ReelViews' Scores
- Movies
For 4,661 reviews, this publication has graded:
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62% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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35% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 1.1 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 66
| Highest review score: | Arrival | |
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| Lowest review score: | A Hole in My Heart |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 3,357 out of 4661
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Mixed: 845 out of 4661
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Negative: 459 out of 4661
4661
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
James Berardinelli
Enough conspiracies and secret codes to make Dan Brown sit up and take notice. All this and more can be found in David Robert Mitchell’s bizarre, trippy Under the Silver Lake, where the plot at times seems as perpetually stoned as Andrew Garfield’s lead character.- ReelViews
- Posted Apr 20, 2019
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Reviewed by
James Berardinelli
When the movie goes “boo!” and the viewer tries hard to stifle a yawn, something has gone wrong.- ReelViews
- Posted Apr 20, 2019
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Reviewed by
James Berardinelli
Somewhere buried in the structurally unsound and unevenly paced Red Joan, there exists the material for not only one but two intriguing motion pictures. Unfortunately, neither manages to struggle to the surface and we’re left with a mediocre mash-up of an old-fashioned spy movie and the story of a son coping with the sins of his mother.- ReelViews
- Posted Apr 18, 2019
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Reviewed by
James Berardinelli
The humor is typically sitcom-ish, tending more toward sophomoric gags than genuinely funny material.- ReelViews
- Posted Apr 12, 2019
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James Berardinelli
There are no real characters in Mary Magdalene – only icons. Actress Rooney Mara does what she can with the role but she isn’t helped by a one-dimensional script whose sole purpose seems to be to turn Mary into a first century feminist crusader.- ReelViews
- Posted Apr 11, 2019
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James Berardinelli
The movie is a pointless retread with nothing to recommend it beyond McShane’s commanding presence.- ReelViews
- Posted Apr 11, 2019
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James Berardinelli
The synergy between the root cause of the peoples’ unrest and some of what we see today will not be lost on many viewers; it gives Peterloo a sense of immediacy that some history-based films don’t have. I learned things while sitting in the audience and that’s a claim I rarely make about any motion picture circa 2019.- ReelViews
- Posted Apr 10, 2019
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James Berardinelli
This is what serious horror is like and it’s not for everyone.- ReelViews
- Posted Apr 5, 2019
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James Berardinelli
My sense is that, while The Best of Enemies may be met by stinging criticism from the far left and far right (for different reasons), those with centrist leanings will appreciate it for what it is (as opposed to for what it isn’t).- ReelViews
- Posted Apr 5, 2019
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James Berardinelli
In Shazam!, the positives outweigh the negatives. The film’s fresh aspects are strong enough to keep the stale ones at bay.- ReelViews
- Posted Apr 3, 2019
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James Berardinelli
If ever there was a production that embodies all the negative Masterpiece Theater qualities, this is it.- ReelViews
- Posted Apr 2, 2019
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James Berardinelli
Although nowhere near as lush, artistic, and downright entertaining as the Warren Beatty/Faye Dunaway interpretation, The Highwaymen hews closer to the historical facts (with the climactic ambush being filmed on-location where it happened).- ReelViews
- Posted Apr 1, 2019
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James Berardinelli
Although it’s being marketed as a love story, The Aftermath is more about grief and recovery than romance. In fact, the film’s illicit relationship is a cold, passionless affair that generates as much heat as a dying ember in a snowstorm.- ReelViews
- Posted Mar 29, 2019
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James Berardinelli
An unconventional tale of redemption that earns its upbeat ending by not falling prey to every cliché of the genre or giving in to the temptation to become too maudlin or sentimental.- ReelViews
- Posted Mar 29, 2019
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James Berardinelli
It’s made with families in mind – the material will resonate with children and parents (thankfully) will be sufficiently engaged not to wish to be elsewhere. Unaccompanied adults, however, may not be quite as enchanted.- ReelViews
- Posted Mar 27, 2019
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James Berardinelli
There’s something enormously refreshing about the openness and honesty found in Keith Behrman’s coming-of-age film, Giant Little Ones.- ReelViews
- Posted Mar 24, 2019
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James Berardinelli
If there’s one thing that saves Us, it’s that, even as the movie descends into a narrative morass from which it never escapes, there are many individual scenes that, taken in isolation, pack a punch. The problem is that, once assembled into the larger whole, it doesn’t all work.- ReelViews
- Posted Mar 21, 2019
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James Berardinelli
The Hummingbird Project is too slow and confused to work as a thriller, a drama, or something in between.- ReelViews
- Posted Mar 21, 2019
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James Berardinelli
An unconventional heist film in which a majority of the action occurs after the loot has been liberated, Triple Frontier features impeccable photography, strong acting, and well-staged action scenes that ooze tension.- ReelViews
- Posted Mar 18, 2019
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James Berardinelli
Captive State is a messy, incomplete affair. Attempts to assemble it into a workable package in the editing room didn’t work, so we’re left with a weird cross between "District 9" and "The Battle of Algiers" that doesn’t do either of those apparent inspirations justice.- ReelViews
- Posted Mar 15, 2019
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James Berardinelli
Five Feet Apart’s final half-hour is disappointing and frustrating – and it has nothing to do with the eventual fates of the characters or their romance. What’s bothersome is that, after spending nearly 90 minutes of meticulously developing a sensitive, honest relationship between two ships passing in the night, the movie takes a turn into the ridiculous.- ReelViews
- Posted Mar 14, 2019
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James Berardinelli
Older viewers are more likely to appreciate the film’s intentions than fully embrace the story and its characters. Kids, on the other hand, will probably enjoy the frenetic action sequences; plucky heroine; cute, talking animals; and colorful visual representations.- ReelViews
- Posted Mar 13, 2019
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James Berardinelli
By incorporating a strong Jamaican flavor and infusing the mix with reggae and dance, Elba provides something more interesting than the standard tale of gang warfare and drug deals that forms Yardie’s skeleton. However, although these unique elements form an effective distraction, their ability to captivate wears thin, exposing the threadbare, overfamiliar story that struggles mightily to keep viewers engaged.- ReelViews
- Posted Mar 12, 2019
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James Berardinelli
An intriguing blend of globetrotting neo-noir and road trip plot elements, The Wedding Guest often seems on the cusp of greatness without ever getting there. The film classifies more as a disappointment than a success because, despite its little triumphs, it fritters away too many opportunities and suffers through a turgid middle act.- ReelViews
- Posted Mar 8, 2019
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James Berardinelli
Captain Marvel, coming only a year after the fantastic "Black Panther," is a disappointment. The acting and special effects are solid but the writing, by co-directors Anna Boden & Ryan Fleck (elevated from the indie productions where they made their mark) with an assist from Geneva Robertson-Dworet, is lazy.- ReelViews
- Posted Mar 6, 2019
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James Berardinelli
We don’t see many movies like Gloria Bell these days. Simple, adult character studies with major stars have become a rarity in today’s movie climate. Gloria Bell is sedate in its approach – it tells a story but the narrative is devoid of sensationalistic happenings and manipulative melodrama.- ReelViews
- Posted Mar 5, 2019
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James Berardinelli
Saint Judy has a serious agenda and, in service of that, it eschews action scenes, thriller elements, and conventional contrivances. It tells a worthwhile story and provides a primer on aspects of immigration law without becoming didactic.- ReelViews
- Posted Mar 4, 2019
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James Berardinelli
For the movie’s first half, director Neil Jordan does a reasonably good job of it. Then, unfortunately, he falls victim to the most dreaded of horror movie clichés: supposedly smart characters doing irredeemably dumb things.- ReelViews
- Posted Mar 4, 2019
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James Berardinelli
Fighting with My Family is as likable as it is generic. Pugh’s performance is the best thing about the movie but the story, despite Merchant’s comedic flourishes, feels stale at times.- ReelViews
- Posted Feb 22, 2019
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James Berardinelli
Although the How to Train Your Dragon series hasn’t been reduced to the harebrained level of a big-screen children’s cartoon, the latest chapter is the least sophisticated of the movies, emphasizing slapstick humor, one-dimensional characterization, and obvious messages.- ReelViews
- Posted Feb 20, 2019
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