Miami Herald's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 4,219 reviews, this publication has graded:
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48% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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49% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 5.3 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 60
| Highest review score: | Radio Days | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | Teen Wolf Too |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 2,423 out of 4219
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Mixed: 1,074 out of 4219
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Negative: 722 out of 4219
4219
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Connie Ogle
Its sumptuous, stately pace will wither the patience of countless moviegoers, but the impressively acted and gorgeously exotic The White Countess improves the longer you mull its complexities.- Miami Herald
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Reviewed by
Connie Ogle
The Family Stone should have been a glittering holiday bauble along the lines of the irresistible Love Actually. Instead, Bezucha stuffs into our stockings what he thinks is good for us. It's not coal, but it's not entirely what we were hoping for, either.- Miami Herald
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Rene Rodriguez
Its social consciousness aside, The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada is really a simple love story between men set in the American West, although unlike "Brokeback Mountain," this love is purely platonic -- nothing more than the bond of brotherhood between two dear friends, a classic Western theme.- Miami Herald
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The chemistry is intact, but performances that were reaching-for-the-balcony big on Broadway haven't been scaled back a bit for a more intimate, up-close medium.- Miami Herald
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Reviewed by
Peter Debruge
Like an early Woody Allen film or a classic Marx brothers feature, more of Hoodwinked's gags flop than hit, but they come at such a steady rate, you hardly notice.- Miami Herald
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Rene Rodriguez
King Kong makes clear that Jackson has no contemporary peer when it comes to outsized, transporting fantasies that enchant in an era when special effects have become white noise.- Miami Herald
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- Miami Herald
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Reviewed by
Rene Rodriguez
This poignant, wise and subtle picture -- which, yes, happens to be the best movie of the year -- should be approached with humble expectations. Lee's approach to this delicate material is suffused with melancholy, metaphors and small, telling touches that favor subtlety over exclamation points and rough-hewn simplicity over grandiloquence.- Miami Herald
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- Miami Herald
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Reviewed by
Connie Ogle
There's little warmth or depth to the characters who, for the most part, trudge through the film with little wonder at the magical journey they're making.- Miami Herald
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Connie Ogle
Despite its subject matter, Transamerica is a surprisingly funny movie, because Tucker never lets the pathos overwhelm his sense of humor.- Miami Herald
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Rene Rodriguez
Openly embraces its noir roots, right down to the femme fatale (Connie Nielsen) who strikes a Lauren Bacall-ish pose in an open doorway and whose eyes are lit by a horizontal slant of light.- Miami Herald
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Peter Debruge
This is superficial entertainment to say the least. But if you're looking for laughs, then Just Friends is just fine.- Miami Herald
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Now a vastly larger audience has the chance to experience the masterwork of a prodigiously talented man who died far too young.- Miami Herald
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Reviewed by
Peter Debruge
The remake seems to have been written and directed by people whose only experience with children is the long-distant memory of having been kids themselves so many years ago.- Miami Herald
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Peter Debruge
What is most beguiling about The Libertine is that it allows Wilmot to self-destruct without ever giving us cause to care or relate.- Miami Herald
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Rene Rodriguez
Gaghan is attempting to cover so much ground in Syriana that the movie at times feels a little suffocating.- Miami Herald
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Connie Ogle
It's a testament to the power of the story -- and this engaging adaptation -- that leaving Hogwarts is tough anyway.- Miami Herald
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Rene Rodriguez
The best moments in Walk the Line are the plentiful musical sequences, from Cash's initial foray into the Sun Records studio in Memphis, to his nights performing in high school auditoriums alongside the likes of Elvis Presley, Carl Perkins and Jerry Lee Lewis, to his landmark concert at Folsom Prison in 1968, where his dangerous, edgy persona was cemented.- Miami Herald
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Rene Rodriguez
Despite the movie's bouncy ebullience (courtesy of a terrific period soundtrack) and dashes of fantasy, the film quickly becomes an endurance test.- Miami Herald
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Marta Barber
There's a timelessness to her character that makes her real even today. And in Devos' intense portrayal, she's a woman you admire.- Miami Herald
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Marta Barber
This Israeli film gives us an honest look at situations we never see in the news. It may have too many flaws to be a good film, but for its content, it is a winner.- Miami Herald
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Connie Ogle
Rapidly devolves into a pedestrian thriller in which almost nobody behaves in a recognizably human way.- Miami Herald
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Peter Debruge
A wild buckle-up-and-blast-off adventure that plunges every corner of kids' favorite subject.- Miami Herald
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Connie Ogle
This Pride & Prejudice isn't minutely faithful to the book -- and for good reason -- but it is authentic where it counts: to the confused, wounded, eager hearts of its lovers.- Miami Herald
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Rene Rodriguez
A drama about dysfunction, spelling bees, mental illness, Hare Krishnas and kaballah. The movie is just as unwieldy as it sounds, except that it also stars Richard Gere.- Miami Herald
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Peter Debruge
Unlike this summer's compulsively watchable "Hustle & Flow," Get Rich or Die Tryin' captures none of the thrill of finding your voice, recording a demo or landing a concert.- Miami Herald
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Peter Debruge
Kids will love it. It feels fresh and original and mildly subversive, but it's all a cover for the filmmakers not having the patience or confidence to put together a real story with a beginning, middle and end.- Miami Herald
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Rene Rodriguez
After an hour of being stranded among these restless soldiers and their increasingly aggressive locker-room antics, you, too, will be longing for combat -- for anything -- to happen.- Miami Herald
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Reviewed by
Connie Ogle
If the Giorgios were more interesting, perhaps Brooklyn Lobster would feel less sluggish. But as it is, the crustaceans' unhappy destinies are more compelling than the colorless lives of their captors.- Miami Herald
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