Oliver Weir
Critic Overview in Movies
70Avg. Critic Score
Critic Score Distribution
positive
5(71%)
mixed
2(29%)
negative
0(0%)
Highest Critic Score
Lowest Critic Score
42
Critic Reviews for Movies
Jan 31, 2026
Nuisance Bear83
Jan 31, 2026
This tension between profit and protection, between exploitation and conservation, is explored in much more depth in Vanden and Weisman’s latest feature, thanks to yet more stunning compositions and some crucial historical context provided by Inuit narrator Mike Tunalaaq Gibbons.
Nov 14, 2025
Arco83
Nov 14, 2025
With his debut feature, Arco, Ugo Bienvenu puts a unique, thought-provoking twist on the solarpunk genre.
Oct 21, 2024
The Summer Book50
Oct 21, 2024
The Summer Book as a whole proves much too programmatic (an early don’t-worry-it’s-nothing cough sets the tone) and much too fearful of leaving its audience in the dark about the characters’ emotional states (hence its symbolic clutter).
Jul 18, 2024
Great Absence75
Jul 18, 2024
For all the weak symbolism, Great Absence‘s achronological structure is a triumph.
Jun 28, 2024
Chronicles of a Wandering Saint91
Jun 28, 2024
In Chronicles, as in the two short films, [Tomás Gómez Bustillo] is primarily concerned with spiritual, ethical, and religious contrasts; scenarios in which miracles are mixed with coincidences, faith with rationality, and boredom with inspiration. But that is where the comparisons end; for Chronicles is in every way a more serious, controlled, and moving work of art, which stands with the very best of contemporary Argentine cinema.
Jun 20, 2024
Chestnut42
Jun 20, 2024
What is detectable of the film’s Everest-thin atmosphere mainly derives from the warmly lit bars in which the somnambulant Annie constantly appears to have awoken. They sometimes exude lust and possibility, thanks to cinematographer Matt Clegg, but their potential is never fully realized, since they are mostly used as spaces to storm out of or quietly drift into, or else as generic backgrounds for interminable small talk.
May 1, 2024
The Contestant67
May 1, 2024
The Contestant provides a breezy chronology of one of television’s mostly baffling shows, as well as an entertaining, and sometimes painfully affecting, portrait of a man who, after years of using comedy as a means of self-defense, didn’t seem to know himself whether he was waving or drowning.