Newsweek's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 1,617 reviews, this publication has graded:
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57% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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40% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 1.6 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 67
| Highest review score: | Children of a Lesser God | |
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| Lowest review score: | Down to You |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 952 out of 1617
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Mixed: 532 out of 1617
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Negative: 133 out of 1617
1617
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
David Ansen
This is not a movie that can bear much postgame scrutiny. The minute you begin to question one element of the plot, gaping holes of logic appear throughout.- Newsweek
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David Ansen
This delightful film, with its surprising depth charges of emotion, has the feel of a movie that's going to lodge itself in the public's affections for a long time to come.- Newsweek
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David Ansen
This indie, a sweet, tart and smart satire about a family of losers in a world obsessed with winning, is an authentic crowd pleaser. There's been no more satisfying American comedy this year.- Newsweek
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Reviewed by
David Ansen
Bob Hoskins, who won the best-actor award at Cannes, is ferociously good. George is both a comic figure and a tragic one, and Hoskins never overplays either hand. At first it's hard to swallow this ex-con's naivete, but he makes George's romantic agony so real it barely matters. The 20-year-old Tyson is stunning, and the more you learn about this elegant femme fatale, the better her performance seems. Caine is wittily slimy: his voice always a shade too loud, his blood pressure too high, he creates a pungent cameo of corruption... Jordan has chiseled a dark, sleazily glamorous gem.[16 June 1986, p.75]- Newsweek
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The vocal performances are a blast, Hunter's and Lee's in particular. The animation of the villain's tropical isle is stunning.- Newsweek
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Reviewed by
David Ansen
The mordant, deadpan humor that streaks through Dead Man is echt Jarmusch, but it's in the service of his most mysterious and deeply felt movie, a meditation on death and transfiguration that, by the end, has thrown off the protective veil of irony. [03 Jun 1996, Pg.75]- Newsweek
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David Ansen
This Superman, which infuses its action with poetry, soars as a love story filled with epic yearnings, thwarted desires and breathtaking imagery.- Newsweek
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David Ansen
Ruthless People is a tight, vulgar, low-down black farce that starts funny and, wonder of wonders, gets funnier as it goes. [30 June 1986, p.59]- Newsweek
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David Ansen
Comedy and suspense, satire and shame are all mashed together--with breezy confidence.- Newsweek
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A Walk on the Moon not only effectively captures the emotional development of all its characters, but it also neatly encapsulates the tumult of the 60s.- Newsweek
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Reviewed by
Jack Kroll
Danny Rose may be his most Chaplinesque film, and therefore his most dangerous: the fine line that Allen (like Chaplin) walks between sweetness and sentimentality has never been finer. [30 Jan 1984, p.69]- Newsweek
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Reviewed by
David Ansen
Face/Off is a summer movie extraordinaire: violent, imaginative, crazily funny and, oddly moving. Hollywood has finally wised up and let Hong Kong auteur John Woo strut his stuff in all its undiluted, over-the-top glory.- Newsweek
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David Ansen
Sarandon is touching and funny--a truly fresh performance. But the movie's sweet, elegiac heart belongs to Lancaster. Lou may be the role of his lifetime, and he carries it gently, obviously cherishing the gift. [06 Apr 1981, p.103]- Newsweek
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David Ansen
This is the most personal, deeply felt film from the gifted director of "Under the Sand" and "Swimming Pool." Ozon leaches his melodrama of all sentimentality, and moves us all the more.- Newsweek
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David Ansen
There hasn't been a studio movie as unapologetically adult, sophisticated, and nuanced as Up in the Air in some time.- Newsweek
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David Ansen
In Peggy Sue Got Married, Francis Coppola takes a familiar, sitcomish premise -- the one about a grown woman who time-travels back to her high-school days -- and invests it with rich and surprising colors. Imagine a paint-by-numbers comic book put in the hands of a Rembrandt; the bold comic outlines remain, but the subject is transformed by the dark palette and subtle brushwork into a tale reverberating with complex, adult emotions. [6 Oct 1986, p.73]- Newsweek
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David Ansen
This is an epic you have to listen to--it's about people who trade in words, who make revolutions in their heads, and Beatty and Trevor Griffiths's script is full of some of the best talk in any movie this year. [7 Dec 1981, p.83]- Newsweek
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David Ansen
The true allure of Titanic is its invitation to swoon at a scale of epic moviemaking that is all but obsolete.- Newsweek
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David Ansen
Exuberantly theatrical yet every inch a movie, and some numbers ("The Cell Block Tango") are so entertaining you might want to applaud.- Newsweek
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Jack Kroll
True Stories is David Byrne's funny, worried, loving celebration of a disoriented America. [27 Oct 1986, p.103]- Newsweek
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David Ansen
Noyce uses his Hollywood craft to unfold this primal, powerful story, he has an epic feel for the harshly beautiful Australian landscape and he gets wonderfully natural performances from the three girls. His bold, lyrical images stay in your head, like an unaccountably beautiful nightmare.- Newsweek
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A surprisingly tender, even heartbreaking, film. Like the original, it's a tragic tale of beauty and the beast.- Newsweek
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Russell has created what is surely the loudest, most assaultive movie musical ever made and stretched the genre into a new realm - the phantasmagorical nightmare. [24 Mar 1975, p.24]- Newsweek
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Reviewed by
David Ansen
Reveals a chilling reality: how hard it is to tell a simple truth when big business doesn't want it told.- Newsweek
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David Ansen
A tad dark for little kids, this one-of-a-kind movie delivers 80 minutes of idiosyncratic inspiration.- Newsweek
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David Ansen
Deep Blue Sea gives good rush -- earning its stripes as one terrific junk movie.- Newsweek
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Breaking Away is fast, funny and very fresh. In a surprising change of pace from the torpors of The Deep, director Peter Yates has made his most enjoyable film since Bullitt. [23 July 1979, p.71]- Newsweek
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Reviewed by
David Ansen
There’s not a whisper of melodrama or sentimentality in the way Moretti tells his tale, guiding us through the stages of grief with calm, devastating lucidity.- Newsweek
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David Ansen
Ferociously intense, furiously kinetic, it’s expressionist film noir science fiction that, like all good sci-fi, peers into the future to shed light on the present.- Newsweek
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