Pauline Kael (born June 19, 1919, Petaluma, California, U.S.—died September 3, 2001, Great Barrington, Massachusetts) was a prominent American film critic of the second half of the 20th century.
Kael graduated from the University of California at Berkeley in 1940. For a number of years she made a precarious living with various minor jobs. She had been an avid fan of the movies since childhood, and in 1953 she published her first piece of film criticism in City Lights magazine in San Francisco. Other articles followed in Partisan Review, Moviegoer, Kulchur, and other journals, and her work began to appear regularly in Film Quarterly. For several years from 1955 she broadcast film reviews over the radio stations of the Pacifica network, and during that time she also managed a pair of art film cinemas in Berkeley.
Kael’s reputation among film buffs and fellow critics for honest, lively, and penetrating criticism led to the publication in 1965 of a collection of her articles in book form under the characteristic title I Lost It at the Movies. The book was a best-seller and won her assignments from such major general-circulation magazines as Life, Holiday, Mademoiselle, and McCall’s. She was the regular film reviewer for McCall’s for some months in 1966 and for The New Republic in 1967, and in 1968 she joined The New Yorker. She reviewed films for that magazine until her retirement in 1991.
Kael was a witty and acerbic critic who considered films in the context of both their audience and contemporary culture in general. Her reviews were both knowledgeable and opinionated and were written in an exhilarating prose style. Subsequent collections of her reviews included Kiss Kiss Bang Bang (1968), Going Steady (1970), Deeper Into Movies (1973), When the Lights Go Down (1980), 5001 Nights at the Movies (1982), Taking It All In (1984), State of the Art (1985), Hooked (1989), Movie Love (1991), and For Keeps (1994).