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
After a lifetime of flogging the demons of cosmic despair, Ingmar Bergman, at 88, comes off as lean and vigorous in this fascinating memoir-interview.- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Lisa Schwarzbaum
The ensemble cast shared the best-actor award at the 2006 Cannes film festival -- and rightly so.- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
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- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
The Nativity Story is a film of tame picture-book sincerity, but that's not the same thing as devotion. The movie is too tepid to feel, or see, the light.- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
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Reviewed by
Lisa Schwarzbaum
Everything old is old again in this rickety extension of 2002's already rickety "Van Wilder."- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Lisa Schwarzbaum
I don't know if it's ickier to assume that writer-director Brad Silberling (Moonlight Mile) thinks the culture-clash jokes he pushes in 10 Items or Less are charming because they're earnest, or because they're tongue-in-cheek. Either way, this sale is void.- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Lisa Schwarzbaum
Every character in The Architect is crazily stuccoed with crisis.- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
The movie, with the exception of that lone squirmy surgery scene, is "Hostel" without sadism, thrills, or funky severed-limb F/X. It quickly turns into a very dull escape thriller.- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Lisa Schwarzbaum
The movie's warm advocacy of hospice, with all the dignity such end-of-life care provides, does real, influential good.- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Lisa Schwarzbaum
What the activist drama "Fast Food Nation" does with talk and the aid of movie stars, Our Daily Bread, a riveting documentary by Austrian filmmaker Nikolaus Geyrhalter, does even better, with no voice-over and barely a word spoken by the unidentified workers involved in matter-of-fact killing and harvesting.- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Lisa Schwarzbaum
I'm as touched and charmed by its failures as I am transfixed, at times, by its successful inventiveness and audacity.- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
In this year's lump of coal, Matthew Broderick is the control freak who lives for toasty yuletide cheer, and Danny DeVito is the vulgar pest who wants his holiday lights seen from space. The dueling-neighbor crankfest is blah.- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
Déjà Vu is watchable trash, meticulously edited in Scott's skip-stutter style, but there's something ultimately unsatisfying about a thriller that more or less makes up its rules as it goes along.- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
Works just like a Tenacious D song. The movie feels giddy and eruptive, dopily enthralled with itself, and more or less made up on the spot.- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Lisa Schwarzbaum
The History Boys is as much about the meaning and value of reading and learning as it is about the ho-humness of genital fondling by sir with love.- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
Relaunches the series by doing something I wouldn't have thought possible: It turns Bond into a human being again -- a gruffly charming yet volatile chap who may be the swank king stud of the Western world, but who still has room for rage, fear, vulnerability, love.- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Lisa Schwarzbaum
A moderately adorable, musically wacky, ecologically activist CG family comedy.- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
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- Entertainment Weekly
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- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Lisa Schwarzbaum
Naturally, a subject this right-on draws a right-on cast. Kris Kristofferson, Avril Lavigne, and Ethan Hawke pitch in.- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Lisa Schwarzbaum
Each and every character in Christopher Guest's latest hilarious cultural corrective is something inspiring to behold.- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
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- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Lisa Schwarzbaum
Ricardo Darín, wearing a mild-mannered expression of emotional remove, plays the unnamed antihero, obsessed with imagining the perfect robbery. The ''aura'' is the clarity with which he sees -- or imagines he sees -- the world in moments preceding an epileptic attack.- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
The hero remains such an exhibitionistically cocky, walled-off jerk that Flannel Pajamas' glib conversational ''candor'' yields no mystery. And that's a problem in two hours of talk.- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
Horton's attempt to authenticate the painting in the face of a hostile art establishment becomes a study in forensics, taste, money, and class warfare.- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
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- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Lisa Schwarzbaum
Bale is mesmerizing and Rodriguez keeps up with him as the whole unsafe contraption zooms.- Entertainment Weekly
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- Critic Score
Mellow -- nay, snoozy -- atmospherics trump actual scares, and it makes almost zero sense.- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
Owen Gleiberman
An eminently easy-to-watch piece of one-joke pop japery, is a movie that mimics the I'm-a-character-in-my-own-life metaphysical playfulness of "The Truman Show."- Entertainment Weekly
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Reviewed by
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Reviewed by
Lisa Schwarzbaum
The calm poetry of the cinematography offsets the mess of the politics to stunning effect.- Entertainment Weekly
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