Joe Baltake
Tomatometer-approved critic
Biography:
Growing up, I wiled away my time at the movies. I'd sit through a movie two, three times and, at night, my dreams invariably would be about movies and the people in them. While other kids were out in the sun, I'd be committing movie dialogue to memory. A fair amount of time was spent either at the local theater (called the Liberty, which, in my case, was apt, as it liberated my mind) or reading about movies, talking about movies, analyzing them. Every school essay somehow was twisted into a movie review. Life, as far as I was concerned, was simply a grand excuse to go to the movies and then sit around and just think about them. When you're 10, no one bothers you if you stare at the ceiling all day, connecting the cracks. My personality was shaped largely on my parents' living room floor. Later, when I became a professional movie critic (for Gannett, Knight-Ridder and McClatchy Newspapers), I realized that making a living out of looking at movies in the afternoon is another way of connecting the cracks in the ceiling. Everyone does it and I've a hunch that the way a person connects the lines, the way he or she analyzes a movie, says a lot about them. My passion now is those films that have been neglected, overlooked, underrated, hastily dismissed, unfairly maligned and generally forgotten -- and that are just about impossible to see anymore. In short, definitely not the usual suspects. Check out http://thepassionatemoviegoer.blogspot.com/ for assorted observations, pronouncements and viewpoints on such films.
Favorites:
Billy Wilder's The Apartment and Ave in a Hole, Mervyn LeRoy's Gypsy, Orson Welles' Citizen Kane, Sam Peckinpah's The Getaway, Jean Renoir's Le Grand Illusion/The Grand Illusion, Alfred Hitchcock's Strangers on a Train, Rear Window, Vertigo and Marnie, Charles Chaplin's City Lights, Jean-Luc Godard's A Bout de Souffle/Breathless, Peter Bogdanovich's At Long Last Love, Richard Quine's Bell Book & Candle and The Notorious Landlady, Fritz Lang's Der Mude Tod/Destiny, Morton DaCosta's Auntie Mame, John Ford's The Searchers, Brian DePalma's Blow Out, Hal Ashby's The Landlord and Vincente Minnelli's Some Came Running
Official Website:
http://www.thepassionatemoviegoer.blogspot.com
North (1994)
12%
EDIT
“An achingly bad movie in which adult filmmakers project their own cynicism, psychological problems and twisted values onto children.” –
Sacramento Bee
Jan 26, 2026
Full Review
Misery (1990)
87%
3/4
EDIT
“Even though it takes down to its audience, its material is rich with possibilities, and Reiner and company make the most of it. ” –
Sacramento Bee
Jan 22, 2026
Full Review
Bite the Bullet (1975)
69%
EDIT
“If "Bite the Bullet" says anything, it says that the real heroes among us are the doers. Pure entertainment coupled with a positive message. Ecstasy!” –
Philadelphia Daily News
Jan 15, 2026
Full Review
Stand by Me (1986)
88%
EDIT
“The gifted Rob Reiner managed to convince someone to give him enough money to make an intimate little movie about friendship.” –
Philadelphia Daily News
Jan 12, 2026
Full Review
A Few Good Men (1992)
85%
4/4
EDIT
“[The cast] all work well together in this thoughtful consideration of a society that creates bullies and, alas, only a few good men.” –
Sacramento Bee
Jan 8, 2026
Full Review
The Sure Thing (1985)
84%
EDIT
“The Sure Thing suffers from a niceness that gets to be mundane. ” –
Philadelphia Daily News
Jan 8, 2026
Full Review
The Princess Bride (1987)
93%
2/4
EDIT
“The Princess Bride is exactly what the little boy suspects it will be -- a dull "kissy book." It's a good argument for playing with a Spiderman video game or watching Ron Howard in American Graffiti for the umpteenth time.” –
Sacramento Bee
Jan 7, 2026
Full Review
Death Race 2000 (1975)
80%
EDIT
“A rain-bath of sickie violence, physical brutality, sadism and cornball humor runs rampant throughout "Death Race 2000."” –
Philadelphia Daily News
Dec 22, 2025
Full Review
Hook (1991)
37%
2/4
EDIT
“One of those slick, expensive novelty items that looks good in the showroom but proves to be virtually useless once you get it home. You can't play with it. There's nothing to do with it, but just stand there and admire how bright and shiny it is. ” –
Sacramento Bee
Dec 19, 2025
Full Review
Christine (1983)
72%
EDIT
“Watching this movie is like being trapped in a stalled car or, worse yet, in a car at a drive-in theater.” –
Philadelphia Daily News
Dec 17, 2025
Full Review
Big Top Pee-wee (1988)
31%
2/4
EDIT
“Very little is funny about the movie's second half.” –
Sacramento Bee
Dec 13, 2025
Full Review
True Lies (1994)
77%
0/4
EDIT
“So bad and plays to such a low common denominator that it just may be a hit. ” –
Sacramento Bee
Dec 10, 2025
Full Review
The Abyss (1989)
76%
4/4
EDIT
“It is a genuinely grown-up entertainment, picking up and producing emotional steam as it moves along.” –
Sacramento Bee
Dec 9, 2025
Full Review
Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991)
91%
EDIT
“The film is exciting even though nothing really exciting happens in it. It's all movie magic.” –
McClatchy News Service
Dec 8, 2025
Full Review
The Terminator (1984)
90%
EDIT
“It is difficult to say whether Cameron's forte is his penchant for tidy storytelling or his knack for staging action sequences. His film is original, fluent and preposterous yet believable. ” –
Philadelphia Daily News
Dec 8, 2025
Full Review
Peeper (1975)
30%
EDIT
“It's the jolliest show about deadly detective doings to come our way in a long, long time.” –
Philadelphia Daily News
Nov 21, 2025
Full Review
The Wiz (1978)
38%
EDIT
“"The Wiz" is a dud.” –
Philadelphia Daily News
Nov 17, 2025
Full Review
The Running Man (1987)
59%
2/4
EDIT
“It is quickly deadened by one predictable, repetitious confrontation after another.” –
Sacramento Bee
Nov 6, 2025
Full Review
Predator 2 (1990)
36%
1.5/4
EDIT
“Glover has said this is "more cerebral" than the original; it would have to be.” –
Sacramento Bee
Oct 31, 2025
Full Review
Dracula (1979)
64%
EDIT
“Badham has conjured up a handsome traditional version of the story, replete with the kind of straightforward storytelling, ambience and look that has made the Hammer horror films so durable and satisfying over the years.” –
Philadelphia Daily News
Oct 22, 2025
Full Review
Re-Animator (1985)
88%
EDIT
“Stuart Gordon's "Re-Animator" is your basic predictable, use-every-trick-in-the-book contemporary horror movie.” –
Philadelphia Daily News
Oct 16, 2025
Full Review
Desert Hearts (1985)
77%
EDIT
“Deitch's intentions don't coincide with her script or casting. ” –
Philadelphia Daily News
Oct 13, 2025
Full Review
My Beautiful Laundrette (1985)
95%
EDIT
“The situations in My Beautiful Laundrette may not sound like much, but Frears' camera eye brings them to pulsating life, using atmosphere to get at some unforgettable truths as it chronicles a young man's not so sentimental education.” –
Philadelphia Daily News
Oct 10, 2025
Full Review
Farewell, My Lovely (1975)
76%
EDIT
“"Farewell, My Lovely" is an expert reconstruction of the gritty crime movies of the '40s, and yet, there's something individualistic and unique about it.” –
Philadelphia Daily News
Oct 8, 2025
Full Review
Tron (1982)
60%
EDIT
“[TRON] looks like a bad imitation of Roy Lichtenstein pop-art paintings crossed with Ralph Bakshi's hideous rotoscope process.” –
Philadelphia Daily News
Oct 6, 2025
Full Review
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