For 16,526 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: 8,699 out of 16526
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Mixed: 5,810 out of 16526
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Negative: 2,017 out of 16526
16526
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Mark Olsen
There is something sharp, exciting and more original tucked within The Berlin File — and it is in moments a sleek, crackling film — but it all feels somehow misshapen.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 14, 2013
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Reviewed by
Betsy Sharkey
Herzog has become a master of the understatement — knowing just how long the images can sustain you without a word being said. Vasyukov and his team of cameramen gave him a stunning range to work with, so the filmmaker keeps his own narration to a minimum.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 14, 2013
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan
Even if No is not the whole truth — and no film is — its pungent dialogue and involving characters tell a delicious and very pertinent tale. And the messages it delivers, its thoughts on the workings of democracy and the intricacies of personality, are just as valuable and entertaining — maybe even more so.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 14, 2013
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Reviewed by
Robert Abele
Hsia has an appealingly slick visual style for the fast-paced if predictable turns in Sam's story, shooting the gleaming, bustling Shanghai as if it had finally earned its big-Hollywood-romantic-comedy stripes as a setting for the usual fish-out-of-water jokes, broad humor, meet-cutes, silly coincidences and happy endings.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 14, 2013
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Reviewed by
Sheri Linden
From moment to moment the low-key intrigue threatens to slip into Hitchcock territory; when it does, it's not in the form of high-wire suspense but in a burst of understated playfulness.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 14, 2013
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Reviewed by
Betsy Sharkey
Maybe there really are supernatural forces at work in this world. How else to explain Beautiful Creatures? The movie is an intriguing, intelligent enigma — three words not typically associated with teen romances.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 13, 2013
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Reviewed by
Betsy Sharkey
This sloppy sentimental journey is long on beauty shots, short on depth and seriously intent on tugging your heartstrings. Indeed, it demands you reach for those tissues. Sob.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 13, 2013
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan
A Good Day to Die Hard plays like an extended victory lap for star Bruce Willis and the entire "Die Hard" franchise. Not surprising, but not overwhelmingly entertaining either.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 13, 2013
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Reviewed by
Mark Olsen
By our quote-unquote standards of contemporary comedy, it plays as uneven at best and often just flattens out for long jokeless stretches.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 11, 2013
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan
Room 237 becomes not a film about "The Shining" or even a film about film. Rather, it is an examination of the nature of obsession, about how we are capable of convincing ourselves — and possibly others — that just about anything might be true.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 10, 2013
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Reviewed by
Sheri Linden
The drama often feels posed and inert. Even so, it strikes more than a few chords as it digs deeper than period cliché.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 7, 2013
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Reviewed by
Robert Abele
Predictable if measured uplift aside, Fox keeps Yossi effortlessly affecting, graced with deadpan humor and a knowingness about lonely lives.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 7, 2013
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- Critic Score
Clandestine Childhood is a sincere effort but also rather sincerely a meager one too.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 7, 2013
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Reviewed by
Sheri Linden
The earnest passages mostly just lie there; the film works best on its frilly, exuberant surface, as a valentine to Streamline Moderne, Pop Art and L.A.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 7, 2013
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan
At its heart Lore qualifies as a coming-of-age story, but it is far from the ones we usually see.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 7, 2013
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan
This clever bag of tricks is made with so much cinematic skill it makes implausibility irrelevant. What happens on screen is unapologetically far-fetched, but it unfolds with enough panache to make turning away out of the question.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 7, 2013
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Reviewed by
Robert Abele
A snapshot of Los Angeles artists during a cultural pivot point, the documentary Young Turks sparks fascination and frustration in equal measure.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 7, 2013
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Reviewed by
Betsy Sharkey
The heart of this film is on the road with Bateman and McCarthy. If not for their brilliance, Identity Thief would be running on empty.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Feb 7, 2013
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Reviewed by
Mark Olsen
The storytelling, from a script by David Coggeshall, is at times nearly incoherent and relies too often on random scares.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 31, 2013
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Reviewed by
Robert Abele
Bullet to the Head is an adrenaline shot to your movie memory if the blunt, gleefully dumb, no-nonsense ways of '80s-style action flicks are your nostalgia drug of choice.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 31, 2013
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Reviewed by
Mark Olsen
Girls Against Boys is some odd male fantasy of what female revenge might be like, sexy and enigmatically charged rather than haunting or scary or even just weird.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 31, 2013
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Reviewed by
Betsy Sharkey
In doing a little genre bending of romantic schmaltz and horror cheese - some fundamental zombie mythology is turned on its head - the film breathes amusing new life into both.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 31, 2013
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan
High-spirited, emotional and funny, Sound City is, of all things, a mash note to a machine. Not just any machine, however, but one that helped change the face of rock 'n' roll.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 31, 2013
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Reviewed by
Sheri Linden
How many directors does it take to screw in a star-studded piece of aggressive stupidity and call it a movie? An even dozen, and there is no punch line.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 29, 2013
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Reviewed by
Mark Olsen
A surprisingly effective low-budget horror film that takes as its true villain the casual cynicism and nihilistic misanthropy that so often go along with online culture.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 28, 2013
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Reviewed by
Robert Abele
What galls is that for all the perspiration in jazzing up an old yarn, there's not a whiff of originality in how Wirkola engages with the perverse pleasures enshrined by the Grimm brothers, two of their era's shrewdest storytellers.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 26, 2013
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Reviewed by
Gary Goldstein
Kudos to writer-director Antonino D'Ambrosio for taking such an eclectic and disparate number of aims, thoughts, subjects and mediums and creating the smart and inspiring - and uniquely whole -documentary that is Let Fury Have the Hour.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 25, 2013
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Reviewed by
Betsy Sharkey
If you're going to saturate a film with so much violence, at least it's nice to see an action hero - or antihero - actually feeling the pain.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 24, 2013
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Reviewed by
Robert Abele
In its gently atmospheric camerawork and nicely underplayed moments between Mike and Chris, Resolution manages to keep its eerier moments surprising and its emotional life arresting.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 24, 2013
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Reviewed by
Robert Abele
Flaked with offbeat witticisms, cheese ball effects and fanboy splatter gore, the surreal John Dies at the End has the vibe of a shaggy dog story, which works both for and against it.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 24, 2013
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