Charlotte Observer's Scores

  • Movies
For 1,652 reviews, this publication has graded:
  • 56% higher than the average critic
  • 3% same as the average critic
  • 41% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 0.1 points lower than other critics. (0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 65
Highest review score: 100 Frost/Nixon
Lowest review score: 0 Waist Deep
Score distribution:
1652 movie reviews
  1. All his facets come through: the satirist, the prankster, the self-described political conservative with libertarian leanings, the anti-authoritarian who urged people to vote, the man tolerant of anything except intolerance.
  2. The movie indicts exclusion and racial hierarchy without finding villains inside that system.
  3. Historians at Ellis Island estimate nearly half of all Americans had at least one ancestor pass through there between 1892 and 1954.
  4. Because the tale is straightforward and conventional, it needed and got terrific acting.
  5. If you like films short, sweet and soothing, this may be exactly your "Dish."
  6. The rest of this well-intentioned picture never reaches (Washington's) level of subtlety and intensity.
  7. Best of all, Billy (Jamie Bell) is that rarity in a film distributed by Hollywood: a real boy, confused at 11 about almost everything.
  8. The voice cast includes Angelina Jolie as a tigress, omnipresent Seth Rogen as an acupuncturist who's a praying mantis, David Cross as a nasal crane and Lucy Liu as a cheerful viper.
  9. Though all but two students look too old, their interpretations are unanimously fine.
  10. The title comes from the memoir by Mariane Pearl, wife of kidnapped Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl. It applies equally to Winterbottom, who has made the rarest movie among this summer's releases: a taut police procedural that examines all sides of an issue and forces us to re-think our own.
  11. The movie feels operatic at times. Tempestuous arias play on the soundtrack, and Puccini figures directly.
  12. Everything here has been done better in other books, other movies. The lone remarkable thing is the level of violence, which exposes the cowardice and hypocrisy of the Motion Picture Association of America's ratings system.
  13. Sitting through Source Code is like watching a chef coax a beautiful soufflé into perfect shape for 80 minutes, then drop a bowling ball on it.
  14. Like "Shattered Glass," the other picture Billy Ray directed, Breach probes a guilty mind and reveals how he baffled people. We get a Hitchcock-like pleasure from knowing the protagonist is guilty and watching other shocked characters realize his wickedness.
  15. I think Garland and Boyle just want to make our flesh creep by showing someone else's flesh decaying. If that's their aim, they achieved it.
  16. Penn, one of Hollywood's most famous iconoclasts, must have felt instinctive sympathy with someone who told the whole world in general to leave him alone.
  17. It's watchable, due to the rotoscoping technique...It's also as lightweight as the smoke rings blown by one of many perverse, dull characters.
  18. In a world full of recyclable superheroes and mindless “empowerment” comedies, we’re finally getting a movie about reality. We’re surrounded by surveillance and the threat of violence, and this film asks us to judge the proper balance between liberty and security – and the amount of collateral damage acceptable to maintain the latter.
  19. Freeman's understated, deeply-felt acting tops a passel of good performances. [25 Dec 1998, p.7E]
    • Charlotte Observer
  20. When I first heard about Wordplay, I assumed I wouldn't have an ort of interest.
  21. The honesty of the performances more than makes up for slight amounts of hokiness in the telling.
  22. A lot of chaotic fun.
  23. The Son's Room refers to every room this family will inhabit for a long time -- he's an unseen, ubiquitous presence -- but they may learn to lead ordinary, even joyful lives again.
  24. The juice in "Man" comes from supporting characters.
    • Charlotte Observer
  25. Trumping its predecessor with a tauter plot, a lower body count and just as many edge-of-the-seat jolts.
  26. Two things keep the film off Disney's top shelf. First, Naveen is a dull hero; his good-natured vanity isn't engaging until late in the story. Second, Newman's songs are less bland than usual but no more memorable.
  27. I'll sum up my reaction in a word: Yawn.
  28. Yet as fine as she and Ewan McGregor are as the parents, Tom Holland stands out as eldest son Lucas, a slightly sullen teen who learns to put other people before himself.
  29. Leaving the book aside, how well does the picture fare? Middingly, and in fits and starts.
  30. For all its flashes of emotional honesty and mordant humor, is nonsense at its core.

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