For 482 reviews, this critic has graded:
  • 48% higher than the average critic
  • 2% same as the average critic
  • 50% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 5 points lower than other critics. (0-100 point scale)

Jay Scott's Scores

  • Movies
  • TV
Average review score: 61
Highest review score: 100 The Black Stallion
Lowest review score: 0 Another 48 Hrs.
Score distribution:
482 movie reviews
    • 66 Metascore
    • 88 Jay Scott
    THE BOND by which to compare all other Bonds is Goldfinger and by that standard Moonraker, the 11th chapter in the exploits of Agent 007, is second-best. But, by the standards of most of the other candy served up as summer fare, Moonraker is marzipan - it's so insubstantial it melts in your mouth, but its flavor is distinctive and you can't get enough of it. [30 June 1979]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 66 Metascore
    • 75 Jay Scott
    Polanski has always inspired comparisons to Hitchcock, back to Cul-de-Sac and up to Rosemary's Baby and beyond, but this is the first time he has intentionally set out to replicate the thrills, chills and laughter of Hitchcock's best work. He succeeds, but with a difference: the last half-hour, at once improbable and horrible and self-referentially satiric, is pure Polanski. [27 Feb 1988]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 66 Metascore
    • 38 Jay Scott
    American Me is a graphic and honest effort that, unfortunately, becomes a catalogue of other films on similar subjects. Its depiction of prison life is much too slow, too long, too repetitive and too familiar. [13 Mar 1992, p. C3]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 66 Metascore
    • 38 Jay Scott
    Casting Eastwood in a friendly, bumbling, light romantic lead is like asking Ethel Merman to sing a lullaby: in the end, nothing is forthcoming but overkill. Clint Eastwood was already famous for that. [16 June 1980]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 66 Metascore
    • 75 Jay Scott
    Even when their material is not much more substantial than a punchline overheard in a playground, Cheech and Chong, in their routines together, make being funny look as effortless as Ella Fitzgerald makes singing sound.[23 July 1980]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 66 Metascore
    • 75 Jay Scott
    It is emphatically not for people who like either Twain or the more sophisticated manifestations of the Arthurian legend (the Camelot musical or Thomas Berger's Arthur Rex) but it is a well-directed, nicely acted bit of slapstick that has young audiences squealing with delight. [13 Aug 1979]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 66 Metascore
    • 38 Jay Scott
    Flashy Talk Radio offers little but babble: A mindless, hollow look at a sad symbiosis. [21 Dec 1988]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 66 Metascore
    • 75 Jay Scott
    A tough, effective, socially conscious melodrama in the old Warner Brothers tradition. [15 Feb 1982]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 66 Metascore
    • 75 Jay Scott
    The Return of the Living Dead, a parody of George A. Romero's unforgettably frightening Night of the Living Dead, is not for everybody, but it's one of the funniest films of its kind ever made. [16 Aug 1985]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 66 Metascore
    • 50 Jay Scott
    Delicatessen is a carniverous sausage - lots of fat, a few meaty bits. [10 Apr 1992]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 66 Metascore
    • 75 Jay Scott
    The film as a whole, beautifully drawn and gracefully set into balletic motion, teaches a few welcome lessons regarding ecology and racial tolerance. [19 Nov 1988]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 65 Metascore
    • 75 Jay Scott
    The plot gives Brest a structure on which to build a minor, gentle, subtle miracle; he uses the hackneyed plot as the foundation for a restrained monument to the dreams of the elderly. Going in Style has many of the simple but considerable virtues of Best Boy - the epiphanies may be diminutive, but they linger. [27 Dec 1979]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 65 Metascore
    • 63 Jay Scott
    Scarface is a B- movie with singularly silly psychological pretensions: its neo-primitivism is to the complex moral cosmos of Francis Coppola's "Godfather" saga as Disney is to Dickens. [09 Dec 1983]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 65 Metascore
    • 75 Jay Scott
    La Bamba may in many ways be a catalogue of cliches, but they are cliches that Valens was able to live for his people for the first time, and they are cliches that Luis Valdez has been able to film for his people (for all people) for the first time.
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 65 Metascore
    • 50 Jay Scott
    Despite the efforts of the talented director, Alan Rudolph (The Moderns, Choose Me), and his experienced cast, Mortal Thoughts is a formulaic TV-sized feature conceived to cash in, and put a feminist spin on, some of the emotions stirred up by Fatal Attraction; unfortunately, it seldom gets intense enough to stir up any emotion. [19 Apr 1991]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 65 Metascore
    • 50 Jay Scott
    And despite the technically impressive quality of the soundtrack, the movie, directed by Karel Reisz, misses the music. [4 Oct 1985]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 65 Metascore
    • 50 Jay Scott
    There are lively, compelling scenes, particularly in the first hour - Raimi has an indubitable talent for camp mayhem - but the picture escalates into absurdity and the last half hour, essentially a chase sequence, is marred by suprisingly cheesy special effects. [24 Aug. 1990]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 65 Metascore
    • 50 Jay Scott
    Lone Wolf gets mad as a bee-stung boxer dog. [18 Apr 1983]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 65 Metascore
    • 75 Jay Scott
    The people behind Cocoon have taken many of the weariest of the cinematic cliches of the eighties and invested them with hearts and minds; from an unsightly chrysalis, a thing of beauty has been born. [21 June 1985]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 65 Metascore
    • 50 Jay Scott
    The Year of Living Dangerously is chic, enigmatic, self-assured - and empty. [18 Feb 1983]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 64 Metascore
    • 75 Jay Scott
    Absence of Malice is lively, provocative and intelligent, three qualities in short supply this Christmas. It simplifies, but it rarely distorts, and it doggedly picks at sores journalists would just as soon banish by Band-aid. [19 Dec 1981]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 64 Metascore
    • 88 Jay Scott
    Guilty by Suspicion is a morality play innocent of moralism and manipulation. It's what almost nobody thinks Hollywood is: decent. [15 Mar 1991]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 64 Metascore
    • 50 Jay Scott
    As directed by Michael Dinner from Charles Purpura's script, the movie combines the anti-Catholic satire of Sister Mary Ignatius Explains It All For You with the rowdy sexuality of Porky's and the stereotyping of every mediocre teen film ever made. [8 Feb 1985]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 64 Metascore
    • 63 Jay Scott
    Brooks' bravery is spiriting; in his debut he has written an unlikeable character doing unlikeable things to likeable people. One wishes his talent as a director matched his chutzpah. [17 Mar 1979]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 64 Metascore
    • 75 Jay Scott
    You may find yourself having more kinky fun in The Wanderers than you have had in any American movie for a long time, but when you try to grasp the meaning of what you've seen, you find yourself clutching at moonbeams. [31 Aug 1979]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 64 Metascore
    • 25 Jay Scott
    A shamelessly commercial and determinedly vulgar director, such as Flash Gordon's Mike Hodges, might have made the film work; it might have succeeded on one level instead of failing on many. [13 Dec 1980, p.E7]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 64 Metascore
    • 25 Jay Scott
    It don't mean nothin'. [28 Aug 1987]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 64 Metascore
    • 63 Jay Scott
    Suspense picture veteran Curtis Hanson (he directed The Bedroom Window and Bad Influence and wrote The Silent Partner) disguises the contrivances with energy and admirable performances, and the audience squeals and cheers on cue. [13 Jan 1992]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 64 Metascore
    • 50 Jay Scott
    Fried Green Tomatoes was obviously cooked up with the best of intentions but, like the dish to which it refers, it's rudimentary eats - not quite junk food, but not quite nourishing, either. [03 Jan 1992]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 64 Metascore
    • 88 Jay Scott
    Rosen has not so much adapted Watership Down as he has intelligently condensed it, and compensated for the simplifications with pleasures books can't provide. [20 Jan 1979]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 64 Metascore
    • 63 Jay Scott
    The movie is entertaining on a rudimentary, never-to-be-taken-seriously level. On the rare occasions when it does rise above the material, it's because Pierce Brosnan is chillingly effective as an assassin with the body temperature of a snake. [26 Aug 1987]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 64 Metascore
    • 38 Jay Scott
    The manipulative Star Wars-style score is the only novelty on tap in Silverado, which has a plot too drearily complicated and arid to summarize and an attitude almost unbearable in its dryly smirky assurance that it knows what you want from a Western, which is to say, action that never quits, emotion that's never felt, characters that are never real and situations that are never sensible. [10 Jul 1985, p.S7]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 63 Metascore
    • 63 Jay Scott
    The Schlondorff version of The Tin Drum is never more than an intelligent reduction and simplification of an enormous and complex work of art. [26 Apr 1980]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 63 Metascore
    • 88 Jay Scott
    The most amazing thing about this amazing movie may be that in the end it communicates the large uncertainties and small hopes of a twisted, inarticulate adolescent boy perfectly, and wordlessly. [14 Oct 1983]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 63 Metascore
    • 88 Jay Scott
    Fosse carries the movie to its conclusion steadily and superlatively, with a directness that is devastating and with a depth of insight that ameliorates, if only slightly, the ghastliness of the carefully choreographed images. [10 Nov 1983]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 63 Metascore
    • 50 Jay Scott
    William Smith, who plays Lucky Lonnie, a drag-strip racer in David Cronenberg's Fast Company, is a personification of country singer Waylon Jennings' voice: powerful and rich and funky and gentle. He doesn't hold Fast Company together - a vise the size of Paraguay couldn't hold Fast Company together - but his presence gives the movie an entirely undeserved distinction. [03 Oct 1979]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 63 Metascore
    • 75 Jay Scott
    Spader, the actor who rose to prominence in sex, lies and videotape, is excellent at delineating the erosion of Michael's conventionally celestial ethics, while Lowe, the actor who rose to prominence in the home version of sex, lies and videotape, is equally good at delineating the solidity of Alex's unconventionally sulphuric sadism. Sadistic or not, Alex knows how to give good time. So does Bad Influence. [12 Mar 1990]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 63 Metascore
    • 75 Jay Scott
    Writer Tesich, previously responsible for Four Friends and Breaking Away, serves Irving's material straight up - the adaptation is thorough and four-square and seemingly unconscious of the bizarre nature of Garp's odyssey through modern mores. The strategy works. [23 July 1982]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 63 Metascore
    • 50 Jay Scott
    On the most rudimentary levels - basic believability and coherent exposition - Hardcore is a joke without a punch line. [03 Mar 1979]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 63 Metascore
    • 63 Jay Scott
    It soars, all right, but it does it on automatic pilot. [10 June 1983]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 63 Metascore
    • 50 Jay Scott
    Cry-Baby is snifflingly nice. By going too far with its teardrop motif, it does the soggily unthinkable: it waters John Waters down. [6 Apr 1990]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 15 Metascore
    • 25 Jay Scott
    Deja vu's too kind a term to describe what happens in the latest chapter in the lives of the characters created so long ago in print by Peter Benchley and brought to life - and, eventually, to death - on screen by Steven Spielberg. [22 July 1987]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 63 Metascore
    • 75 Jay Scott
    The Lost Boys mixes comedy and horror with a dexterity that augments each. Dracula and Peter Pan were antipodal products of the same society: bringing them together has resulted in a marriage that would make Bram Stoker snicker and J.M. Barrie bawl. [1 Aug 1987, p.C5]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 62 Metascore
    • 100 Jay Scott
    Kurt Russell has never seemed more clever, Mel Gibson more vulnerable nor Michelle Pfeiffer more goddess-like. Once upon a time, before the pictures got small and the hills were obscured by smog, the Hollywood sign read: "Hollywoodland." That was back when Tequila Sunrise, an intelligent, escapist epic for adults, wouldn't have seemed the anomaly it seems today. [2 Dec 1988, p.C1]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 62 Metascore
    • 63 Jay Scott
    Taken as a psychological parable, Paul Schrader's Patty Hearst is thoughtful and provocative. Taken as a political parable, it is gallingly reactionary, but it is also right, in more than one sense of the word. [28 Oct 1988]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 62 Metascore
    • 88 Jay Scott
    The picture is slightly too long, there are some special effects (especially during a storm at sea) that don't come off, and Vangelis's electronic moans on the soundtrack are sporadically anachronistic, but The Bounty is otherwise a spectacularly sustained piece of epic filmmaking. [04 May 1984]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 62 Metascore
    • 75 Jay Scott
    Henry & June, a portrait of two pioneers in prose, accomplishes its own kind of pioneering on screen and not merely because it's unapologetically erotic: it effortlessly pairs that oddest of all couples, sexual desire and cerebral activity. It is, as a friend commented in a phrase Nin and Miller would have loved, "an erection for the mind." [05 Oct 1990]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 62 Metascore
    • 88 Jay Scott
    The Doors is excessive, unsubtle, emotionally brutal and stylistically sadistic, but that's exactly right for the dark side of the sixties Morrison and his band embodied. [01 Mar 1991]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 62 Metascore
    • 80 Jay Scott
    Too distanced to be called compassionate - the term can imply condescension - Working Girls is provocative, honest and disturbing. [15 May 1987]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 62 Metascore
    • 75 Jay Scott
    It is, to be sure, a Jaws ripoff, but it has enough sidelong wit and head-on scares to guarantee its revival as a classic cult item long after more expensive, ambitious efforts like Altered States have been forgotten. [13 Apr 1981]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 62 Metascore
    • 63 Jay Scott
    Wise Guys is never more than a nice time, but it's never less than that either, and because the timing of the jokes is so bang-on, it makes you wish De Palma would get away from the blood bag more often. [23 Apr 1986, p.C5]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 62 Metascore
    • 75 Jay Scott
    A surprisingly large portion of the picture is given over to a gritty and unexpectedly moving examination of a senseless but understandable feud between two wrongheaded, sincere people making all the wrong moves. [21 Oct 1983]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 62 Metascore
    • 25 Jay Scott
    In Drowning by Numbers, there is a strange character called Smut, a precocious boy genius fascinated by sex and obsessed with death: his avocation is the compulsive cataloguing of dead animals. The Cook, The Thief, His Wife & Her Lover feels as if it could been made by that child. [31 March 1990]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 62 Metascore
    • 75 Jay Scott
    The movie remains an embodiment of Spielberg's commercially cunning brand of clankingly retro filmmaking, despite the wit and charm brought to their Spiel-speak dialogue by the talented young performers, The Goonies is less a movie than an entertainment machine. [7 Jun 1985, p.E1]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 62 Metascore
    • 60 Jay Scott
    Edel's Last Exit generates visceral voltage, but the nation illuminated is the pre-unification West Germany of a mere moment ago, not the United States of 40 years gone by. [04 May 1990]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 62 Metascore
    • 50 Jay Scott
    Although Tom Stoppard's script lifts Ballard's spare dialogue directly from the page, the context in which it is placed is kitsch. [11 Dec 1987]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 62 Metascore
    • 25 Jay Scott
    The performers are powerless to bring life to this moribund courtroom drama...a snoozer.
    • 62 Metascore
    • 75 Jay Scott
    O'Toole's performance transforms a mundane movie into one of the most scintillating, enjoyable comedies of the year. [01 Oct 1982]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 62 Metascore
    • 38 Jay Scott
    It's a satire inferior to the thing it satirizes. [3 July 1981]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 61 Metascore
    • 88 Jay Scott
    More frightening than most horror movies, more erotic than most pornography, The Postman Always Rings Twice (at the Imperial) is a sour slice of bona fide Americana, a relentlessly pessimistic melodrama that conjures memories of They Shoot Horses, Don't They?, Bonnie and Clyde, The Godfather and Chinatown. [21 March 1981]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 61 Metascore
    • 75 Jay Scott
    If Vice Versa becomes the hit it deserves to be - adults who accompany their kids will be glad they came along for the joyride - Reinhold may be able to flex artistic muscles that have been necessarily flaccid until now. [11 Mar 1988]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 61 Metascore
    • 75 Jay Scott
    Kindergarten Cop is fast, loud and obvious, but there are unexpectedly delicate touches. [21 Dec 1990, p.C10]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 61 Metascore
    • 50 Jay Scott
    First Blood is a gung-ho action flick fast enough and brutal enough to become Stallone's first non-Rocky hit; on the profound sympathetic levels it seeks to address, however, it is an emission of profound stupidity. [22 Oct 1982]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 61 Metascore
    • 100 Jay Scott
    This is Sally Field's movie. Her performance - hyperbole completely aside - is peerless, one of the major achievements by an actress in the movies of any place and of any time. Reuben tells Norma Rae that when he wants a smart, loud, profane, sloppy, hardworking woman he'll call on her. From now on, when directors want legerdemain that becomes art, they're going to call on Sally Field.[10 Mar 1979]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 61 Metascore
    • 50 Jay Scott
    With Redford, less is not more, less is nigh on to nothing. He's natural in The Natural, but he's artless: it has been years since he played the politician in The Candidate, but he's still running for office on screen. The gig he wants is God, and that's what he gets to play in The Natural, a Greek deity with an arm made of home runs and a halo made of Sun-In. [11 May 1984]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 61 Metascore
    • 38 Jay Scott
    The picture is an inventory of film noir effects and attitudes, but Wenders has nothing new to say about the style, about the period, about Hammett or about the creative process. The Hammett case can be closed: a case of massive esthetic masturbation. [18 Sep 1982]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 61 Metascore
    • 38 Jay Scott
    Most of the time the film is simply stupid; not offensive, just silly. [03 May 1983]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 61 Metascore
    • 63 Jay Scott
    There are two ways to look at Tightrope: as a Clint Eastwood Hollywood vehicle, or as a world-class movie that deserves to be judged with the best. By the first standard, Tightrope is an exceptionally realized thriller; by the second, it is an interesting failure, a movie that loses its nerve and resolves its contradictions in the slam-bang heroics of formula moviemaking. [18 Aug 1984]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 61 Metascore
    • 63 Jay Scott
    Cat People, a remake by the not noticeably gifted director Paul Schrader, of a 1942 RKO mood piece about a lady who thought herself capable of turning into a panther, is many things, not every one of them bad: as a B-movie, this fantasy of a young woman who develops the distressing habit of changing shape after sex is moderately entertaining. [05 Apr 1982]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 61 Metascore
    • 38 Jay Scott
    When The Big Chill is busy being funny, it's a great comedy, but when it goes for depth, it hits bottom an inch down. [30 Sep 1983, p.E1]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 61 Metascore
    • 63 Jay Scott
    Perhaps it is Stallone's candor with respect to his commerciality that is the key to the success of both Rockys - they're not trying to con you behind your back. Right out in front, they are unpretentiously calculated, manipulative, unbelievable, faux naif, sentimental. And irresistible. Stallone's stitched-together innocence hides its seams. [16 June 1979]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 61 Metascore
    • 63 Jay Scott
    At no time is Urban Cowboy especially well-directed - Bridges, director of The China Syndrome and The Paper Chase, has yet to learn where to put a camera and when to move it. But the performances are so fresh, the dialogue so prickly and arid, and the milieu observed with such accuracy, that one's reservations regarding the cinematography, editing and a raft of other technical matters are held in check. [07 June 1980]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 61 Metascore
    • 63 Jay Scott
    A patchwork quilt of clashing colors, but it's cozy and warm. [10 Oct 1981]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 61 Metascore
    • 50 Jay Scott
    There are individual sequences alternately amusing and touching. [08 May 1984]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 61 Metascore
    • 63 Jay Scott
    Once the riffs are over and put into place, Mo' Better Blues is approximately one-third fabulous, one-third boring, and one-third infuriating. [06 Aug 1990]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 60 Metascore
    • 25 Jay Scott
    Stripped of absolutely everything Absolute Beginners has borrowed from absolutely everything else, the entire film would fit absolutely snugly into a cockroach's shoe. [19 Apr 1986]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 60 Metascore
    • 50 Jay Scott
    The larger budget has given Scanners a high-gloss Hollywood look, the editing is occasionally elegant and the special effects, which consist mostly of imaginative ways of turning actors into meat, provoke from the audience the desired response ("Oh, yuk]"), but he is careful to keep the violence within currently accepted boundaries. [19 Jan 1981]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 60 Metascore
    • 50 Jay Scott
    For most of the movie, Murray desperately throws in schtick after schtick to try to keep the film afloat (Meatballs doesn't deserve him, and he certainly doesn't deserve it), but when facing Makepeace, who isn't allowed to do anything but trade a petulant pout for a wait-'til-the-sun-shines-Nellie smile, he caves in under the sentimental good cheer and becomes a nice guy, a role he is not especially suited to play. [2 July 1979]
    • The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
    • 60 Metascore
    • 12 Jay Scott
    Guilty of gross mellerdrammer & innocent of sophistication... Guilty of being dumber than WWF wrestling & innocent of hypocrisy about its cartoon violence.

Top Trailers