Philadelphia Daily News' Scores

  • Movies
  • TV
For 363 reviews, this publication has graded:
  • 46% higher than the average critic
  • 2% same as the average critic
  • 52% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 0.4 points lower than other critics. (0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 65
Highest review score: 100 The Last Days
Lowest review score: 25 The Happytime Murders
Score distribution:
  1. Negative: 27 out of 363
363 movie reviews
  1. There are a few fearful moments when you think the movie will be a collection of affectations. But the characters are too real, Gerwig’s eye for the adolescent lives of young women too keen.
  2. Surely one of the funniest movies ever made. [12 Sept 2001, p.53]
    • Philadelphia Daily News
  3. The Last Days is full of children and grandchildren. This idea of regeneration is a common thread that connects the stories of the five survivors, and provides the documentary with its unexpected warmth and redemptive power. [05 Mar 1999, p.51]
    • Philadelphia Daily News
    • 91 Metascore
    • 100 Critic Score
    Director James Whale's masterpiece is the definitive monster flick, one of the scariest films of all time. [04 Nov 1994, p.97]
    • Philadelphia Daily News
  4. Kean inherited these subjects from his earlier documentary Swimming in Auschwitz, and has said that gender informs the film – the women are particularly attuned to the emotional nuance of the survival story, which comes through beautifully.
  5. The more-is-more approach to superhero movies is usually a deadly mistake, but it works nicely in the animated Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse.
  6. A spare, meticulously crafted movie.
    • 35 Metascore
    • 88 Critic Score
    Even moviegoers who don't own Nintendo...will thoroughly enjoy these superheroes. And chances are, this is only the beginning of their film exploits.
    • Philadelphia Daily News
  7. Lean on Pete is life affirming in that it affirms life is hard and unforgiving.
  8. The movie clicks, and given the sorry state of movie comedy, its ability to be consistently funny stands out. It is expertly, briskly paced — shout out to the judicious and effective editing of Jamie Gross.
  9. It’s a remarkable performance by McDormand, matched by Rockwell.
  10. It’s barbed, bighearted, and brave.
  11. The small miracles that do occur in The Mustang feel real, and well–earned.
  12. Cold War, a love story about music and musicians, is for people who found A Star Is Born way too cheerful and optimistic. It’s pretty downbeat, but it’s also another black-and-white (subtitled) marvel from Pawel Pawlikowski.
  13. They Shall Not Grow Old avoids geopolitics to concentrate on the lives of the common soldier and the reality of trenches — the horseplay, camaraderie, boredom, disease, squalor, and terror that were all part of life on the front. It’s a sobering, moving success.
  14. It is a portrait not of grinding earnestness but of a penetrating sincerity, the kind that reduces the cynical, the skeptical, and the callous to tears.
  15. Can You Ever Forgive Me? charts the offbeat alliance and ultimately the friendship that develops between the Hock and Israel, a bond that exists somewhere between proximity and affinity.
    • 65 Metascore
    • 88 Critic Score
    Love jones may be the first to show black 20somethings simply going about their lives - searching for love, falling in love and messing up love without their ethnicity being an issue. [14 Mar 1997, p.54]
    • Philadelphia Daily News
  16. A movie that could have been about loss and defeat becomes something else — a testament to spiritual stamina, to the power of family bonds and their importance to homes, to streets, to neighborhoods and to cities.
  17. Whitney offers an informed and moving portrait of a complex, talented woman who was poorly understood, and often cruelly judged.
  18. Ali and Mortensen make the friendship feel real, using some unexpected tools from Farrelly's kit. His comedic instincts help the movie tiptoe through some dangerous cultural minefields.
  19. Pulling us through all of it is Place, who imbues her character with a touching persistence, and gives striking depth and dimension to this “regular” woman, who used to be a regular.
  20. Often fascinating, and sometimes even moving. There are lessons here about the cycle of life that can only be driven home by the real, random, and sometimes cruel dictates of fate.
  21. Buster Scruggs, it seems, is about not just the Old West, but The West in a larger sense.
  22. Writer-director Bo Burnham is after something different here, a complex, thoughtful and funny look at the way the internet can insert itself into the coming-of-age search for identity.
  23. Black Panther sticks to Marvel orthodoxy, and yet does so with a nearly all black cast (Martin Freeman and Andy Serkis have small roles), and with strikingly Afro-centric production design. In the process it freshens and enlivens the Marvel brand.
  24. Nolan fractures the narrative so that it loops back on itself — we see the events from the perspective of different characters and from different chronological vantage points, though the story coheres by movie’s end.
  25. It is often a captivating visual marvel, using newfangled special effects in ways that aspire more to the poetic than the kinetic.
  26. Spielberg and Co. are obviously excited to be making The Post, and that palpable enthusiasm makes the movie feel so unusually lively for a big-studio movie. It’s nimble, crisp, passionate, full of verve and invention.
  27. For Iannucci, who loves to mock the craven, unprincipled pursuit of power, the scenario is an antic delight and plays to his talent for hectic plot turns and (pardon the expression) rapid-fire dialogue.

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