For 16,522 reviews, this publication has graded:
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56% higher than the average critic
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6% same as the average critic
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38% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 2.3 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 63
| Highest review score: | Sand Storm | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | Saw VI |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 8,697 out of 16522
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Mixed: 5,808 out of 16522
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Negative: 2,017 out of 16522
16522
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas
Sunrise reminds us that the silent film was reaching its artistic heights just as sound was arriving. [29 Apr 1985, p.2]- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Mark Chalon Smith
On the surface, a lace of flirtations, insinuations and rejections compose the basic plotting. But Renoir uses flashes of accelerating drama to amplify his bigger points.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas
Never was Tati's mastery of sound effects more inspired than in Playtime, a commercial disaster at the time of its release that nevertheless may be Tati's true masterpiece. [14 May 1998, p.F18]- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Katie Walsh
What a wonder that the film adaptation of Judy Blume’s beloved 1970 young adult novel Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret is as lovely, heartfelt and, indeed, deeply radical as the original text.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 27, 2023
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Reviewed by
Justin Chang
This is a movie that teaches you how to watch it.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 2, 2023
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Reviewed by
Justin Chang
If the filmmaking feels poetic and subdued, it’s the opposite of coy. Leaf is confident enough to let her images, as much as her written dialogue, do much of the narrative lifting.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jul 13, 2023
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Reviewed by
Katie Walsh
This madcap mockumentary works beautifully because Gordon, Lieberman, Platt and Galvin take care to imbue this setting with a real sense of culture and place, populated with wonderfully eccentric characters.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jul 16, 2023
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Reviewed by
Justin Chang
Throughout this movie, an absorbing, barbed and frequently funny evisceration of artistic ego, Petzold practices a deft and disarming sleight of hand, using key details to keep the viewer off balance and deliver a stinging rebuke to Leon’s myopia.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jul 13, 2023
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Reviewed by
Justin Chang
It takes a confident storyteller to avoid the trap of overexplanation, to give us only a partial glimpse of her characters’ lives, and these narrative elisions have the effect of deepening rather than undercutting the story’s realism.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 1, 2024
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Reviewed by
Justin Chang
It seeks to demystify the bodies we see, normalize the act of seeking medical intervention and remind us of the great swath of humanity — of different ages, colors, genders, shapes and sizes — passing every day through this ward and others like it.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Aug 14, 2023
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Reviewed by
Tim Grierson
The effortlessly orchestrated dialogue scenes are riveting, but what’s remarkable is that, no matter how talkative Samet and his cohorts are, they often don’t say what they mean. The characters argue politics, worldviews or how to handle the disturbing accusations leveled against Samet and Kenan at school, but their rhetorical jousting masks unspoken resentments and disappointments.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 22, 2024
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Reviewed by
Robert Abele
This exquisitely rendered work from Kore-eda is a delicate web of compassion and embattlement: three separate views of one stretch of momentous time, spun and re-spun with care and craft.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 30, 2023
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Reviewed by
Justin Chang
The conclusion that Glazer arrives at, with a sudden formal rupture, is shattering in ways that defy easy description. More than any movie I’ve seen this year, or perhaps any year, The Zone of Interest leaves you pondering the magnitude of what the banality of evil has wrought — and the terrible, inconsolable void that it leaves behind.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted May 23, 2023
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Reviewed by
Justin Chang
Triet’s movie is a monument to the ambiguous and unknown, a labyrinth of half-glimpsed causes and vague, sinister effects.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 13, 2023
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Reviewed by
Justin Chang
From unsettled beginning to wondrously open-hearted finale, The Delinquents is wise enough not to offer clear or easy answers, beyond its certainty that getting lost is the only way to be found.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Oct 30, 2023
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Reviewed by
Carlos Aguilar
Using a style of elegant lyricism, which enshrines tiny moments into glisteningly miraculous turning points, Erice lets the exchanges between the people he’s conceived play out without the need to advance the plot.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Aug 31, 2024
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Carlos Aguilar
The year’s most succinctly perfect film, Fallen Leaves aims to do for us what companionship does for its couple: make this treacherous life a bit more bearable.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 22, 2023
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Reviewed by
Justin Chang
Inside the Yellow Cocoon Shell reminds us that confusion is often a necessary first step toward enlightenment, and that bafflement and beauty often go hand in hand. This is a lesson that Thiên must learn as well. The gift of this movie is that it invites us to learn it alongside him.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 25, 2024
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Reviewed by
Carlos Aguilar
As with Rohrwacher’s previous movies, there is an exquisite blurring between the tangible and the ethereal, the urban and the pastoral, life and death, past and present — all of it overlapping with the same ease as the hues of a twilight sky.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 29, 2024
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Reviewed by
Robert Abele
This film beams and buzzes inside its closed loop with the hard-won wisdom of acceptance. And it does so while staying in awe of what can never be understood, only appreciated — and if we’re lucky, enjoyed.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 8, 2024
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Reviewed by
Justin Chang
[Anderson’s] movies have always proposed — sometimes ingeniously, sometimes exhaustingly, always sincerely — that we might benefit from looking at the world from a fresh vantage. And so it is with The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar, in which a revolutionary new way of seeing holds the key to an altogether deeper transformation.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Sep 28, 2023
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas
The film is at once of its time--simultaneously the fullest flowering of the French New Wave and the shattering of its male chauvinist tendencies--and utterly timeless in its perception of love, sex and human nature.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Robert Abele
What rings truest and richest about The Eternal Memory, as exquisitely humane a film as you’re likely to see all year, is what abiding love and stewardship look like in the moment: to care so deeply for someone as to tend to their memories, and to be loved so deeply that it’s the last beautiful thought one may ever need.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Aug 18, 2023
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Reviewed by
Justin Chang
As you leave The Boy and the Heron, you may feel strangely bereft, emptied out in a way that I suspect Miyazaki both intends and hopes to console us against.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Nov 28, 2023
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- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Tim Grierson
A corrosive rage courses through this 163-minute odyssey that’s matched by a leavening absurdism, Jude aghast at the comical stupidity of our inauthentic, greed-driven world.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 20, 2024
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas
Boasting one of the most exciting all-star casts ever assembled, glittering with authentic glamour, this MGM hit is one of those happy instances when art and entertainment are one. [17 Jun 1991, p.F9]- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Justin Chang
More than any great movie I can remember, Andrew Haigh’s All of Us Strangers captures the eerie, disorienting and utterly sacred experience of encountering a lost loved one in your dreams.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Sep 1, 2023
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- Critic Score
Janet Planet is a brilliant debut for Baker, who doesn’t so much translate her artistry to the screen as discover a whole new frontier for her singular sensibility.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jun 25, 2024
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Reviewed by
Carlos Aguilar
You can get the facts about these migrants anywhere, but Garrone knows the tool of cinema is more effective. By presenting these adolescents in all their fragility and strength, he comes as close as is possible to getting us to feel how they felt. Io Capitano is as unflinching as it is robust with empathy.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 23, 2024
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