For 16,520 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 16520
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Mixed: 5,806 out of 16520
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Negative: 2,017 out of 16520
16520
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Justin Chang
It's a simple, cumulatively shattering record of life as we rarely see it captured in narrative or documentary cinema.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 5, 2018
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Kimber Myers
Rogers Park is populated by real people with real problems, though the dialogue in Carlos Treviño's script doesn't always serve them well. The lines sometimes feel manufactured, but there's real warmth — or frustration or anger, depending on the scene — present in these authentic performances.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 5, 2018
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Kenneth Turan
It's all strangely wonderful, and it will take your breath away if you give it the chance.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 5, 2018
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Justin Chang
The pleasures of this story are the pleasures of watching people think, quickly but methodically, through a situation. To the very end, where a different picture might have devolved into a routine bloodbath, the movie clings to its intelligence like a protective amulet; it keeps the viewer in a state of heightened alertness throughout.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 5, 2018
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Gary Goldstein
Anchored by Jacobson's touchingly layered turn as a dutiful enabler, this risk-taking piece has an effectively anxious, naturalistic feel (it was inspired by producer Samantha Housman's own experience), with Franco bringing credible charm and desperation to the messed-up Seth.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 5, 2018
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Katie Walsh
It's a viewing experience that's challenging, unflinching and deeply honest.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 5, 2018
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Gary Goldstein
Director-editor Simon Kaijser takes an often choppy approach to the narrative, the catch-a-mouse symbolism is a bit heavy-handed and the ending could use more oomph.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 5, 2018
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Robert Abele
It's a prodigiously researched buzz saw of archival material, facts, feelings, testimonials, and nostalgia.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Apr 4, 2018
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Michael Rechtshaffen
The old debate over nature versus nurture is played for (sporadic) laughs in Birthmarked, a satire that's unable to deliver on a promising hypothesis.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 29, 2018
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Justin Chang
Duplass' puppy-dog affect may seem softer than you'd expect for a character who spent 20 years behind bars, but the actor's quietly wrenching performance gives the lie to any easy assumptions about the experience of the incarcerated. And Falco...gives a performance of aching depth and subtlety.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 29, 2018
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Robert Abele
The actors gamely strive for conversational naturalism, but what they say matters little because you never sense anything other than an environment rigged to explode, rather than nurtured into emotional relevance.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 29, 2018
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Kenneth Turan
Though this film is simple to summarize, to understand and experience the powerful emotional charge King in the Wilderness conveys, it simply must be seen.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 29, 2018
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Noel Murray
God's Not Dead: A Light in Darkness, directed by Michael Mason, is less strident than the two surprise hits that preceded it, but it still tells a programmatic story, rooted in presumptions.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 29, 2018
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Kimber Myers
Its bubbly tone is often at odds with the casual cruelty present. Status Update layers in a message about social media's filters and fakery, but it isn't enough to make this a movie worth sharing- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 29, 2018
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan
Warm without sacrificing integrity, pleasant but not to a fault, Back to Burgundy is satisfying rather than earth-shaking.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 29, 2018
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Michael Rechtshaffen
Thanks to its star's all-in commitment, the overtly maudlin film works better than it should, particularly sequences in which octogenarian Reynolds is dropped into "Smokey and the Bandit" and "Deliverance" and converses philosophically with his younger self.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 29, 2018
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Justin Chang
For Huppert, most celebrated for her uncompromising severity in films like "Elle" and "The Piano Teacher," the movie is an opportunity to cut gloriously loose; no less than Claire herself, she seems to be enjoying her holiday.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 29, 2018
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Gary Goldstein
Pacino bites off an awful lot here, yet, as our puckish, ebullient and, later, prickly guide on this kaleidoscopic journey, he manages to present an intriguing and passionate view of artistic risk and reward.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 29, 2018
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Gary Goldstein
The feature's visual simplicity ends up countering the play's more florid, flamboyant elements, keeping the lean but intense story more centered and accessible.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 29, 2018
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Noel Murray
Caught hits the usual beats, but with an unusually strong cast and original characters.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 29, 2018
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Kimber Myers
While First Match is more ambitious than most films in the genre, it still provides moments to cheer our complicated heroine, whether she's on the mat or off.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 29, 2018
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Robert Abele
As hopelessly strained and unfunny as the fish-out-of-water material is in the guess-the-lines-predictable screenplay by Meg Leonard and Nick Moorcroft, the actors ultimately sell its sentiment, like expert landscapers who can make a homey garden using artificial turf.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 29, 2018
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Katie Walsh
Stone had the right instincts about the part — she inhabits Senna beautifully, and her performance anchors the light-as-air All I Wish. It's the perfect role for her to sink her teeth into, sexy and fun, but she brings a sense of real intelligence and soulfulness to the character. That's true star power.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 29, 2018
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Gary Goldstein
[An] accessible, persuasive, often amusing look at how investments in dubious Chinese companies gave way to crisis-level losses for average American stockholders in the wake of the 2008 financial disaster — and beyond — and made some U.S. bankers and lawyers and Chinese executives a bundle.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 29, 2018
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Robert Abele
You sense the messier aesthetics of Katz's mumblecore origins have fallen away to reveal a born alchemist of story and imagery — in its arresting visual tour of L.A.'s groovy neighborhoods and rich hideaways, Gemini captures a secret, abiding and even menacing melancholy behind its oft-regarded surfaces.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 29, 2018
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Kenneth Turan
Its plot is complexity itself, but its "kids save the world" soul is simple and earnest as opposed to earth shattering. With apologies to Bill and Ted, it's an excellent adventure, and let's leave it at that.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 28, 2018
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Justin Chang
It is, in effect, a scrambled history of San Francisco told through moving pictures, a record of the social and architectural changes the city has endured over more than a century.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 26, 2018
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Noel Murray
Unfortunately, there's not enough footage of Wallace playing; and in an effort to squeeze in as many voices as possible, "Triumph" suffers from some repetition of anecdotes and ideas. But the details of what Wallace went through are astonishing, and important to revisit.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 22, 2018
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Noel Murray
The overall tone is light and breezy, and while the jokes aren't exactly side-splitting, they do add some welcome eccentricity.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 22, 2018
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Reviewed by
Robert Abele
Gould's admiration for the genre is affecting and sincere. The problem is that his and screenwriter Greg Tucker's love of horse operas both boilerplate and ruminative a la Peckinpah doesn't mesh well enough into a smooth ride.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Mar 22, 2018
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