Winston Burdett
Winston Burdett's reviews only count toward the Tomatometer® when published at Tomatometer-approved publication(s).
The President's Mystery (1936)
80%
“The picture works up considerable interest.” –
Brooklyn Daily Eagle
Oct 25, 2022
Full Review
Java Head (1934)
71%
“[Java Head] proceeds from a fairly arresting situation, becomes suddenly vague toward the middle and hastens thence to a pat and unsatisfying conclusion.” –
Brooklyn Daily Eagle
Oct 21, 2022
Full Review
The Great Ziegfeld (1936)
72%
“Though it is a flattering tribute to the taste of the late showman, The Great Ziegfeld is also an apt one, for it has the same combination of gaudiness and elegance, of show and finish, which you associate with a good "Follies."” –
Brooklyn Daily Eagle
Dec 2, 2021
Full Review
Redes (1936)
75%
“The film fails completely, as drama, to do Justice to its theme, faltering now and again through irresolute direction, underdeveloped story and the inadequacy of its native players before the movie camera.” –
Brooklyn Daily Eagle
Aug 25, 2021
Full Review
Modern Times (1936)
98%
“What begins as a rather heavy lampooning gets lost in a series of first-rate slapstick acts and ends up as an idyll. Modern Tunes is, of course, funny picture; it Is also a very disappointing one.” –
Brooklyn Daily Eagle
May 6, 2021
Full Review
A Night at the Opera (1935)
97%
“Luckily the the film is sufficiently rich in comic invention to compensate for the banality of its material. My only objection is that it throws away an open chance for satire.” –
Brooklyn Daily Eagle
Nov 19, 2020
Full Review
Frisco Kid (1935)
“The direction and writing of the film are hardly distinguished, but there are numerous able performances.” –
Brooklyn Daily Eagle
Nov 19, 2020
Full Review
The Melody Lingers On (1935)
“Miss Hutchinson acts very ably, despite the caprices of the scenario.” –
Brooklyn Daily Eagle
Nov 19, 2020
Full Review
The Raven (1935)
79%
“What inspired the makers of The Raven would be hard to say, but one can be reasonably certain that it wasn't the poem of Edgar Poe, whose title they have appropriated.” –
Brooklyn Daily Eagle
Oct 14, 2020
Full Review
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