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
John Bleasdale
Party Girl may tread familiar ground but Theis-Litzemburger is utterly convincing as the self-absorbed, beguilingly unaware lead.- CineVue
- Posted May 26, 2014
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John Bleasdale
As you'd expect from an actor-director of Amalric's pedigree, the performances are brilliant throughout and Mathieu himself has a wonderful eye for the telling tick and/or the revealing gesture.- CineVue
- Posted May 26, 2014
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Ben Nicholson
The ultimate message may be a little fuzzy, but Mundruczó has crafted a incredibly cinematic canine parable that remains gripping and inventive from its nose to its tail.- CineVue
- Posted May 26, 2014
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Reviewed by
John Bleasdale
The film isn't just bad - it's awful - ineptly directed (Olivier Dahan), terribly written (Arash Amel) and bafflingly acted by an assortment of miscast faces.- CineVue
- Posted May 26, 2014
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Reviewed by
John Bleasdale
This is the kind of oddball midnight movie that could easily gain a cult following and there are delights to be had in the midst.- CineVue
- Posted May 26, 2014
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- CineVue
- Posted May 25, 2014
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Reviewed by
John Bleasdale
A fluid, dreamlike tone poem of mothers and fathers, death and continuance.- CineVue
- Posted May 25, 2014
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John Bleasdale
There's no doubting Hazanavicius' sincerity in trying to bring the Chechen conflict, the war crimes committed against the civilian community and the indifference of the international community to light, but it's this righteousness that gets in the way of The Search working as a film first and foremost.- CineVue
- Posted May 25, 2014
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John Bleasdale
The characters of Jimmy's Hall aren't really characters as much as archetypes: the saintly mother, the sweetheart, the hero, the villain. This is the kind of film where people don't argue - they debate - speaking in lines from manifestos and creating an incongruity.- CineVue
- Posted May 25, 2014
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John Bleasdale
With The Homesman, Jones has produced an original and cantankerously offbeat western which becomes increasingly beguiling as the road stretches on.- CineVue
- Posted May 25, 2014
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John Bleasdale
Both actresses are excellent, with Binoche given more to do and she flips between attempting to get into the skin of her character and back to her normal self. Stewart, on the other hand, has an easy naturalism as she moves from devotion to rebellion without ever being able to fully express herself.- CineVue
- Posted May 25, 2014
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Reviewed by
John Bleasdale
The trajectory of success and excess followed by last act redemption is familiar to the point of parody, and the ploys with time come over as gimmicky attempt to inject an element of surprise into the otherwise predictable narrative.- CineVue
- Posted May 25, 2014
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John Bleasdale
As we pass from one story to another the relentless savagery does get a bit grinding. In addition, at two hours in length, Szifron's film is perhaps one skit too long. Regardless, Wild Tales is an inventive, occasionally hysterical ride.- CineVue
- Posted May 25, 2014
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John Bleasdale
Two Days, One Night is well made, and Cotillard and the rest of the cast give assured performances, but its optimism is desperate. By no means the Dardennes' best work, one wonders if they shouldn't perhaps stray outside of their comfort zone.- CineVue
- Posted May 25, 2014
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John Bleasdale
Not exciting enough to be taken as straightforward thriller and not engaging enough for a dramatic character piece, Egoyan's The Captive is held back by its own lame script and a distinct lack of necessity.- CineVue
- Posted May 25, 2014
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John Bleasdale
A brutal, crackling and savage Hollywood satire Maps to the Stars knows exactly where it's going, carefully breaking every rule in the book. After carefully constructing his crystal kingdom, Cronenberg launches his stones with dark, mischievous joy.- CineVue
- Posted May 24, 2014
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John Bleasdale
In arguably a career-topping performance, Timothy Spall plays the cantankerous painter as a complex, grunting, snarling and utterly single-minded creature.- CineVue
- Posted May 24, 2014
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John Bleasdale
Zvyagintsev's pessimism is leavened both by his comedy and his sense of beauty. Mikhail Krichman's cinematography captures the sublime grandeur of the landscape against which the nasty, brutish and short lives are played out.- CineVue
- Posted May 24, 2014
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John Bleasdale
Dolan is a director who thinks hard about the possibilities of cinema and explores them with verve and ingenuity, but it is in his latest film that everything has come together.- CineVue
- Posted May 24, 2014
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John Bleasdale
The Wonders is a complex and nuanced illustration of a family trying to live by their own standards - whilst only partly failing. Rohrwacher's vision is tactful and restrained, with so much we don't ever know. The characters' histories are there to be guessed rather than spelled out.- CineVue
- Posted May 24, 2014
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Reviewed by
John Bleasdale
With a richness of characterisation usually reserved for hefty novels, each shot in Winter Sleep glows like a symbol, whilst each digression is almost a short story in itself.- CineVue
- Posted May 24, 2014
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Reviewed by
Ed Frankl
Nothing quite competes with the blistering opening scene, but The Salvation's cast of characters mean it's never less than a fun watch.- CineVue
- Posted May 23, 2014
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John Bleasdale
For most post-apocalyptic films, the nightmare is really a disguised fantasy. In Michôd's excellent The Rover, the nightmare is real.- CineVue
- Posted May 23, 2014
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Reviewed by
John Bleasdale
Carell, in a rare but not unique departure into drama, proves himself as accomplished at tragedy as he is at comedy.- CineVue
- Posted May 23, 2014
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Adam Lowes
Despite a liberal dose of full frontal nudity, The Canyons fails to fully revel in its sleaze, struggling to even work as a deadpan satire on the kind of vacuous and deadened Hollywood types Easton Ellis brought to life in the pages of his debut novel, Less Than Zero.- CineVue
- Posted May 21, 2014
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Daniel Green
With Frank, Abrahamson cultivates a mystical hour of prog-based shenanigans before he - and his film - begin to lose their collective heads in a muddled final third.- CineVue
- Posted May 21, 2014
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Joe Walsh
Tender, charming and made with substantial care, Next Goal Wins celebrates the cliché that it's not about winning, but the taking part.- CineVue
- Posted May 21, 2014
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Amon Warmann
Arnie completists will enjoy seeing the Austrian Oak in good form, but as a whodunit thriller Sabotage is found severely wanting.- CineVue
- Posted May 21, 2014
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- Critic Score
Unlike many of Miyazaki's previous works, The Wind Rises is a film rooted far more firmly in realism. Although it does have its fair share of fantastical dream sequences and magical flying machines.- CineVue
- Posted May 21, 2014
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Reviewed by
Joe Walsh
As an audience, you're infected with the languor Abby suffers, realising that as pretty as Concussion looks and with such an interesting premise behind it, beneath the surface there is precious little to really sink your teeth into.- CineVue
- Posted May 21, 2014
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