Richard Corliss
Select another critic »For 1,008 reviews, this critic has graded:
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56% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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42% lower than the average critic
On average, this critic grades 1.3 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Richard Corliss' Scores
- Movies
- TV
| Average review score: | 67 | |
|---|---|---|
| Highest review score: | Green Zone | |
| Lowest review score: | Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls | |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 603 out of 1008
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Mixed: 307 out of 1008
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Negative: 98 out of 1008
1008
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Time
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- Richard Corliss
Despite some rough edges and language, this is at heart a beguiling fantasy of comradeship.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
The film (directed by Andy Tennant) has more problems than Melanie, and they're insoluble. Its lazy calculation telegraphs each plot turn and underlines emotions with corn-pone music.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
The film, which had a troubled history and a humongous reported price tag of $120 million, could have been a fiasco; instead, it smartly remythologizes this indispensable Hollywood icon. [01 Jul 1996 Pg.65]- Time
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- Richard Corliss
Apocalypse Now is about an American, perhaps a human madness. It searingly depicts, and finally embodies, the spiritual wounds men inflict on themselves and one another in the name of war. To gain the hearts and minds of a distant people, we lose our own souls.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
With all its boardroom bickering, the plot is a gun that shoots mostly blanks. G3 is too faithful to the deliberate pacing of the first two films: the slow walking into a dark room, the silence surrounding the threats... The film is a slow fuse with a big bang. [24 Dec 1990, p.76]- Time
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- Richard Corliss
Extending the patented Pixar mix of humor and heart, Up is the studio's most deeply emotional and affecting work.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
Though faithful in every detail to Tolkien, it has a vigorous life of its own -- grandeur, moral heft and emotional depth.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
Tom Ford -- the Texas-born fashion designer who for a decade was the creative director at Gucci -- financed this first feature himself. The producer couldn't have hired a smarter director.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
It's an efficient thriller, with scare weapons ranging from the primitive (a pitchfork) to the apocalyptic (an A bomb). The acting is only horror-film-functional, and you might wish that our trio of renegades knew a few basic laws of the genre.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
Something got lost in the move from storyboard to screen, and in the stretch from seven minutes to 103. [27 June 1988]- Time
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- Richard Corliss
In this film we learn that it takes 8,000 lbs. of pressure to crush a car but only one credited screenwriter (Scott Rosenberg) to pound out such a lame script.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
At 2 1/2 hours, it all plays like the rough assembly of a 90-min. caper film--an anecdote told at epic length. Grier, foxy lady of '70s blaxploitation, is given little chance to radiate. [22 Dec 1997, p.80]- Time
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- Richard Corliss
The movie is like a car wreck in which no one is injured but the onlookers.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
For a viewer sympathetic to Schwarzenegger's and Cameron's best selves -- the ironist with muscles and the mordant fabulist -- True Lies is a loud misfire. It rarely brings its potent themes to life.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
When Possession finds its true home, lodging in the convulsive certitude of Victorian romance, it does indeed catch fire -- and warms any viewer in the mood for love.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
Elia Suleiman's Divine Intervention is a cure for nagging ethnic generalities. This Palestinian sort-of-comedy has a sly wit that amuses and disturbs in equal, salubrious measure.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
This solemn, incoherent, brown film is set in New York and Pennsylvania in 1776-81, but it often looks determined to analogize, one more time, the Viet Nam War.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
Those opening trailers are hilarious and devastatingly acute, but the rest of Stiller's film could be more a deconstruction of comedy than a display of it. The brain gets the joke; the ribs are untickled.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
The film is wonderfully cast and played, right down to the bit player (Ralph Tabakin) who shops suspiciously for a TV set: "I saw Bananzo and it was not for me."- Time
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- Richard Corliss
There's evocative atmosphere in the period detail and perky faux-'60s tunes. A pity these are wasted in a movie that, like many a pop tune, has a cute idea but a simpleminded lyric.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
For dinosaurs to rule the earth again, the monsters needed majesty as well as menace. And Spielberg got it all right. [14 June 1993, p.69]- Time
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- Richard Corliss
This movie exists wholly in the realm of metaphor, whose messages stick out like placards: Find joy through pain. Reunite with estranged loved ones. Keep hope alive.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
This darkly seductive, flawlessly acted piece is worlds removed from most horror films. Here monsters have their grandeur, heroes their gravity. And when they collide, a dance of death ensues between two souls doomed to understand each other.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
Davies recalls all these sights and sounds -- so horrifying, so beautiful -- and, with his unflinching style, turns anecdote into artistry. The distant voices still live.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
Luhrmann, an Australian who pretty much let his camera go nuts in the egregiously overrated "Strictly Ballroom", here makes reasonable, imaginative decisions that are, arguably, true to Shakespeare.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
Major League doesn't try too hard or aim too high, but it is pretty funny. With its stock characters, breezy dialogue, dense ambience and instinct for easy emotions, it could serve as the pilot for a pay-cable sitcom. The film's tone is acerb, but its climax is as predictably uplifting as Rocky's and as surefire effective as Damn Yankees'.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
Fast, witty, glamorous, with thrill piling on giggle atop gasp. [11 June 1990, p.85]- Time
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- Richard Corliss
Batman Returns could mark a happy beginning for Hollywood -- not because it might make a mint but because it dispenses with realism and aspires to animation, to the freedom of idea and image found in the best feature-length cartoons.- Time
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- Time
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