The Irish Times' Scores
- Movies
For 1,136 reviews, this publication has graded:
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53% higher than the average critic
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4% same as the average critic
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43% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 4.8 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 70
| Highest review score: | Son of Saul | |
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| Lowest review score: | The Turning |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 641 out of 1136
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Mixed: 469 out of 1136
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Negative: 26 out of 1136
1136
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Tara Brady
Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady cemented their reputation for tender portraits of young people blossoming away from home with their earlier films The Boys of Baraka, Detropia and the Oscar-nominated Jesus Camp. With Folktales, the veteran documentary duo return to familiar thematic terrain with renewed compassion.- The Irish Times
- Posted Dec 3, 2025
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Reviewed by
Tara Brady
The director’s formal control, from the eerie electronic sounds of an ondes Martenot to the startling image of blood flowering across ice, collides the cinematic and the liminal.- The Irish Times
- Posted Dec 1, 2025
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Reviewed by
Donald Clarke
The problem is that, until the closing 15 minutes, the film traces the same path as too many (sad and true) stories before it. Happily, the inevitable redemption is handled with great vim and a shameless determination to cause audiences to punch air and dab eyes. Only those with the coldest of hearts will be able to resist.- The Irish Times
- Posted Nov 26, 2025
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Reviewed by
Tara Brady
Richard Linklater’s Blue Moon features a luminous ensemble and arguably a career-high performance from Ethan Hawke, yet it’s hobbled by an aesthetic gamble so distracting, so patently absurd, that it nearly sinks the enterprise.- The Irish Times
- Posted Nov 26, 2025
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Reviewed by
Tara Brady
It’s tricky material, but what the script loses by making an actual monster it gains in small, poignant details.- The Irish Times
- Posted Nov 21, 2025
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Reviewed by
Donald Clarke
The film does indeed reflect how megastardom goes about its business. The script, by the director and Emily Mortimer, piles on the irony with admirable diligence. But this is about as cutting-edge as making fun of Donald Trump for being orange.- The Irish Times
- Posted Aug 28, 2025
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Reviewed by
Donald Clarke
Yet, through sheer insistence, Erivo and Grande, who deserve the bump in status they’ve received, almost pull it back together with a closing duet that makes a virtue of emotional incontinence.- The Irish Times
- Posted Nov 18, 2025
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Donald Clarke
Mind you, everyone here is suffering. That overbearing mass of existential angst almost certainly contributes to the many negative responses, but few will endure its attack without admitting they’ve sat through something out of the ordinary.- The Irish Times
- Posted Nov 13, 2025
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Tara Brady
For all the Hollywood gloss, Vanderbilt sounds an alarming relevance in Göring’s sneering claim that Hitler “made us feel German again” and Triest’s warning that “it happened because people let it happen”.- The Irish Times
- Posted Nov 12, 2025
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Reviewed by
Tara Brady
Bentley sometimes leans too heavily on lyricism and voiceover, but the film’s earnestness and restraint cast a strange spell. Train Dreams may mourn a disappearing US, but, more movingly, its muted reverence salutes those nation builders who were never visible to begin with.- The Irish Times
- Posted Nov 6, 2025
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Reviewed by
Donald Clarke
No sensitive person watching Anemone could fail to be intrigued about where Ronan Day-Lewis will go next. This grandiose, inventively operatic project is no ordinary film. But it is not quite a good film either. Too monotonous. Too self-regarding. Showy to the point of meretriciousness.- The Irish Times
- Posted Nov 5, 2025
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Reviewed by
Tara Brady
Die My Love is uncompromising, hypnotic, brave and often indelible looking, even when the theatricality and fractured structure erode any emotional weight. The result is an impressively punishing, intermittently brilliant bad trip that may be the worst date movie ever made.- The Irish Times
- Posted Nov 5, 2025
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Reviewed by
Donald Clarke
This remains a careering exercise in mid-ranking Yorgosia that just about justifies its many indulgences. We should remain grateful that a talent so odd remains somewhere adjacent to the mainstream.- The Irish Times
- Posted Oct 31, 2025
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Reviewed by
Donald Clarke
The Palestinian submission for international picture at the incoming Academy Awards is a handsome, old-fashioned production that, even when it is telling us things we didn’t know, confirms all our worst suspicions about the British colonial experience in the Holy Land.- The Irish Times
- Posted Oct 31, 2025
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Reviewed by
Tara Brady
In common with Jude’s scathing attack on the gig economy and toxic online culture in Do Not Expect Too Much from the End of the World, Kontinental ’25 takes a scattershot approach to various targets: anti-Semitism, capitalism, nationalism and religious hypocrisy. The incomparable writer-director’s dark comedy doesn’t care to resolve its heroine’s quandary; it’s out to poke with ethical heft and barbed wit.- The Irish Times
- Posted Oct 31, 2025
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Reviewed by
Donald Clarke
This is a cinema of introversion, concealment and evasion. Nothing is given up easily.- The Irish Times
- Posted Oct 24, 2025
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Tara Brady
With looming grace and the fluffy heart of a Golden Labrador, Elordi, standing in for a departing Andrew Garfield, turns out to be the most swooning Goth heart-throb since Edward Scissorhands emerged from Vincent Price’s laboratory.- The Irish Times
- Posted Oct 24, 2025
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Tara Brady
Despite the best efforts of Graham, menacing in monochrome flashbacks, the sanitised script never truly pins whatever unprocessed trauma is eating at the rising star.- The Irish Times
- Posted Oct 23, 2025
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Reviewed by
Donald Clarke
Hoover fans will know that, early on, a catastrophe looks to upset the order. Nothing in the film-making suggests, however, this dilemma will not be tidied away by the time of senior prom. Who would want to live in so dull a fantasy?- The Irish Times
- Posted Oct 22, 2025
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Reviewed by
Tara Brady
Conveniently set against the fraught contemporary environs of Yale University’s philosophy department, After the Hunt offers a dull retread of the PC-gone-mad arguments that have dominated the culture wars since the 1990s.- The Irish Times
- Posted Sep 2, 2025
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- The Irish Times
- Posted Oct 15, 2025
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Reviewed by
Tara Brady
This is a nervy study of how poverty wears people down, eroded by uncertainty and the grinding effort to stay afloat.- The Irish Times
- Posted Oct 15, 2025
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Reviewed by
Donald Clarke
This excellent debut feature from Ben Leonberg may be unique among horror films in fairly attracting the compound adjectives “deeply unsettling” and “utterly adorable”.- The Irish Times
- Posted Oct 9, 2025
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Reviewed by
Tara Brady
Thankfully, Tron: Ares is less ponderous than Tron: Legacy, and the music is turned up to 11 in the hope you won’t notice all the shortcomings.- The Irish Times
- Posted Oct 7, 2025
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Reviewed by
Tara Brady
Blunt works hard to flesh out an underwritten role, but Safdie seems more interested in Kerr’s silences than his partner’s complaints. The relationship is too ill-defined to land an emotional punch.- The Irish Times
- Posted Oct 2, 2025
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Reviewed by
Tara Brady
Dickinson plays a small role as Mike’s antagonistic friend, but everything rests on Dillane’s powerhouse turn and the writer-director’s compassionate, daring script.- The Irish Times
- Posted Oct 2, 2025
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Reviewed by
Tara Brady
With its fast-paced walking, talking and shouting into telephones, A House of Dynamite is a nervy, timely thriller that goes down like Coca-Cola while another US brand – its military – takes centre stage.- The Irish Times
- Posted Sep 3, 2025
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Reviewed by
Tara Brady
Hassan and Ingar deliver compelling, complementary performances: Hassan is as quiet and vulnerable as Ingar is fiery and charismatic. Clarissa Cappellani’s fluid cinematography and Fiona DeSouza’s stylish edits and inserts keep pace with the youthful exuberance. Judicious use of flashback sets up a gut-punch coda.- The Irish Times
- Posted Sep 25, 2025
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Reviewed by
Donald Clarke
Anderson and his fine cast layer all these pyrotechnics with a palpable sadness for their characters and for the country. There are few explicit arguments here about the state of the US, but one can imagine endless such arguments being projected upon it.- The Irish Times
- Posted Sep 24, 2025
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Reviewed by
Donald Clarke
McConaughey and Ferrera prove the most delightful endangered bus companions since Keanu Reeves and Sandra Bullock in Speed, exhibiting just the right balance between tension and comradeship.- The Irish Times
- Posted Sep 23, 2025
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