Baltimore Sun's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 2,175 reviews, this publication has graded:
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54% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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43% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 1.7 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 63
| Highest review score: | Odd Man Out | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | Double Team |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,245 out of 2175
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Mixed: 548 out of 2175
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Negative: 382 out of 2175
2175
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Michael Sragow
The result is not a first-class film noir but a top-grade acting class. You admire it without enjoying it.- Baltimore Sun
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Reviewed by
Chris Kaltenbach
With all its cloying, tone-deaf attempts at genuine emotional warmth, all it really deserves is to be avoided.- Baltimore Sun
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Reviewed by
Michael Sragow
It's seductive in its buildup but overall as subtle and, alas, as humorless as a hatchet to the brain.- Baltimore Sun
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Reviewed by
Michael Sragow
In the strongest scenes, Ben Affleck gets his lead actors to extract the bitter juice from Lehane's wood-alcohol prose. The movie has its horrifying Gothic twists and turns, but it's never better than when it takes these two into places where the underclass goes to forget or be forgotten or get lost.- Baltimore Sun
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- Baltimore Sun
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Reviewed by
Michael Sragow
This movie asks us to "accept the good" in life - not a bad message. But to overpraise Things We Lost in the Fire would be to accept the mediocre.- Baltimore Sun
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Reviewed by
Michael Sragow
Wristcutters: A Love Story is a lousy title for a lovely-loony picture about an afterlife for suicides. It's an off-road "road movie" about people who off themselves.- Baltimore Sun
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Reviewed by
Michael Sragow
As overstated and expository as a historical pageant, from the drippy music to a sputtering, running gag involving funky old jalopies to cliched speeches and teary-eyed deaths and a final voice-over crying out for peace. Why not add a song score and an exclamation mark in the title?- Baltimore Sun
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Reviewed by
Michael Sragow
The best you can say about Owen is that no actor has looked better in thigh-high boots and puffed-out britches.- Baltimore Sun
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Reviewed by
Michael Sragow
The plotting is so rickety that the action hinges on suspicions roused by a character carrying a cigarette lighter and matches. Is that more rare or suspect than a man wearing a belt and suspenders?- Baltimore Sun
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Reviewed by
Michael Sragow
Even if you have no interest in Joy Division, this picture is worth seeing for the unsentimental empathy and passion of the moviemaking.- Baltimore Sun
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Reviewed by
Michael Sragow
This Heartbreak Kid makes the mistake of trying to be semi-heartwarming.- Baltimore Sun
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Reviewed by
Michael Sragow
Because Bar-Lev fails to go the extra mile either as a filmmaker or a friend, My Kid Could Paint That is at best "documentary silver."- Baltimore Sun
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Reviewed by
Michael Sragow
The movie has a lot going for it, including wonderful sets and locations - in Bucharest, Romania! - that create a heightened-reality English hamlet with pub, church, manor and shops (make that shoppes!). And the lead actor, Ludwig, registers the growth spurts of the stripling hero with the sensitivity and precision of an emotional seismograph.- Baltimore Sun
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Reviewed by
Michael Sragow
Anderson creates a deluxe train set, for sure. All he neglects is building up an electric current or a head of steam.- Baltimore Sun
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Reviewed by
Michael Sragow
The final half-hour is like the not-so-grand finale for a silly-sticky sitcom. It's a college-town “Friends” with an unearned doctorate.- Baltimore Sun
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Reviewed by
Michael Sragow
Berg doesn't let up on the tension, even when the action is bloodless.- Baltimore Sun
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Reviewed by
Michael Sragow
Tang Wei brings a terrible and awe-inspiring purity to an impure character.- Baltimore Sun
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Reviewed by
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- Baltimore Sun
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- Baltimore Sun
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Reviewed by
Chris Kaltenbach
The result is a charmer that boldly marches where lesser movies - at least since the heyday of John Hughes - fear to tread.- Baltimore Sun
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Reviewed by
Michael Sragow
First-time director Swicord brews an atmosphere of geniality and warmth and brings a modicum of momentum to a happily discursive book.- Baltimore Sun
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- Baltimore Sun
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- Baltimore Sun
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Reviewed by
Michael Sragow
In the Valley of Elah is too inept and diffuse to be a howl against the war in Iraq. At best, it is a manly whimper.- Baltimore Sun
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- Baltimore Sun
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- Baltimore Sun
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Reviewed by
Michael Sragow
With Joan Allen bringing a crisp intelligence to the sharp, unsentimental narration, it's both awful and fascinating to follow Hitler's warped growth from frustrated painter to self-appointed arbiter of Germanic art.- Baltimore Sun
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Reviewed by
Michael Sragow
The rousing new Western 3:10 to Yuma has the sweep of an epic and the economy of a stopwatch.- Baltimore Sun
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Reviewed by
Michael Sragow
It's both irrefutably concrete and irresistibly uplifting.- Baltimore Sun
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