Dallas Observer's Scores
- Movies
For 1,518 reviews, this publication has graded:
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48% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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49% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 5.6 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 59
| Highest review score: | Final Destination 3 | |
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| Lowest review score: | How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 678 out of 1518
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Mixed: 604 out of 1518
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Negative: 236 out of 1518
1518
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Bill Gallo
This is not the easiest film in the world to untangle, but our attentions are soon rewarded.- Dallas Observer
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Gregory Weinkauf
The movie remains engaging, with a couple of sequences verging on stunning.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Luke Y. Thompson
Laurel Canyon lacks the sense of risk that "High Art" had, and in doing so, emasculates its apparent protagonist in Sam.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Luke Y. Thompson
The movie's not without moments of genuine humor--no comedy starring Steve Martin could be--but sad to say, his Oscar-hosting gig two years ago was funnier.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Gregory Weinkauf
What isn't hard to say is that Noé really isn't a very talented filmmaker.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Andy Klein
The result is by no means the embarrassment that many such offerings from unjustifiably vain actor-auteurs have been, but nor does it present much of anything new or compelling to demand one's attention.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Gregory Weinkauf
Ultimately, it's the hip cast that keeps things hopping.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Bill Gallo
One beautiful piece of work--as alert and aware a survey of interpersonal relations as you're likely to find at the movies this year.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Robert Wilonsky
We have heard this song before, know it by heart (sadly, as film still can't keep pace with real-life headlines about fake drug busts and a shady LAPD), and still filmmakers can't resist its rhythms.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Gregory Weinkauf
There's a somber tone to Petroni's work here--enhanced by Roger Lanser's shadowy cinematography and handicapped a bit by a schmaltzy Hollywood-type score--and there's also plenty of episodic life stuff.- Dallas Observer
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- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Luke Y. Thompson
Some of this stuff should give you some good laughs. Unfortunately, the film's not a comedy, and once the conservative-bashing wears off, the alleged thriller elements kick in. Too bad that for you, the viewer, there's still another hour to go.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Jean Oppenheimer
Filled with so much religious righteousness--endless Bible-readings...that the film feels more like a recruitment tool for Soldiers for Christ than a look at the bloody four-year conflict that tore this nation apart.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Robert Wilonsky
Cinema has done a fine job of documenting the anti-apartheid movement, even if too often the spotlight shone brightest on the white man through whom the black man's story was being told.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Gregory Weinkauf
There's elegance and grace here, fostering an opportunity to reflect upon why men get so dutiful about being down. It's worth the hike.- Dallas Observer
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- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Robert Wilonsky
A shame Johnson couldn't give the movie over to Bullseye, since Farrell displays more danger with a cocked brow and sharpened pencil than Affleck with pages of melodramatic mush he can't force out without sounding like a high-school drama student with a sore throat.- Dallas Observer
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Gregory Weinkauf
Standing on its own, it's comme ci, comme ça, self-serious when it should be adventurous, coy when it should be revelatory. One must afford it props, though, for its proud celebration of insanity. Now that is truly creepy.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Bill Gallo
In the end, Stone Reader gives us an old-fashioned romantic's view of writers and their craft--complete with the hint of a happy ending.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Robert Wilonsky
Why would the writers bother with narrative when the story is just something that kills time, and brain cells, between feats and fists of fury?- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Luke Y. Thompson
Not that there aren't funny moments in the film, but they're cobbled together so awkwardly that you'd never suspect the director had made a film before.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Luke Y. Thompson
With a level of dark humor akin to the screenplays of Todd Solondz, and a visual style reminiscent of Dario Argento, May is one of the funniest, most disturbing, yet strangely touching movies of the year- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Gregory Weinkauf
All in all, the only lesson here is how to irritate. This is a stupid movie for stupid people. If you're a stupid person, knock yourself out. Please- Dallas Observer
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- Critic Score
There are enough good scenes within the 94 minutes of The Guru to make an entertaining coming-attractions trailer.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Bill Gallo
An ideal film for movie buffs, who are bound to delight in each new misfortune even as they sympathize with the documentarians' sometimes inflated vision of a tortured genius at work.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Robert Wilonsky
There's no kick to its bag of tricks...It's a mild one among biker pics, a tricycle only pretending to be a Hog.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Andy Klein
But by the end the audience, along with Clayton, has been jerked around so many times that it's almost too exhausting...By then, it's almost impossible to care.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Gregory Weinkauf
A tight, rockin' popcorn flick packed with nasty kicks, the year's first major sequel is a rare beast, matching and in some ways superseding the original movie.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Gregory Weinkauf
If Junge's first-hand recollections aren't always visually stimulating, they're still more illuminating than most cinematic re-creations of the era.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Luke Y. Thompson
Once you get past the inherent silliness of the premise, what we've got here is actually a deft little chiller, stylishly directed despite the so-so cast.- Dallas Observer
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