John DeFore
Critic Overview in Movies
60Avg. Critic Score
Critic Score Distribution
positive
703(47%)
mixed
632(43%)
negative
148(10%)
Highest Critic Score
Lowest Critic Score
Critic Reviews for Movies
Jun 25, 2024
The Black Guelph80
Jun 25, 2024
Intriguing characters and elements of crime fiction prevent the film from being a dour slog, but there’s not much hope to be found here, especially for victims who, due to payoffs and court-ordered silence, can never share their trauma with an outraged public.
Sep 21, 2023
Neither Confirm Nor Deny70
Sep 21, 2023
As we’re reminded in the background here, the ’60s and ’70s were not exactly glorious years for covert operations by operatives of the U.S. government. This plot, though, was about as morally defensible as they come.
Jul 6, 2023
Once Upon a Time in Uganda70
Jul 6, 2023
While Hugo Perez and Cathryne Czubek don’t tell a perfectly crafted story in Once Upon a Time in Uganda, their film captures enough of Nabwana’s resourcefulness and enthusiasm to make one wish his movies (which have played some fests in North America) were easier to see here — not on YouTube, but in theaters where their shout-at-the-screen, howl-with-your-seatmates vibe would be just the thing to remind you how essential the communal experience of cinema is.
Jun 23, 2023
American Pain80
Jun 23, 2023
Foster’s research and storytelling are very satisfying, even if the results aren’t. Many of those involved wound up serving prison time, but of course it was far too short, too gentle and not served in the same cells as the Big Pharma execs who made this horror story possible.
Jun 16, 2023
Anchorage70
Jun 16, 2023
Cheap commentary is scarce here, and empathy runs deeper than a first glance suggests.
May 21, 2023
The Taking70
May 21, 2023
A visually rich doc with much more than scenic vistas on its mind.
May 2, 2023
Sanctuary90
May 2, 2023
Margaret Qualley and Christopher Abbott make an exceptionally good team here, in a film that requires a deep sexual chemistry but keeps sex itself almost entirely out of the picture. Careening from one kind of intensity to another, the encounter excites without prurience and, like the transactions it depicts, is more concerned with psychology than sex in any case.
Nov 10, 2022
Slumberland50
Nov 10, 2022
For all the surface wildness of Lawrence’s Slumberland, it’s about as rule-following a family pic as you can find.
Oct 27, 2022
Louis Armstrong's Black & Blues70
Oct 27, 2022
A delightful experience for jazz buffs and more than an eye-opener for any youngsters who barely know who Armstrong was, it’s worth applauding just for its belief that it can meaningfully touch on private life, public persona, musical legacy and everything else — even if, on each front, it leaves one wanting more.
Oct 18, 2022
Black Adam50
Oct 18, 2022
Johnson creates a magnetic antihero, volatile and antisocial. He doesn’t fly so much as stalk the sky; he swats opponents like the bundles of weightless CG pixels they are. And this passion project serves the character well, setting him up for adventures one hopes will be less predictable than this one.