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
Jean Oppenheimer
A wobbly Basinger and a feeble screenplay doom I Dreamed of Africa.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
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Reviewed by
Gregory Weinkauf
The soul of Gladiator is made sluggish by a maddening lack of suspense.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Andy Klein
It doesn't have enough power in the first place to make a strong claim on our attentions.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Gregory Weinkauf
Braugher does much to hold this show together, because without him, the reality gets muddled. He's a terrific balancing agent for both Caviezel and Quaid; kudos to casting.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Gregory Weinkauf
Sits before us like an exquisite platter of wax fruit, colorful, flavorless, and, if you eat it, very likely to come back up.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Andy Klein
We become so absorbed in the ramifications of the techniques involved that a more challenging plot might have resulted in sensory overload.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Luke Y. Thompson
A top-notch cast compensates for dubious credibility.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Andy Klein
Takes roughly a third of its length to really get going, but, once it does, it's a devilishly clever, engaging piece of work that milks every cent of value from its tiny budget.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Bill Gallo
Impeccably acted by a fine ensemble cast, it's a sheer pleasure to behold.- Dallas Observer
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- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Gregory Weinkauf
[Coppola] understands the crisp, oblique horror and wistfulness of Eugenides' narrative, plunking down five enchanting princesses into an environment that is anything but magical.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Robert Wilonsky
A film built upon transitions so weak and obvious it's astonishing the entire thing doesn't collapse on itself.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Robert Wilonsky
Banal sit-comedy masquerading as religious deepthink dolled up as boy-meets-goy love story.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Robert Wilonsky
An ethereal, creepy, almost breathtaking meditation on the life of a mind snapped in two.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
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- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Andy Klein
Slips by quickly enough, but it never engages our interest more than passingly.- Dallas Observer
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- Critic Score
There is some meandering, episodic raggedness to the plotting, but Khan-Din's dialogue has a fine, naturalistic flow, and the young, debuting director O'Donnell, who's neither English nor Pakistani but Irish, skillfully keeps the material from showing too clearly its theatrical origins.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Andy Klein
The film looks great, but Wargnier is so heavy-handed in his portrayal of postwar Russia that it casts suspicions on the film's reliability as history.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
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Reviewed by
Luke Y. Thompson
Be forewarned: The rural Irish accents may be incomprehensible to viewers who aren't accustomed to them.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
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- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Bill Gallo
A vivid double portrait of the artistic sensibility in its many weathers -- expressed by two fine actors clearly engaged in a labor of love.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
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- Dallas Observer
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- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Gregory Weinkauf
Immediately disarming for its candor, verve, and sheer nerve.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
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- Critic Score
Predictable and conventional and unadventurous. It can't really be defended, except that it's comfortably enjoyable.- Dallas Observer
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- Dallas Observer
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- Dallas Observer
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- Critic Score
The film is so much like the book, it might as well come with a bookmark to hold your place when you step outside to use the restroom.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
Andy Klein
It would be heartening if the adolescent girls of America turned their backs on this pandering piece of kitsch, but that would be hoping too much.- Dallas Observer
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Reviewed by
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Reviewed by
Gregory Weinkauf
A pensive, reflective movie, more or less equal in tone to Ang Lee's "The Ice Storm," yet, because of its temporal breadth and tight emotional focus, it packs a more intimate punch.- Dallas Observer
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