Observer's Scores
- Movies
For 1,801 reviews, this publication has graded:
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49% higher than the average critic
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1% same as the average critic
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50% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 4.8 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 60
| Highest review score: | Denial | |
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| Lowest review score: | From Paris with Love |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,004 out of 1801
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Mixed: 382 out of 1801
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Negative: 415 out of 1801
1801
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Rex Reed
The story behind Touching Home is more inspiring than the film itself, but don't let that deter you. It's the kind of can-do miracle that reminds us all that anything can happen and everything is possible.- Observer
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- Observer
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Reviewed by
Rex Reed
As the film builds to a feverish hysteria, you have to work hard to keep from laughing.- Observer
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Reviewed by
Rex Reed
A flawless film of heartrending realism about the eternal chord that binds parents and children and the emptiness when they are separated.- Observer
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Reviewed by
Rex Reed
One of the least likable characters (Cox) in recent memory--irascible, but with moments of real tenderness--he’s the reason this strange movie takes on a perverse charm that is uniquely its own.- Observer
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Reviewed by
Rex Reed
Michael Caine is such a consummate actor that it's a major cause of concern to see him in Harry Brown, another hateful vigilante flick the wags in England have already labeled Dirty Harry Brown for reasons that are immediately obvious.- Observer
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Reviewed by
Rex Reed
At a time when every penny counts, where do they come up with the money to finance a movie this boring?- Observer
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Reviewed by
Rex Reed
Staying awake during this ordeal of incompetent, incomprehensible stupidity is not difficult. It’s so noisy that you can hear it in the next town. Staying interested is something else entirely.- Observer
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Reviewed by
Rex Reed
Instead of the feel-good comedy they intended, you are left with the suspicion that the movie is really about a man suffering from an undiagnosed mental illness for which there is no cure.- Observer
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Reviewed by
Rex Reed
Every complex member of the writer’s legacy has an agenda, with varying gains and losses, and the power of the film rests in the way it captures so many tangled lives as they cross and intersect at curious angles. The camera is literal, so the film sometimes fails to escape its roots of literary inspiration. This did not bother me. How many times do you get the chance to curl up with a good movie?- Observer
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Reviewed by
Rex Reed
It’s rare to see a film directed by a woman who knows more about men than they themselves do. With Handsome Harry, the widely respected independent filmmaker Bette Gordon has hit a bull’s eye.- Observer
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Reviewed by
Rex Reed
Surprising, inventive and crisply, merrily written and directed by Derrick Borte, The Joneses is a brisk, captivating entertainment. Think Ozzie and Harriet on speed.- Observer
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Reviewed by
Rex Reed
After.Life, with a pretentious point between the two words in the title for no explainable reason, is a horror film with a macabre style but few of the creepy chills of cheaper, cliché-riddled thrillers that are a dime a dozen these days.- Observer
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Reviewed by
Rex Reed
La Mission, carefully directed by Peter Bratt and beautifully photographed by award-winning cinematographer Hiro Narita (Never Cry Wolf), explores the human side of a culture we know almost nothing about, in a world usually exploited on film to depict drugs and danger.- Observer
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Rex Reed
For the Edgerton brothers and for their protagonists, The Square works on several levels, as it shows how far two people will go for love and profit--in more ways than one.- Observer
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Reviewed by
Rex Reed
A film of maturity and courage, one that kept me consistently engaged. Quite an accomplishment, really, for a new filmmaker on her first date with a camera.- Observer
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Reviewed by
Rex Reed
Don’t be misled by the title Leaves of Grass. Do not expect literacy, either. This stoner comedy has nothing whatsoever to do with Walt Whitman or poetry of any kind.- Observer
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Reviewed by
Sara Vilkomerson
With a different cast and director, this movie would be just another fuzzily lit made-for-TV movie. But because of the performances and the rather gorgeous cinematography, one is left wishing that it just could have been something more.- Observer
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Reviewed by
Sara Vilkomerson
Mr. Baumbach has a knack for capturing real-life dialogue--particularly and hilariously how people tend not to listen to the person on the other side of the conversation.- Observer
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Reviewed by
Sara Vilkomerson
It's when the music stops that we run into problems. For starters, there are so many questions left unanswered.- Observer
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Rex Reed
Shot by Barry Ackroyd, the same cinematographer who filmed "The Hurt Locker," and using the same camera techniques, this movie looks like outtakes from a much better film.- Observer
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Rex Reed
There is no hope on the horizon for movies as leaden as The Exploding Girl.- Observer
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Reviewed by
Rex Reed
Not a masterpiece, perhaps, but technically polished, with inspired performances and enough suspense that by the time Mr. Hamm found the redemption that freed him from his own demons, I was so wired I needed a Valium.- Observer
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It might be time for Johnny Depp and Tim Burton to start thinking about seeing other people. Alice in Wonderland, their seventh film together, is so thoroughly soul-deadening and laborious that the prospect of an eighth collaboration feels like the sword of Damocles.- Observer
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Reviewed by
Sara Vilkomerson
Mr. Gere is miscast as Eddie, too naturally regal in bearing to be the screw-up he’s supposed to be, and for a broken man, he still moves with the same confidence as his younger self did in "An Officer and a Gentleman."- Observer
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Reviewed by
Rex Reed
With so much junk littering the screen these days, the movie business looks like a garbage strike, and it’s beginning to smell, too. The latest pollution from the celluloid dumpster is sub-mental horror called Cop Out.- Observer
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Reviewed by
Rex Reed
Wonderful, honest and low-key performances inform and enhance The Yellow Handkerchief, an otherwise unexceptional little drama.- Observer
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Reviewed by
Rex Reed
This gruesome thriller set in a fogbound insane asylum is incomprehensible and fatally flawed, but having said all of that, I will also say this: It never seems anything less than the work of a skillful film buff. Mr. Scorsese may be a smart aleck, but he’s a professional smart aleck.- Observer
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Reviewed by
Sara Vilkomerson
Has moments of heart-pounding suspense and brief glimmers of greatness, thanks to fine performances by Ewan McGregor, Pierce Brosnan and Olivia Williams, but overall feels uneven, sprawling and strangely incomplete.- Observer
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