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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- Richard Corliss
An adoring tone and the familiar slo-mo, wide-angle baskebatics.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
The best Hollywood movies always knew how to sneak a beguiling subtext into a crowd-pleasing story. Superman Returns is in that grand tradition. That's why it's beyond Super. It's superb.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
Raimi directs the film at Maguire's pensive pace. Some scenes are just inert.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
Blane's snooty friend Steff (Spader) could be a tired stereotype, but with his all-year tan, his hip-blase voice and hs view of high school as a "career," Steff becomes a recognizable character of any age: upscale slime in embryo. [3 Mar 1996, p.83]- Time
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- Richard Corliss
The better class of moviegoers will love Billy Elliot. And I loved hating it.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
But this Evita is not just a long, complex music video; it works and breathes like a real movie, with characters worthy of our affection and deepest suspicions.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
Alas, in Tetro he (Coppola) has made a movie in which plenty happens but nothing rings true.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
The cast is uniformly superb, and Marc Forster's attentive direction gives proper weight to each perplexing emotion. Strip away the strident melodrama, and you have this season's moodiest, most adult love story.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
The voluptuousness of visual detail offers proof, if any more were needed after The Little Mermaid, that the Disney studio has relocated the pure magic of the Pinocchio-Dumbo years.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
So why does the movie version, with Robert Duvall as Tom and Robert De Niro as Des, proceed at the sluggish pace of a Sodality novena? Perhaps because Dunne's collaborator on the screenplay was his wife, the Empress of Angst, Novelist Joan Didion. Onscreen, characters who should percolate with rage simply simmer. Two exciting, dangerous actors have little to do: Duvall spends too much time pacing and waiting; De Niro's big scene has him hanging up his vestments.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
Some of us knows that there's an American style -- best displayed in the big, smart, kid-friendly epic -- that few other cinemas even aspire to, and none can touch. When it works, as it does here, it rekindles even a cynic's movie love. So cheers to Downey, Favreau and the Iron Man production company. They don't call it Marvel for nothing.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
Samantha Morton, as Emmet's "mute orphan half-wit" of a girlfriend, is the sweet revelation. Rarely has a performer mined such complex and potent emotion from such simple materials: a smile, a shrug, an attentive winsomeness.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
It blends tension and emotion, computer wizardry and dramatic skill in a vigorous climax--and the most impressive, haunting final shot of the movie year.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
In a style of agitated naturalism, Jordan examines poignant matters of life and death, sex and friendship, duty and loyalty, freedom and bondage, manhood and womanhood and all the ambiguous areas in between. [30 Nov 1992]- Time
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- Richard Corliss
Triplettes is terrific…there's no competition for the fall's most imaginative delight. In that race, Triplettes can already take its victory lap.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
The second half of the film elevates all the story elements to Beethovenian crescendo. Here is an epic with literature's depth and opera's splendor -- and one that could be achieved only in movies. What could be more terrific?- Time
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- Richard Corliss
The enterprise is sluggish when it's not grinding toward the preposterous.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
When the filmmakers grow tired of fowl puns -- about an hour after the audience does -- they switch to space opera, and Howard battles a scientist (Jeffrey Jones, funny against all odds) whose body is invaded by a giant lobster-scorpion space troll.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
The viewer almost has to be a journalist--or a good editor--to sniff out the meat under all the fat.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
The plot becomes landlocked in true-life implausibilities; the characters rarely get a hold on the moviegoer's heart or lapels. What saves this meditation on the vestiges of colonialism is, ironically, its celebration of American star power.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
Ultimately, Titanic will sail or sink not on its budget but on its merits as drama and spectacle. The regretful verdict here: Dead in the water.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
Big and pretty, vigorous, thoughtful, this Hamlet expands the story with helpful flashbacks.- Time
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- Time
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- Richard Corliss
Everything finally came together under the sensitive directorial hand of, yes, Francis Coppola. The supporting cast is splendid. The film's occasional lapses never puncture the airy tone; they are easily forgiven, like Peggy Sue and her friends, whose only sin was to grow up. This prom-night balloon of a movie floats easily above the year's other exercises in '50s nostalgia. If you dare reach for it, it will land smartly in your heart.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
Reitman's blend of comedy and drama, romance and social observation make Up in the Air the ideal movie --- and maybe even a cure -- for the Great Recession blues.- Time
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- Richard Corliss
As you watch this enchanting fantasy, feel free to be thrilled or to giggle, as you wish. This time, Happily Ever After lasts 98 minutes. [21 Sept 1987]- Time
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- Richard Corliss
So it is Scorsese's triumph that GoodFellas offers the fastest, sharpest 2 1/2-hr. ride in recent film history. [Sept 24, 1990]- Time
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- Richard Corliss
Hamlet 2 is as needy as its hero -- because it wants not to be probing or profound or even witty but, above all else, to be loved.- Time
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