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 higher 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. As usual, Almodovar finds unusual camera angles to break up the straightforward storytelling. But for the first time I recall, not a single male character is crucial to his story, and no actor has a leading role. You won't miss them.
  2. Fire shows what happens when a government systematically denies rights to one racial group for decades, but its message is more current.
  3. It offers razor-sharp editing, first-rate performances, direction that yields maximum emotional effect and a flabby, unconvincing screenplay.
  4. Most importantly, Shut Up & Sing is about what happens in the music industry to people who won't.
  5. Writer-director Coppola and her production team have gotten the look of the late 18th century right...But they've gotten almost everything else wrong.
  6. Eastwood thrusts us into the period with an understated piano score (which he composed) and authentic production design by Henry Bumstead, who died last May after working on the film at 90. (He collaborated with Eastwood on 11 films, including the Oscar-winning "Unforgiven" and "Million Dollar Baby," and he's a dedicatee of "Flags.")
  7. To talk more about the movie's layers is to risk giving away too much. I'll say only that this film confirms Nolan's status as the director whose work I look forward to more than any other.
  8. Top honors go to Guinee, who steadily builds his character from tiny details, and Reaser, who's understood through eyes and attitude while speaking a hodgepodge of German, Norwegian and English.
  9. Writer-director Barry Levinson leaned on Robin Williams the way a one-ring circus relies on its lone acrobat. So they're jointly responsible for the film's utter failure.
  10. Infamous, which mines almost the exact same ground as "Capote," comes up 300 days late and artistically close to bankruptcy.
  11. Scorsese in his prime might've made better use of this hamming, but this picture feels like an exercise by a Scorsese clone who has tackled the master's themes - without his energy and economy of style.
  12. It's hard to fault a script that keeps finding new dilemmas for characters and rewards attentive viewers with in-jokes.
  13. Thornton and Heder perform at about half their maximum wattage, which isn't enough to power the inert script.
  14. Besides its title, the movie has retained the book's outline...But the film throws away the point of the book completely.
  15. Yet even the language, finally, becomes as inauthentic as the accents.
  16. Li plays haughty, brilliant wushu master Huo Yuanjia, whose recklessness leads to tragedy after he becomes a champion at the end of the 19th century.
  17. I felt depressed when I realized all 87 minutes had passed without one word about forgiving sin or reaching out to the image of God in neighbors who don't think as you do.
  18. Lane, perhaps the most underrated actress of those deemed employable in their 40s, wonderfully embodies the mogul's wife.
  19. Another surefire sports biography from Disney.
  20. Babbit clumsily underlines emotional moods.
  21. The picture feels like an entertaining short story, competently executed at undue length, and that's its origin.
  22. "Man" is like a sour, half-formed version of a TV sitcom full of dislikable, disconnected characters.
  23. The movie is not credible, even in an inner-city setting. At the same time, it's touching.
  24. The strong personalities of Maria Bello and Maggie Gyllenhaal, who play typical supportive wives, keep scenes from sagging.
  25. At the heart of the film, beyond the human/crawler conflict, is the suppressed tension between Sarah and Juno. That Marshall bothered to include such a fillip sets him apart from run-of-the-mill scaremongers; it makes me want to see what else he's done and will do.
  26. All of Barnyard is odd. Oddly funny much of the way, oddly serious when it makes room for the early death of a beloved character or the hushed birth of another, oddly musical with its melange of hip-hop and reggae and hard rock and bluegrass.
  27. On their accounts (Williams/Collette), The Night Listener is compelling viewing-but on their accounts only.
  28. They've interspersed laugh-out-loud segments with dry, repetitive material.
  29. If you really must see Miami Vice (and you mustn't), buy a ticket to something better, then slip into "Vice" at the 95-minute mark and watch the last third of the movie. No one involved will profit by your curiosity, and you won't miss a thing of importance.
  30. When Allen revives his plodding "Manhattan Murder Mystery" as the even duller Scoop, I snore.

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