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
The movie naturally pulses with life and energy, invigorated by its narrative sweep, its nimble camerawork and propulsive musical score composed by Danny Bensi and Saunder Jurriaans. But Bahrani scrupulously resists the temptation to turn India into a flashy, exoticizing spectacle, as more than a few critics accused “Slumdog Millionaire” of doing.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 22, 2021
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Reviewed by
Justin Chang
Zendaya . . . has a way of rendering dialogue irrelevant. She holds a closeup here more skillfully and naturally than her co-star does, and her silence proves far more eloquent than his words. And those words turn out to be the undoing of Malcolm & Marie, not just because there are so many of them, but because they feel like the building blocks of a meta-movie parlor trick, an intellectual exercise that exists for no purpose other than its own justification.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 22, 2021
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Reviewed by
Justin Chang
As its delightfully loquacious title suggests, Preparations to Be Together for an Unknown Period of Time is both methodical and enigmatic. It’s a movie that sees no real contradiction between the rational and irrational, only degrees of difference. The instinctive intelligence and curiosity that Márta brings to her emotional investigation, tempered by the kind of humility that only comes with great knowledge, is what makes her such an involving protagonist — someone you naturally want to follow down any rabbit hole that may present itself.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 21, 2021
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Katie Walsh
This wildly entertaining eco-feminist crime caper, anchored by a winning lead performance from Agnieszka Mandat, isn’t just worth the wait, it’s an imperative watch.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 21, 2021
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Gary Goldstein
The film absorbingly shuttles back and forth in time, tracking key moments in the trio’s lives that not only illuminate their pasts but effectively prepare us for who Matt, Nicole and Dane become, for better and worse, when the going gets tough. It adds up to a skillful kind of mosaic that pays powerful emotional dividends.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 21, 2021
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Michael Ordoña
No Man’s Land comes out of the blue to comment memorably on the immigration crisis by simply giving human life its due. It’s wise and empathetic and worth a watch.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 21, 2021
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Carlos Aguilar
Imperfect as it is, this often-intuitive piece with a strong observational eye personifies the notion of the calm before the storm.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 20, 2021
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Carlos Aguilar
Rather than speaking to the moment coherently, the movie communicates its message in loud fits of dull screaming.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 15, 2021
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Robert Abele
The result is a sharply assembled multiformat collage of memory and investigation that starts like a trip any of us might make into a what-made-him-tick past, but ends in the present with scattered feelings and tenuous bonds.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 15, 2021
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Reviewed by
Justin Chang
The brilliance of MLK/FBI lies in how effortlessly conversant it manages to be with the injustices of the present, without ever deviating from the injustices of the past.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 14, 2021
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Reviewed by
Robert Abele
Needless to say, the point of Ciorniciuc’s immersive, lively, warm and heartbreaking film is not to see the Enaches in the park as total paradise and their stab at urban living as some terrible detour into restrictiveness. Acasă, My Home is much more complicated, as any thorough portrait of our modern world is when progress is a balance between old and new ways and people like the Enaches find their notions of survival and independence challenged.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 14, 2021
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Reviewed by
Gary Goldstein
It’s easy enough to take this brisk documentary at face value and enjoy it for the well-shot curio that it is. And Oppenheim, just 24, is a talent to watch. Still, this movie shouldn’t preclude — and, who knows, may even inspire — a more definitive documentary about this debatable slice of “heaven.”- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 14, 2021
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Noel Murray
Everyone involved with Bloody Hell is doing their jobs with creativity and gusto, even if it’s hard to discern any larger point.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 13, 2021
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Carlos Aguilar
My Little Sister is frank and poignant. With a distinctive angle and the rawness of the cast’s first-rate performances, Chuat and Reymond elevate a premise that could have, in other hands, veered into the realm of the uninspired.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 13, 2021
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Reviewed by
Justin Chang
I’m wary in general of making any definitive pronouncements about Locked Down, whose charms and irritations (and it has its share of both) are largely a matter of timing and perspective.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 13, 2021
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Michael Ordoña
The Marksman is more drama than thriller, but really more old-fashioned western than anything else — and a familiar one at that.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 12, 2021
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Robert Abele
Even with a thinly drawn lead, Blizzard of Souls maintains an undeniably raw power as a small country’s coming-of-age story, told through a bright-eyed wannabe hero and forged in a maelstrom of death and disillusionment.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 7, 2021
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Reviewed by
Justin Chang
The suspension of disbelief that any celebrity impersonation requires may be multiplied fourfold here, but One Night in Miami ... turns that excess into a kind of economy. It moves, with light-fingered assurance, through sequences that transform from soulful arias into sustained duets, built around performances that are collaborative rather than imitative in nature.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 7, 2021
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Kevin Crust
It’s a profound, immersive lesson in empathy that should resonate with anyone interested in neurodiversity or simply seeking a more inclusive society.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 7, 2021
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Michael Ordoña
Beautiful Something Left Behind, which won the documentary award at last year’s South by Southwest Film Festival when the film was called “An Elephant in the Room,” serves as a snapshot of kids in emotional crises, but sadly, little more.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 7, 2021
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Reviewed by
Justin Chang
In the bruising melodrama Pieces of a Woman, Vanessa Kirby does something remarkable and rare — or at least, she makes it seem rare. She brings sharp emotional definition to a character who, in the throes of a devastating loss, refuses to make her feelings easily readable, or consolable, for those around her.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 7, 2021
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Less a film about the iconic 17th century Dutch painter of the film’s title than it is an acute, often fascinating and occasionally puzzling rumination on aspects of the other titular word — “my.”- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Jan 6, 2021
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Reviewed by
Noel Murray
If not for Moretz’s expressive face, the film might stall out before it really gets rolling. It does get rolling though … and at maximum speed.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 31, 2020
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Robert Abele
That silver-lining nature is also what keeps “Herself” from entirely distinguishing itself, too often leaving an admittedly powerful story about female fortitude to rely on schematics and clichés instead of the accumulated impact of its many well-played human details.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 30, 2020
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Gary Goldstein
For all its flaws and missteps (more nose growing antics, please), the movie gets under your skin and holds interest, if only to find out not if, but how Pinocchio will reunite with his devoted Babbo (dad) and what the future might have in store for Geppetto’s lovingly crafted creation.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 24, 2020
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Reviewed by
Justin Chang
The grimly multitasking finale of Promising Young Woman feels both audacious and uncertain of itself, as Fennell tries to meld a cackle of delight and a blast of fury, with a lingering residue of anguish. It doesn’t all come together, though there’s an undeniable thrill in seeing it come apart.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 23, 2020
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Reviewed by
Carlos Aguilar
Sweeping and flawlessly produced, Ashe’s epic works as an inherently refreshing entry in the canon of a genre designed to make us sigh with knowing elation or tear up in misery thinking about our own bygone rendezvous.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 23, 2020
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Kevin Crust
The film’s themes of extinction and survival are worthy of thoughtful treatment, something that eludes the ambitious movie as it succumbs to a schematic and sentimental telling that overreaches for a grand gesture and obscures the more meaningful ideas.- Los Angeles Times
- Posted Dec 23, 2020
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