For 7,950 reviews, this publication has graded:
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54% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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44% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 1 point lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 64
| Highest review score: | Autumn Tale | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | Argylle |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 5,231 out of 7950
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Mixed: 1,554 out of 7950
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Negative: 1,165 out of 7950
7950
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Mark Feeney
The documentary’s chief virtue, after the very considerable pleasure of getting to spend time in Sacks’s company, is learning how much his personal life rivaled his career in remarkableness.- Boston Globe
- Posted Sep 24, 2020
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Reviewed by
Mark Feeney
The first two-thirds is lively in pace, all of it is amiable in tone and sun-splashed in appearance. The final half hour gets a bit gushy. It’s mostly devoted to Alpert’s blissful second marriage, to singer Lani Hall — they’ve been married nearly 50 years — and his philanthropic largess. But since there’s a lot to gush about, that’s okay.- Boston Globe
- Posted Sep 30, 2020
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
Yet for all the gags that fall flat and scenes that don’t quite play, there are enough that fuse shock humor and sly moral commentary to combust in your face.- Boston Globe
- Posted Oct 22, 2020
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Reviewed by
Jay Carr
Certainly Loaded Weapon delivers laughs. It's just that you notice the spaces between the laughs more readily than with the "Naked Gun" fusillade. I laughed, but I laughed more at Joe Dante's sendup of schlock sci-fi a la William Castle last week in "Matinee." [5 Feb 1993, p.33]- Boston Globe
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Ty Burr
The director is Lee Daniels, of Precious (2009) and The Butler (2013), here evoking the historical era and its figures with verve and intelligence but unable to find a dramatic center other than his electrifying star.- Boston Globe
- Posted Feb 24, 2021
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
A delicate, observant, and rather too quiescent drama of coming home to a strange land, Monsoon is an interesting change of pace for star Henry Golding (“Crazy Rich Asians”) and another musing on diaspora by the Cambodia-born British filmmaker Hong Khaou.- Boston Globe
- Posted Nov 12, 2020
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Reviewed by
Jay Carr
Dragonheart has what it needs at its heart - namely, the dragon. The rest of its story, about a disillusioned knight joining forces with the world's last dragon to help peasants overthrow a tyrannical 10th-century king, has a warmed-over quality. [31 May 1996, p.47]- Boston Globe
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Ty Burr
The Twentieth Century exists somewhere on the Venn diagram between midnight movie, fever dream, Turner Classics fetish object, and all-Canadian prank. Does that sound interesting? By all means. Does the movie go anywhere? Not really. Will you mind? I didn’t.- Boston Globe
- Posted Nov 18, 2020
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Mark Feeney
It’s not hard to see the script’s appeal for the actors, John David Washington and Zendaya. Playing the only characters in the movie, they get a very serious workout and give seriously good performances.- Boston Globe
- Posted Feb 3, 2021
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Reviewed by
Jay Carr
First Knight, despite its unfortunate title, is not a stupid film, just a mostly flat and talky one. It's gorgeously crafted and filled with goodwill, but it's more admirable than genuinely compelling or moving, much less ablaze with conviction. It's got the trappings, but not the inner fire. [07 Jul 1995, p.27]- Boston Globe
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Ty Burr
The movie’s a watchable affair for most of the running time, not so much subverting cliches of the serial-killer genre as keeping the audience in suspense as to how, if, and when those cliches will be observed.- Boston Globe
- Posted Jan 29, 2021
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Jay Carr
It plays something like Robert Altman Lite. It's saved from writer-director Willard Carroll's increasingly forced linkages and made watchable by the resourceful acting of its ensemble, some of whom get more to work with than others. [22 Jan 1999, p.D4]- Boston Globe
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Odie Henderson
It’s a mechanical exercise that lacks suspense, is too long (at 148 minutes, it’s the franchise’s lengthiest film), and is so chockfull of exposition that I took more notes than I’ve done in years.- Boston Globe
- Posted May 20, 2024
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Reviewed by
Mark Feeney
Rodney Ascher directed Glitch. He’s best known for Room 237 (2012), an inspired look at several bizarre theories about Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining (1980). Glitch ups the ante on that documentary and then some. It looks at a bizarre theory about everything. The result is lively, playful, and busy — in a very good way.- Boston Globe
- Posted Feb 3, 2021
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Reviewed by
Mark Feeney
Babylon is a labor of love that never feels laborious. But as the allusions and inside jokes pile up, they become distracting. Or they do if you care about old movies.- Boston Globe
- Posted Jan 2, 2023
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Reviewed by
Jay Carr
As Die Hard clones go, it's easier to take than most. [06 Nov 1992, p.38]- Boston Globe
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Stone Cold trips up at the end, but it's still recommended for fans of the genre or Road Warrior fans out for a night of cinematic slumming. It snarls, it bites, it roars. [17 May 1992, p.32]- Boston Globe
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Reviewed by
Jay Carr
There's nothing seriously wrong with Man in the Moon. It's sincere, heartfelt and handsomely crafted - but within limits, and ultimately it's the limits you feel most strongly. [04 Oct 1991, p.43]- Boston Globe
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Matthew Gilbert
Along with Cusack's marvelously natural performance, True Colors offers a premise deeper than most twentysomething-audience movies. The ethical conflicts between Spader and Cusack are thought-provoking, if simplistic and exaggerated. At the same time, True Colors seems to scream Cultural Statement. It's self-consciously anthemic. [26 Apr 1991, p.74]- Boston Globe
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Mark Feeney
Nightmare Alley doesn’t lack for action. It’s just that the action feels mechanical, a going through the motions. It’s a sincere going through the motions. It’s a committed going through the motions. But it’s still a going through the motions. Worse than a dream that’s a nightmare is a dream that’s a form of sleepwalking.- Boston Globe
- Posted Dec 15, 2021
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Reviewed by
Patricia Smith
This formula comedy could have been a disaster, but during their short-lived career as a comedy team, Kid 'N Play seemed to have picked up a few pointers. They're not Abbott and Costello, but that's not what's called for here - what's called for is a fresh face on the formula, a young and easygoing team that really believes what it's doing is funny. [05 Jun 1992, p.29]- Boston Globe
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Mark Feeney
Ruby is an underdog worth rooting for, and Jones (the Netflix series Locke & Key) is terrific. She’s like a cross between the young Winona Ryder and the young Kate Winslet. The comparison flatters all three.- Boston Globe
- Posted Aug 12, 2021
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Reviewed by
Mark Feeney
There’s some scary bad-guy stuff in the movie, but nothing to compare for fearfulness with its climactic forest fire.- Boston Globe
- Posted May 13, 2021
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
True to its title, Moxie has a lot of moxie, and it’s an easy watch, smartly acted by a crew of young talents.- Boston Globe
- Posted Mar 5, 2021
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Reviewed by
Mark Feeney
It would be wrong to call El Planeta a comedy, or drama, or even that wretched if useful term dramedy. It’s a slice of life, the life belonging to Gijon.- Boston Globe
- Posted Nov 3, 2021
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Reviewed by
Mark Feeney
Strawberry Mansion is a very strange movie. It’s at times beguiling, at other times so wackadoo inscrutable you want to groan. Either way, it’s always inventive. It’s very much its own thing, and in this movie day and age that is no small accomplishment.- Boston Globe
- Posted Feb 16, 2022
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
Together Together sounds like a really bad idea on paper, and for the first half-hour or so, it’s a really bad idea on screen. Yet a funny thing happens to this surrogate-pregnancy romantic comedy (I told you it was a bad idea) as it bumps along: It develops curious and unexpected pockets of feeling.- Boston Globe
- Posted Apr 21, 2021
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