About Defacto Film Reviews
Defacto Film Reviews is a unique site where the film critics are also filmmakers themselves. It will feature weekly reviews as well as lists and more.
Originally formed in 2002 under Defactoweb.com, our website’s chief film critic is Robert Joseph Butler. His top ten lists were featured under Movie City News. His reviews have also been published at Michigan Movie Magazine and on Michigan’s longest running film school website, MPIFilm.com. His reviews have also been featured and published in The Oakland Press as well, which is one of Michigan’s largest newspaper publications.
He later went on to become an award-winning filmmaker of several independent short films including such festival hits as The Spirit of Isabel and Within, which won the Audience Choice Award at the 2015 Cinetopia International Film Festival. His short film “The Girl on the Mat” won Best Screenplay at the 2017 Queens World Film Festival. His most recent feature length movie, “Blood Immortal,” won Best Horror Feature Film at the 24th annual Indie Gathering International Film Festival and is now available to own on DVD and is available on Digital streaming platforms.
Using grassroots support, the site is devoted to celebrating independent and art-house cinema, as well as to high-crafted films that tell engaging stories with vision, focus, and skill.
Defacto Film Reviews is a unique case where the film critics are also filmmakers themselves. We will give readers comprehensible, honest, and erudite analysis of each film.
Rating System–4 Stars





Reviews published in
The Humans
Stephen Karams' experience as a playwright and screenwriter (The Seagull, Speech & Debate) delivers him promising directing skills in The Humans, a Thanksgiving family reunion dark comedy that is carried out with caustic humor and [...]
The Feast
Slow-paced films, when done right, can offer a rewarding journey exploring intricately written characters along with an engrossing narrative. Though, when a film is seeking to capture these slow-paced arcs, its path can be lost [...]
House of Gucci
Following the traditional rise and fall formula, where the main characters of the yarn rise from nothing and fall right after hitting the peak as the narrative unfolds, House of Gucci is a deeply flawed [...]
Ghostbusters: Afterlife
After the unnecessary debacle over the failed 2016 relaunch of Ghostbusters, the decision was made to salvage the franchise by instead following the trend of legacyquels and craft a follow-up to the original two films. [...]
tick, tick…Boom!
Jonathan Larson quickly became one of the defining voices of his generation, and never even lived to witness it. Larson passed away suddenly from an aneurism from marfin’s syndrome the night before the opening day [...]
King Richard
Following his 2018 feature debut, the Sundance police drama "Monsters and Men," Reinaldo Marcus Green makes a huge leap from an indie drama to a studio drama with King Richard, a highly inspiring sports drama [...]
Red Notice
What do the films, Indiana Jones And The Raiders Of The Lost Ark (1981), Oceans 11 (2001), and The Hitman’s Bodyguard (2017) have in common? Well, almost nothing except for the fact Netflix’s new action-comedy, [...]
Wes Anderson Retrospective (Film Rankings from Worst to Best)
Wes Anderson's tenth film, The French Dispatch, was just recently released to some polarizing reactions from both critics and audiences, but it still has its champions. The most common question I have been getting from [...]
Passing
Actress turned filmmaker Rebecca Hall's debut feature shows a commendable passion for human drama, as well as for the technical aspects of filmmaking, composition, and framing in Passing, a black-and-white period piece marital/social drama that [...]
Belfast
In Kenneth Branagh's award-winning crowd-pleaser, Belfast, a nostalgic and self-autobiographical chronicle of Branagh's own childhood as well as a tribute to his lovable and loving family--who is forced to come to terms with the growing [...]
The Beta Test
What is it about Jim Cummings and PJ McCabe’s, The Beta Test, that lures and attracts audiences into the psychological disarray that it is? Perhaps it’s the dreamscape-esque environment the film takes place in that [...]
Wife of A Spy
Once again succeeding on a artistic level, Wife of A Spy, which is acclaimed Japanese filmmaker Kiyoshsi Kurosawa's 23rd film which was released on Japanese Television last year during the pandemic, but released theatrically here [...]
The Harder They Fall
Attempting to reinvent and create a refreshing twist to a century-old genre is quite the challenge, especially when it comes to westerns. And yet Jeymes Samuel takes that challenge and runs with it, crafting decently [...]
Spencer
Centering on a more romanticized but accurate chapter in the detached marriage of Princess Diana and Prince Charles, Pablo Larrain's Spencer is an exquisitely crafted, superbly acted biographical drama about the emotional anxiety and distress [...]
Eternals
What would a filmmaker like Chloe Zhao, coming off her much-deserved Oscar win(s) for her cinematic masterwork, Nomadland, and known for small, intimate character pieces set in the American west, find intriguing about working within [...]
Mogul Mowgli
In his sophomore effort, the dramatic film Mogul Mowgli, Pakistani filmmaker Bassam Tariq holds a lot of promise as a co-writer and director with his first attempt at narrative filmmaking. After making a splash on [...]
Ema
Though not entirely cohesive, Ema, Pablo Larrain's Chilean drama, is a challenging, skillfully directed drama that showcases more of his artistry and elegant visual eye that hopefully more audiences will seek out and prepare themselves [...]
Last Night in Soho
After years of making acclaimed genre comedies, filmmaker Edgar Wright finally struck commercial gold with his fifth feature film, Baby Driver, earning both universal critical acclaim and over $200 million at the worldwide box office. [...]
Antlers
Adapted by Nick Antosca's short horror fable The Quiet Boy, Antlers delivers the rich atmosphere and creepy thrills of a more retro creature feature from the 80s, but it suffers from some underwritten subtext and [...]
The French Dispatch
It's no surprise to find that Wes Anderson returns to his singular style and traits that he is celebrated for with The Royal Tenenbaums and The Grand Budapest Hotel being his highlights, yet his distinctive [...]




















