Empire's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 6,820 reviews, this publication has graded:
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54% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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43% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 0.7 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 66
| Highest review score: | Oppenheimer | |
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| Lowest review score: | Superman IV: The Quest for Peace |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 3,008 out of 6820
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Mixed: 3,654 out of 6820
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Negative: 158 out of 6820
6820
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Colin Kennedy
Network is typical of the cool intelligence of '70s American cinema.- Empire
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Reviewed by
Ian Nathan
The only movie to truly deliver the visceral power of a dental drill, John Schlesinger’s taut, well written if far-fetched and baffling thriller, is the film that gives you a tooth ache in a good way.- Empire
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Reviewed by
Ian Nathan
The songs and set pieces are still fresh and infectious and most of the child cast are mesmerisingly good. I defy anyone not to be caught up in the charm and nostalgia.- Empire
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Reviewed by
Ian Nathan
There were a few sci-fi movies in the 70s that managed to transcend the genre and become fairly well known in the mainstream. This weren't one of 'em and for good reason.- Empire
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Reviewed by
William Thomas
The Duke's last hurrah is one of the very best of a cycle of 70s movies that served as obituaries for the Western itself.- Empire
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Reviewed by
Kim Newman
Fonda and Danner — who looked then exactly like her daughter, Gwyneth Paltrow, does now — are likable leads in ’70s futurist leisurewear (why didn’t those tailored jumpsuits catch on?), and some creepy corporate robot action helps (Danner’s gunfight with her robot duplicate), but it’s a lot less exciting than the original and replaces satire with TV-style plotting.- Empire
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- Critic Score
The only obsession on display here is De Palma's - with Hitchcock. It's an unhealthy one too which results in an out of focus rip-off.- Empire
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- Critic Score
Never magical, this hotchpotch of colourful, unrelated snippets is certainly a mystery.- Empire
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Reviewed by
Ian Nathan
A truly great Western from Clint that is bleakly atmospheric and charming in turns.- Empire
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David Parkinson
The performance of Harvey Stephens as the young Damien has invested the film with the chill of genuine credibility.- Empire
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Kim Newman
A disturbing and poignant anthology of Roman Polanski's favourite, oppressive themes.- Empire
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Ian Nathan
A sci-fi which balances big themes and claustrophobic action with apparent ease.- Empire
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Kim Newman
This Neil Simon-scripted pastiche of an array of much-loved detective characters is surprisingly charming.- Empire
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Reviewed by
William Thomas
Undoubtedly the finest of Argento's thrilling horrors, this one takes the radical step, for the director at least, to concentrate on a plot that equals the shocking visuals of his other works. David Hemmings is well cast and is given a great script which genuinely frights.- Empire
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- Critic Score
Slightly lacking in tension but with a striking performance from Marlon Brando.- Empire
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Reviewed by
Ian Nathan
One of modern American film’s most intelligent and provocative accounts of a nation’s political failings, and a near-perfect depiction of journalism at its purist and most inspired. To be more succinct, it is quite brilliant.- Empire
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- Empire
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Reviewed by
William Thomas
With a heavily improvised script Cassavetes gets the most from his actors, each giving emotive performances.- Empire
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Reviewed by
William Thomas
The blend of Schrader's script, Scorsese's direction and De Niro's performance is both riveting and unnerving. A film that will stay with you forever.- Empire
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Reviewed by
Adam Smith
Pacino simmers in this daring and brilliantly constructed treatise on the many facets of a crime.- Empire
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Ian Nathan
Peckinpah is never quite as comfortable with the high-rise terrain (including sloppy kung fu) as he is with the dusty rawhide of the West, but it still shows up the slick trigger-edits of new action cinema for the gutless vacuum it has become.- Empire
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Reviewed by
Ian Nathan
Kubrick's superb version of William Thackery's first novel is meticulous and philosophically stimulating but it can leave some audiences unmoved on an emotional level.- Empire
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