For 5,164 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 4.5 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 69
| Highest review score: | The Only Living Pickpocket in New York | |
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| Lowest review score: | Pixels |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 3,565 out of 5164
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Mixed: 1,333 out of 5164
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Negative: 266 out of 5164
5164
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Eric Kohn
There are plenty of guts, but The Woman doesn't have enough to make its feminist rhetoric stick.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 10, 2011
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Reviewed by
Eric Kohn
Estevez treats the drama with a straight-faced, utterly earnest approach with dual respect for the material and the audience's awareness of how it can go wrong. By playing it straight, The Way never goes off the deep end.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 9, 2011
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Eric Kohn
Artistically, however, the movie delivers on a surprisingly effective scale, no matter how Lonergan sees it. Alternately perceptive, subversive, tragic and profound.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 4, 2011
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Eric Kohn
Polanski struggles to make the material more cinematic, toying with clever mise-en-scene to showcase the mounting tensions. However, Carnage repeatedly suffers from an internal tension between the possibilities of two media at odds with each other.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 4, 2011
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Eric Kohn
Like the original, the most shocking aspect comes from the revelation that Six can actually tell a story.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 2, 2011
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Eric Kohn
Paranormal Activity 3 hardly adds anything new to the situation; instead, it pretends to fill a gap while basically just heaping on one calculated "boo!" after the other.- IndieWire
- Posted Oct 2, 2011
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Eric Kohn
Deeply sorrowful and drenched in ambiguity, My Joy adopts a patient rhythm that departs from reality while studying it in depth.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 29, 2011
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Eric Kohn
As with "Shotgun Stories," Nichols assembles a tense portrait of blue-collar life, while deepening his thematic interests and working on a bigger scale. Burrowing into the subconscious of a damaged man, he delivers a modern American epic with extraordinary restraint.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 29, 2011
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Eric Kohn
For anyone frustrated with countless formulaic exercises that drain modern horror of fresh ideas, Tucker & Dale is a downright cathartic indictment that encourages comparison to the "Scary Movie" franchise. It's mostly a smart spoof that looks awfully dumb for a reason.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 28, 2011
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Eric Kohn
The action scenes in Machine Gun Preacher work fine on their own, but they cheapen a work that attempts to command great importance.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 22, 2011
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Eric Kohn
Weekend builds into a powerful encapsulation of an identity crisis over the course of three passionate days.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 21, 2011
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Eric Kohn
Ellen Barkin puts on a bold, candid performance in Cam Archer's Shit Year, but the enigmatic movie is composed of too many fragments to sustain her efforts.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 21, 2011
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Eric Kohn
Art History is essentially Swanberg's version of "Zach and Miri Make a Porno," and, within the larger context of his career, just as inconsequential.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 20, 2011
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Eric Kohn
The title suggests a dramatic Shakespearean twist, but Clooney's aims are much simpler. As he builds to a western showdown divorced from political specificity, the Manchurian-like manipulation turns Ides of March into an allegorical monster movie in which everyone's competing for the role of the monster and most people can't see it.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 10, 2011
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Eric Kohn
Director Bennett Miller has produced a warm and generally agreeable character study about the pratfalls of athletic institutions and the willingness to think outside the box.- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 10, 2011
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Eric Kohn
The first half of I'm Glad My Mother's Alive effectively inhabits a child's mind in a manner that recalls Maurice Pialat's marvelous 1968 debut "The Naked Childhood."- IndieWire
- Posted Sep 3, 2011
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Eric Kohn
While there's a casual dissonance to each twist in its winding plot that results in a disconnected and emotionally vapid experience, Detective Dee unquestionably achieves the escapism it intends.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 30, 2011
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Eric Kohn
Largely a cut-and-paste affair, although useful for that very reason; it provides a glaring reminder that scary movies have evolved, both in terms of style and expectations, but the evolution isn't worth the effort.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 26, 2011
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Eric Kohn
An earnest, sometimes bland and unsophisticated look at Corinne's undulating relationship to spirituality in general and Christian dogma in particular. But it's also a surprisingly well-made character study outside of its specific theme.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 24, 2011
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Eric Kohn
Hiding behind a shaggy beard and a stoner grin, Paul Rudd plays an amusingly oblivious shlub in Our Idiot Brother, but the movie can't keep up with his comic inspiration.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 22, 2011
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Eric Kohn
The Tiniest Place calls to mind Patricio Guzmán's brilliant "Nostalgia for the Light," which focuses on the remnants of Chilean atrocities strewn about the Atacama Desert. Huezo, however, relies more on irony, juxtaposing the wartime setting with storybook images, acknowledging her distance from the events in question.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 19, 2011
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Eric Kohn
Anne Hathaway's faux British accent might be the first obvious conceit in One Day, but not its most cumbersome. That distinction belongs to the eponymous structure, a claustrophobic device that follows a pair of best friends over the course of a 22-year period, but only on many versions of July 15th.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 17, 2011
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Eric Kohn
Well cast and undeniably attuned to the nuances of human behavior, Amigo nevertheless suffers from simple dramatic shorthand.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 17, 2011
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Eric Kohn
For everything that Mozart's Sister imagines, it leaves much more up to imagination.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 16, 2011
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Eric Kohn
A four-and-a-half hour period piece littered with interconnected events spread across many years, it moves forward with fits of intrigue, interspersed with casual developments that deaden its momentum and call into question its monumental running time.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 3, 2011
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Eric Kohn
Despite its meandering plot, Bellflower presents its doom-laden vision as an astonishingly distinctive state of mind, arguing that the end of one self-made world always marks the start of a new one.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 2, 2011
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Eric Kohn
Santana was cast prior to making her gender transition and had never acted before. Her personal experience brings such legitimacy that she would probably succeed in the role even if she sucked at line reading. Fortunately, she doesn't.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 1, 2011
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Eric Kohn
It's hard to believe that The Devil's Double doesn't intend to be a put-on. Despite a real-life basis of its plot, Lee Tamahori's fierce depiction of hedonistic Saddaam Hussein spawn Uday Hussein relegates the character to a farcical cartoon.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 27, 2011
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Reviewed by
Eric Kohn
It's a pretty experiment with no apparent results, but plenty of marketability.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 27, 2011
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Eric Kohn
Unquestionably stands above the market standard for middlebrow comedies, but it repeatedly approaches greatness and stands down, beholden to forces quite possibly beyond the directors' control.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 26, 2011
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