For 16,524 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: 8,698 out of 16524
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Mixed: 5,809 out of 16524
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Negative: 2,017 out of 16524
16524
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan
It's an acceptable film, but the story of family ties and forgiveness simply cannot manage the emotional connections it is desperate for.- Los Angeles Times
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- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas
This is a sophisticated adult treat in the French manner with an attractive and gifted cast and is essentially serious, yet often whimsical and always compassionate.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
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- Los Angeles Times
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- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas
Serves up a lot of bone-crushing violence in an offbeat context with considerable style and energy, but the steady diet of brutal street fighting makes it all but impossible to connect with this picture, despite whatever visceral appeal it may offer.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
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- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kevin Crust
Anker evocatively captures the joys (and sometime frustrations) experienced by high-level artists working within an institution. The ardor they bring to their music is both enviable and inspiring.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas
There's not a second in the film that isn't a reminder that New Orleans in its architecture, cuisine and multicultural diversity as well as in its music is a unique and major American center of culture. Murphy has made a film more valuable than he surely ever could have imagined.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kevin Crust
Carl T. Evans' tedious drama Walking on the Sky serves primarily as an acting exercise for its cast and a showcase for its primary location, a scenic Manhattan rooftop.- Los Angeles Times
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Kenneth Turan
A potent and imaginative creative biography of virtuoso percussionist Glennie.- Los Angeles Times
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- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas
The picture looks as murky as its story line, the sound is tinny, much of the dialogue is flat or confoundingly technical or merely risible, and most everything on the screen looks patently fake.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas
Marcos Siega's direction is well-paced, but writers David T. Wagner and Brent Goldberg haven't brought anything sufficiently fresh or original to a formula plot to allow Underclassman to rise above the level of a mildly diverting video rental.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas
She has something to say to everyone, and one can only hope that she is preaching to more than her choir of devoted fans.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas
Although graceful and dynamic, Three Dancing Slaves is none too substantial or original, lacking the edge or complexity of Morel's impressive debut film, "Full Speed."- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan
A film that grips us dramatically, intellectually and emotionally.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan
An elegantly discursive examination of one of the great modern photographers, a surprisingly intimate portrait of an elusive, laconic man.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan
Unfortunately, although Gilliam has always had a taste for the outre, he has allowed it to get out of hand here and swallow the picture whole. There's an excessiveness, an unwelcome too-muchness to "Grimm's" creepy moments.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas
It's increasingly hard to work up a fright on the screen these days, but even if The Cave doesn't exactly terrify, it's fun and looks great.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kevin Crust
The whole movie could be clipped by about 95 minutes and it would make a swell little video for Simpson's performance of the title cut from the soundtrack.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Carina Chocano
A tender love story and a dead-on lampoon of the genre, but its main drawback is that Showalter is egregiously miscast in the title role.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kevin Crust
Recycling is alive but not well in the outmoded teen comedy Dirty Deeds, with a result that is more toxic than intoxicating.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas
That the acting is stilted and that the filmmakers and especially Pla take themselves so seriously serves to make Eternal deliriously silly camp fare.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kenneth Turan
This is one terrific thriller with several wicked tricks up its sleeve, each more satisfying than the last.- Los Angeles Times
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- Los Angeles Times
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- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Carina Chocano
Takes a premise that, in less competent, less empathetic hands, would have had the depth of a pancake, gives it a soul and turns it into a surprisingly sweet and funny ode to male friendship and middle-aged love.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Kevin Thomas
The plot is not absolutely airtight, but Craven's filmmaking is too fast-moving and too involving for this to matter. As a movie, Red-Eye is in every way as well crafted and sharply designed as the Boeing 767 Lisa fatefully boards.- Los Angeles Times
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Reviewed by
Carina Chocano
An unconscionably dreary and amateurish-looking thing, and the rote plot and annoyingly predictable script -- a compendium of bird puns, mostly -- don't work nearly hard enough to make up for the hammy awfulness of the images.- Los Angeles Times
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