CineVue's Scores
- Movies
For 1,771 reviews, this publication has graded:
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48% higher than the average critic
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4% same as the average critic
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48% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 6.3 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 71
| Highest review score: | Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb | |
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| Lowest review score: | Victoria and Abdul |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,013 out of 1771
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Mixed: 727 out of 1771
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Negative: 31 out of 1771
1771
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Ed Frankl
A luscious, strangely enchanting watch and terrific fun for those who'll launch themselves into it.- CineVue
- Posted Jan 31, 2017
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Jamie Neish
Boyle has made an admirable effort that captures the melancholy of being right back to where you started from. But it's not what it used to be - or what it could have been.- CineVue
- Posted Jan 27, 2017
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Reviewed by
Tom Duggins
It mostly holds together, but you'd have to hope that David Brent: Life on the Road represents the farewell tour.- CineVue
- Posted Jan 20, 2017
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Martyn Conterio
My Father, Die's pummelling violence and existentialist leanings would be too absurd if set in County Kerry or County Mayo, but the doom-filled lyricism - its bloodied, weary soul - might best be described as Beckett with gunplay.- CineVue
- Posted Jan 19, 2017
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Matthew Anderson
Its lasting resonance and wider humanitarian message is diluted by a second half that drags it down.- CineVue
- Posted Jan 19, 2017
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Reviewed by
Matthew Anderson
Watching the goofy boy develop into a man, we share in his experiences and root for him each step of the way.- CineVue
- Posted Jan 18, 2017
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John Bleasdale
Starless Dreams is a fascinating and humane view of the marginalised and forgotten. The girls' voices rise as a startlingly powerful chorus, questioning, challenging and demanding we listen.- CineVue
- Posted Jan 17, 2017
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- Critic Score
Though Anna and Otto's story is undoubtedly a fascinating example of the necessity of resistance and Perez is clearly a skilful director of actors, there's something anticlimactic about Alone in Berlin.- CineVue
- Posted Jan 12, 2017
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Reviewed by
Matthew Anderson
Fares' film doesn't ever quite hit the same high-octane levels as its petrol head subjects but it is nevertheless a very unusual and encouraging representation of social change, defiance and self-determination.- CineVue
- Posted Jan 11, 2017
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Matthew Anderson
A chilling expose of state-sponsored cyber warfare and the enemy within.- CineVue
- Posted Jan 10, 2017
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Martyn Conterio
Challenging, daring, provocative, disgusting - We are the Flesh is all those things and then some, but also superbly crafted and always visually compelling.- CineVue
- Posted Jan 9, 2017
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Reviewed by
Allie Gemmill
The Son of Joseph is nothing short of marvelous. A modernised tale of literal Biblical proportions that will make viewers reconsider what defines paternity, family, and their place in the world. But don't worry: that's a good thing.- CineVue
- Posted Jan 9, 2017
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Reviewed by
Ben Nicholson
Johnson is pushing the audience to see these images as a dialogue between herself and these subjects, both in the frame of her representation of them and their impact on her.- CineVue
- Posted Jan 6, 2017
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Christopher Machell
Molero's film is a challenging and truly contemporary work: a forceful, if imperfect, look at the shifting sands of digitally-mediated reality and the people balancing on its surface.- CineVue
- Posted Jan 5, 2017
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Reviewed by
Ben Nicholson
It's a film swimming in symbolism, transgressive eroticism and perplexing details that will infuriate some audiences but for others will add to its irresistible allure.- CineVue
- Posted Jan 3, 2017
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- CineVue
- Posted Dec 22, 2016
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Reviewed by
Tom Duggins
Whatever strange alchemy went into this film, nothing is so strange as how compelling it proves to be when you approach its premise with complete seriousness.- CineVue
- Posted Dec 20, 2016
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Maximilian Von Thun
Szabolcs Hadju's It's Not the Time of My Life is an engrossing, poignant and often very funny study of marriage, family and child rearing.- CineVue
- Posted Dec 19, 2016
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John Bleasdale
Behemoth is a stunning and moving denunciation of the situation in Inner Mongolia, where the mining industry is permanently changing the landscape.- CineVue
- Posted Dec 16, 2016
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Daniel Green
A minor miracle in and of itself, Edwards' Rogue One somehow delivers on almost all of its weighty pre-release promises whilst at the same time besting The Force Awakens for sheer spectacle and world-building.- CineVue
- Posted Dec 13, 2016
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Joe Walsh
If we allow ourselves - as Scorsese asks us - to place ourselves in the shoes of these priests, then we have a graceful film of stoic power, which wrestles with the very nature of faith.- CineVue
- Posted Dec 13, 2016
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Martyn Conterio
Abattoir doesn't have a jaw-dropping...shock scene, but the ending does pack an emotional punch, of a type so few and far between in the annals of horror cinema.- CineVue
- Posted Dec 8, 2016
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Reviewed by
Matthew Anderson
[Miles Teller] does dogged, unerring determination very well and makes Younger's film an engaging rollercoaster ride.- CineVue
- Posted Dec 7, 2016
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Ben Nicholson
Striking a balance between the dark and combative religious humour and its more saccharine elements proves difficult.- CineVue
- Posted Dec 4, 2016
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Reviewed by
John Bleasdale
A Woman's Life is a modest chamber piece, a series of sketches revealing a life of quiet desperation, which eschews melodrama and, for the most part, platitudes but exhibits great tenderness and sensitivity.- CineVue
- Posted Nov 29, 2016
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Reviewed by
John Bleasdale
The film itself is fairly conventional given the wildness of its subject matter and Jim Jarmusch's pedigree.- CineVue
- Posted Nov 23, 2016
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Reviewed by
Matthew Anderson
A United Kingdom is a solid, competently made and gorgeously photographed film, but its exploration of complex issues - race, gender, politics and affairs of state - feels rather safe throughout, their full impact and import somewhat dialled back.- CineVue
- Posted Nov 23, 2016
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Reviewed by
Martyn Conterio
Not only is the film a compellingly told tale of suspense and terror, but it's crafted with such precision and sense of timing that one can cry "Masterpiece!" without being shamefaced or wondering if a hyperbole-induced crime against all good sense has just been committed.- CineVue
- Posted Nov 23, 2016
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- Critic Score
You don't have to like a piece of art to appreciate the artists vision. Terrence Malick has created a beautiful and ambitious meditation on memory, childhood and the nature of being.- CineVue
- Posted Nov 22, 2016
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Reviewed by
Ben Nicholson
Evolution more often chimes aesthetically with a European arthouse drama, but that is only until it voyages into more fantastical territory. Then this haunting and esoteric work manages to seduce and repulse in uncanny harmony.- CineVue
- Posted Nov 22, 2016
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