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
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- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Robert Abele
Neither involving as a study in grief nor compelling as a thriller about conscience, the cat-and-mouse tragedy Reservation Road is a misery windup so schematic and obvious it reduces its crisis-stricken characters to little more than emotional bumper cars.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan
Things are sporadically troublesome about the film. The story goes in and out of being self-consciously earnest and ponderous, a situation that numerous tight close-ups of people's eyes does nothing to help.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Jan Stuart
It's borderline parody of a kind of fey filmmaking popular at crunchy-granola festivals, but the counterfeit aesthetic is ultimately outshone by the life-affirming message.- Los Angeles Times
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Meeting Resistance in theory should have been a revealing documentary. In truth, however, the measures taken to protect the informants' identities dilute the potency of their statements and diminish the film's efficacy as a historical document.- Los Angeles Times
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A sincere, slow-paced drama about a Florida family dealing with schizophrenia, Canvas is never terribly convincing, despite being inspired by writer-director Joseph Greco's life growing up with a mentally ill mother.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Carina Chocano
Gives new meaning to "costume drama" in that it is a drama primarily about costumes. But the drama is about as subtle as a sledgehammer to the temple.- Los Angeles Times
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In a movie where the timing of a squeeze bunt is presented as the thing of beauty that it is, and the eradication of small-town culture in a changing world is a genuine concern, the simplifying countrified morality of The Final Season is the real crying shame.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan
The creators of this film were fiercely determined not to go so much as a millimeter over the line into sentiment, tawdriness or mockery. It's the rare film that is the best possible version of itself, but "Lars" fits that bill.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Carina Chocano
Language this lethal has all but disappeared from the movies, and it's an unmitigated pleasure to observe Caine and Law attack it with such ferocity. Sleuth is nasty fun.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan
It is the gift of Terror's Advocate, Barbet Schroeder's riveting new documentary, to simply present Vergès as is, to say "here is the man" and let things speak for themselves. Do they ever.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kevin Crust
It's a bare-knuckled crime drama set in 1988 that stylistically could have been made that year and emphasizes Gray's strengths as a director while drawing attention to his limitations as a writer.- Los Angeles Times
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King Corn is entertaining enough, but it's also a moral, crucially skeptical road trip down the food chain.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Gene Seymour
Control keeps you riveted in ways that "24 Hour Party People" doesn't, primarily because of the investment of craft and conviction by all concerned.- Los Angeles Times
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Harper and Golda's Balcony generate tremendous influence and timeless meaning.- Los Angeles Times
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Only intermittently funny at best, but mostly full of dead air, the film is a let-down on both fronts.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Jan Stuart
The Good Night has flashes of bookish wit but never quite recovers from the metronomic monotony of its first half, which ticktocks between scenes of Paltrow braying and Cruz voguing.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Carina Chocano
A grim, shrill, deluded and incredibly depressing movie, so bewilderingly mean-spirited that the trademark Farrelly Brothers gross-out scenes feel like the sweetest.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan
A smart and suspenseful legal thriller that comes completely alive on-screen.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan
The longer it goes, the more frustrating it becomes, as Bar Lev declines to come down on one side or the other.- Los Angeles Times
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- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Carina Chocano
As sad as it is to realize that youth activism in this country is dead, it's sadder still to find yourself agreeing that they have a point. Just look at what happened to Kurtz.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kevin Crust
There's nothing particularly revelatory about the interviews recorded over a two-month span, but there's an intimate quality that gives the impression you're listening to a private conversation, which, in a sense, you are.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Carina Chocano
The India of the movie is more an idea than a reality...Exotic, spiritual and, according to Peter Whitman (Adrien Brody), "spicy"-smelling, it's a magical mystery place where wayward foreigners can go to get their souls back on track.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kevin Crust
Trade works fairly well as a thriller ticking down to Adriana's auction. It's less assured when it strains for some buddy picture chemistry between Ramos and Kline. Though both actors are fine, with Ramos' performance being reminiscent of some of Diego Luna's English-language roles, the attempts at humor to ease the tension between Jorge and Ray and some of the speechifying are out of tune with the rest of the film.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Carina Chocano
Love is a many-splendored thing in Robert Benton's dull romantic fantasy Feast of Love, though none of its splendors rings true.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Gene Seymour
Pettis is adorable, but she pushes the cuteness dial well past one's tolerance level. Still, if you've got small ones yourself, they'll probably enjoy the messes Joe and Peyton make together. They may also wonder why it takes so long for all the movie's messes to get cleaned up.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan
THE Kingdom has some power but not enough sense. A ripped-from-today's-headlines thriller, it wants us to feel as if we're watching something relevant when what's really going on is a slick excuse for efficient mayhem that's not half as smart as it would like to be.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan
A brooding meditation on the unnerving power and terrible cost of emotional and political masquerades, the Chinese-language Lust, Caution gets under your skin with its examination of what qualifies as love and what does not.- Los Angeles Times
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Still, as compelling as The Price of Sugar is, it also represents a squandered opportunity. A stronger connection could have been made between the film's subject and our own responsibility as consumers.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan
Though Penn's fierce identification with the protagonist is a key source for the film's accomplishments, Into the Wild succeeds on screen because Hirsch ("Alpha Dog," "The Lords of Dogtown") throws himself into the part without reservation, projecting an appealing openness and life force that brings a special poignancy to his fate.- Los Angeles Times
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