For 5,173 reviews, this publication has graded:
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59% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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38% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 4.3 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 69
| Highest review score: | The Only Living Pickpocket in New York | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | Pixels |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 3,574 out of 5173
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Mixed: 1,333 out of 5173
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Negative: 266 out of 5173
5173
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
However you slice it, this is the rare CGI movie that radiates its own kind of inventive beauty, slick without feeling plastic, and the artistry that made it possible deserves to be celebrated on its own merits.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 21, 2021
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Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
The home stretch of We Broke Up is so knowing that the forced smile of the movie’s first hour achieves a certain poignancy in hindsight.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 21, 2021
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Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
If there is a valuable movie to be made in the wake of America’s most recent wave of mass shootings, Beast Beast offers only tantalizing hints of what it might look like. And yet Madden’s eye is nevertheless sharp enough to draw some blood; the kids are alright, they’ve just had the bad luck of being raised in a country that can’t seem to give a shit why so many of them don’t survive to become adults.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 15, 2021
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Eric Kohn
Whether or not you adore “The Shawshank Redemption,” “Driving Miss Daisy,” “Million Dollar Baby” — or even the “Almighty” franchise, for crying out loud — the Freeman spark that elevated those movies is nowhere to be found, and Freeman minus the Freeman factor is just a lost cause.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 14, 2021
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David Ehrlich
The Banishing ends with such a walloping undertow of “wait, that’s it?” that it earns little more than the backhanded compliment of realizing you expected a lot more from it.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 14, 2021
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Kate Erbland
While Papadimitropoulos and his cast capture the perma-vacation feel that permeates Mickey and Chloe’s happiest moments, he’s less adept at navigating the heftier emotional elements.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 14, 2021
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David Ehrlich
It’s a shaggy and distended portrait of friendship that pinballs through time as freely as it does between genres, and a few too many of the 140-minute story’s frequent detours wind up in dead ends, but Ride or Die retains enough forward momentum to roll across even its least successful chapters because of how stubbornly Hiroki refuses to keep score between these characters.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 13, 2021
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Steve Greene
In the many ways it’s straightforward, it also allows for the same care that helped make him a transformational figure for himself and those moved to action by his work.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 10, 2021
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David Ehrlich
Park makes a noble attempt to suffuse the meditative soulfulness of Takeshi Kitano’s “Fireworks” into the propulsive genre tropes established by more recent (and more Korean) forebearers like “A Bittersweet Life,” but he just can’t find the same poetry in that silent pain as he’s able to produce from the screaming kind.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 10, 2021
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Ryan Lattanzio
The way the editing (by Alain Dessauvage and George Hanmer) so gracefully unfolds from present to past suggests a kind of cinematic Proustian madeleine, conjuring how involuntary memories can be jolted again by encounters in the present.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 9, 2021
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Kate Erbland
While McCarthy and Spencer do their damndest to make the family-friendly feature work — McCarthy in particular brings real texture to her charming slacker with a heart of gold, a role she’s played so many times before — Thunder Force isn’t clever enough to break new ground in the superhero milieu, nor is it silly enough to mine its material for the kind of jokes that would make it distinctive.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 9, 2021
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David Ehrlich
The more bizarre The Man Who Sold His Skin becomes, the less original it gets.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 8, 2021
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David Ehrlich
The middling but enjoyable Voyagers is meant to be a timeless parable about the primitive essence of human nature; if its space-age shenanigans are broadly identical to the beats of a book William Golding wrote about a group of preadolescent boys who crash on a deserted island during World War II, that’s more of a feature than it is a bug.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 7, 2021
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Kate Erbland
The Power is built on subtle elements, but the director’s more ambitious jumps are just as electrifying.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 7, 2021
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David Ehrlich
Here, the same genre tropes that are ordinarily primed for cheap thrills and big twists are bent towards the opposite effect, as the film blurs the line between reality and delusion in order to make audiences question a trauma so disorientingly awful that it might otherwise be easy to dismiss altogether — even for the people who suffer it first-hand.- IndieWire
- Posted Apr 1, 2021
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David Ehrlich
The rare moments when Shoplifters of the World isn’t tripping over its own cutesy fan service reveal a movie that’s listening for the real and mysterious friction that has always transmuted suicidal music into its own kind of salvation.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 29, 2021
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Kate Erbland
In the end, though, it’s all about the battles, and Wingard’s film offers some of the franchise’s best.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 29, 2021
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Ben Travers
The film ultimately suffers from an overfamiliarity in not just construction but content; the “WeWork” documentary paints a broad portrait of what happened without expanding on (or even including) details that made previous exposés so juicy.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 26, 2021
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Kate Erbland
Its low-key religious underpinnings — truly, no one even hauls out a Bible during the entire film — likely won’t rankle the secular set, even as Christian kids will be happy to see their worldview reflected by way of a mild crowd-pleaser. It’s hammy, it’s predictable, it’s a little silly, but what YA musical isn’t?- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 26, 2021
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Eric Kohn
Unlike Baron Cohen’s work, André seems to invite his targets to crack up with him, and they’re more than happy to oblige. Bad Trip is an extension of that all-inclusive approach: It’s a blunt instrument of absurdity, but that’s also what makes it so much fun.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 26, 2021
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Eric Kohn
The movie makes its points in grand, emotional gestures more than policy nuances, but what it lacks in sophistication it makes up in immediacy. The drama acts as a visceral of ode to the nature of activism under dire circumstances.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 23, 2021
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Eric Kohn
But Nobody uses its boundaries as an asset. This giddy approach to action in place of story has held appeal ever since Wiley E. Coyote chased the Road Runner off a cliff, and Nobody lingers in a ludicrous plane that works in bite-sized pieces.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 22, 2021
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Eric Kohn
Above all, the movie makes a case for the tremendous resources on display by attaching them to genuine investment in the stakes at hand. When the telescope gets to work, it may not deliver firm answers for a world that demands instant gratification. But it will provide many reasons to keep looking up, and The Hunt for Planet B captures many of them.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 21, 2021
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Kate Erbland
Purcell, as star, stays resolute to the last, but as filmmaker, her sharp ideas are dulled into something that barely leaves a mark.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 21, 2021
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David Ehrlich
The directors do a brilliant job of making its ad-hoc, mixed-media aesthetic into more of a feature than a bug. Glitched together from dozens of Charli’s boom-tastic PC Music bangers and punctuated with computer-generated animation (impish avatars and the like), the film nails the semi-digital existence that we all have come to understand as its own kind of reality.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 21, 2021
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Kate Erbland
While The Fallout allows for lightness to occasionally emerge, the film never forgets the experience at its center, one that can never be fully forgotten.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 20, 2021
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David Ehrlich
"Somewhere You Feel Free” doesn’t develop into a snapshot so much as a loving impression of a legend gone too soon. But the beautiful 16mm footage (with the new interviews shot to match) will trigger warm memories from Petty’s truest fans, and Wharton interprets the music in a way that should allow this film to serve as an irresistible entry point for neophytes who don’t realize how many Petty songs they already know by heart.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 20, 2021
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Kate Erbland
While Bateman’s more florid touches sometimes wear, Munn is so devastatingly good at selling Violet’s internal strife that it’s easy to forgive Bateman’s other creative impulses. With a star this well-suited for the role, Bateman has already proven her salt as a keen-eyed filmmaker.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 20, 2021
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- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 20, 2021
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Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Trusting that her subject matter is fertile enough to merit such a scholarly approach, and also bewitching enough to survive it, Janisse connects the dots between “The Wicker Man” and “La Llorona” in a way that allows this multi-chapter epic to function as both séance-like spectacle and streaming-era syllabus in equal measure.- IndieWire
- Posted Mar 20, 2021
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