For 7,797 reviews, this publication has graded:
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68% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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30% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 2.2 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 67
| Highest review score: | 13th | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | Wide Awake |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 4,958 out of 7797
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Mixed: 2,079 out of 7797
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Negative: 760 out of 7797
7797
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
Lawrence makes you believe in the character you're watching. He does an amazing little piece of acting.- Entertainment Weekly
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Lisa Schwarzbaum
Even by Soderbergh's standards of serious playfulness/playful seriousness, Full Frontal is a tricky novelty item: The director himself has variously described it as an ''experiment,'' an ''exercise,'' and a ''sketch.''- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
A crowd-pleaser in the deepest sense, mixes heartbreak and happiness together until you don't even want to see them apart.- Entertainment Weekly
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Lisa Schwarzbaum
An awful, stillborn comedy assembled out of rusty spare parts from secret agent movies and run-of-the-mill ''Saturday Night Live'' skits.- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
It's a high-octane doomsday vision built almost entirely around our sense of anticipation, and that's both its strength and its weakness.- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
Huppert has never been this cheerful, or lethal, and the movie itself is like Hitchcock's ''Rebecca'' reshot for House & Garden, with all the ghosts pulled out of the closet.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
At times too restrained, yet there are moments it captures the erotics of intimacy in a way that makes most American love stories look downright unfree.- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
A modest vérité portrait of Wilco, the engagingly melodious, deeply unglam alt-folk rockers.- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Lisa Schwarzbaum
It's sort of an ursine ''The Last Waltz,'' with more costumes and no direction from Martin Scorsese.- Entertainment Weekly
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Owen Gleiberman
Allen is no more convincing than the writer-director, Chris Ver Wiel, who strings together faux-QT, faux-Elmore Leonard clichés like so many necklace beads and pretends that's the same thing as making a movie.- Entertainment Weekly
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Lisa Schwarzbaum
Mike Myers and Austin Powers may stick to their old Beatle boots, but they've both come a long way, luvvy. For proof, just look at all the A-list celebrities-I-won't-mention happy to crash the party.- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Lisa Schwarzbaum
Had O. Henry set his stories in China, he might have come up with Happy Times, a comedy for which the adjective ''bittersweet'' could have been invented.- Entertainment Weekly
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Owen Gleiberman
What's really needed is a story with some sizzle, but Bigelow, in K-19, can't seem to decide whether she's making a shoot-the-works underwater rouser, like ''U-571'' or ''Crimson Tide,'' or a lofty historical message movie that hits us with the breaking news that the arms race was, in every sense, a poisonous game.- Entertainment Weekly
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Owen Gleiberman
Very much a kiddie ride, Stuart Little 2 is lively without being hyperactive -- it's a bouncy mouse caper with a wee bit of soul.- Entertainment Weekly
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Lisa Schwarzbaum
Where ''Rushmore'' surprises and delights with its spiky depiction of sprawling American idiosyncrasy, Tadpole's more urbane, less complicated charms are specifically made in New York City.- Entertainment Weekly
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Lisa Schwarzbaum
Like many of the worst pop-referential parodies of the post-''Scream'' era, this one stalls on laughs once the big joke has been established.- Entertainment Weekly
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Lisa Schwarzbaum
Gorgeously shot tableaux of random adolescent brutality are interrupted by flashes of computer garble and chat-room talk, backed by ''Lily's'' music, with its blend of Debussy-like arpeggios and Enya-like sighing.- Entertainment Weekly
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Lisa Schwarzbaum
With every detail in this clever peekaboo, the sly filmmaker dangles the possibility that fiction is fact and that Yvan and Charlotte are real -- or at least as real as the movies.- Entertainment Weekly
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Lisa Schwarzbaum
The mad genius of this cheerily bonkers feature is the integration of a documentary-style safari into an outlandish fiction involving a fancy-pants CIA pursuit of a downed spy satellite, and a shotgun-wielding outback widow.- Entertainment Weekly
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Lisa Schwarzbaum
Conveys the heaving passion of Puccini's famous love-jealousy-murder-suicide fandango with great cinematic innovation.- Entertainment Weekly
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Owen Gleiberman
A truly titillating and truly convoluted tale of l'amour fou. Perhaps the American remake could be titled ''Hot Fudge Ripple Sky.''- Entertainment Weekly
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Owen Gleiberman
Schaeffer's howler of a romantic comedy, which presents itself as a valentine to Clayburgh even as it keeps dreaming up fresh ways to humiliate her.- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
Halloween: Resurrection comes closer to comatainment.- Entertainment Weekly
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Lisa Schwarzbaum
There's much that's simplistically grand, worthy, and fine in Perdition. If I yearn for less measured filmmaking that cries out with more reckless despair, it's because I think hell on earth is a meaner, much more interesting, and far less tidy cinematic place than Mendes trusts his audience to handle.- Entertainment Weekly
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Lisa Schwarzbaum
Expertly sinister, office-as-devil's-playground French thriller.- Entertainment Weekly
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Owen Gleiberman
Like Mike has the synthetically wrapped pseudo-charm of a perfunctory ''Flubber'' sequel.- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
Some motion pictures portray ultimate passion; others create ultimate thrills. Men in Black II achieves ultimate insignificance -- it's the sci-fi comedy spectacle as Whiffle-Ball epic.- Entertainment Weekly
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Lisa Schwarzbaum
The three kindergarteners make up for their lack of irony with laser-power eyes, radical post-post-postfeminist blithe confidence, and some of the coolest retro-futuristic animation style this side of Gerald McBoing-Boing.- Entertainment Weekly
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Owen Gleiberman
This trio is like a looser, funnier version of the family of wrecks in Woody Allen's ''Interiors.''- Entertainment Weekly
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