- The Guardian
- Posted Feb 26, 2020
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Reviewed by
Cath Clarke
The film is gorgeous to look at, all alpine meadow flowers and glorious green mountains. But the drama loses momentum pretty early on.- The Guardian
- Posted Feb 26, 2020
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Reviewed by
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- The Guardian
- Posted Feb 26, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
It balances what is with what might have been and what could still be, and, although the result is maybe a bit less substantial than Castro intended, there is a certain literary elegance in the way he sketches it out.- The Guardian
- Posted Feb 26, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
It is a sombre, realist study of what day-by-day, moment-by-moment abuse actually looks like.- The Guardian
- Posted Feb 26, 2020
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
Vivarium is a lab-rat experiment of a film, with flat, facetious humour and a single insidious joke maintained and developed with monomaniacal intensity. In its way, this film is an emblem of postnatal depression and simple loneliness.- The Guardian
- Posted Feb 26, 2020
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Reviewed by
Phil Hoad
All the exertion – fleshed out in visuals that veer from Astro Boy-aping cutesiness to interestingly rough closeups, as if the animation itself is fraying in the heat of battle – pays diminishing dividends. The panoply of powers begin to seem interchangeable, the character arcs dim.- The Guardian
- Posted Feb 26, 2020
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Reviewed by