S. James Snyder, Time Out New York
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For 37 reviews, this critic has graded:
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43% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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55% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 9 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
S. James Snyder's Scores
- Movies
| Average review score: | 50 |
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| Highest review score: |
Critic Score
80
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| Lowest review score: |
Critic Score
20
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Score distribution:
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Positive: 6 out of 37
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Mixed: 23 out of 37
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Negative: 8 out of 37
37
movie reviews
- By critic score
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S. James Snyder 80
Geraghty’s performance is harrowing: Clinging to the phone and tortured by his ecstasy, he weaves empathy out of a flawed loner’s dysfunctional fetish. -
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S. James Snyder 80
Perkins asks us to bask silently in the majesty of an artist in his element; in one unforgettable shot, Francis stands atop a newly finished canvas, utterly transfixed. It’s a stirring snapshot of that strange space where the act of creating can be a religious experience. -
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S. James Snyder 80
Filmmaker Victor Nunez pairs evocative locales--beatnik Bay Area, bucolic rural New Mexico--with fleeting asides of poetry (penned by the Santa Fe–based writer Joe Ray Sandoval); these meditative detours both elevate a routine story arc and tap into tangled, twisted familial roots. -
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S. James Snyder 80
Interviewing residents from across the spectrum, Neshoba reopens the debate: How was this allowed to happen? How do we move forward? Some questions, this compelling movie reminds us, still require answers. -
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S. James Snyder 80
Battle offers both a sobering portrait of personal revolt (notably through activist Daniel Goldstein, whose eviction fight landed in the State Supreme Court) and a searing case study of a community dismantled by racial and economic tensions. Alas, it's not much of a battle; more like "Requiem for Brooklyn."- Posted Jun 14, 2011
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S. James Snyder 80
It's in the periphery of this daily minutiae that Covi and Frimmel work their neorealistic magic, turning what might have been a sappy maternal-awakening melodrama into a simplistic, genuinely sweet tribute to motherhood, Italian style.- Posted Aug 30, 2011
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S. James Snyder 60
Director Sam Garbarski’s focus occasionally skews narrow, but he does evoke the anxiety of reconciling a strict faith with secular times. -
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S. James Snyder 60
Though Hilary Helstein’s film displays depth, its structure relies too heavily on Maya Angelou’s narration to flesh out deeper implications. -
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S. James Snyder 60
Like Moore’s modus, Shamir’s stroll is sloppy, but his willingness to tip sacred cows is truly courageous. -
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S. James Snyder 60
These ragtag rebels exude an infectious determination, and while director Dan Stone fails in the adrenaline department, he succeeds in bringing home a memorable portrait of resilience. -
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S. James Snyder 60
Flimsy dialogue and fickle characters undercut the weighty historical demons in this fractured family portrait of three generations of men dealing with their emotional scars. -
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S. James Snyder 60
Though Aron Gaudet’s documentary never quite captures the relieved atmosphere of these homecomings, it does acknowledge the dark side of a cheery platitude: those on both sides of the divide are in need of healing. -
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S. James Snyder 60
Playing smarter and smoother than the plot, Cisneros uncorks an antimacho performance that deviates from type. His unconventional hero is worthy of a more original treatment. -
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S. James Snyder 60
Kleine forgoes good-old-days nostalgia in an effort to examine a generation that braved the new America sans a rule book. But it’s the central mystery of Cindy’s own life--did Phyllis ever love Harold?--that turns this sociological examination into something profoundly personal. -
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S. James Snyder 60
An illuminating profile but a sloppy snapshot of the immigrant experience. -
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S. James Snyder 60
In the director’s hands, these societal passion plays and “documentaries” offer a terrifying, top-down perversion of art itself--another insidious extension of politics by other means. -
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S. James Snyder 60
Every bit as unshakable as "An Inconvenient Truth," Werner Boote's documentary isolates the mysteries (and possible dangers) of that ubiquitous titular substance.- Posted Jan 11, 2011
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S. James Snyder 60
Once upon a time, raw talent was enough to get your name in lights; as this look at the underside of showbiz reminds us, you also need to know how to sell it.- Posted Jan 25, 2011
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- Posted Mar 15, 2011
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S. James Snyder 60
Damn! clearly knows a thing or two about fameballs, but it leaves the rest of the heavy lifting to the viewer.- Posted Aug 10, 2011
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S. James Snyder 40
Both Project Greenlight runners-up, directors Michael Aimette and John G. Hofmann get the teen angst and Gaelic aesthetic right; too bad their third-act thuggery isn’t just routine, but ridiculous. -
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S. James Snyder 40
Pornography: A Thriller may have a few interesting things to say about porn. But thrills? Not so much. -
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S. James Snyder 40
That we never actually meet his Mr. Hyde is an inventive twist, but all the labored explanations (and tedious psychology) that follow the bad behavior and bloodshed make for a serious buzzkill. -
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S. James Snyder 40
Good policy does not ensure good drama; Gerrymandering summarizes an urgent issue but forgets to detail the true fallout. -
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S. James Snyder 40
Big on emotional highs but skimpy on details, Dressed rallies behind the orphan but fails to reveal the artist.- Posted Feb 1, 2011
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S. James Snyder 40
Some ventriloquists win the fame game, while some remain stuck in the D-list dugout. The fact that Dumbstruck doesn't even attempt to differentiate these camps makes the film feel as if it's just talking out of the side of its mouth.- Posted Apr 19, 2011
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S. James Snyder 40
Steven Peros's character study is clearly designed as an homage to vintage Tinseltown mystique, so it's a pity that the old guard would have been mortified by Peros's rudimentary craftsmanship and Temtchine's thudding performance as a walking metaphor for L.A.'s young, A-list–averse idealists.- Posted Apr 12, 2011
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S. James Snyder 20
Timing’s everything in comedy, so perhaps Post Grad would have seemed peppier prior to the Great Recession; circa now, this comedy feels like a cynical stroll through the unemployment lines awaiting today’s class of seniors. -
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S. James Snyder 20
Never mind the unreliable Angeleno characters; it’s the director-actor who’s the flakiest, as he’s unable to decide if Fix is a real-time saga of a rebel, a loser or a victim. How many face-lifts can you give a single film? -