Charlotte Observer's Scores
- Movies
For 1,652 reviews, this publication has graded:
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56% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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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: | Frost/Nixon | |
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| Lowest review score: | Waist Deep |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,085 out of 1652
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Mixed: 279 out of 1652
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Negative: 288 out of 1652
1652
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman
Director Tom McCarthy, who wrote the script with Josh Singer, has made a film without heroes.- Charlotte Observer
- Posted Nov 25, 2015
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Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman
The two most frightening concepts in Room, one of the most remarkable movies of 2015, are freedom and the lack of it.- Charlotte Observer
- Posted Nov 17, 2015
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Lawrence Toppman
I can't recall the last film that so wholly, honestly and movingly explained what it means to be a Christian.- Charlotte Observer
- Posted Apr 21, 2011
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Lawrence Toppman
Writer Steve Kloves, who adapted all of J.K. Rowling's novels except "Order of the Phoenix" over the last 11 years, neither wastes a word nor leaves out any essentials.- Charlotte Observer
- Posted Jul 13, 2011
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Lawrence Toppman
Selick's fantastical adaptation of Neil Gaiman's novel will be too dazzlingly rich for many; it'll be like "caviare to the general," as Hamlet said of a complex play enacted for a public with lazy minds.- Charlotte Observer
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Lawrence Toppman
The most difficult task in Pixar's 20-year history: to make an un-Mickey-like rodent appealing enough to admire.- Charlotte Observer
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Lawrence Toppman
He's (Yimou) like a painter combining bloody reds, sunshine yellows and pale blues in the harmony of a masterpiece.- Charlotte Observer
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Lawrence Toppman
Just as moving, uplifting and funny as ever in its slightly modified form. [2002 re-release]- Charlotte Observer
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Lawrence Toppman
We don't find out until the last scene how reality and fantasy intersect, when the meaning of the first shot of the film gets driven home. How many movies have you seen with a payoff like that?- Charlotte Observer
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- Charlotte Observer
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Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman
Succeeds as an action film, character study and metaphor for our own terrorism-obsessed time.- Charlotte Observer
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Lawrence Toppman
Once every couple of years, a movie comes along to remind us how satisfyingly complex the genre can be. Christopher Nolan’s reimagining of the “Batman” saga did that masterfully. On a slightly less ambitious scale, so does X-Men: Days of Future Past.- Charlotte Observer
- Posted May 22, 2014
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Lawrence Toppman
Director Matt Reeves, working from a script by Rick Jaffa, Amanda Silver and Mark Bomback, elevates the apes to primary importance in this intelligent thriller.- Charlotte Observer
- Posted Jul 10, 2014
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Don't let the spectacle and the hugeness of the film scare you -- it's good entertainment. [02 Jun 1936, p.19]- Charlotte Observer
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Reviewed by
Lawrence Toppman
The film remains sadly profound and profoundly sad, yet it holds just enough humor to lighten a weighty subject without trivializing it.- Charlotte Observer
- Posted Jul 9, 2015
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Lawrence Toppman
Moore makes no attempt at visual reality. The colors and drawings employ the flat design of a handsomely decorated book, and the children have the huge eyes, disproportionately large heads and small bodies you sometimes see in Japanese animation.- Charlotte Observer
- Posted Feb 7, 2015
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Lawrence Toppman
The Dardennes know how to tell low-key stories effectively, and Cotillard’s Academy Award-nominated performance builds toward the unexpected ending.- Charlotte Observer
- Posted Feb 7, 2015
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Lawrence Toppman
Nobody fires a shot. Nobody topples a kingdom. But as Ivan Locke’s life unravels behind the wheel of his car, which he drives almost from the first frame to the last, we can’t look away.- Charlotte Observer
- Posted May 15, 2014
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Lawrence Toppman
The most important thing, though, is that we come away feeling we know him. He died on Christmas Day eight years ago, and people listening to samples of his music in rap and hip-hop may have no idea why he mattered. Now they’ll see.- Charlotte Observer
- Posted Jul 31, 2014
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Lawrence Toppman
The film could hardly be less American in tone: It has no villains. It provides complete and comfortable closure for none of its relationships.- Charlotte Observer
- Posted Feb 13, 2014
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Lawrence Toppman
It’s the rare animated film that might amuse adults and kids while slipping a useful message to the latter.- Charlotte Observer
- Posted Sep 25, 2014
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Lawrence Toppman
Now You See Me can’t quite claim to be the ideal crime drama – that would be “The Usual Suspects,” which justly won an Oscar for its script – but it’s only one level down.- Charlotte Observer
- Posted May 30, 2013
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Lawrence Toppman
Relaxed editing and well-researched set and costumes give us a firm feeling of the period, and Dick Pope (who has worked with Leigh 10 times) excels. It’s a cliche to say a cinematographer does painterly work, but Pope suffuses the screen with light in the way Turner did his canvases.- Charlotte Observer
- Posted Mar 1, 2015
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Lawrence Toppman
This Oscar-nominated documentary does everything you want a documentary to do. It introduces us to a compelling character and, by the finish, allows us to feel we know him well. It makes larger points about the human toil and suffering he shot for most of his career, before he turned to nature to refresh himself.- Charlotte Observer
- Posted May 28, 2015
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Lawrence Toppman
Gone Girl offers interesting, even amusing audio cues: the sound of a distant mourning dove when we suspect Amy’s been killed, or Blue Oyster Cult’s “Don’t Fear the Reaper” playing on a car radio as Nick returns his obnoxious father to an assisted care center.- Charlotte Observer
- Posted Oct 2, 2014
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Lawrence Toppman
The Fault in Our Stars beautifully captures the hesitancy, shyness masked by outward confidence, feelings of unworthiness and quiet intensity of teenagers in love.- Charlotte Observer
- Posted Jun 5, 2014
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Lawrence Toppman
The result is two-tiered humor, broad enough to appeal to anybody but overlaid with jokes that will be funnier if you know the show.- Charlotte Observer
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Lawrence Toppman
He's (Soderbergh) among the few directors working today who makes me wonder what he'll do next - and draws me into the movie house, whatever it may be.- Charlotte Observer
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Lawrence Toppman
An animated film that challenges preconceptions about the genre and foregoes the usual romance/adventure structure.- Charlotte Observer
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Lawrence Toppman
Begins and ends quietly, like stirrings of thunder from a distant storm. In between comes a tragedy that rolls over us like a compact hurricane.- Charlotte Observer
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