Nathan Rabin
Select another critic »For 1,228 reviews, this critic has graded:
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46% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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52% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 12.7 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Nathan Rabin's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 53 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Once | |
| Lowest review score: | Nothing But Trouble | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 464 out of 1228
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Mixed: 454 out of 1228
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Negative: 310 out of 1228
1228
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Nathan Rabin
Funny and realistically romantic, but almost never at the same time.- The A.V. Club
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- Nathan Rabin
The filmmakers don't seem to realize that if a movie with a mythology this groan-inducingly convoluted doesn't have a sense of humor about itself, the laughs are going to come anyway. They just won't be of the intentional variety.- The A.V. Club
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- Nathan Rabin
Like the forgotten blaxploitation schlock it often resembles, the film aspires to nothing but cheap thrills, but while it's plenty cheap, it's far from thrilling.- The A.V. Club
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- Nathan Rabin
I was never bored, even if the film ultimately amounts to little more than a very expensive freak show. Just before slurring one of the all-time great terrible last lines ("I want to go to dog heaven"), Kilmer utters, with sublime understatement, a line that doubles as the film's epitaph: "Well, that didn't work out." Failure, Fiasco or Secret Success: Fiasco.- The A.V. Club
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- Nathan Rabin
A vibrant, funny, fully realized slice of oft-overlooked cultural, show-business, and black history. It's better than the film whose genesis it chronicles, though inherently doomed to be nowhere near as important.- The A.V. Club
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- Nathan Rabin
As Ray nears its abrupt ending, it veers into camp silliness, complete with a psychedelic freak-out withdrawal sequence straight out of a Roger Corman LSD epic.- The A.V. Club
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- Nathan Rabin
Propelled by a fine Tomandandy score and a savvy assortment of seductive new-wave hits, Attraction is top-notch trash, a guilty pleasure designed for the decadent 14-year-old in everyone.- The A.V. Club
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- Nathan Rabin
Everything an action-comedy should be. It achieves through parody what most films in the genre can't accomplish straight.- The A.V. Club
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- Nathan Rabin
Differences would have benefited from a more cerebral lead actor, but O’Neal does a good job of capturing Bogdanovich’s ingratiating passion for cinema and his fatal hubris, and the script scores some clever jabs at the vapid self-absorption of show-biz types.- The A.V. Club
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- Nathan Rabin
As a featherweight trifle rooted in young death, an endless mourning process, and quasi-incestuous stirrings, the film suffers from jarring tonal shifts on a continual basis.- The Dissolve
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- The A.V. Club
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- Nathan Rabin
Faithfully recreates a bygone era of larger-than-life filmmakers and stars.- The A.V. Club
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- Nathan Rabin
An unforgettable tribute to a remarkable life, Sister Helen is inspirational in a way a film about a more conventionally pious religious figure could never be. Travis seems to be the antithesis of a cardboard saint.- The A.V. Club
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- The A.V. Club
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- Nathan Rabin
Laughing at this turkey might not necessarily make you a redneck, but it sure does make you easily amused.- The A.V. Club
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- Nathan Rabin
A punishingly awful slasher film with monosyllabic banter dreadful enough to make viewers yearn for the sophisticated repartee of earlier Dark efforts like "White Bunbusters."- The A.V. Club
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- Nathan Rabin
An initially engaging but ultimately wearying combination of naturalistic acting, cinéma vérité camerawork, and broadly melodramatic plotting.- The A.V. Club
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- Nathan Rabin
Entrapment is ostensibly some sort of action film, but perhaps out of deference to its sleepwalking star, it moves slowly and contains very little actual action.- The A.V. Club
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- Nathan Rabin
Could and should have been a giddy, tongue-in-cheek action-comedy romp. Instead, it's a meandering action-drama, in which nearly all of the abundant laughs are unintentional.- The A.V. Club
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- Nathan Rabin
The film's heart and soul belong to O'Hara and to Levy, whose folk-music burnout has the shell-shocked expression of someone who's been to hell and never quite made it back.- The A.V. Club
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- Nathan Rabin
Writer-director Chris Kentis has dreamed up an ingenious premise, but he botches its execution. Every once in a while, the film stumbles upon a twist that ratchets up the tension, but then haphazardly discards it.- The A.V. Club
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- Nathan Rabin
Workingman's Death's primary pleasures are aesthetic. Glawogger is an extraordinarily elegant filmmaker with a photographer's eye for striking compositions.- The A.V. Club
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- Nathan Rabin
Night Of The Creeps has all the ingredients of a top-notch cult movie, yet Dekker too often ends up recycling clichés rather than subverting or spoofing them.- The A.V. Club
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- Nathan Rabin
They're now the first major all-girl punk band to inspire a bleary, excessive, and altogether mediocre big-screen biography.- The A.V. Club
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- Nathan Rabin
Sidney Lumet’s uncomfortably intense adaptation of Edward Lewis Wallant’s novel gets inside Nazerman’s skin and lets the audience see the world as he does: as unspeakably vulgar, corrupt, and oppressive, a nightmare from which he cannot wake up.- The Dissolve
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- Nathan Rabin
It's become a tired cliché for characters in "serious" science-fiction movies not to realize they're dead or dying, but Stay as a film doesn't seem to realize that it's dead from the outset, an unconvincing automaton grimly going through the motions.- The A.V. Club
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- Nathan Rabin
Escapism raised to the level of art, Singin' In The Rain inventively satirizes the illusions of the filmmaking process while celebrating their life-affirming joy. Half parody, half homage, the movie became the apex of the splashy MGM musical, while showcasing the collaborative possibilities of the studio system.- The A.V. Club
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- Nathan Rabin
A pathetic wallow, first in misanthropy and later in sentimentality.- The A.V. Club
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