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Daniel Palmer

Daniel Palmer's reviews only count toward the Tomatometer® when published at Tomatometer-approved publication(s).

Reviews

Movies TV Shows
Somewhere Beautiful (2014) 40% EDIT “In its search for a unifying metaphor, Somewhere Beautiful drifts between a travelogue and a show-reel, an experiment which never quite moves beyond the picturesque.” – Film Inquiry May 2, 2017 Full Review Cries From Syria (2017) 100% EDIT “Cries from Syria is one of the most cogent attempts to dispel the poisonous myths being promulgated in certain sections of the media with regard to refugees.” – Film Inquiry Mar 12, 2017 Full Review Blood on the Mountain (2016) 90% EDIT “Blood on the Mountain is not overly daring in its formal approach, but the story is so compelling that stylistic bells and whistles are not necessary.” – Film Inquiry Feb 21, 2017 Full Review The Fits (2015) 96% EDIT “The Fits positions Holmer at the vanguard of new voices, possessing the potential to enliven the frozen forms of mainstream cinema if given the opportunity.” – Film Inquiry Feb 9, 2017 Full Review Paterson (2016) 96% EDIT “Paterson is a quietly majestic paean to the life of the mind; to the perishability of everything.” – Film Inquiry Feb 6, 2017 Full Review Dark Night (2017) 61% EDIT “For all its formal ambiguity, the thing which truly resonates in Dark Night is its rendering of a culture captivated by its own reflection.” – Film Inquiry Jan 29, 2017 Full Review Hitchcock/Truffaut (2015) 96% EDIT “Hitchcock/Truffaut is Kent Jones' meticulous work in which commentary and conversation overlap, charting the art of filmmaking.” – Film Inquiry Dec 26, 2016 Full Review The New Man (2016) 100% EDIT “The New Man is a fascinating insight into modern fatherhood, male identity, cultural expectation and the torturous path of late parenthood.” – Film Inquiry Dec 8, 2016 Full Review Accidental Courtesy: Daryl Davis, Race & America (2016) 86% EDIT “The film's most sobering message is that civil rights is not history. Seen through the prism of recent events, Accidental Courtesy is essential viewing.” – Film Inquiry Dec 8, 2016 Full Review Bela Lugosi Meets a Brooklyn Gorilla (1952) 29% EDIT “Beaudine's films were delivered to a small and easily pleased audience with the haphazard rapidity of someone with nothing better to do. One can't help but admire his persistence.” – TheShiznit.co.uk May 24, 2003 Full Review
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