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
If Concussion really stuck its neck out, it would have been the better for it. The film comes on as hard-hitting, but it’s weighted down with protective gear.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 24, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
It’s fun for a while to see Kurt Russell hamming it up behind his voluminous mustache or Samuel L. Jackson once again raising rafters by laying down the law. But the film is pointless, even as entertainment, because it builds to nothing more than a comic book blood bath.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 24, 2015
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 23, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
Of course, on some level, no movie about this subject can fail to move us, and Son of Saul has its share of powerful sequences. I wanted it to be great, though, with a largeness of vision to match the awful immensity of its subject.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 18, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
If the sequels to “The Force Awakens” are as good as this film, that will probably be because they follow the same formula: heavy on the human side, more comedy, less CGI, more fresh faces, and more delightful droids. And, yes, one must pay homage to the Force.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 16, 2015
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 11, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
The actors play their roles to the hilt, but in the end, the role of these investors in extenuating the crisis they took advantage of is played down, as is the disastrous life consequences of all those who were severely hit by it.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 11, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
If the movie accomplishes nothing else, though, I hope it inspires the curious to actually sit down and finally read “Moby-Dick.” It’s an extraordinary yarn. Really.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 11, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
The remarkable thing about Smith in The Lady in the Van is that, even though the role is no longer fresh for her, the performance certainly is. She gives it everything she’s got because, you feel, she wants to honor this character. She wants Miss Shepherd to live on.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 4, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
Sorrentino’s magic is all smoke and mirrors. People calling this movie a visual feast must be awfully famished.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 4, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
Marion Cotillard’s Lady Macbeth, however, is a triumph. She seems transfixed by her own capacity for evil, and her mad scene is one of the most unhistrionic, and therefore spookiest, ever filmed.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Dec 4, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
The script is more functional than funny, and the animation, while adept, is not altogether memorable.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 25, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
Director Francis Lawrence stages the action sequences, both aboveground and underground, with a modicum of flair, and Julianne Moore as rebel leader Coin gives off some sparks – she’s a reformer with a totalitarian streak – but for the most part there is nothing divertingly new or different about this franchise fade-out.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 20, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
For me, there is too much rue that goes unacknowledged by the filmmakers. When great musicians must adulterate their art in order to find an audience, I see no pressing reason to cheer.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 13, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
Both Jolie Pitt and Pitt have demonstrated their chops in far better movies. I suspect the problem here is that there was no one around to tell them, “Please don’t. Please. Don’t.”- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 13, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
Unearths not only those thirty-three miners but also several thousand tons of clichés.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 13, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
It plays out all the usual tropes of the investigative-journalism genre – the hot tips, the clandestine meetings, the hand-wringing about ethics, etc. – without adding a jot of novelty.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 6, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
Even a subpar James Bond movie is worth seeing because, well, it’s James Bond. But if one of the most successful and long-running franchises in movie history wants to keep pumping, it’s once again time to change the formula.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 6, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
It’s possible to be heartwarming and tough-minded, as this wonderful film demonstrates. And it’s possible to be both “old-fashioned” and vibrant, too. It’s the best new/old movie in town.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Nov 5, 2015
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- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 30, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
Weary as I am of documentaries built around competitions, this one is charming because the three teens, especially the girls, are so radiantly intense about the sport.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 30, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
Anderson works in animation and home movies (Lolabelle “playing” the piano is a wonder), and Anderson’s voice-over narration is closer in quality to song than to spoken word. It’s a confounding, transfixing mélange.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 23, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
Gavron’s conventional approach to the material compares unfavorably to the newsreels and stills of the actual suffragettes that close out the film. The harsh reality comes through in that footage in a way that the film as a whole only approaches in bits and pieces.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 23, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
The film in the end seems more of an expertly orchestrated blood bath than a full-scale tragedy.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 16, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
The film basically upholds the verity of the news story while not condoning the sloppiness, and it’s worth seeing mostly for Cate Blanchett’s firebrand performance as Mapes, a battler consumed by righteousness.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 16, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
Solid and uplifting, but it doesn’t extend Spielberg’s range. Perhaps one day he will make a movie about a historical character whose complexities are not quite so untainted.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 16, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
For most of its two hours it’s brainy, high-speed entertainment, but the filmmakers are not quite as smart as they think they are. For all its flash and hypertalk, Steve Jobs is an old-school movie in new-style camouflage.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 9, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
I wish the film had done more – anything – to analyze Petit’s psyche. But he barely exists in the movie except as a certified daredevil.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 2, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
Freeheld is certainly timely, though, given its ponderous approach, less than invigorating.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 2, 2015
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- Peter Rainer
Entertaining as the movie often is, this all-American, can-do attitude is also the source of its shortcomings. Given the enormousness of its subject, there is a radical lack of awe in this movie.- Christian Science Monitor
- Posted Oct 2, 2015
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