Entertainment Weekly's Scores

For 7,797 reviews, this publication has graded:
  • 68% higher than the average critic
  • 2% same as the average critic
  • 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: 100 13th
Lowest review score: 0 Wide Awake
Score distribution:
7797 movie reviews
  1. Works hard to be exciting, but the movie scarcely lives up to its title. It could have used a bit of a fuel injection itself.
  2. There are mountain tunes as powerful as moonshine to be enjoyed in Songcatcher -- but there's also a mighty mushy heap of corn pone to be swallowed.
  3. This is just cut-rate, generic daughter of Indy Jones hokum.
  4. Carries so much impacted menace and visual narrative gamesmanship that it brought back some of the excitement I felt nearly a decade ago watching Quentin Tarantino's ''Reservoir Dogs.''
  5. Has my eye, seduced by the devious and tactile delights of ''Shrek,'' already evolved in tandem with the technological leaps in computer animation? Or is Atlantis simply a Disney dud?
  6. Visually witty and even marvelous when it comes to depicting the spectacular creatures evolving at a speed previously known only in the Bible.
  7. A sodden ''feminist'' vulgarization.
  8. As a work of art, the movie, shot quickly on digital video, is genial enough if unrefined.
  9. A good movie? Hardly. But more than enough to pass a dog day afternoon.
  10. The tonal elegance of this black comedy set in a dark time -- is boldly dependent on performances that tug at taut lines of moral complexity.
  11. While a good deal funnier than ''Deuce Bigelow,'' is still destined to get branded, if not condemned, as ''dumb.''
  12. Maybe the worst thing that can happen is that every other movie at the multiplex will be sold out this weekend.
  13. There's only one performer in the movie who looks completely at ease with what he's doing: the horse.
  14. This is a gentle, engaging narrative of constancy and devotion against all odds, both natural and bureaucratic, in which the past represents enduring family values and customs.
  15. The picture is nearly painstaking in its traditionalism, a tale of love, war, and valor in which nostalgia for ''simpler times'' gets mashed together, almost fetishistically, with nostalgia for old movies and for the spirit of knightly self sacrifice during World War II.
  16. The movie draws us into the illusion that we're simply eavesdropping on the lives of three inner-city black and Hispanic girls.
  17. Kollek is a fringe auteur who makes independent films the old fashioned way: no budget, static camera, a script that telegraphs its tiny, paste gem ironies.
  18. A cumbersome dud, grows draggier with each new revelation.
  19. The result is a musical that substitutes irony for pop passion, misanthropic disjointedness for lyrical flow.
  20. Lives happily ever after because it's such a feisty but good natured embrace of the inner ogre in everyone.
  21. For sheer dramatic wallop outpowers virtually every fiction feature I've seen this year.
  22. Janet McTeer displays Amazonian power while Jennifer Jason Leigh tears into her role as a high maintenance creature with a ferocity that leaves little room for her usual acting tics.
    • 27 Metascore
    • 25 Reviewed by
      Ty Burr
    A pox on the man's (E.B. White) memory.
  23. Laddish, one joke, genre scrambling rock & roll fairy tale.
  24. Cotton candy story with an acrid aftertaste.
  25. When Kinney and Muth share scenes, it's hard not to get caught up.
  26. Ozon specializes in dissecting the vulnerability, erotic longing, and garbled intentions with which people regularly rub up against one another.
  27. Slow -- sometimes maddeningly, soporifically so.
  28. The actors themselves are more rip roaring and full of spunk than in their first outing.
    • 16 Metascore
    • 33 Critic Score
    If you put the scripts for ''West Side Story,'' ''Mean Streets,'' and ''The Warriors'' in a blender, you might wind up with something like Deuces Wild, a preposterously melodramatic paean to gang-member teens in Brooklyn circa 1958.

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