For 5,162 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: 3,564 out of 5162
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Mixed: 1,332 out of 5162
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Negative: 266 out of 5162
5162
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
The violent beauty of this film, which rips your soul out of your chest so completely that its seismic grief almost feels like falling in love or becoming a parent, is that it’s as much about the experience of having a child as it is about the experience of losing one.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 30, 2025
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Reviewed by
Josh Slater-Williams
A hypnotizing historical and spiritual epic that’s immersive in a way that few decades-spanning stories successfully pull off.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 30, 2025
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Reviewed by
Ryan Lattanzio
If you want your del Toro weirder, Frankenstein might not be your cup. But if you want a period monster movie that’s solid, almost oaken in its sturdiness, you don’t need to knock on wood to assure that del Toro is keeping the innermost essence, the soul of cinema, alive at least.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 30, 2025
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Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Cooper’s film wants to be the “Nebraska” of rock biopics, but it lacks the finesse to retain the essence of that sound when transferring it into the body of a commercial biopic. In that sense at least, it all too perfectly articulates how difficult it can be too move forward when something is holding you back.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 30, 2025
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Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
There are any number of movies about people who try to reinvent themselves in the face of a crisis. There are many fewer movies about people who violently refuse to even consider that idea — people who would rather kill someone else than become someone else. Park Chan-wook’s bleak, brilliant, and mordantly hilarious “No Other Choice” is the exception that proves the rule.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 29, 2025
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Reviewed by
Ryan Lattanzio
It’s an overintellectualized script that reduces its characters to broad stand-ins and mouthpieces for hot topics, bizarrely retrograde, and a few beats behind the times in interrogating both the post-#MeToo context of how assault charges are handled, reacted to, and also in untangling a tricky identity politics inquiry that brushes against race and gender issues.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 29, 2025
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Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Baumbach lacks Sofia Coppola’s singular ability to leverage a character’s wealth for the wanting it reveals of them, but he, Mortimer, and Clooney share a vivid understanding of the resentments that can form in the space between who we are and how we’re seen — and of how stardom can widen that space to the point that friendships and families are liable to fall into it unnoticed.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 28, 2025
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Reviewed by
Ryan Lattanzio
Imagine if Michael Haneke’s Funny Games were instead about a pair of lone-wolf, conservationist vigilantes trying to save the world instead of two sociopathic twinks wanting to tear it down, and you’ll have some idea of the hyper-contained, rigorously controlled torture chamber that is Yorgos Lanthimos’ Bugonia.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 28, 2025
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Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Megalopolis is one of those movies that feels like it offers an accurate window behind the scenes of its own creation process, and Megadoc confirms as much without ever becoming redundant.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 28, 2025
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Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Style has always been the vehicle for his substance, and while it’s easy to imagine why an overdone misstep like “Parthenope” might inspire Sorrentino to rein things in a bit for his next feature, it’s funny that said feature turned out to be the story of a man who threatens to unravel from self-doubt at the height of his power.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 27, 2025
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Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
For all the texture of the film, which was shot in and around a New York City vibrantly retrofitted to the story’s 1998-set specifications (costumes, music, locations, the whole kit), the hammy way important beats and plot points are served up feels out of step. It doesn’t pop, at least until the film’s final act, which finally brings together Aronofsky’s disparate parts and shows an inkling of what the filmmaker was attempting to capture.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 27, 2025
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Reviewed by
Kate Erbland
That McNamara has written a truly new spin on Adler’s novel is genuinely refreshing, but the lighter tone and greater reliance on actual romance between its leads makes what’s to come all the harder to swallow.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 26, 2025
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Reviewed by
Wilson Chapman
The detail, attention, and artistry of every pixel in frame is very evidently displayed. In many respects, watching “Ne Zha 2” feels akin to viewing the “Avatar” films, as the film provides a visual experience that’s the absolute peak of what its medium is capable of.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 22, 2025
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Reviewed by
Josh Slater-Williams
The build-up to the film’s low-key, poetic resolution is made all the more moving by Shim’s intelligent performance, which is effectively informed by the actor’s positioning between two languages throughout, giving her a platform and reason to convey additional emotional nuances without dialogue — the performer, in a sense, also breaking free from “a cage of words” like her character.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 21, 2025
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Reviewed by
Christian Zilko
Indie animation remains one of the toughest niches to find traction in, but here’s hoping “Boys Go to Jupiter” launches the film career of an artist who graces us with his whimsy for decades to come.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 20, 2025
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Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Radu Jude’s gleefully stupid Dracula proves much too expansive — and much too invested in the centuries of barbarism that paved the way toward Silicon Valley — to be misunderstood as a simple rebuke against the grotesqueries of algorithmic image-making.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 20, 2025
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Reviewed by
Kate Erbland
Handsomely made but tediously plotted, Kirby is more than deserving of this kind of meaty, she’s-in-every-frame role, but Night Always Comes sunsets long before we get there.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 14, 2025
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Reviewed by
Wilson Chapman
Odenkirk seems decidedly checked out: he, along with almost every other actor in the cast, approaches the material with a complete lack of energy, which can pass for an acting choice to represent Hutch’s exhaustion but slowly begins to resemble a boredom with this character.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 13, 2025
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Reviewed by
Wilson Chapman
Just like the dog it’s about, Fixed has plenty of balls, but its big heart is what really matters.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 13, 2025
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Reviewed by
Alison Foreman
At a time when even horror lovers are petrified of isolation, Mother of Flies festers with feelings too scary to keep inside. It’s imperfect, better for it, and even languishing in grief, a clear cinematic legacy ready to start.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 6, 2025
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Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
The non-linear shape of its story doesn’t just allow Weapons to disguise the age-old genre pattern of tension and release, it also allows Cregger to condense it until he’s completely elided the distance between horror and comedy, terror and relief, self-control and surrender.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 6, 2025
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Reviewed by
Kate Erbland
Leave it to Jamie Lee Curtis and Lindsay Lohan to crack the code as to what makes a good legacyquel, which they’ve done quite handily with their long-gestating Freaky Friday sequel, Nisha Ganatra’s charming and quite fun Freakier Friday. The secret? Fittingly enough, it harkens back to exactly what Curtis and Lohan brought to Mark Waters’ 2003 Freaky Friday: actual verve, obvious joy, and performances that are about three times better than they need to be.- IndieWire
- Posted Aug 5, 2025
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Reviewed by
Christian Zilko
Sometimes Souleymane feels like he’s sprinting through a race with no finish line, and sometimes he’s running into an unmovable brick wall. The film exists in the space between those opposing outcomes, and its contradictions become its greatest strength as it depicts the endless exhaustion of navigating a system that doesn’t care about you nearly as much as it claims to.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 31, 2025
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Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
As is clear from the very first scene, and made all the more so by the very last, She Rides Shotgun is Polly’s movie at its core, and Heger’s face — a detailed portrait of love and loss, its colors all the more radiant by how they run together when she cries — is expressive enough to make it a movie worth watching even when it feels like one we’ve already seen a number of times before.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 31, 2025
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Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
While it’s a mild shame “The Naked Gun” peters out a little bit toward the end (at least before rebounding during the credits), it’s even more of a shame that it has to end at all.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 30, 2025
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What Beecroft achieves exists in its own unique realm. It reminds us that no matter who you are, how isolated your world may seem, or how unworthy of being seen you may feel, your life is still deserving of the cinematic treatment.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 28, 2025
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Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Empowered by the indivisible viscerality of Monk’s work (a massive Zoom discussion on her career immediately devolves into a mess of voices unintelligible enough to sound like one of Monk’s performances), Shebar’s film relies on creative urgency to compensate for what it lacks in specific insight.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 25, 2025
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Reviewed by
Kate Erbland
And, yes, it is also often quite funny. Most of that humor comes care of Sandler, who slips back into Happy with something like grizzled ease, and seems to have not lost a trick on what makes the character both so funny (his rage, his imagination, his fashion sense) and so easy to care about (his rage, his imagination, his fashion sense).- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 25, 2025
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Reviewed by
Kate Erbland
The devil is in the details, and the details? Well, they’re in the kind of patchwork-guessing and random sign-seeing that so many are forced to endure as they embark on the horrors of modern dating. Brooks just takes them in some delightfully daffy (and occasionally deeply scary) new directions.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 23, 2025
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Reviewed by
David Ehrlich
Huang will never forgive Smith for killing the golden goose, and Smith will probably never take responsibility for it (to judge by the Instagram message with him that Huang shares in the film), but that’s not really what this raw and well-relished documentary is all about.- IndieWire
- Posted Jul 22, 2025
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