Vanity Fair's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 643 reviews, this publication has graded:
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52% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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46% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 3 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 68
| Highest review score: | Under the Skin | |
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| Lowest review score: | Bright |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 429 out of 643
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Mixed: 171 out of 643
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Negative: 43 out of 643
643
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
It would be easy to get lost in all that technical detail, to figure the impression—both physical and vocal—is enough. But Chastain digs deeper than the aesthetics, and locates something crucial in Tammy Faye. It’s a genuine, deep-seated, perhaps ruinously naive compassion, which Chastain illustrates with great care.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 17, 2021
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
Pike has been nominated for a Golden Globe for the performance, but don’t let that turn you off. She is, once again, a stealthy marvel in this movie, cruel and clever. The rest of the film might not meet the heights of its star, but it is still a sleek and compelling standout in an erratic season, anchored by one of the great performances of the year (so far, anyway).- Vanity Fair
- Posted Feb 18, 2021
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
Chappaquiddick isn’t a harangue against Kennedy, but it does take a hard look at a man who was a revered stalwart of the Democratic party for decades. The film works best as a character study, a profile of moral crisis, rather than any sort of true-crime exposé.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Apr 25, 2018
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Reviewed by
Jordan Hoffman
This extremely homemade film, written and directed by Bridey Elliott and starring her own mostly-famous family, is extremely funny at times and nerve-wracking at others, but also pitch black to the point that many will find it unbearable. I say stick with it; if nothing else, the film is a work of great daring.- Vanity Fair
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Reviewed by
Jordan Hoffman
Hazanavicius is one of our weirder directors. His schtick is to parrot other styles, either with his parody Bond films (the two OSS 117 movies) or The Artist. But Le Redoutable is his best work, I think, and not just because I’m fond of the French New Wave.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Apr 25, 2018
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The film contains the best answer yet recorded to the type of gangster who swears he can never be caught—namely, that "Dillinger didn't die of old age!"- Vanity Fair
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Reviewed by
K. Austin Collins
Despite its pure beauty, in other words, there’s no mistaking The Rider for a simple, crowd-pleasing pick-me-up. The movie is soulful, elegant, filmed as often as not at the magic hour, when the sky is as broad as it is orange-yellow, and every nook of the world seems alight with possibility. It is hardly, on its surface, an outright downer. But it’s unmistakably a movie about loss.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Apr 25, 2018
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Richard Lawson
Brody and Pearce vividly manifest Corbet’s arguments about the clash between art and money, between the old world and the new. When they are blazing away on screen together, The Brutalist swells to epic size—two craftsmen prodigiously working to realize their architect’s flawed and awesome vision.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Dec 21, 2024
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
Nomadland, which is really more character study than surveying sociology, approaches Fern’s circumstances, and those of the people she encounters on her travels, with a fluid, un-judging sensitivity.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Mar 7, 2024
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
The film is not going for total plausibility, but it is grounded in the logic and physics of the real world. Carry-On is refreshingly old-fashioned in that way; it is more interested in actual human capacity than in what modern technology can fake.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Dec 21, 2024
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Devotion is thoroughly well-executed, but it’s rousing when Majors gets to play outside the box and show you something new.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 17, 2022
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Reviewed by
K. Austin Collins
The story, which is humbly well told and good-humored, if familiar, is enjoyable enough not to write the film off.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Feb 19, 2019
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
No Hard Feelings is a nice comedy, courting taboo here and there but largely rounded out with sweetness. It’s an amiable time at the movies—but I was hoping for more of a shock.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jun 22, 2023
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
Let Him Go is a swift entertainment, claustrophobic and anxious in its depiction of an impossible, frustrating situation, and satisfying in its gnarly climax.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Nov 3, 2020
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
The film’s gaze is narrow and insider-y, but it somehow kind of works. Deadpool & Wolverine is an amusing reflection on the recent cultural past, and a half-cynical, half-hopeful musing on what its future might be.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jul 24, 2024
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
The Last Duel is a surprising jumble, a motley assemblage of tones that often work in perverse harmony.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Oct 13, 2021
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
Boys State is a grim lesson—a painful allegory—in the realities of American politics, in who so often wins campaigns by running platforms built on red-meat shibboleths while ignoring or barely addressing the pertinent ills of the country.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Aug 12, 2020
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Reviewed by
Jordan Hoffman
You don’t need to be a fan of the accordion-toting Yankovic to get some enjoyment and laughs out of the gleefully absurd Weird, but it sure wouldn’t hurt either.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Nov 9, 2022
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
The familiarity of RW&RB’s obnoxious indulgences are, in some ways, its greatest triumph: its version of storybook love is allowed to be just as annoying, in the same ways, as the heteros’.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Aug 14, 2023
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
Stylish and intriguing, Saltburn proves an engaging sit for the majority of its run, and thus a stumble—even a big one—can mostly be forgiven. If anything, the film makes me curious to see what Fennell might do with another classic novel.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 2, 2023
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
Lelio’s haughty piece of flair doesn’t diminish the impression made by Pugh, who fluidly projects compassion tinged with the faintest hint of menace.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Nov 9, 2022
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With the adult actors playing zany characters, the kids’ genuine passion and skills ground the movie. Their performances make you believe in the mission of the camp, and may even have you wiping away tears.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jan 27, 2023
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- Critic Score
One lovely wisp of a movie. ... Offers few surprises but plenty of comfort.- Vanity Fair
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
There’s something sweetly clumsy about how Stargirl invites us back in time, to twenty years ago, when such a made-up person might have surprised and delighted us. Stargirl is a strange but not unwelcome reminder of that fact. How quaint of us. How quirky, really.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Mar 26, 2020
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
Much of Master Gardener is disarmingly placid. It’s a warmer, more optimistic film than one might expect, even if it does at times creak with the antiquated perspective of a stalwart septuagenarian filmmaker unwilling to shake off some of the past’s bad habits.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 17, 2022
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
Materialists is successfully seductive, eventually revealing a few potential deal-breakers but otherwise proving an engaging date. I wanted to fall in love, as I had with Past Lives. But a diverting, heady fling will do too.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jun 9, 2025
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
The riskiness of that—the way Knock at the Cabin, accidentally or not, courts and even invites sympathy to one of the right’s most dangerous shibboleths—gives the film a surprising, alarming, but not unwelcome edge.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Feb 3, 2023
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
80 for Brady is a loosely structured hang movie, albeit one that culminates in a curiously affecting emotional climax.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Feb 3, 2023
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
I wouldn’t call The Wife middling, exactly—but for all its soapy seriousness, it can’t match the genuine heft of Close’s craftwork.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Aug 21, 2018
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Reviewed by
K. Austin Collins
It doesn’t have the polish or prestige of your typical Oscar movie ... But there’s a tension at work in Harriet that’s missing from other, “better” movies. ... It’s also a vaster and in many ways wilder film than it will get credit for, a movie that leans into the excitement of Tubman’s mission so energetically it almost morphs into a heist picture, dredging up odd romantic and religious energies along the way.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 13, 2019
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
Bird is a puzzling film, but gradually draws us toward a significant catharsis.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 18, 2024
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
What is decidedly clear, consistent, and declarative in the film is the force of seeing Kidman venture down yet another new avenue, tossing self-consciousness out the window (or, maybe, just laying it aside for a while) to help realize Reijn’s curious vision.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Aug 30, 2024
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Richard Lawson
There are too many endings here, as if Fargeat had several great ideas for final images but couldn’t decide on one. So they’re all thrown in, one after the other, as the film wears out its well-earned welcome. Moore and Qualley keep selling it, though.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 21, 2024
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Richard Lawson
His intricate craftsmanship is a pleasure to watch in motion, though a bad symptom of sequel-itis stalks the film: Johnson, facing all that daunting follow-up pressure, has decided to go bigger.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 12, 2022
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Richard Lawson
I love the way Jia grapples with large social shifts in such metaphorical and yet still intimate ways, peering in on individual people caught in the churn of time and growth and framing them in the defining context of their surroundings.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 14, 2018
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Richard Lawson
It’s chiefly a diversion put on for the sake of air-conditioning, an inelegant but efficient excuse to leave the swelter of our lives behind for a little under two hours. Johnson knows why we’re there, and he performs his heaving acrobatics with dutiful grace. How wondrously uncomplicated and giving he can be. Daddy really does love us, doesn’t he.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jul 10, 2018
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
It’s a good time, but it maybe could have been a great one. Which I suppose is true of so many nights meant to deliver us from the doldrums of settled life. I don’t think that meta-ness is a deliberate feature of Game Night. But with all the sharpness Daley and Goldstein show us here, I’m not ruling it out, either.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Feb 22, 2018
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
Fantasies like this can satisfy even in creaky packaging. All it takes, really, is some nice scenery and a pair of actors who can sell their chemistry. Lonely Planet checks those boxes, even if it makes one yearn for a more elegant vehicle for Dern—one in which her romantic adventure might prove genuinely inspiring.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Oct 10, 2024
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Richard Lawson
The movie is fun, which could be all we need right now. Let’s do it again next summer.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Aug 10, 2023
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
At times, Hermanus’s style is effective, selling us on the film’s lonely, years-spanning heartsickness. But too often the film’s muted emotion feels more gimmicky than credible to Lionel and David’s circumstances, particularly because Hermanus is so demure about sex; we barely even see the men kissing.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 22, 2025
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
Accepting the wild ambition of Final Reckoning, embracing its maudlin amassing of all M:I lore into one turgid act of nostalgia, is the best way to enjoy it.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 14, 2025
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Richard Lawson
Dumb Money is a sturdy entry into the developing canon of docufiction that seeks to be lively and lucid and informative about the rotten state of the American dream. It’s often as crassly effective as Roaring Kitty and his cohort were in those wild months two years ago, when greed was good for the many instead of the few.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 10, 2023
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
At first, I thought I didn’t like the movie. But then, of course, I quickly realized that the film had simply done its job; the whole point is for the audience to desperately want out, just as Linda does.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jan 25, 2025
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Reviewed by
Katey Rich
It succeeds by sticking closely to the important specifics ... It’s a small-scale human story, precious few of which make it to film these days. It’s also, if you’re in the market for that kind of thing, an extremely effective tearjerker.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 13, 2019
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Richard Lawson
There is plenty in Barbie to be delighted by, even moved by. I have no doubt that the film will be a massive hit, cheered for turning a cynical I.P. project into a loopy treatise on being. But the movie could maybe have been stickier, more probing and indelible, if it had reined in some of its erratic energy and really figured out what it wanted to say.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jul 18, 2023
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
Hit Man is determined to be fun above all else, and it largely succeeds in that honorable, populist mission. It entertains, and generously pushes two game performers closer toward the movie-star pantheon.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 5, 2023
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Hocus Pocus 2 is sweeter, gentler, and pointedly more inclusive than its hilariously crass predecessor, trading in winking jokes about hell and sex for lite feminist jokes about the modern beauty industry.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 30, 2022
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Reviewed by
K. Austin Collins
Union, a conquering badass, owns it. The movie walks an intriguing line between strained believability and outright superherodom—a line every action movie walks, of course. But then, most action movies don’t star black women.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 11, 2018
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
Whatever LuPone is doing, it’s undeniable. Here, long into a meandering and fitfully rewarding film, is something worthy of fear—or maybe it’s awe.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Apr 11, 2023
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
It’s funny in ways anticipated and not, and there is enough suspense—or something like suspense—to balance out the coy winks to the audience. The irony isn’t overweening, the doll is equal parts creepy and yassified, and the human lead, Allison Williams, anchors things with an admirable commitment to the bit.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jan 4, 2023
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
Wright, Angela Bassett, Lupita Nyong’o, Danai Gurira, and others are commanding presences, standing proud and formidable in Ruth Carter’s glorious costumery. The film’s lush visuals—its rendering of bustling old-town Wakanda, of a mysterious city under the sea, of gleaming tech and natural landscapes—are sumptuous and considered. There is much to be admired here, a care for craft and detail on a higher plane than other Marvel fare.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Nov 8, 2022
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
What a welcome rarity Boston Strangler is, even in its limits: a sturdy, thoughtfully constructed movie featuring a compelling story and host of great actors.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Mar 16, 2023
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
The curious fun of Daniel Espinosa’s film is in how it embraces the gothic mythology that inspired it. Morbius does eventually become a cluttered slugfest, as all things must. But for much of its run it is a stylish, intriguingly toned story of a man trying to thwart mortality.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Mar 30, 2022
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
A more thoughtful and interesting film than its immediate predecessor.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jun 5, 2018
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Reviewed by
K. Austin Collins
McKinnon is all excess, all the time, and The Spy Who Dumped Me—a solid comedy, overall—gives us another chance to bask in that.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Aug 2, 2018
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Richard Lawson
Coen and his acting troupe make dense language wholly legible, bending famous phrases into intriguing new shapes. The film moves at a pleasant clip, eschewing cinematic digressions and driving, like a dagger, to the heart of the story. It’s an efficient little film, despite its fussy aesthetics.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 29, 2021
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
Greyhound has texture—it’s carefully, credibly mounted and subtly performed—but doesn’t do much with it. There’s nothing wrong with a fleet little chase movie, but the Battle of the Atlantic had real sprawl, both in terms of its geography and its crucial effect on the outcome of the war. That scope is only gestured toward in Greyhound, undermining any possibility that the film might take on an epic shape.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jul 9, 2020
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Richard Lawson
Pooh and his animal pals are wonderfully subtle feats of animation, textured so carefully that you can almost smell the cozy, woodsy mustiness of their matted fur.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Aug 2, 2018
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Richard Lawson
Songbirds is the rare intelligent, useful prequel; its origin story (or, really, stories) actually do better elucidate what we’ve already seen.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Nov 16, 2023
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K. Austin Collins
A strange, uneven, but ultimately effective satire of masculinity.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Aug 6, 2019
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Joshua Rivera
Feels Good Man shows the collective lizard brain of the internet at work, explaining how systems driven by engagement naturally propagate outrage and instigation.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 9, 2020
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Richard Lawson
As a dancer to Hargrave’s violent tune, Hemsworth acquits himself beautifully—he gets a grim and maybe irresponsible assignment done quite well.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Apr 24, 2020
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Richard Lawson
Egerton tears into the material with an intensity that elevates Rocketman’s standard-issue tortured-artist drama.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 24, 2019
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Richard Lawson
It’s a curious film, messy in all its ambition but consistently transfixing, an earnest labor of love—and one about love.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 20, 2022
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Richard Lawson
For all of its piercing insight and arresting performances, its steamy sex, its devastating conclusions, the film operates at a remove, from behind a pane of glass. Perhaps because Haigh gives Adam so little tether to the realm of the real; so much of the film is lost in plaintive reverie.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 1, 2023
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Richard Lawson
It’s half mess, half triumph, and thrilling even in its failures.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 20, 2025
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K. Austin Collins
I admire Zellwegger’s performance most of all for risking outright broadness, even badness, to chip away at the truths of the star’s persona. Frankly, it’s a performance that threatens to fly free of the movie enclosing it, which is well-made but not nearly as compulsively odd as its star.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 1, 2019
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K. Austin Collins
It’s not a remake so much as a juicy, larger-than-life update—a movie whose aim is to bring the Super Fly myth up to speed.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jun 29, 2018
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Richard Lawson
Blonde is a film partly about exploitation that might be exploitative itself. If the film is aware of that meta function, then there’s something interesting happening in it. If not, and Dominik thinks he is genuinely ennobling Monroe and expressing some kind of radical pity for her, then Blonde is a little perverse.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 8, 2022
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K. Austin Collins
What materializes isn’t a fresh way of understanding this event, but rather a new set of images for telling the same story. This is obviously the wiser choice, commercially; artistically, it proves frustrating, even as this method has its revelations.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Mar 20, 2019
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Richard Lawson
The movie is as engaging as it is sinisterly ridiculous. Its costumery is luxe and eye-popping, its courtly intrigue pleasingly low-stakes. The looming Revolution is only mentioned, in somber tones, in voiceover at the very end. Otherwise, Jeanne du Barry wants you to feel the fantasy.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 17, 2023
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Richard Lawson
What remains engaging throughout are the carefully textured performances—MacKay’s study of repressed energy and Ingram’s mix of wariness and gratitude are particular highlights—and the film’s myriad aesthetic graces.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 9, 2024
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
Written and directed by Scott Beck and Bryan Woods, Heretic is an alternately clever and silly horror-thriller that wants to have a kicky, pointed dialogue about faith vs. reason, free will vs. preordination. It maybe doesn’t arrive anywhere profound, but it has a good time laying out its thesis.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 10, 2024
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Reviewed by
Jordan Hoffman
It’s hard to find compliments for Jamie Dornan beyond “very athletic”—but from start to finish, one can’t give Johnson enough credit for making these asinine movies work as well as they do.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Feb 8, 2018
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Reviewed by
K. Austin Collins
It’s a fine movie: cute, clever, moving, and engagingly-told, an altogether painless confirmation of what we should all agree is Pixar’s basic aptitude for keeping kids’ asses in seats and parents from pulling out their hair.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Feb 26, 2020
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Richard Lawson
Only 92 minutes long, Work It could use more space to move around in: to let these performers really strut their stuff, and to allow the movie to develop a bit more idiosyncratic texture. As is, Work It is an agreeable enough pastiche, clearly aware of its influences and not trying to pretend that it’s come up with these steps all on its own.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Aug 7, 2020
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
For roughly its first half, Hotel Artemis glides nicely on all of Pearce’s world-building and the cast’s confident performances. But as the power flickers at the Artemis and dangerous foes close in, the movie starts to wobble. Pearce has maybe put too many variables in play and has trouble connecting them into a unified narrative.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jun 7, 2018
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
Project Power has a nicely saturated, jittery visual language, an aesthetic that operates in concert with Tomlin’s surprisingly discursive script, giving the film an actual grain of place-and-time texture. Project Power often has a pleasing specificity to it, even when it’s thrashing around in violent special-effects hullabaloo.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Aug 13, 2020
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Richard Lawson
I wish the movie was just a tad sharper, took a little more time to really clarify its stance on this whole social-sexual-commercial world of romantic aspirationalism, to make its commentary and its humor really sing—and sting.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Feb 12, 2019
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
Ambulance is a visual ordeal, but deliberately so. Bay wants us to feel the exhausted tension of his characters- Vanity Fair
- Posted Apr 7, 2022
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Richard Lawson
There is a chance that much more of Aline is played for comedy than I realize; perhaps the jolts of revulsion and fascination are meant to resolve into a giddy laugh. But the film doesn’t really wink to let us in on the joke, except perhaps for one scene that puts a full, slo-mo view on the results of this experiment.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Apr 8, 2022
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Richard Lawson
While Michael Fimognari’s film does have some heart-fluttery moments—chiefly the first reappearance of heartthrob Peter (Noah Centineo), framed in a doorway and blessed with a nice winter jacket and a crooked smile—what’s more arresting is its gentle wisdom about all the stuff that happens after the swoon.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Mar 26, 2020
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Reviewed by
K. Austin Collins
For all the ways the film appears to be taking a hard look at the lives therein, I walked away with the sense that I was too often given vague shapes where that hard reality ought to have been. Beanpole is effective, regardless, and at times genuinely moving, if frequently beguiling. It often works—even it believes a little too much in the power of its design and intentions to fully live up to them.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Mar 26, 2020
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
Those Who Wish Me Dead is missing an act, maybe, some of kind bridge between its drawn-out beginning and its hurried climax. What’s in the film is staged shrewdly by Sheridan, but there’s little sense of cumulative build.- Vanity Fair
- Posted May 25, 2021
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Cassie da Costa
The result is an extremely thorough documentation of events, and a literal one. The Rescue is not so much a film as it is a record.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Oct 9, 2021
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Richard Lawson
There’s a joy to the film’s ornate beauty, a loving craftsmanship that rescues Aquaman from the branded synergy that so haunts and chokes it elsewhere.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Dec 11, 2018
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K. Austin Collins
The purpose of the fine-grained emotional details keeps getting scrubbed out of Waves as its runtime wears on and reconciliation feels increasingly imminent. The observations are sharp, but the attitudes and arcs that they paint feel overly simple.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 14, 2019
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
The Suicide Squad walks about as far up to the line of the indecent as is perhaps possible for a film of this size right now, which makes portions of it genuinely exciting. But we get inured to its provocations too quickly, and then the movie tries to soften itself and add emotional dimensions that aren’t exactly earned.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Aug 5, 2021
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Reviewed by
K. Austin Collins
The sense of enclosure, of these two lovers pushed into discomfiting, dangerous proximity when we see them together, is immediately striking. But so is the sense that the director has squeezed all the gritty, more specific sense of conflict out of his movie.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jan 10, 2019
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
The Invisible Man loses its personality as it tumbles into the third act, and with it goes a lot of the emotional fiber Moss has worked so hard to spin into something rich and memorable. She still holds her own as the movie crumbles around her, but her performance deserves better than what Whannell ultimately gives her.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Feb 26, 2020
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
A part-clever, part-misshapen global caper, Charlie’s Angels—like Stewart—connects a few solid kicks in all its flailing.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Nov 14, 2019
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Hillary Busis
The film strikes a nice balance between serviceable, not-overly-slick action scenes—we’ve come a long way from those shoddily animated monkeys—and comedy that’s actually rooted in character, rather than cheap references or stereotypes.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Dec 9, 2017
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K. Austin Collins
Fahrenheit 11/9 does what Moore has done best, or at least most, throughout his career. It’s a sprawling, big-mouthed, big-hearted mess of a polemic, equal parts righteously impassioned and unforgivably dubious. It’s a rip-roaring airing of grievances from a man who has only ever used his substantial platform to get shit off of his chest.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Sep 22, 2018
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K. Austin Collins
Sure, the movie’s moral arc distracts from what’s best about it, but its highs are indeed high. I don’t believe that the cure for our hashtag-flawless-obsessed culture is easy encouragement. But you don’t have to save the world to make a good movie.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Apr 25, 2018
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K. Austin Collins
The First Purge is very clearly nonsense, and it’s not ashamed of that—nor should it be. Every so often, that nonsense stumbles into a surprising idea, a striking image, or something else worth clinging to when you leave the theater.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jul 4, 2018
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Richard Lawson
Ocean’s 8 is fun. The sequel (of sorts) to Steven Soderbergh’s three Ocean’s films, this time with a mostly female cast of smooth criminals, is a lark and a laugh, an airy caper featuring a bunch of actors you love and a lot of great clothes. Who can argue with that, in June or any other time of year? In that way, Ocean’s 8 is a worthy continuation of a hallowed brand. So, breathe a sigh of relief. There’s no disaster here, no regrettable misfire to be chagrined about. Phew. That said, I do wish Ocean’s 8 were a little more than fun.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jun 5, 2018
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Richard Lawson
We can feel a richer idea tingling just beneath Sea Fever’s skin. But Hardiman never roots it out, opting instead for a restraint that is often admirable, but also dampens the film’s potential power.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Apr 16, 2020
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Reviewed by
Sonia Saraiya
It won't disappoint viewers who want to see Hanks play a nerdy cowboy, or who want to revel in wide shots of American west. But for a film with so many thorny contradictions encased within it, News of the World has surprisingly few hooks.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Dec 11, 2020
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Reviewed by
Richard Lawson
Lucy in the Sky is an odd curio, a drama that’s forlornly funny, a comedy of social manners with a howling desperation fueling its engine. I admire the balance that Hawley tries to strike, between the mundane and the sublime.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Oct 3, 2019
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Cassie da Costa
King clearly has the chops, and hopefully, with future films, she’ll be more adventurous. Still, as it stands, One Night in Miami is fitting fare for our present conditions. By placing some of the 20th century’s boldest Black male figures in one shining frame, simply talking, we are asked to consider Black lives as both public and private creations. It’s a great theme, which the film falls just short of embodying.- Vanity Fair
- Posted Jan 21, 2021
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