These are all the movies and series that Eric has reviewed. Read more at: The Movie Waffler.
Number of movie reviews: 2278 / 2278
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Chuat and Reymond can't find anything interesting or insightful to do with Sven, who gradually fades into the background... Review
Uncut Gems is the most explicit trans-Atlantic companion to Hughes' film the Safdies have yet made. Review
The movie is resolutely unwilling to explore the notion that Ailes' entitled behaviour was propped up on a nightly basis by Kelly and Carlson's right wing rhetoric. Review
Stewart is excellent in the role, making up for some of the deficiencies of a script that concentrates more on showing us what Seberg did and said rather than what she felt. Review
Much like Mike Leigh, Eastwood has a gift for mining comedy from scenarios that have high personal and political stakes. Review
With its neon backdrops and constantly dancing and prancing cast, Cats often resembles a child-friendly companion to Gaspar Noe's Climax. Both movies are light on story and heavy on garish disco era inspired spectacle and funky footwork, and they're arguably the best screen musicals the modern era has produced. Review
Abrams plays it safe with a series of plot twists that mimic those of earlier films and the reintroduces some original trilogy characters, some from beyond the grave. His film chugs its way to a climax in which yet again the rebels are asked to take a one in a million shot. Review
As Queen & Slim descends into such clichés as a character hanging out of a car window to experience the simple joy of freedom, you begin to wonder how such a terrible script could have made it to the screen in its present form. Review
The film is incessantly talky, with so much dialogue that your mind begins to treat it like white noise, shutting it out to focus instead on the immaculate production and costume design. Review
Against the odds, Poots' performance adds a depth to her character that the thoughtless script is constantly attempting to undermine. Review
By its conclusion, Long Day's Journey Into Night has made it clear that memories are often false too, but as rendered by Gan and his ace cast and crew, Luo's false memories reveal a simple truth, that impactful, thoughtful, experimental, vital cinema hasn't faded away just yet. Cherish your memories, hold onto your dreams, but keep moving; exciting times lie ahead. Review
But as visually alluring as Atlantics is, it suffers from a script that struggles to pull its disparate elements together. Review
No movie can ever come close to relaying their experience, but 1917 gives it a damn good try. Review
Honey Boy cements LaBeouf as one of the most interesting actors we have today, while also introducing us to British singer FKA Twigs, making a striking debut in a largely mute performance that involves dancing as much as acting, and young actor Jupe, who is the equal of LaBeouf in their scenes together. Review
On the subject of music, Motherless Brooklyn boasts the year's most gorgeous score, a collaboration between Wynton Marsalis, Daniel Pemberton and Thom Yorke. Like Dick Pope's elegant cinematography and the stunning period recreation, it adds a layer of mahogany varnish that covers up the narrative balsa wood that Norton has constructed his flimsy yarn from. Review
The main issue with Matthias & Maxime is that neither of the title characters, nor the world they inhabit, feel remotely real. Review
The structure of Portrait of a Lady on Fire reflects that of many relationships. It begins with intrigue, leads to infatuation, followed by sated sensual desires, but thankfully this dalliance is cut short before it has time to grow stale. Review
Carwash is the cinematic equivalent of enjoying a cold pint of Belgian beer on a lazy summer afternoon. There's an almost complete absence of such conventions as dramatic conflict and narrative thrust. Instead Schmitz simply allows us to hang out with his characters, all of whom are affable in their own way. Review
In many ways, Amanda plays like a gentler, more hopeful, and arguably superior French cousin of Kenneth Lonergan's Manchester by the Sea, the main difference being that the protagonist here hasn't given up, as he simply doesn't have that luxury with a child now in his care. Review
There's an intriguing movie to be mined from this subject, but I can't help but suspect this is territory that might be more astutely explored by a filmmaker closer to its subject, i.e. a middle-aged woman who knows what it's like to hit a certain age if you don't have the luxury of resembling Juliette Binoche. Review
The movie is ironically at its best when it keeps away from its young would-be jihadists and instead focusses on Muriel, with Deneuve delivering a quietly devastating performance as a woman whose heart is being shattered by the growing idea that she can't save her grandson. Review
Seydoux and particularly Forestier are excellent as the suspects in a seemingly meaningless and motiveless murder, and Zem is genuinely intimidating as their interrogator. But it all feels like something we could watch any weeknight on TV, just a little more polished. Review
It looks more professionally made and boasts a cast of talented actors (how is Olivia Colman in this?), but a polemic is a polemic, regardless of which side of the debate it represents. Review
Along with the likes of Haneke, Von Trier, Seidl and Noé, we're now seeing the formation of a new wave of women shock merchants, with Borleteau taking her place alongside Eklöf, Ducournau and Fargeat. Lullaby is a welcome addition to their growing canon. Review
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