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
Robert Wilonsky
Were it not for the involvement of producer Bruckheimer, who has made billions by conning millions into believing they can't live without his celluloid crack, it's doubtful Kangaroo Jack would even exist. As it stands now, the "movie" barely exists anyway.- Dallas Observer
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- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Jean Oppenheimer
Emotionally gripping from start to finish, the movie presents an electrifying and unforgettable look at life in a place that God has all but forgotten.- Dallas Observer
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- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Andy Klein
It was Melville's second-to-last feature, and it shows him in top form, with a more generous dose of humor than usual.- Dallas Observer
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- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Bill Gallo
A fascinating, frequently hilarious meditation on delusion, self-loathing and personal salesmanship- Dallas Observer
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Robert Wilonsky
Provides Hoffman with what he's long deserved: a movie of his own.- Dallas Observer
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Bill Gallo
The singing and dancing in this Chicago are uniformly splendid, right down to Gere's tap dancing. The high wit and dark eroticism Marshall brings to the famous "Cell Block Tango" number are matchless.- Dallas Observer
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Andy Klein
There have been other films dealing with the Jewish ghettos during the Nazi occupation of Poland -- some very good -- but The Pianist, the latest feature from Roman Polanski, may be the best.- Dallas Observer
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Gregory Weinkauf
Pits good taste against rousing intellectual provocation, and, happily, allows both to win.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Gregory Weinkauf
If you're after some family-friendly classic lit at the multiplex, here 'tis.- Dallas Observer
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Gregory Weinkauf
It's a noble work, an elegant work, a compassionate work -- and a somewhat tedious and glaringly self-important work.- Dallas Observer
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Robert Wilonsky
Breezy and easy to swallow. Its maker, Steven Spielberg, hasn't had so much fun in two decades.- Dallas Observer
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Andy Klein
One of the glories of the film is that Ramsay keeps us rigorously to Morvern's point of view without ever being explicit about what's going on in her head.- Dallas Observer
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Jean Oppenheimer
Viewers looking for extremely light, romantic entertainment with a guaranteed happy ending could do worse.- Dallas Observer
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Gregory Weinkauf
Authenticity and plausibility get gunned down from the get-go, but if explosive shaky-cam ultraviolence and frequent extreme close-ups of greasy whiskers are your bag, this hyperactive wannabe may count as something of a score.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Bill Gallo
The problem here lies not in the abundance of blood--we've seen that before--but in the film's pounding insistence, which prevails for all two hours and 40 minutes, that we also absorb a rather thin and unreliable history lesson.- Dallas Observer
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Bill Gallo
It takes an especially fine-tuned director and an inventive actor to cut as close to the bone as Spider does.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Luke Y. Thompson
In the hands of lesser mortals, this would add up to perhaps the worst movie of the year. In the hands of Denzel Washington, it manages to work magic on some who might not tolerate such shenanigans from, say, Chris Columbus.- Dallas Observer
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Robert Wilonsky
The movie resonates precisely because it serves as documentary only pretending to be fiction: It's set in a real place recovering from real pain, which Lee makes tangible.- Dallas Observer
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Gregory Weinkauf
The year's greatest adventure, and Jackson's limited but enthusiastic adaptation has made literature literal without killing its soul.- Dallas Observer
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Robert Wilonsky
The Guys is less a tearing open of old wounds than a balm to be applied over them. It doesn't wallow. It doesn't weep.- Dallas Observer
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Robert Wilonsky
Plays like something Dr. Phil and "Sex and the City's" Carrie Bradshaw might have written during a commercial break, a feel-good fantasy that sounds deep but has no more depth than a kiddie pool drained for winter.- Dallas Observer
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Gregory Weinkauf
A mind of overcooked pasta and a stomach of iron may get you through it, but it really is worth considering how desperately you need cheap chuckles while executive producer Adam Sandler and his favorite charity case laugh all the way to the bank.- Dallas Observer
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Gregory Weinkauf
James Bond wants us to believe he's an Everyman. The lovely thing is, it works.- Dallas Observer
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Robert Wilonsky
What makes About Schmidt so extraordinary is how ordinary its tale is; it's a gray picture about gray people looking for some kind of meaning in their gray lives.- Dallas Observer
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Luke Y. Thompson
If you were ever in marching band, you'll love this; if not, stay far away.- Dallas Observer
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Robert Wilonsky
Plays like a greatest-hits remix; like "Die Another Day," it's bent on resurrecting a moribund franchise by recalling all the things you used to love about it till you grew into big-boy pants.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Luke Y. Thompson
Everyone seems more relaxed this time around, including director Harold Ramis, who was presumably less intimidated now that he knows De Niro can be really funny and draw a large audience to a comedy.- Dallas Observer
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