For 7,945 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 0.9 points 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: 5,227 out of 7945
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Mixed: 1,553 out of 7945
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Negative: 1,165 out of 7945
7945
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
It’s a not-unwatchable retread that has been tricked up to pass as a whole new thing. The problem with high-frame-rate productions is that they don’t look like what we’re used to calling “movies.” The problem with this one is that there wasn’t much movie there to begin with.- Boston Globe
- Posted Oct 9, 2019
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Reviewed by
Mark Feeney
The biggest problem with Where’s My Roy Cohn? is the documentary’s attitude toward its subject: not that it’s critical (an uncritical approach to Cohn would be about as interesting as a daytime visit to Studio 54), but that it so thoroughly accepts his view of himself.- Boston Globe
- Posted Oct 2, 2019
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Reviewed by
Mark Feeney
So expect the upending of expectations: visual, emotional, tonal, generic. Especially generic. Is First Love a comedy? A crime thriller? A love story? An advertorial for subscriptions to Guns and Ammo?...Yes.- Boston Globe
- Posted Oct 2, 2019
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
If the Marvel/Disney comic-book movies tend toward the chromium brio of the “Avengers” series, the DC superhero movies purveyed by Warner Bros. have taken their cue over the years from the 1986 revisionist graphic novel “The Dark Knight Returns,” and they are very dark indeed. Joker is the culmination of that approach, a slab of self-important pop-culture masonry whose only bright spot is the figure dancing brilliantly along its top.- Boston Globe
- Posted Oct 2, 2019
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
Who’s the audience for this? Well, me and about five other movie junkies at the crossroads of history and art. Maybe you, too, even if your knowledge of Buñuel stops with the slashed eyeball of “Un Chien Andalou” (1929), still one of the most shocking images in all cinema.- Boston Globe
- Posted Sep 25, 2019
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
If you saw Judy Davis as Garland in the 2001 miniseries “Me and My Shadows,” you know that’s a performance to beat. Zellweger matches it in her own way, through hair and makeup but mostly by channeling a kind of terrified bravura that’s riveting to watch. This Judy knows she’s an icon, and she knows it does her no good, and it’s all she’s got.- Boston Globe
- Posted Sep 25, 2019
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Reviewed by
Tom Russo
Yes, as it turns out — not only is Abominable as amusing as the competition, it boasts a lyricism and sweetness uniquely, sublimely its own.- Boston Globe
- Posted Sep 25, 2019
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Reviewed by
Tom Russo
The biggest narrative justification for “Downton” getting feature treatment might be the sweeping quality to all the character developments and showcase moments being juggled here. The intricacy is managed without ever playing like Fellowes took a couple of routine postscript episodes and simply stitched them together.- Boston Globe
- Posted Sep 17, 2019
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Reviewed by
Mark Feeney
Ad Astra is moody, meditative, and slow (though not the knife fight or rover demolition derby).- Boston Globe
- Posted Sep 17, 2019
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Reviewed by
Mark Feeney
What’s stimulating and fun about “Raise Hell” is quite stimulating and fun. But the more smitten you become with its subject — and it’s hard not to be — the more you feel there’s something missing or that what isn’t missing is yet too thin.- Boston Globe
- Posted Sep 11, 2019
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
The Goldfinch isn’t great literature but it is a good read. By breaking up the chronology and yanking the audience back and forth between Theo’s fraught youth and crisis-ridden present, though, the film prevents an audience from gaining emotional traction.- Boston Globe
- Posted Sep 11, 2019
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Reviewed by
Tom Russo
The character-isolating bits furnish us with immolating heroines and dread-laden glimpses of Pennywise unmasked — you know, stuff to fill the quiet moments between arachnophobe nightmares and a predatory scene even more perverse than the saga-opening storm-drain vignette.- Boston Globe
- Posted Sep 5, 2019
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
A documentary about a Macedonian beekeeper doesn’t sound like one of the best films of the year, does it? But few movies capture the great wheel of nature turning with as much beauty and empathy as Honeyland, and fewer still show how easily the wheel can slip its track and come crashing to pieces.- Boston Globe
- Posted Sep 4, 2019
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
The tumultuous emotional, sexual, and literary relationship between Virginia Woolf and Vita Sackville-West would make a fascinating movie — it’s a shame that Vita & Virginia isn’t it.- Boston Globe
- Posted Sep 4, 2019
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Reviewed by
Mark Feeney
A lot of jazz labels have mattered, but none has mattered the way Blue Note did — and, thanks to a proudly hip-hop-inflected present, still does. It’s the gold standard of recorded improvisational music. Sophie Huber’s briskly reverential documentary, Blue Note Records: Beyond the Notes, lets us see and hear why.- Boston Globe
- Posted Sep 4, 2019
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
It’s an occasionally plodding but rarely dull movie, and one whose stakes outweigh its impact as drama. In the end, the message is both illuminating and disturbing.- Boston Globe
- Posted Sep 4, 2019
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
This Is Not Berlin is a relative rarity: a coming-of-age drama in which the student may have more maturity than the teachers.- Boston Globe
- Posted Aug 28, 2019
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
Thankfully, the movie approaches this subject the way one might a used car, with suspicion and an extra helping of mordant humor. It just folds in the endorphins gradually, until you understand why audiences voted it their favorite film at this year’s Sundance Film Festival.- Boston Globe
- Posted Aug 28, 2019
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Reviewed by
Peter Keough
After watching the movie, its relentlessly catchy numbers might keep playing for you; as one of the interviewees says, “You’ll be singing these songs for the rest of your life, whether you like it or not.”- Boston Globe
- Posted Aug 21, 2019
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Reviewed by
Tom Russo
For all of its engaging performances, this thoughtful yarn from the filmmaking tandem of Tyler Nilson and Michael Schwartz is limited by a quaintly straightforward story line. Every choice the characters opt for, every bit of self-discovery they make, is as scripted as a rasslin’ baddie’s folding-chair cheap shot.- Boston Globe
- Posted Aug 21, 2019
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This saga, for all its twists and turns, comes to a relatively neat end. Those living in the real world aren’t so lucky. In the meantime, Zoabi seems to say, we can at least laugh about it.- Boston Globe
- Posted Aug 15, 2019
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Reviewed by
Peter Keough
Similar to Joshua Oppenheimer’s “The Look of Silence” (2014) in its confrontation with those implicated in past crimes, Wang’s film differs in that many of her subjects are both victims and perpetrators.- Boston Globe
- Posted Aug 15, 2019
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A charming study of masculinity and friendship, the movie makes the case that “goodness” is a measure of how boys perceive themselves in relation to others. It may be another addition to the “adolescent party odyssey” line — think “Superbad” (2007) and “Booksmart” (2019) — but Good Boys yields something fresh.- Boston Globe
- Posted Aug 15, 2019
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
Mishandles Maria Semple’s best-selling comic novel into a clattery mess. There are deftly human moments to be found, but you have to dig for them like potatoes.- Boston Globe
- Posted Aug 15, 2019
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
The movie’s sentimental, predictable, fairly sloppy. It’s also a thoroughgoing joy — a cherry popsicle for the end of summer. If certain elements seem familiar from the recent “Yesterday” — classic rock and a South Asian lead character, primarily — “Blinded” is the better bargain: less slick, more cliched, but also more genuinely felt.- Boston Globe
- Posted Aug 14, 2019
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Watts’s insistence on pursuing in secret the truth about her son, as opposed to asking him simple questions outright, doesn’t quite track. The questions echo long after the credits roll — which is either brilliant or maddening, depending on who you ask.- Boston Globe
- Posted Aug 8, 2019
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
If you doubt that August is the boneyard for movies too poor to release in other months, here’s The Kitchen, an addled and actively unpleasant crime comedy-drama with a high-profile cast and a mean streak a mile wide. Based on a limited-edition comic book and completed in July 2018, the movie’s been sitting on the shelf until enough people are on vacation to not see it.- Boston Globe
- Posted Aug 7, 2019
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
It’s a PG movie with pleasantly canned life lessons, and it’s safe for kids and adults alike, although anyone with a shred of cynicism may not want to be seen caving in to the script’s emotional inevitabilities.- Boston Globe
- Posted Aug 7, 2019
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
The Nightingale strives to be an epic and pulls it off, even if there are one or two false summits before the final scenes. It’s painful to watch because the truth is often painful, especially when so many myths of empire have accreted around it.- Boston Globe
- Posted Aug 7, 2019
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The snake stuff is riveting — how could it not be? But Poulton and Madison Savage’s treatment of the rural community tilts toward the anthropological: A few corny bits of dialogue can make the parishioners feel like types instead of characters.- Boston Globe
- Posted Aug 7, 2019
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