Ronnie Scheib, Variety
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For 414 reviews, this critic has graded:
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54% higher than the average critic
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5% same as the average critic
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41% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 2.4 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Ronnie Scheib's Scores
- Movies
| Average review score: | 57 |
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| Highest review score: |
Critic Score
100
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| Lowest review score: |
Critic Score
10
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Score distribution:
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Positive: 163 out of 414
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Mixed: 220 out of 414
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Negative: 31 out of 414
414
movie reviews
- By critic score
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Ronnie Scheib 60
Its extremely narrow focus on the death throes of an art form, rather than the art itself, limits its appeal. -
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Ronnie Scheib 60
Culture shock often proves the stuff of comedy, but the sight of a silver-studded, sombrero-topped mariachi band breaking into a rousing rendition of "Hava Nagila" transports diversity into the realm of the surreal. -
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Ronnie Scheib 60
Frank Langella's note-perfect, tour-de-force turn as a man elegantly shaping his own demise is nicely counterpointed by a shambling Elliott Gould as a bird-watching private eye. -
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Ronnie Scheib 60
Evocatively fleshed out with surprisingly iconic homemovies, passionate love letters and well-chosen pop tunes, Kleine's homegrown Jewish "Madame Bovary" escapes the navel-gazing boundaries of the personal-diary docu by the sheer force of its evocation of bygone sensuality. -
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Ronnie Scheib 60
As a character study and revelation of a possible answer to addiction, the docu rocks. But Negroponte's low-res video camera, trivializes the film's already crude approximations of psychedelic experiences and its recordings of shamanistic rituals.- Posted Jan 12, 2011
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Ronnie Scheib 60
Covering familiar ground from an unfamiliar angle, Ted Woods' oddball documentary White Wash examines the history of African-American disenfranchisement from a black surfer's viewpoint, in the process countering the racist myth that black people don't swim or surf.- Posted Sep 22, 2011
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Ronnie Scheib 60
Set in cramped apartments and hole-in-the-wall storefronts in the East Village, Michael M. Bilandic's nanobudget comedy Happy Life plays like a poor schlub's "High Fidelity."- Posted Oct 16, 2011
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Ronnie Scheib 60
The indomitable siblings' unusual background, huge size and highly developed intellects, as well as the dramatic ups, downs and rebounds of their interwoven sagas, should result in a fascinating dual biodoc. But the two-hour pic's lack of economy makes for heavy slogging, with no boxing minutiae too small for exhaustive exposition.- Posted Oct 22, 2011
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Ronnie Scheib 60
Once Heifetz becomes a household name, Rosen struggles mightily to milk drama not from his musical genius, but from his relatively unremarkable personal life.- Posted Nov 10, 2011
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Ronnie Scheib 60
Documentarian Jarred Alterman emphasizes oddball lyricism in the one-of-a-kind Convento, in which a 400-year-old Portuguese monastery provides the canvas for a Dutch family's artistic experimentation.- Posted Mar 8, 2012
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Ronnie Scheib 60
Watching a consummate pro like Turner navigate an uneven script, veering from farcical determination, her cheeks puffed like those of a demented chipmunk, to utter devastation, can be immensely entertaining, particularly when she's backed by an able cast, as she is here.- Posted Apr 28, 2012
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- Posted Jun 19, 2012
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Ronnie Scheib 60
Collectivist in spirit, this mostly entertaining film lacks an official host or voiceover narration, which first works swimmingly but eventually becomes too diffuse.- Posted Aug 2, 2012
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Ronnie Scheib 60
Though the picture meanders somewhat in the absence of a clear throughline, the focus on Scott's music and electronic experimentation remains strong throughout, thanks to an eclectic roster of musicians and scholars and a generous sampling of his compositions.- Posted Jul 12, 2012
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Ronnie Scheib 60
A Whisper to a Roar traces a too-familiar step-by-step political pattern: the transformation of a liberator into a despot, his subsequent reign of tyranny and the popular uprising against it.- Posted Oct 12, 2012
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Ronnie Scheib 60
Of particular interest to gay-rights activists and their adversaries, this "War Room"-like but extremely civil documentary seems best suited to community venues and the smallscreen.- Posted Oct 20, 2012
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Ronnie Scheib 60
Despite lively commentaries by a pantheon of master musicians and magnificently performed classical pieces, "Exiles" only distantly echoes Huberman's visionary adventure.- Posted Oct 23, 2012
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Ronnie Scheib 60
Certain moments in the film resemble nothing so much as attending a school reunion, being buttonholed by an old acquaintance and shown snapshots of the grandkids. A complacently conservative acceptance sometimes seems to blanket all of 56 Up, as if maturity entails a serene blessing of the status quo.- Posted Jan 3, 2013
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Ronnie Scheib 60
For Fry, the music's complexity, ambiguity, innovation and humanity far surpass Wagner's personal limitations. He may not convince his viewers of the rightness of his conclusions, but he certainly makes a fervent case for the triumph of art over biography.- Posted Dec 6, 2012
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Ronnie Scheib 60
Barsky wisely includes just enough dissenting voices and admissions of grievous error by Koch himself to prevent the picture from seeming like a 100% feel-good puff piece.- Posted Feb 3, 2013
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Ronnie Scheib 60
The latest in a line of documentaries decrying the destruction of viable working-class businesses and residential neighborhoods in Brooklyn, Su Friedrich’s film bypasses sadness and indignation for flat-out anger and well-aimed sarcasm.- Posted Mar 13, 2013
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Ronnie Scheib 50
This far-fetched, deliberately artificial game of musical chairs -- in which mismatched characters encircle, attract and repel each other -- feels forced, often losing itself in excess verbiage. -
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Ronnie Scheib 50
Israeli helmer Dror Sahavi's well-meaning but simplistic terrorist melodrama, gingerly counterbalancing religious fanatics on either side of the Israeli-Palestinian divide, utilizes a lyrical "Romeo and Juliet"-type encounter between a reluctant suicide bomber and a Jewish escapee from Orthodox closed-mindedness to plead mutual tolerance. -
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Ronnie Scheib 50
Slicker, funnier and more professional than its predecessor, State Property 2, with Damon Dash at its helm tones down the original. -
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Ronnie Scheib 50
In scope, depth, rhythm and gags, "Pizzas" seems best suited to the small screen. -
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Ronnie Scheib 50
Keeps grimly glued to its one-note premise, relieved by nary a glimmer of humor, surprise or personality. -
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Ronnie Scheib 50
Shady mood-piece profits greatly from enigmatic performance by Emmanuel Xeureb. -
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Ronnie Scheib 50
Inevitable comparisons to Quentin Tarentino's femme-centered carnage extravaganza "Kill Bill" are not unwarranted insofar as both films featurefeature an abstract, self-conscious, and decidedly post-modern approach to a moribund genre. -
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