For 7,955 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: 5,235 out of 7955
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Mixed: 1,554 out of 7955
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Negative: 1,166 out of 7955
7955
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
Hearts Beat Loud is gentle, funny, humane, and predictable, kept from becoming tiresome by a cast of pros that includes not only Offerman but Toni Collette as Frank’s landlady and possible love interest and a frisky Ted Danson as a philosophic stoner who owns the neighborhood watering hole.- Boston Globe
- Posted Jun 13, 2018
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Tom Russo
What’s most unexpectedly gratifying is how much energy veteran standup director Jeff Tomsic and his splashy cast pour into ensuring that this is legit entertainment, packed with gonzo wit and even some sentiment.- Boston Globe
- Posted Jun 13, 2018
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
Nancy is an eccentric, pungent gift of a film about a woman without identity played by an actress without persona.- Boston Globe
- Posted Jun 13, 2018
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Ty Burr
The result is a clattery, unfocused affair that at times is more irritating than fun.- Boston Globe
- Posted Jun 13, 2018
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Reviewed by
Ty Burr
High-concept, low-budget, proudly set-bound, Hotel Artemis shouldn’t work at all. Somehow, miraculously, it does.- Boston Globe
- Posted Jun 7, 2018
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Tom Russo
The drama palpably, potently conveys the group’s misgivings, their jangling nerves, the foolhardy resignation pushing them on despite themselves.- Boston Globe
- Posted Jun 6, 2018
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Peter Keough
In this semi-autobiographical period piece, Simón achieves the rare feat of faithfully recreating the mysterious consciousness of a child. Though her techniques can get repetitive and stall the narrative, more often than not her elliptical editing recreates an innocent’s perception of the slow drift of time.- Boston Globe
- Posted Jun 6, 2018
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Ty Burr
It’s an eerie mood piece that slowly and surely tightens the thumb screws before all hell breaks loose; that and the fact that much of Hereditary takes place in one rambling dark house is evidence that Aster has spent a lot of time studying “The Shining,” “The Exorcist,” and “Rosemary’s Baby.” It’s nice to have a classicist back in town.- Boston Globe
- Posted Jun 6, 2018
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Ty Burr
We go to heist films to see the suckers get taken in high style. This one just robs us bland.- Boston Globe
- Posted Jun 6, 2018
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Matthew Gilbert
For your two hours of discomfort, you will gain a better understanding of the insidious ways in which sexual predators work, and a clearer picture of how a victim’s denial and memory can conspire to bury the truth in the name of self-protection. You will also gain the experience of watching a wisely written, inventively directed, and extraordinarily acted story- Boston Globe
- Posted Jun 5, 2018
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Peter Keough
In his three-decade run, Rogers touched millions of souls. But the film is honest in questioning whether, in the end, he really made a difference.- Boston Globe
- Posted Jun 4, 2018
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Tom Russo
As he did with his "Everest" cast, Kormákur draws a strong, pathos-rich performance from Woodley, filled with moments of her character confronting her own mortality and looking back on safe choices not made. It’s solid drama, but also very slow going.- Boston Globe
- Posted May 31, 2018
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Ty Burr
Throw out any expectations you might have of coherent narrative structure or directorial control, and you might have a pretty good time.- Boston Globe
- Posted May 30, 2018
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Ty Burr
If Mary Shelley disappoints, it’s only because al-Mansour sticks to the tried and true bones of the bio-pic genre and plays it stylistically safe. Maybe the filmmaker hopes to prove her skill with a big-budget period piece; if so, she easily succeeds.- Boston Globe
- Posted May 30, 2018
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Isaac Feldberg
Upgrade, Whannell’s second outing behind the camera, is yet another top-notch repair job, this time a kinetic sci-fi riff fashioned from scrap metal and human entrails, nervily updating Cronenbergian body horror for the iOS era.- Boston Globe
- Posted May 30, 2018
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Tom Russo
Veteran London theater director Dominic Cooke (the BBC’s “The Hollow Crown”) and acclaimed novelist Ian McEwan adapt the fractured-narrative feature from McEwan’s book, enhancing the elegant prose with additional bits of rich characterization and handsomely shot scenery.- Boston Globe
- Posted May 23, 2018
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Ty Burr
The film casts Annette Bening as the vain, aging stage actress Irina Arkadina, Saoirse Ronan as the naive country beauty Nina, and Elisabeth Moss as bitter Masha, dressed in black “in mourning for my life.” Those are three excellent reasons to see the movie, and the filmmaking fights them almost every step of the way.- Boston Globe
- Posted May 23, 2018
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Ty Burr
Audiences should feel free to lower their guard — to adjust expectations into B-movie territory. And as a B-movie, “Solo” delivers, sometimes in a way that reminds a viewer of this franchise’s roots in classic Saturday matinee adventure serials and sometimes simply as proficient, dutiful, time-passing entertainment.- Boston Globe
- Posted May 22, 2018
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Ty Burr
This feeble excuse for a comedy made me angry, and if you have any cherished cinematic feelings for the quartet of actresses at its center, you may feel angry, too.- Boston Globe
- Posted May 16, 2018
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Ty Burr
Pope Francis: A Man of His Word is an essay in radical humility capable of moving a viewer regardless of his or her religious persuasions, or lack thereof.- Boston Globe
- Posted May 16, 2018
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Mark Feeney
Holding it all together is his voice-over narration: always intelligent and thoughtful, sometimes wistful, occasionally navel-gazing annoying. Even when annoying, the narration sounds great, thanks to the murmury musicality of Salles’s Portuguese.- Boston Globe
- Posted May 16, 2018
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Ty Burr
Deadpool 2 is very good at what it does, which is flattering the audience into feeling like it’s in on the joke. If you’re a doubter, though, you may wonder if the joke’s on us.- Boston Globe
- Posted May 16, 2018
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Tom Russo
Subpar stuff with a few multiplex-worthy bits: a gonzo opening chase with the US Border Patrol, some wisecracking narration, and grungy location atmosphere. [15 July 2012, p.N10]- Boston Globe
Posted May 12, 2018 -
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Peter Keough
Though sometimes it seems like a promotional video, the film offers a glimpse into the vagaries of class, culture, celebrity, and social mores since the hotel was first established back in 1930.- Boston Globe
- Posted May 10, 2018
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Ty Burr
Sadly, it’s not quite as fun as that sounds. If you’re up for something deeply and unsettlingly strange, though, Bruno Dumont’s portrait of the saint as a young zealot has genuine oddball pleasures amid stretches of real tedium.- Boston Globe
- Posted May 9, 2018
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Tom Russo
Thoroughly vanilla comedy, a movie jammed with well-meaning girl power messages but surprisingly little edge.- Boston Globe
- Posted May 9, 2018
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Peter Keough
Perhaps that is Roskam’s ultimate point: volition and individuality are illusory; only love and death matter. That truth comes through with somber clarity in the film’s eloquent coda, which almost makes up for the silliness that precedes it.- Boston Globe
- Posted May 9, 2018
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Ty Burr
Plays a little like “Sex and the City” as reconceived by a Minimalist composer. That makes the movie sound like a threat, when actually it’s a dry, lightly sad, and very French comedy of romantic neurosis, brought to us by two great artists, director Claire Denis (“Chocolat,” “Beau Travail,” “White Material”) and star Juliette Binoche.- Boston Globe
- Posted May 9, 2018
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Ty Burr
It’s an inane, absurd, fitfully amusing time-waster that ranks low on the believability scale and somewhere in the middle as mindless entertainment.- Boston Globe
- Posted May 3, 2018
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Ty Burr
A documentary love letter to Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, and it assumes you love her too.- Boston Globe
- Posted May 2, 2018
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