Chicago Sun-Times' Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 8,157 reviews, this publication has graded:
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73% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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25% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 6.1 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 71
| Highest review score: | Falling from Grace | |
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| Lowest review score: | Jupiter Ascending |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 6,086 out of 8157
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Mixed: 1,243 out of 8157
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Negative: 828 out of 8157
8157
movie
reviews
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
There is an odd moment when Harpo shows Groucho a doghouse tattooed on his stomach, and in a special effect a real dog emerges and barks at him. The brothers broke the classical structure of movie comedy and glued it back again haphazardly, and nothing was ever the same.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Richard Roeper
Uncut Gems is part psychological thriller, part black comedy, part thriller and part dysfunctional extended family drama — and it clicks on all those cylinders.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 26, 2019
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
In McCabe and Mrs. Miller, Altman uses a tactfully unobtrusive camera, a distinctive conversational style of dialog and the fluid movements of his actors to give us people who are characters from the moment we see them; we have the sense that when they leave camera range they're still thinking, humming, scratching, chewing and nodding to each other in the street.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Richard Roeper
This is a well-crafted look at the American folk music scene of the early 1960s, a sometimes hilarious dry comedy — and oh yeah, the music is terrific.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Dec 18, 2013
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Roger Ebert
It feels surprisingly modern: lean, direct, honest about issues that Hollywood then studiously avoided. After the war years of patriotism and heroism in the movies, this was a sobering look at the problems veterans faced when they returned home.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
Stagecoach holds our attention effortlessly and is paced with the elegance of a symphony.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp is a film of balance and insight--a civilized film, which even in a time of war celebrates civilized values.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Richard Roeper
Even as TÁR delivers as an intellectually soaring, elaborately constructed and passionate tribute to the technical AND emotional joys of playing, conducting and appreciating beautiful music, it also becomes a knowing and timely #MeToo fable.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Oct 13, 2022
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
The kind of film that is easily called great. I am not sure of its greatness. It was filmed in the same area of Texas used by "No Country for Old Men," and that is a great film, and a perfect one. But There Will Be Blood"is not perfect, and in its imperfections we may see its reach exceeding its grasp. Which is not a dishonorable thing.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
A few great directors have the ability to draw us into their dream world, into their personalities and obsessions and fascinate us with them for a short time. This is the highest level of escapism the movies can provide for us.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Feb 21, 2013
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
Using period songs and decor to create nostalgia is familiar enough, but to tunnel down to the visual level and get that right, too, and in a way that will affect audiences even if they aren't aware how, is one hell of a directing accomplishment.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
It comes closer to reflecting the current state of race relations in America than any other movie of our time.- Chicago Sun-Times
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- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
At a point when many dancers would be gasping for breath, Astaire and Rogers are smiling easily, heedlessly. To watch them is to see hard work elevated to effortless joy: The work of two dancers who know they can do no better than this, and that no one else can do as well.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
Brother's Keeper, the year's best documentary, has an impact and immediacy that most fiction films can only envy. It tells a strong story, and some passages are truly inspirational, as the neighbors of Munnsville become determined that Delbert will not be railroaded by some ambitious prosecutor more concerned with bringing charges than with understanding the reality of the situation.- Chicago Sun-Times
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- Chicago Sun-Times
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- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
[Kurosawa] was deliberately combining the samurai story with the Western, so that the wind-swept main street could be in any frontier town, the samurai (Toshiro Mifune) could be a gunslinger, and the local characters could have been lifted from John Ford's gallery of supporting actors.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Richard Roeper
It’s not easy to make an emotionally involving film in which some of the most pivotal moments are about phone calls and making copies of documents and a source circling names on a document — but save for a few overly dry moments, Spotlight prevails.- Chicago Sun-Times
- Posted Nov 12, 2015
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Roger Ebert
Routinely called Tarkovsky's reply to Kubrick's "2001" -- But Kubrick's film is outward, charting man's next step in the universe, while Tarkovsky's is inward, asking about the nature and reality of the human personality.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
Singin' in the Rain is a comedy, but The Band Wagon has a note of melancholy along with its smiles, a sadness always present among Broadway veterans, who have seen more failure than success, who know the show always closes and that the backstage family breaks up and returns to the limbo of auditions and out-of-town tryouts.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
Late Spring is one of the best two or three films Ozu ever made.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
Over the years I have seen "Ikiru" every five years or so, and each time it has moved me, and made me think.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
The Wizard of Oz has a wonderful surface of comedy and music, special effects and excitement, but we still watch it six decades later because its underlying story penetrates straight to the deepest insecurities of childhood, stirs them and then reassures them.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
At the end we are left with the reflection that human consciousness is the great miracle of evolution, and all the rest (sight, sound, taste, hearing, smell, touch) are simply a toolbox that consciousness has supplied for itself.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
The movie is bursting with life, energy, fears, frustrations and the quick laughter of a classroom hungry for relief.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
It was Francois Truffaut who said that it's not possible to make an anti-war movie, because all war movies, with their energy and sense of adventure, end up making combat look like fun. If Truffaut had lived to see Platoon, the best film of 1986, he might have wanted to modify his opinion. Here is a movie that regards combat from ground level, from the infantryman's point of view, and it does not make war look like fun.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Roger Ebert
Many of the scenes in No Country for Old Men are so flawlessly constructed that you want them to simply continue, and yet they create an emotional suction drawing you to the next scene. Another movie that made me feel that way was "Fargo." To make one such film is a miracle. Here is another.- Chicago Sun-Times
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Reviewed by
Roger Ebert
[Nicholson's] performance is key in keeping Chinatown from becoming just a genre crime picture--that, and a Robert Towne screenplay that evokes an older Los Angeles, a small city in a large desert.- Chicago Sun-Times
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