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Australian Financial Review

Australian Financial Review is not a Tomatometer-approved publication. Reviews from this publication only count toward the Tomatometer® when written by the following Tomatometer-approved critic(s): John McDonald.

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Rating Title | Year Author Quote
Fly Me to the Moon (2024) John McDonald We understand that in any romcom the course of true love requires many twists and turns, but Tatum’s character is so maudlin, so self-denying we begin to think of him as a big boofhead unworthy of the charismatic Kelly.
Posted Jul 20, 2024
The Bikeriders (2023) John McDonald What begins as an expression of rebellion against the conformity of mainstream American society, with Cream’s I Feel Free playing as the guys zoom along on their bikes, will gradually degenerate into sordid criminality.
Posted Jul 20, 2024
Kinds of Kindness (2024) John McDonald All three chapters involve demands for “love”, which can’t be separated from total submission. Sexual pathologists such as Krafft-Ebing, who investigated sado-masochism and other perversions, would have plenty to say.
Posted Jul 20, 2024
A Silence (2023) John McDonald One minute in and we’ve already had the scandal and the crime. The son is in a police cell, the father in intensive care. No wonder Astrid looks stressed.
Posted Jul 20, 2024
La Syndicaliste (2022) John McDonald ...it shows how governments increasingly act like big corporations, crafting decisions and policies under a veil of secrecy, putting capital before community.
Posted Jul 20, 2024
Midnight Oil: The Hardest Line (2024) John McDonald It’s worth the price of admssion to see Peter Garrett with a shaggy blonde haircut, which gets gradually mown down to the familiar chrome dome that would become his trademark.
Posted Jun 18, 2024
The Three Musketeers: Part I - D'Artagnan (2023) John McDonald Although he virtually invented the potboiler, Dumas’s books have a panache that distinguishes them from those lifeless popular squibs written to a formula.
Posted Jun 18, 2024
High & Low - John Galliano (2023) John McDonald For Galliano, whose psyche resembles a ball of wool that’s been with the kittens for a few days, his fall from grace seems to have arrived in stages.
Posted Jun 18, 2024
Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga (2024) John McDonald In Fury Road not a minute was wasted, but in this film, Miller gets caught up with all the gruesome particulars of the post-apocalyptic world he is creating.
Posted May 24, 2024
The Taste of Things (2023) John McDonald The kitchen is the engine room of this film. Occasionally the action may stray into the garden or the bedchamber, but almost every scene, and every relationship seems to revolve around the oven.
Posted May 24, 2024
Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes (2024) John McDonald The early part of the story spends so much time introducing us to the lead chimp, Noa (Owen Teague), and the rest of his clan, that I half expected David Attenborough to appear from behind a tree and start explaining the nature of their community.
Posted May 24, 2024
Monster (2023) John McDonald Kore’eda keeps us wondering about who, if anyone, is the monster. With each part of the puzzle falling into place, the picture keeps changing. It’s not even clear what being a “monster” might mean.
Posted May 24, 2024
Fremont (2023) John McDonald Although everyone is a philosopher in this film, wisdom remains in short supply.
Posted May 24, 2024
Golda (2023) John McDonald Golda, with Helen Mirren in the lead role, is a sympathetic portrait of a leader under extreme pressure, who rises to the occasion in defiance of her own physical frailty and the demands of her American allies, but it’s not entirely flattering.
Posted May 24, 2024
Evil Does Not Exist (2023) John McDonald The low key nature of the first scenes makes the later scenes even more disturbing. It’s like a screw that is slowly tightened while we feel nothing is happening.
Posted May 24, 2024
Challengers (2024) John McDonald The contest is conducted on the court and in the minds of the three players, with Tashi being by far the most psychologically complex. What does she want?
Posted May 24, 2024
Late Night with the Devil (2023) John McDonald As the show begins, the real horror for Jack is his persistent inability to win the ratings war, and the anxiety that the studio is losing patience with his failures.
Posted Apr 19, 2024
The First Omen (2024) John McDonald It’s ironic, but perhaps understandable, that the austere life of nuns has always given rise to the most lurid cinematic treatment.
Posted Apr 19, 2024
Goodbye Julia (2023) John McDonald Kordofani effortlessly weaves the political issue of the Independence vote into the ongoing moral drama, allowing us to see how race, religion and politics influence every interaction between Northerners and Southerners...
Posted Apr 19, 2024
Perfect Days (2023) John McDonald We understand Hirayama’s good nature as related to his chosen way of life, but the mechanism of that relationship remains unfathomable.
Posted Apr 19, 2024
Io Capitano (2023) John McDonald The real skill of this film lies in Garrone’s abilty to take us to the edge of despair and engineer a rescue through an unexpected act of kindness or a stroke of luck, let alone a small but mesmerising dream sequence.
Posted Apr 19, 2024
American Fiction (2023) John McDonald On that rapidly shrinking plain called Common Sense, a chasm has opened up, and ideologues are conducting a race to the bottom.
Posted Apr 19, 2024
Subtraction (2022) John McDonald The realistic approach makes the implausible seem plausible, even as Farzaneh and her doctor think she must be going mad.
Posted Apr 19, 2024
The Zone of Interest (2023) John McDonald Glazer wants us to reflect on what is normal, and what is abnormal, barbaric, obscene.
Posted Apr 19, 2024
Fallen Leaves (2023) John McDonald Nobody speaks unless they have to, although there is a wealth of wordless communication. At a time when movies seem to be getting longer and longer, Kaurismäki keeps everything under 90 minutes.
Posted Feb 18, 2024
Force of Nature: The Dry 2 (2024) John McDonald This time the landscape shots are of lush, green forest and mountain vistas, chiefly the Otways, the Dandenongs and the Yarra Valley. Once again, the scenery threatens to be more engaging than any of the characters.
Posted Feb 18, 2024
May December (2023) John McDonald If our sympathies are with Elizabeth at the beginning of the film as she tries to crack Gracie’s mask of forced positivity, by the end we’ve learned to mistrust her motivations.
Posted Feb 18, 2024
The Color Purple (2023) John McDonald The entire package is bathed in an evangelical glow that would seem to be part of the problem rather than a promise of salvation.
Posted Feb 18, 2024
Anatomy of a Fall (2023) John McDonald The “fall” is not only Samuel’s plummet from the third floor, it’s the decline of a marriage, and we know that’s never a speedy process.
Posted Feb 18, 2024
Priscilla (2023) John McDonald The bulk of the film is devoted to the confusions and uncertainties of an immature girl who meets the world’s most famous pop star when she is only fourteen, and finds herself the object of a strange, chaste courtship.
Posted Feb 18, 2024
The Iron Claw (2023) John McDonald Although the film has the makings of a rollicking comedy, it grows progressively darker until it becomes the saddest feature you’re likely to see this year.
Posted Feb 18, 2024
The Holdovers (2023) John McDonald In a film that manages to be touching and consistently funny, you won’t be surprised to learn that a rapport develops between existentially miserable Paul, who seeks solace in Jim Beam and Marcus Aurelius, and prickly, troublesome Angus.
Posted Feb 18, 2024
The Boys in the Boat (2023) John McDonald Clooney has given us a reminder of all the reasons people once went to the cinema and suggests those preferences have been repressed but not abandoned.
Posted Feb 18, 2024
Ferrari (2023) John McDonald It’s a film about racing, but not narrowly focused on scenes of cars speeding around a track at hair-raising speeds. Yes, there’s plenty of that, but an equal amount of time is spent negotiating the hairpin bends of Enzo Ferrari’s love life
Posted Jan 07, 2024
Dream Scenario (2023) John McDonald The temptation of social media fame is presented as a bargain with the devil that can quickly turn sour.
Posted Jan 07, 2024
Poor Things (2023) John McDonald But where Frankenstein’s monster went searching for love and met only rejection, Bella is the universal object of male lust. Her personal evolution is from object to subject.
Posted Jan 07, 2024
Wonka (2023) John McDonald The only way to approach Wonka, with its manifold special effects and relentless cheeriness in the face of adversity, is to remember that it’s a kids’ film.
Posted Dec 23, 2023
Maestro (2023) John McDonald The sexual focus is but one way of telling the story, but a powerfully revealing one. Instead of seeing Bernstein as a great man or an artistic genius, we take these things for granted and look at the ferment beneath the carapace of fame.
Posted Dec 23, 2023
The Old Oak (2023) John McDonald Despite the tide of misery that usually engulfs his characters, Loach is an optimist. He wants to believe human beings are basically good-hearted, no matter how their attitudes may be deformed by circumstances.
Posted Dec 23, 2023
Napoleon (2023) John McDonald While it’s impossible not to have reservations about this film, it’s equally impossible to avoid being impressed. Scott has given us a magnificent, flawed epic, with a lead actor strapped into the character like a pilot in his cockpit.
Posted Dec 23, 2023
The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes (2023) John McDonald The ”snakes” of the title may refer to that mass of multicoloured serpents Dr. Gaul wants to unleash on the hapless tributes, but it’s just as easy to see Coryo as the snake to Lucy Grey’s songbird.
Posted Dec 23, 2023
Saltburn (2023) John McDonald Saltburn owes its lurid magnetism to the grotesque nature of the characters. We feel the hatred, lust and envy beneath Oliver’s deadpan demeanour, and the superficiality of Felix’s compassion, born from a life of shameless privilege.
Posted Dec 23, 2023
Foe (2023) John McDonald There was potentially an engaging film in this material, but the fuse burns slowly from start to finish, and nothing ever goes bang.
Posted Nov 13, 2023
The Origin of Evil (2022) John McDonald The gothic mansion, the feared but wounded patriarch, the ghastly family, the scheming grifter who takes her chances… we’ve seen these things a thousand times, but they never lose their appeal.
Posted Nov 13, 2023
Dumb Money (2023) John McDonald The hedge fund guys are still thriving, still doing exactly what they did before, perhaps with a trifle more caution.
Posted Nov 13, 2023
Killers of the Flower Moon (2023) John McDonald Ernest can’t draw a line between fact and fiction. He is unable to reconcile his genuine feelings with the part he is expected to play in this genocidal plot.
Posted Nov 13, 2023
Lie with Me (2022) John McDonald Stéphane has made a fetish of his teenage affair, using it to fuel his literary imagination, but he must have known that first loves rarely survive
Posted Nov 13, 2023
Scrapper (2023) John McDonald Scrapper is constantly animated by a spirit of fun, as if Regan and her team couldn’t bring themselves to dwell too long on the sad bits.
Posted Nov 13, 2023
The Creator (2023) John McDonald Although ‘New Asia’ is America’s enemy, we are encouraged to transfer our sympathies in that direction. Yet the abiding vision of Asian life is a mass of touristic clichés seen through western eyes.
Posted Nov 13, 2023
The Exorcist: Believer (2023) John McDonald The outcome is a qualified success – a horror feature that tries to say something profound about good and evil, love and faith, but ultimately creeps around the edges of these big topics.
Posted Nov 13, 2023
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