Luke Hicks
Select another critic »For 19 reviews, this critic has graded:
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42% higher than the average critic
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5% same as the average critic
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53% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 5.1 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Luke Hicks' Scores
- Movies
- TV
Average review score: | 70 | |
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Highest review score: | Moonage Daydream | |
Lowest review score: | Jerry Lee Lewis: Trouble in Mind |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 12 out of 19
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Mixed: 7 out of 19
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Negative: 0 out of 19
19
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Luke Hicks
There’s a version of the film that feels engaging and well-considered. It pops its head out every once in a while (most notably in an FBI impersonation sequence led by a gut-busting Kaitlin Olson). But it can’t even stay above water in a shallow script. Despite its name, Champions rides the bench.- The Film Stage
- Posted Mar 10, 2023
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- Luke Hicks
The Eternal Daughter buries us in the apprehension and frustration of writing and self-discovery as if they were one act, inextricable necessities. It’s spectral; much of what’s going on or being said doesn’t actually connect, but feels like it should. In a world of ghosts, somehow it does—a phantom connection that hovers brilliantly over everything.- The Film Stage
- Posted Oct 12, 2022
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- Luke Hicks
It’s hard to imagine mal intent from the mind behind The Father, a film laced with an intoxicating empathy, but it’s not hard to imagine a lesser work. If we’re giving Zeller benefit of the doubt, it just goes to show how difficult it is for a director to make back-to-back bangers.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 15, 2022
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- Luke Hicks
Without his trademark vulgarity and narrative absurdity, McDonagh’s challenged himself to draw humor and meaning from the mundane. And he does.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 7, 2022
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- Luke Hicks
Ultimately, Don’t Worry Darling is an elaborate game of house with little pay-off, the movie version of a fake tan: it gets the job done, but might sour your interest in the tan itself in the process.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 5, 2022
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- Luke Hicks
The chemistry between Chalamet and Russell is off the charts. Their love is desperate, passionate, true, confused and confounded, perpetually crushing under the ethical crisis they face in killing innocent people to survive, not to mention the fact that they feel very differently about it.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 4, 2022
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- Luke Hicks
When it’s all said and done—the technical marvels elucidated, the stylistic flare appreciated, the wide-eyed self-reflection given a fair shake in retaliation to the all-too-easy critique of self-indulgence—I can’t help but wince a little at the thought of a second watch. If it’ll be great to revisit certain sequences, the thought of stomaching all three hours again so soon is grueling.- The Film Stage
- Posted Sep 2, 2022
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- Luke Hicks
Bodies Bodies Bodies feels like A24 trying to suck up to the cool kids––a vapid, perhaps successful attempt to reel in a contemporary influencer crowd. Enjoying it feels partially dependent on one’s familiarity with celebrity pop culture, the intricacies of tabloid news, and the ever-evolving landscape of political correctness.- The Film Stage
- Posted Aug 1, 2022
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- Luke Hicks
The explosiveness and wavering intrigue and sleek blue-gray cinematography minted for a cop movie––the kind that reflects thematic consideration and well-crafted execution in matching the steeliness of its hard-nosed leads––can’t do enough to save it.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jun 13, 2022
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- Luke Hicks
Broker marks a thematic continuation of career-length fascination with alternative families and the legal, social, and philosophical values that paint such complicated ethical portraits of them. The director still has plenty to say, and does so quite eloquently.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jun 1, 2022
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- Luke Hicks
Among many films that tackle class, race, and privilege at Cannes this year ... War Pony is more subtle in its pursuit. The stories aren’t plotless but the emphasis isn’t on any one narrative conflict. Keough and Gammell make it more about witnessing the culturally and spiritually rich world of Pine Ridge.- The Film Stage
- Posted May 28, 2022
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- Luke Hicks
Thirty minutes in—with all interesting ledes sufficiently buried or ignored, the charm of his husky southern drawl faded—you realize you’ve been conned into letting Coen take you on a YouTube train of his favorite Lewis performances and interviews. If you like Lewis’s sound, that’s fun for a short while. Then you realize he’s just playing the same songs on repeat and it starts to get annoying, as getting cornered at a party usually does.- The Film Stage
- Posted May 28, 2022
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- Luke Hicks
It’s tough to watch a movie like Elvis and totally dismiss it, no matter how much of a trainwreck it might seem. Name a department that isn’t the Tom Hanks department and there’s plenty of creative work worth praising. It’s just utterly incoherent with the material—that’s even tougher to get past.- The Film Stage
- Posted May 28, 2022
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- Luke Hicks
There’s never a moment of grand revelation; rather a subtle, perpetual sense of understanding what’s going on, a fact that takes some pressure off the film and will likely make for a richer rewatch.- The Film Stage
- Posted May 25, 2022
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- Luke Hicks
Though struggling with some pacing issues, it’s mostly an engaging, well-performed drama that offers a fascinating peek into an institution matched in significance only by the Vatican itself.- The Film Stage
- Posted May 25, 2022
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- Luke Hicks
At a lengthy 140 minutes, the film flashes by. The deeper you go the more you want to know, and the more there is to know.- The Film Stage
- Posted May 24, 2022
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- Luke Hicks
Paris, 13th District wades in the strange, true interconnectedness of life and evokes the banality within, so much that it starts to become banal itself.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jul 26, 2021
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- Luke Hicks
If The Year of the Everlasting Storm isn’t exempt from the typical disjointedness of portmanteau films, it yields more coherency than its kin. With so many disparate works included, the experience becomes an intriguing exercise in cinematographic range and creative perspectives on the most globally unifying trauma in human history.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jul 21, 2021
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- Luke Hicks
It isn’t the most entertaining version of a Velvet Underground documentary, but it’s the truest to the group. Haynes hones in on character and new elements they brought to the table which, like elements of modern art, are best captured through philosophies and conceptual understanding, as they are here.- The Film Stage
- Posted Jul 20, 2021
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