Peter Rainer
Select another critic »For 2,765 reviews, this critic has graded:
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53% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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45% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 1.6 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Peter Rainer's Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 67 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Summer of Soul (...Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised) | |
| Lowest review score: | Mixed Nuts | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,744 out of 2765
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Mixed: 866 out of 2765
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Negative: 155 out of 2765
2765
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Peter Rainer
The story that Hidden Figures tells is so irresistible that you can almost forgive the fact that the movie itself is resistibly unoriginal. It’s an unabashed crowd-pleaser with a heavy history lesson undertow.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jan 6, 2017
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- Peter Rainer
Driver’s low-key charisma in the role rescues it from terminal dullness, and there are a few fine sidelights.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jan 5, 2017
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- Peter Rainer
Almodóvar is attempting to create a continuum of genres as well, one that particularly involves the traditional Hollywood “women’s picture” and film noir. That he doesn’t altogether succeed is perhaps due to the fact that Almodóvar is too enraptured by old movie conventions to give them a new life.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jan 5, 2017
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- Peter Rainer
The strongest exchange in the film comes when he is confronted by several angry black activists who believe what he is doing is self-abasing and hurtful to the cause of civil rights. It is left for you to be the judge. I think he’s a hero. Every little bit helps.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jan 5, 2017
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- Peter Rainer
I, Daniel Blake is one of his better efforts because the story is powerfully focused and the acting is strong, which is not always the case with Loach's films.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Jan 5, 2017
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- Peter Rainer
Without Bening, whose performance is a watchful and laid-back marvel, 20th Century Women, written and directed by Mike Mills, would still be borderline worth seeing because of its supporting cast.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 22, 2016
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- Peter Rainer
Pratt does a creditable job of playing distraught without seeming like a ninny, and Lawrence at least looks stylish, though she’s not called upon to do much acting. You can almost hear her saying to herself, "I wonder what David O. Russell has planned for his next movie and can I pretty please have a role in it?"- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 22, 2016
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 16, 2016
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- Peter Rainer
The fact that neither Stone nor Gosling are tip-top song-and-dance artists is, in some ways, integral to their appeal. If they were Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire, we might not feel as much of a kinship with them.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 9, 2016
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- Peter Rainer
This meta-biopic is more about Jackie Kennedy as perceived in the popular imagination than it is about the woman herself. And what Larraín has to offer on this score is not terribly enlightening.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 2, 2016
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- Peter Rainer
Huppert never loses sight of the fact that Nathalie’s wounded heart often overrules her steel-trap mind.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 2, 2016
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- Peter Rainer
This is a movie about how one’s passion can burn away and leave in its place a vast nostalgia.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 23, 2016
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 23, 2016
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- Peter Rainer
A movie about unremitting grief and yet it has a boisterousness, a comic twirl, that makes it much truer to the zigzags of life than most similarly themed movies that simply pile on the gloom.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 18, 2016
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- Peter Rainer
The only performances worth discussing are delivered by the always excellent Michael Shannon, the Texas detective who tries to set things right, and Aaron Taylor-Johnson as the scurviest of the marauders.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 18, 2016
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- Peter Rainer
It provides us with a window into the psyche of a person worth caring about.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 18, 2016
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- Peter Rainer
The film is fine enough to make you forgive, if not forget, the fact that it exists primarily as a corporate enterprise and not as an imaginative tour de force.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 18, 2016
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- Peter Rainer
This is a technological breakthrough, all right, but a breakthrough to what?- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 11, 2016
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- Peter Rainer
Unless there’s something truly momentous going on, I prefer my sci-fi to be a lot more weightless than weighty.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 11, 2016
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- Peter Rainer
Loving is a decent and heartfelt movie that, rarity of rarity these days, suffers from being too decent and heartfelt. It is so careful not to give offense that, in some ways, it’s more admirable for what it doesn’t do than for what it does.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 4, 2016
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- Peter Rainer
The war scenes in Hacksaw Ridge, which take up almost half the screen time, are almost on a level with the D-Day invasion sequence from “Saving Private Ryan.”- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 4, 2016
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- Peter Rainer
Allow me a quick lament: Do we really want to see a great actor like Cumberbatch, not to mention Chiwetel Ejiofor and Tilda Swinton, entombed in yet another superhero franchise?- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 4, 2016
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- Peter Rainer
The film, some of which looks staged, is too slick, and its feminist emphasis, complete with Australian performer Sia singing “You can do anything” on the soundtrack, grates. But Aisholpan triumphs over these excesses.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 28, 2016
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- Peter Rainer
There’s something borderline dishonest about the way Rosi intercuts the oblivious, life-goes-on Lampedusans with the harrowing, too-brief footage of Africans inside the immigration center and aboard the rescue ships. His stylistics keep these two groups cruelly apart, but who knows if this is the way things actually play out?- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 28, 2016
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- Peter Rainer
So few unexploitative movies are made about young black men, especially young black gay men, that the overpraise for this frail, sweet, discursive fantasia is understandable – and forgivable. It’s a beautiful film around the edges.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 28, 2016
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- Peter Rainer
Unless you are a Dante scholar, and perhaps not even then, following Inferno is a wild goose chase – without the goose.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 28, 2016
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- Peter Rainer
The film is a dutiful attempt to convey some of the vehemence of the novel – of the counterculture of the 1960s and early ’70s especially – but McGregor, making his directorial debut, lacks the temperament to do this era justice. He’s an innocent bystander in the melee.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 21, 2016
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- Peter Rainer
It should all resemble a vanity project except for one thing: The film lays out the case for reform with steadfast rigor.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 21, 2016
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- Peter Rainer
This is a movie about people trying to make sense out of the senselessness of what happened.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 14, 2016
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- Peter Rainer
It’s to Hall’s credit that, in the end, we see Chubbuck as a victim of no one so much as herself.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 14, 2016
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