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Algo Más Que Cine

Algo Más Que Cine is not a Tomatometer-approved publication. Reviews from this publication only count toward the Tomatometer® when written by the following Tomatometer-approved critic(s): Dionar Hidalgo.

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Rating Title | Year Author Quote
7/10
La Cena (2025) Dionar Hidalgo A well-crafted tragicomedy set in post–Civil War Spain, La cena balances satire and tension with solid performances and strong production design. Entertaining and polished, though it stops short of delivering a truly biting political punch.
Posted Feb 15, 2026Edit critic review
7/10
Aída y Vuelta (2026) Dionar Hidalgo More than a reunion, Aída y vuelta turns nostalgia into meta-commentary. Sharp, self-aware and powered by cast chemistry, it reflects on comedy, fame and changing sensitivities—uneven at times, but smart enough to justify its return.
Posted Feb 15, 2026Edit critic review
5/10
Ella McCay (2025) Dionar Hidalgo Warm, old-fashioned and uneven, Ella McCay recalls James L. Brooks at his most sentimental. A strong cast and flashes of sharp dialogue can’t fully overcome its scattered narrative, but it remains an endearing, if flawed, adult dramedy.
Posted Feb 15, 2026Edit critic review
7/10
Crime 101 (2026) Dionar Hidalgo Sleek, controlled and proudly derivative, Crime 101 doesn’t reinvent the heist movie but plays it with style and conviction. Strong performances and tight set pieces outweigh familiar beats in this polished neo-noir throwback.
Posted Feb 15, 2026Edit critic review
5/10
Greenland 2: Migration (2026) Dionar Hidalgo Bigger in scale but smaller in impact, Greenland 2: Migration trades intimacy for generic spectacle. Solid effects and a committed Gerard Butler can’t hide a sequel that feels predictable, overly solemn and ultimately interchangeable.
Posted Feb 15, 2026Edit critic review
8/10
Wuthering Heights (2026) Dionar Hidalgo Emerald Fennell’s Wuthering Heights isn’t faithful to Brontë, but it’s fiercely intoxicating. Stylish, sensual and unapologetically excessive, it reimagines Cathy and Heathcliff as addicts of desire in a visually ravishing gothic fever dream.
Posted Feb 12, 2026Edit critic review
8/10
It Would Be Night in Caracas (2025) Dionar Hidalgo Aún es de noche en Caracas is an intense, claustrophobic political thriller that turns Venezuela’s collapse into lived experience, using fear, identity loss, and survival as a stark warning for Latin America’s fragile democracies.
Posted Feb 07, 2026Edit critic review
8/10
Dracula (2025) Dionar Hidalgo Radu Jude’s Dracula is a ferocious, grotesque essay on myth, power, and cultural appropriation, turning the vampire into a symbol of capitalism, nationalism, and digital excess with fearless, exhausting energy.
Posted Feb 07, 2026Edit critic review
7/10
Strange River (2025) Dionar Hidalgo A tender, atmospheric coming-of-age film that embraces ambiguity over answers, Strange River turns adolescent desire and family tension into a hypnotic, beautifully textured journey of feeling rather than explanation.
Posted Feb 07, 2026Edit critic review
8/10
Palestine '36 (2025) Dionar Hidalgo A sweeping yet intimate historical epic, Palestine 36 revisits the roots of conflict with clarity and restraint. Anchored by strong performances and a humanist gaze, Annemarie Jacir turns history into a necessary act of remembrance.
Posted Jan 24, 2026Edit critic review
6/10
The Captive (2025) Dionar Hidalgo A polished and ambitious historical drama that finds poetry in imagination as survival, but plays it a bit too safe. Elegant, provocative at times, yet oddly restrained for a film about the birth of literary madness.
Posted Jan 24, 2026Edit critic review
6/10
All You Need Is Kill (2025) Dionar Hidalgo A visually striking and melancholic take on the time-loop premise. Akimoto’s anime finds beauty in repetition and despair, but its thin characterization and rushed emotional turns keep it from fully blooming.
Posted Jan 24, 2026Edit critic review
2/10
Mercy (2026) Dionar Hidalgo A dystopian thriller that looks like a warning but plays like propaganda. Mercy borrows the aesthetics of classic sci-fi while quietly endorsing surveillance, police states, and algorithmic justice. Stylish noise, hollow ideas
Posted Jan 24, 2026Edit critic review
7/10
Paternal Leave (2025) Dionar Hidalgo A quiet, honest debut that finds emotional power in silences and small gestures. Juli Grabenhenrich is a revelation, and Luca Marinelli brings fragile restraint, even if the film hesitates to fully explore the weight of absent fatherhood.
Posted Jan 18, 2026Edit critic review
6/10
She Walks in Darkness (2025) Dionar Hidalgo A restrained and competent infiltration thriller, anchored by a solid lead performance. Díaz Yanes builds tension and historical context, but the film’s didactic tone and shallow psychology keep it from digging deeper into its troubling subject.
Posted Jan 18, 2026Edit critic review
6/10
The Piano Accident (2025) Dionar Hidalgo A sharp, abrasive satire of viral fame, elevated by Adèle Exarchopoulos’ deliberately ugly performance. Dupieux provokes and entertains, but the film’s punch fades quickly, leaving more sting than substance.
Posted Jan 18, 2026Edit critic review
8/10
28 Years Later: The Bone Temple (2026) Dionar Hidalgo A ferocious, human-centered reinvention of the franchise. DaCosta and Garland turn zombies into background noise, letting Fiennes and a terrifying Jack O’Connell explore how language, power, and cruelty truly end the world.
Posted Jan 14, 2026Edit critic review
6/10
The Tank (2025) Dionar Hidalgo 'Der Tiger' trades battlefield spectacle for moral decay and existential dread. Claustrophobic and technically impressive, it raises sharp questions about guilt and obedience, but struggles to turn its heavy ideas into compelling drama.
Posted Jan 11, 2026Edit critic review
6/10
Rental Family (2025) Dionar Hidalgo A gentle, well-meaning dramedy carried by Brendan Fraser’s warmth. Rental Family touches on loneliness and emotional labor, but its reluctance to dig deeper turns a fascinating premise into a safe, sentimental comfort watch.
Posted Jan 11, 2026Edit critic review
7/10
Song Sung Blue (2025) Dionar Hidalgo A warm, crowd-pleasing biopic lifted by Hugh Jackman’s showmanship and, above all, Kate Hudson’s heartfelt performance. Conventional and rushed in its drama, but emotionally anchored by Hudson’s undeniable screen presence.
Posted Dec 30, 2025Edit critic review
9/10
2000 Meters to Andriivka (2025) Dionar Hidalgo Relentless and immersive, 2000 Meters to Andriivka turns a short distance into an abyss. Chernov places us inside the war’s physical and emotional toll, stripping combat of heroism and revealing only exhaustion, loss, and uncertainty.
Posted Dec 29, 2025Edit critic review
8/10
Mr. Nobody Against Putin (2025) Dionar Hidalgo A chilling, intimate look at how war is taught before it’s fought. Mr. Nobody Against Putin reveals the classroom as a frontline, where propaganda replaces education and fear quietly shapes the next generation.
Posted Dec 29, 2025Edit critic review
8/10
Apocalypse in the Tropics (2024) Dionar Hidalgo A chilling, deeply personal essay on how faith mutates into power. Petra Costa exposes Brazil’s evangelical populism as a global warning: democracy doesn’t collapse overnight—it’s slowly preached into oblivion.
Posted Dec 27, 2025Edit critic review
8/10
Cover-Up (2025) Dionar Hidalgo A rigorous, unsentimental portrait of Seymour Hersh that doubles as a defense of investigative journalism. Laura Poitras and Mark Obenhaus craft a sober, gripping reminder of why truth still matters in an age of noise.
Posted Dec 26, 2025Edit critic review
6/10
Goodbye June (2025) Dionar Hidalgo A well-acted and sincere family drama elevated by Mirren and Riseborough, but held back by a cautious direction and a predictable script. Kate Winslet shows promise behind the camera, even if Goodbye June plays it too safe.
Posted Dec 26, 2025Edit critic review
8/10
We Shall Not Be Moved (2024) Dionar Hidalgo A powerful debut that turns historical trauma into lived, intimate cinema. Luisa Huertas anchors a film about memory, impunity, and the cost of refusing to forget, rejecting easy forgiveness in favor of uneasy, necessary remembrance.
Posted Dec 26, 2025Edit critic review
6/10
The Storm (2024) Dionar Hidalgo A visually stunning animated film with a confusing but heartfelt core. Its myth-heavy narrative feels culturally distant, yet the father-son bond and bold artistic vision make it an intriguing, if uneven, experience.
Posted Dec 25, 2025Edit critic review
6/10
Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere (2025) Dionar Hidalgo A respectful and intimate portrait of Bruce Springsteen during the making of Nebraska, elevated by Jeremy Allen White’s soulful performance. Honest and restrained, yet too conventional to match the boldness of the album it celebrates.
Posted Dec 23, 2025Edit critic review
3/10
Anaconda (2025) Dionar Hidalgo A self-aware remake that knows its jokes but never sharpens them. Jack Black and Paul Rudd can’t rescue thin characters, flat satire, or toothless horror. A clever idea strangled by caution and predictability.
Posted Dec 23, 2025Edit critic review
7/10
The Housemaid (2025) Dionar Hidalgo A glossy, twisty thriller that leans heavily on ’90s erotic noir vibes. Amanda Seyfried steals the show, elevating uneven material. It lacks the boldness of its influences, but delivers guilty-pleasure fun when it finally lets loose.
Posted Dec 23, 2025Edit critic review
5/10
Christy (2025) Dionar Hidalgo A painfully routine sports biopic that wastes an extraordinary life. Despite solid physical work from Sydney Sweeney, Christy relies on tired boxing clichés and domestic abuse tropes, offering little insight into its trailblazing subject.
Posted Dec 21, 2025Edit critic review
5/10
The Carpenter's Son (2025) Dionar Hidalgo An intriguing but frustrating biblical horror that never commits. Strong ideas and a solid Noah Jupe performance can’t save a tonally confused film where Nicolas Cage feels miscast and ambition collapses into a muddled, forgettable experience.
Posted Dec 21, 2025Edit critic review
6/10
Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery (2025) Dionar Hidalgo A darker, more serious Knives Out that aims high but lands unevenly. Strong performances, especially Josh O’Connor, can’t fully save an overlong mystery that promises depth on faith and power but settles for clever distraction.
Posted Dec 21, 2025Edit critic review
7/10
She Rides Shotgun (2025) Dionar Hidalgo A gritty modern western powered by a raw father-daughter bond. Taron Egerton is compelling, but Ana Sophia Heger is extraordinary, grounding the violence with real emotional weight and making this adaptation quietly devastating.
Posted Dec 21, 2025Edit critic review
6/10
Nuremberg (2025) Dionar Hidalgo A polished historical drama that confuses gravity with spectacle. Russell Crowe commands the screen, but James Vanderbilt’s film plays it too safe, offering solemnity without insight and prestige without true moral interrogation.
Posted Dec 14, 2025Edit critic review
7/10
Blue Moon (2025) Dionar Hidalgo Ethan Hawke delivers a heartbreaking, career-best performance in Blue Moon, a beautifully worded, intimate chamber piece where Linklater turns one night of despair into a luminous portrait of artistic ruin and fleeting human connection.
Posted Dec 09, 2025Edit critic review
5/10
Jay Kelly (2025) Dionar Hidalgo Jay Kelly delivers strong performances from Clooney and Sandler, but Baumbach’s film sinks into Hollywood self-indulgence, offering a glossy yet shallow portrait of fame, loneliness, and failed redemption.
Posted Dec 08, 2025Edit critic review
4/10
Afternoons of Solitude (2024) Dionar Hidalgo Stunningly shot but morally hollow, Serra’s bullfighting doc turns cruelty into visual ornament. A hypnotic yet empty exercise where style smothers substance, leaving beauty complicit with brutality.
Posted Dec 07, 2025Edit critic review
9/10
Orwell: 2 + 2 = 5 (2025) Dionar Hidalgo A furious and essential essay-doc, Orwell: 2+2=5 confronts today’s political nightmare with haunting clarity. Peck’s dense, unsettling montage turns Orwell’s warnings into a blistering call to awareness—and resistance.
Posted Dec 07, 2025Edit critic review
2/5
Five Nights at Freddy's 2 (2025) Dionar Hidalgo Clunky, overstuffed, and strangely lifeless, Five Nights at Freddy’s 2 trades genuine scares for incoherent lore. Even the animatronics can’t save a sequel that feels more like brand maintenance than an actual movie.
Posted Dec 05, 2025Edit critic review
8/10
Left-Handed Girl (2025) Dionar Hidalgo Bursting with color and chaotic charm, Left-Handed Girl blends humor, heartbreak, and feminist bite. Tsou’s iPhone-shot whirlwind offers vibrant performances and a raw, lived-in energy that turns everyday struggle into cinematic delight.
Posted Dec 03, 2025Edit critic review
8/10
Homebound (2025) Dionar Hidalgo A grounded and emotionally powerful drama, Homebound captures the quiet resilience of two marginalized friends fighting for dignity. Ghaywan’s restraint and the leads’ remarkable chemistry turn a social critique into a deeply human story.
Posted Dec 03, 2025Edit critic review
4/10
Regretting You (2025) Dionar Hidalgo Despite solid turns from Williams and Thames, Regretting You stumbles through tonal swings and shallow melodrama. Boone’s glossy adaptation leans on nostalgia and soundtrack cues but never finds the emotional depth its story demands.
Posted Dec 01, 2025Edit critic review
6/10
Roofman (2025) Dionar Hidalgo A warm and engaging crime dramedy uplifted by Tatum and Dunst’s chemistry, Roofman charms but never digs deep enough. Cianfrance trades his usual raw edge for a gentler touch, resulting in an appealing yet surprisingly subdued film.
Posted Dec 01, 2025Edit critic review
7/10
Winter in Sokcho (2024) Dionar Hidalgo A visually delicate and emotionally restrained debut, "Winter in Sokcho" captures identity and longing with quiet power. Kamura crafts a sensory, melancholic tale anchored by Bella Kim’s subtle performance and a striking sense of place.
Posted Nov 27, 2025Edit critic review
8/10
If I Had Legs I'd Kick You (2025) Dionar Hidalgo Powered by a career-best performance from Rose Byrne, If I Had Legs I’d Kick You is a raw, unrelenting portrait of maternal collapse—messy, anxious, and brutally human. Bronstein crafts a fiercely intimate drama that lingers long after it ends.
Posted Nov 25, 2025Edit critic review
9/10
Train Dreams (2025) Dionar Hidalgo A beautifully crafted, elegiac frontier drama elevated by Joel Edgerton’s quietly devastating performance. Though occasionally sentimental, Train Dreams offers a haunting, gorgeously shot meditation on loss, memory, and the vanishing American landscape.
Posted Nov 25, 2025Edit critic review
4/10
Wicked: For Good (2025) Dionar Hidalgo Visually lavish but emotionally hollow, Wicked: For Good sinks under its "more is more" approach. Erivo shines, yet the film’s rushed storytelling and overexplained mythology drain the magic. A loud, glossy, strangely joyless finale.
Posted Nov 24, 2025Edit critic review
6/10
Good Fortune (2025) Dionar Hidalgo A charming but uneven fable. Ansari blends fantasy, class critique and gentle comedy, though the script is overly literal. Keanu Reeves shines as a lovable, misguided angel, giving warmth to a debut that’s heartfelt, funny and flawed in equal measure.
Posted Nov 21, 2025Edit critic review
7/10
After the Hunt (2025) Dionar Hidalgo A sharp, unsettling drama where Guadagnino dissects power, guilt, and moral ambiguity with precise direction. Strong performances and steady tension make it a compelling and quietly haunting character study.
Posted Nov 21, 2025Edit critic review
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