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
Keith Staskiewicz
"Once" was a small and well-loved heirloom, its imperfections part of the charm. But Begin Again has been burnished to a shiny dullness.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 26, 2014
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In several instances, you can sense that director Tim Story simply rolled the proverbial ball out to Hart on the court and called the play: Make it funny. Hart scores occasionally, but Think Like a Man Too loses by double digits.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 20, 2014
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Reviewed by
Joe McGovern
What is surprising is how little Polanski juices the material with his usual devilish touch.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 19, 2014
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Reviewed by
Chris Nashawaty
The three main narratives cut back and forth between New York, Paris, and Rome, which is the best thing the movie has going for it: picturesque locations. Unfortunately, by the time we're done taking in the sights and Haggis finally coughs up his third-act puzzle-box twist, it comes off as a big metaphysical So What.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 19, 2014
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Chris Nashawaty
The biggest problem is that the film, written by Marshall Brickman and Rick Elice, never makes a convincing case for why Valli the man or the singer matters beyond the music in the way that "Ray" and "Walk the Line" did for Ray Charles and Johnny Cash.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 19, 2014
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Reviewed by
Chris Nashawaty
A major disappointment. Bleak, brutal, and ultimately pointless.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 12, 2014
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Leah Greenblatt
A raft of fine actors – including Amy Adams, Richard Jenkins, and Downton Abbey’s Jessica Brown Findlay – are wasted in a sour, callow family drama that mistakes constant yelling for emotional tension and fortune-cookie aphorisms for wisdom.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 12, 2014
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Lindsey Bahr
Despair is not quiet for a broken father (Aaron Paul) and his troublemaker sons in Kat Candler’s brisk, transfixing drama, which takes place in blue-collar southeast Texas.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 12, 2014
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Joe McGovern
The film’s nihilism serves as a metaphor for the merciless death pit of Mexico’s drug war, but not much else.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 12, 2014
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In Martin Provost’s graceful biopic, Emmanuelle Devos plays Leduc as a powder keg of a woman who used her loneliness and insecurity as the explosive fuel for her work.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 12, 2014
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Reviewed by
Chris Nashawaty
To cover up the script's lack of originality, screenwriters Michael Bacall, Oren Uziel, and Rodney Rothman pummel us with a string of self-aware meta-commentary jokes that poke fun at bloated sequels.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 11, 2014
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Reviewed by
Joe McGovern
While the original movie benefited from narrative simplicity and an admirable lack of villains, this one paints the screen with too many characters and frequent diversions from the main story, but nevertheless serves up a bountiful and sugary feast for the 3-D-bespectacled eyes.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 11, 2014
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Clark Collis
If all this sounds like a souped-up episode of "The Twilight Zone" or "The X-Files," then you're in the right ballpark — or underground bunker.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 11, 2014
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Clark Collis
The wordy end product may be short on demons and murderous droids, yet Coherence is a satisfying and chilling addition to the ever-growing pal-ocalypse subgenre.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 11, 2014
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Joe McGovern
Gregg doesn’t possess the moral rot needed to crawl into the Willy Loman muck, and the film’s dialogue is Glengarry lite, but Saxon Sharbino, as an enigmatic tween actor, is just as the movie claims: the real deal.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 4, 2014
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Leah Greenblatt
The movie borders on hagiography, but Gordon is a charmingly voluble storyteller; he’s like Dos Equis’ Most Interesting Man in the World recast as a balding Jewish guy from Long Island.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 4, 2014
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Chris Nashawaty
West is a talented director and knows how to build suspense. But here’s a case where the truth wasn’t only stranger than his fiction, it was scarier, too.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 4, 2014
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Chris Nashawaty
The film coasts on its time-capsule fetishism and affable supporting turns from Susan Sarandon and Lea Thompson, but it never achieves the emotional punch of like-minded comedies such as "Adventureland" and "The Way, Way Back."- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 4, 2014
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Leah Greenblatt
Despite a few too-cute moments (and many fantastically graphic vagina jokes), the movie is both smarter and more sympathetic than that glib shorthand.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 4, 2014
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Chris Nashawaty
I couldn't help wondering what kind of spiky unpredictability a "Say Anything" - era John Cusack would have brought to the character — with or without the requisite Peter Gabriel song.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 4, 2014
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Chris Nashawaty
Despite its terribly unimaginative title, Edge of Tomorrow is a surprisingly imaginative summer action movie.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted Jun 4, 2014
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Reviewed by
Chris Nashawaty
I don't know if A Million Ways to Die in the West will turn any of the MacFarlane haters into fans. But for those of us who have remained on the fence until now, his raunchy, rat-a-tat parody is proof that beneath all of the bratty immaturity lays the head and heart of an outrageous quick-draw satirist.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted May 29, 2014
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Reviewed by
Keith Staskiewicz
The characters are boiled down to their essentials, the humor is timelessly broad, and Jolie's at her best when she's curling her claws and elongating her vowels like a black-sabbath Tallulah Bankhead.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted May 28, 2014
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In Blended, his (Sandler) comic flab has never felt as thick, and this hackneyed "family-friendly" entertainment feels less like a movie than a bad sit-com re-run.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted May 22, 2014
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Reviewed by
Adam Markovitz
It’s a rom-com setup lamer than anything in the Barrymore-Sandler canon, but Binoche and Owen tackle it like high drama and eke out a few sweet moments.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted May 21, 2014
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Chris Nashawaty
As a coming-of-age story, the film is a bit uneventful. But the girls’ rebellious, fist-in-the-air spirit and the warmth of their friendship are undeniable.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted May 21, 2014
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Reviewed by
Chris Nashawaty
While the first hour is evocative and suspenseful, the second doesn’t quite muster the depths of paranoia and doom you’re led to expect.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted May 21, 2014
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Leah Greenblatt
The movie is disappointingly flat-footed about both rock and journalism, and its shaggy plot sheds logic as it goes. Still, the actors are excellent; they’re triple crème slathered on an odd little undercooked biscuit of a script.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted May 21, 2014
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Stephan Lee
There’s nothing remotely original about the premise, and jokes about prostates feel more pandering than funny, but the leads make this dumb romantic caper watchable.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted May 21, 2014
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Reviewed by
Joe McGovern
Director Nabil Ayouch hammers his points rather bluntly, but his filmmaking is hypnotic.- Entertainment Weekly
- Posted May 21, 2014
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