For 7,601 reviews, this publication has graded:
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62% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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36% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 1.5 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 66
| Highest review score: | Autumn Tale | |
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| Lowest review score: | Car 54, Where Are You? |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 5,106 out of 7601
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Mixed: 1,473 out of 7601
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Negative: 1,022 out of 7601
7601
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Michael Wilmington
From A.I. Bezzerides' "The Long Haul," with George Raft and Bogie as tough trucking brothers and Ann Sheridan and Ida Lupino as the good woman and the bad.[06 Oct 2006, p.C8]- Chicago Tribune
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Michael Wilmington
Even if you think you've sampled all Jane Austen has to offer on screen, you still may jump at the chance to see Pride and Prejudice. [29 Aug 1996, p.7A]- Chicago Tribune
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Michael Wilmington
This one features the heartbreaking young Vivien Leigh with her flower-like face, flashing eyes and seductive fragility; Robert Taylor is a little stiff as the hero. (isn't he always?), but it's a nice lush MGM production. [31 Oct 1999, p.34]- Chicago Tribune
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Despite Hitch's discomfort at the iron hand of producer David Selznick, it remains one of his best-loved works. [23 Dec 2011, p.C10]- Chicago Tribune
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Michael Wilmington
One of the great American social films: strong, ribald, deeply compassionate. [30 Sep 2005, p.C6]- Chicago Tribune
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Dave Kehr
Perhaps the most perfect of the great Disney animated features-the most expressively animated, the least pretentious, the best balanced between horror and joy, adventure and comedy.- Chicago Tribune
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Reviewed by
Michael Wilmington
Ex-Chicago reporters Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur's "The Front Page" may be the greatest of all newspaper plays, but none of the other movie versions matches this snazzy remake. [04 May 2001, p.C1]- Chicago Tribune
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Michael Wilmington
Lovingly designed, impeccably stylish and heartwarming.- Chicago Tribune
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Michael Wilmington
This is an intoxicatingly amusing blend of cynical urbane comedy, slick detection and breezy romance. [24 Jun 2005, p.C6]- Chicago Tribune
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Michael Wilmington
Walsh and producer Mark Hellinger's classic ultra-tough gangster opus about World War I, Prohibition and good-hearted mobster Jimmy Cagney's breezy rise and grim fall. [18 Feb 2005, p.C6]- Chicago Tribune
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Michael Wilmington
Hitchcock adapts another Daphne Du Maurier novel -- a tale of pirates and distressed damsels on the Cornish coast -- with less memorable results than either "Rebecca" or "The Birds." But Charles Laughton is a nicely nasty two-faced villain and Maureen O'Hara a staunch heroine. [18 Jun 2000, p.22]- Chicago Tribune
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Michael Wilmington
Like many Hollywood classics, Oz benefited from happy accidents: Happiest of all was the casting, as Dorothy, of MGM teenage songbird Garland, whose wide-eyed emoting and passionate singing make the movie. Behind her is a near-perfect supporting cast. [18 Jun 1999, p.I]- Chicago Tribune
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Michael Wilmington
Musical bio of the early 20th Century dance team; their weakest. [03 Nov 2006, p.C5]- Chicago Tribune
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Michael Wilmington
After "Ninotchka," this is the best Billy Wilder-Charles Brackett script filmed by somebody else: a terrific romantic swindle comedy set in Paris, starring Claudette Colbert, Don Ameche and John Barrymore. [26 Sep 2003, p.C5]- Chicago Tribune
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Superb performances by John Wayne, Claire Trevor and Thomas Mitchell -- who won the Oscar for best supporting actor -- make for an authentic classic that has been copied but never equaled. [25 Feb 2008, p.C8]- Chicago Tribune
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Reginald Owen stars as Ebenezer Scrooge, the Christmas-hating curmudgeon who finally gets the spirit in this 1938 adaptation of the Charles Dickens classic. [05 Dec 2014, p.C2]- Chicago Tribune
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Michael Wilmington
Trains are perfect settings for murder mysteries and thrillers. The best of them -- surpassing Murder on the Orient Express, The Narrow Margin, Runaway Train and dozens of others -- is Alfred Hitchcock's The Lady Vanishes. [26 Nov 1999, p.A]- Chicago Tribune
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Michael Wilmington
A masterpiece. Davis' great naughty Southern belle role, co-starring Henry Fonda and Fay Bainter. [07 Jul 2006, p.C7]- Chicago Tribune
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Michael Wilmington
Though relatively little-known, this ingenious romantic chase thriller, based on Josephine Tey's "A Shilling for Candles," is one of Hitchcock's most inventive and charming '30s films. [22 Jan 1999, p.F]- Chicago Tribune
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Michael Wilmington
Amazingly cynical and howlingly funny. [13 Jan 1994, p.10]- Chicago Tribune
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Michael Wilmington
One of the great screwball comedies. [23 Jan 1998, p.N]- Chicago Tribune
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Michael Wilmington
A near-classic, "Woman" is let down only by Bacon's sluggish helming. [15 Aug 1996, p.9A]- Chicago Tribune
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A commercially compromised but often brilliant updating of Joseph Conrad's The Secret Agent. [27 Sep 2013, p.C6]- Chicago Tribune
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Second-best of the "Thin Man" series, after the unbeatable first entry, this sparkling sequel boasts a breezy San Francisco setting and an even better cast, topped by William Powell and Myrna Loy. [30 Dec 2011, p.C2]- Chicago Tribune
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Michael Wilmington
La Cava was famous for improvising his scenes; My Man Godfrey is the most brilliant, unbuttoned example. It's a champagne farce, sparkling and bubbling from the depths of the Depression. [08 Jun 2007, p.C9]- Chicago Tribune
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Michael Wilmington
Swing Time, a Depression-era Manhattan ballad -- and best of the bunch by a hair over Top Hat -- has Fred as a threadbare gambler named Lucky, Ginger as a saucy dance teacher named Penny and a heart-stopping Kern-Dorothy Fields score that includes The Way You Look Tonight, A Fine Romance, Pick Yourself Up and their masterpiece farewell duet number, Never Gonna Dance. [23 Aug 2005, p.C3]- Chicago Tribune
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For sheer lavishness, attention to detail, honesty of purpose, The Great Ziegfeld is to be commended. Where the picture falls down - hard! - is in its fulsomeness. [15 Apr 1936, p.21]- Chicago Tribune
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Michael Wilmington
It's a Rafael Sabatini pirate movie with almost everything: galleons, high seas, Olivia de Havilland and a fantastic Errol Flynn-Basil Rathbone swordfight. [15 Aug 1996, p.9A]- Chicago Tribune
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Michael Wilmington
The first, and best, of the three versions of Charles Dickens' tale of the French Revolution. [05 Dec 2008, p.C5]- Chicago Tribune
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Michael Wilmington
The story is spellbinding, the acting lusty and the spectacle everything you could expect from a Golden Age MGM production--though sometimes it's a bit too much on the monumental side.- Chicago Tribune
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