Austin Chronicle's Scores
- Movies
- Music
For 8,778 reviews, this publication has graded:
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41% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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57% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 6.7 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 58
| Highest review score: | The Searchers | |
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| Lowest review score: | Gummo |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 4,774 out of 8778
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Mixed: 2,557 out of 8778
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Negative: 1,447 out of 8778
8778
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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- Critic Score
The correlation between music and math, if not explicit, is seldom documented with as much panache as Tom Dowd & the Language of Music.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Marrit Ingman
The combination of high animé style and old-school heart gives the film a broad enough appeal to merit a wide release. Not that it isn't quirky.- Austin Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Kimberley Jones
Though the three leads are all likable performers, their lunkheaded characters are as thinly drawn as their cartoon counterparts, and the supporting cast is littered with one racial stereotype after another.- Austin Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Marjorie Baumgarten
It becomes unmistakably clear that Wuornos’ wretched childhood and young life is representative of a deep failure within American society to adequately protect our young and defenseless. This becomes part of the movie’s argument against capital punishment.- Austin Chronicle
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Kimberley Jones
Their travelogue-ready romance is utterly doofy but not disagreeable, and this sort of wish-fulfillment fantasy will strike the right chord with Moore’s fan base of preteen girls.- Austin Chronicle
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Marc Savlov
It’s Brisseau's penchant for the flamboyantly perverse and the perversely flamboyant, however, that might have been best left secret.- Austin Chronicle
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Marrit Ingman
This is not a conventional love story but a philosophical one.- Austin Chronicle
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Kimberley Jones
When The Company owns up to what it is -– a performance piece -– it’s glorious. Everything else -– the window-dressing of a fiction film -– just gums up that gloriousness.- Austin Chronicle
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Marc Savlov
Maybe it’s time for Woo to finally make that musical he keeps talking about.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Marjorie Baumgarten
Everyone learns a lesson by movie’s end: Don’t put work before family. Curiously, no one learns that all this could have been avoided with a good method of birth control.- Austin Chronicle
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Marc Savlov
If you can get past the ick factor inherent in these suddenly adulterized relationships –- and there’s really no way this film should have received a kid-friendly PG rating –- and latch on to the film’s wealth of metaphor, you’ll surely have something to discuss over coffee post-screening.- Austin Chronicle
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Marjorie Baumgarten
Doesn’t provide any answers, and that’s both its strength and weakness.- Austin Chronicle
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Marjorie Baumgarten
The actresses are terrific together, and it’s nice to see Helen Mirren smiling onscreen for a change. And although Calendar Girls is resolutely pleasant, the movie never really goes much beyond that.- Austin Chronicle
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Marjorie Baumgarten
In the end, The Fog of War offers a couple of hours of brilliant clarity amid the noise and chaos.- Austin Chronicle
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Kimberley Jones
There's just no reconciling the film's ambivalent message. Newell hangs a modern sensibility on a supposed period piece, and hangs his film in the process.- Austin Chronicle
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Marrit Ingman
A sterling example of what Hollywood can accomplish when it puts its trust into an offbeat project whose creative team has a different perspective on American life.- Austin Chronicle
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Marc Savlov
It’s odd and unfortunate, however, that The Return of the King just barely misses the eye-misting emotional wallop of the series’ previous installment, The Two Towers, which had a lyrical subtlety underpinning the vast vistas of growing chaos (and Christopher Lee hardly hurt matters) and hobbits-in-peril.- Austin Chronicle
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Marjorie Baumgarten
An interesting though not extremely successful experiment, but it definitely makes you want to see what Duncan Roy does next.- Austin Chronicle
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Steve Davis
By the time The Statement comes to its inevitable conclusion, you'll be hard pressed to remember much about it, sadly enough. In other words, The Statement doesn't make much of one.- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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- Austin Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Kimberley Jones
[Keaton's] lost none of the spunk, sass, and ditzbomb charm of her "Annie Hall" days. She, quite simply, is marvelous. Too bad her similarly iconic co-star is such a toad. Jack never stops being Jack, to great distraction.- Austin Chronicle
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Marjorie Baumgarten
In filming this movie with such artistic precision, the movie ironically winds up objectifying Griet just as much as any appreciator of the original painting.- Austin Chronicle
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Marc Savlov
Tim Burton is all grown up and getting serious with this wildly scattershot tale.- Austin Chronicle
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Steve Davis
The titular role of Monsieur Ibrahim is not a terribly taxing one, but Sharif effortlessly demonstrates that he still has the stuff that made him a star so many years ago – he exudes a charismatic appeal that is apparently timeless.- Austin Chronicle
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Marc Savlov
Amid the endless stream of catch-a-rising-star movie clichés that Honey screenwriters Alonzo Brown and Kim Watson throw up and out are a few new ones, notably "skinny girls always win out in the end" and "hootchie bad, faux hootchie good."- Austin Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Steve Davis
What is not debatable, however, is that Cruise is an actor of limited emotional resources, one who lacks the presence required for the film’s protagonist, a character intended to inhabit more than one dimension.- Austin Chronicle
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Marc Savlov
As Timeline so adequately proves, not every bestseller will render a good film.- Austin Chronicle
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