RogerEbert.com's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 7,557 reviews, this publication has graded:
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55% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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42% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 0.5 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 65
| Highest review score: | Ghost Elephants | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | Buddy Games: Spring Awakening |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 4,950 out of 7557
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Mixed: 1,249 out of 7557
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Negative: 1,358 out of 7557
7557
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Simon Abrams
My Golden Days exists simultaneously within and outside of its characters' headspace, a testament to Deplechin's powers of imaginative sensitivity.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 18, 2016
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Reviewed by
Susan Wloszczyna
As tedious as much of this sounds, an odd thing happened around “Allegiant’s” midway point. The fairly packed audience started vocally reacting “Rocky Horror”-style to some of the more overtly melodramatic turns with “oohs," “ahhs” and even laughter.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 17, 2016
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Reviewed by
Brian Tallerico
Midnight Special respects your intelligence, letting you come to its themes emotionally instead of narratively. It is a breathtaking display of visual storytelling, confidently rendered by someone who understands the power of cinema.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 16, 2016
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Reviewed by
Christy Lemire
Bring tissues. Because whether you’re the faithful target audience for Miracles From Heaven, a non-believer or someone in the mass agnostic middle ground, you may find it hard to hold back the tears during various points in this real-life tale. And they’ll be earned.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 16, 2016
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Reviewed by
Godfrey Cheshire
As [Farhadi] does to such masterful effect in “A Separation,” here he constructs a story that keeps revealing new thematic and psychological layers, ones that often come to light through the shifting of perspective from one character to another, a technique that deepens our sympathy for the people we’re watching to the point of our realizing that, as in Renoir, “everyone has their reasons.”- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 16, 2016
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- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 14, 2016
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Reviewed by
Odie Henderson
If you came looking for the psychological sexing, or even just regular, good old fashioned erotic screwing, you’ll find it only if you’ve brought it to the theater yourself.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 14, 2016
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Susan Wloszczyna
Hello, My Name is Doris is like a beacon of beckoning human warmth just waiting to be cherished.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 14, 2016
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Reviewed by
Sheila O'Malley
The best part of Frot's performance, and the key to why Marguerite works when it does work, is how totally Marguerite believes in her nonexistent gift.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 14, 2016
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Reviewed by
Godfrey Cheshire
For fans of the genial, garrulous Gold, of Los Angeles culture or of films about food, City of Gold will easily merit four stars and its 90-minute length. For those less enamored of those subjects, its claim on any stars will be qualified by some serious questions about its cinematic worth.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 14, 2016
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- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 14, 2016
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Reviewed by
Christy Lemire
That’s one dismayingly archaic trend throughout The Young Messiah: the fiendish characters are also wildly effeminate.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 12, 2016
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Glenn Kenny
This sometimes rewarding but also bothersomely uneven comedy is Julie Delpy’s sixth feature film as a director; she also co-wrote.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 11, 2016
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Reviewed by
Godfrey Cheshire
While Hood’s film says very little about American policy in this area, it does suggest that its terrible subject is likely to be with us for a long time to come.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 11, 2016
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Reviewed by
Glenn Kenny
As a full movie experience this did not drop my jaw in a consistently enjoyable way. And the movie’s Trump joke is pretty ineffectual. Sad!- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 11, 2016
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Reviewed by
Sheila O'Malley
Some of it is so predictable you could set your watch by it, but there is a welcome (and surprising) layer of complexity running through the film that makes it a little bit more than your standard fare. The likable and funny ensemble helps too.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 11, 2016
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Brian Tallerico
A tight, tense thriller carried by excellent performances from John Goodman and Mary Elizabeth Winstead.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 10, 2016
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Christy Lemire
To her credit, Callies has an accessible presence and tries to provide more pathos and humanity than were supplied on the page, even as her character makes increasingly idiotic decisions in the name of parental love.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 5, 2016
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Reviewed by
Matt Zoller Seitz
If Zootopia were a bit vaguer, or perhaps dumber and less pleased with itself, it might have been a classic, albeit of a very different, less reputable sort. As-is, it's a goodhearted, handsomely executed film that doesn't add up in the way it wants to.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 5, 2016
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Simon Abrams
By preferring to keep viewers in suspense until the film's finale, Pastoll makes it harder to recommend a movie that has many good ideas, but no clue what to do with them.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 4, 2016
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Reviewed by
Nick Allen
Unabashedly pro-choice, Trapped is not a debate itself, but it has no need to be.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 4, 2016
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Reviewed by
Glenn Kenny
A tidy and nasty and often effective thriller that doesn’t quite blossom into full horror.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 4, 2016
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Reviewed by
Brian Tallerico
What’s interesting about The Wave is stepping back and considering just how well-constructed the whole thing is. The slow-burn build-up is just long enough, the disaster itself is just harrowing enough and the final act is just intense enough to keep us engaged.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 4, 2016
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Simon Abrams
A visually impressive mix of hand-drawn and CGI animation with basic action-adventure elements that are always viscerally satisfying thanks to Hosoda's apparent warts-and-all love for humanity.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 4, 2016
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Reviewed by
Sheila O'Malley
The fantastical and surreal are presented with unshowy practicality. It's magical realism mixed with kitchen-sink drama, seasoned by a haunting sense of history as a sentient entity.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 4, 2016
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Reviewed by
Matt Zoller Seitz
The film seems to be fighting a losing battle to make sense of itself, to coalesce into a statement, to not fade away. This feels right. Knight of Cups is not a young man's movie. It's an old man's movie. A philosophically engaged, beatific, starchild-as-old-man's movie. The end is coming.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 4, 2016
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Reviewed by
Susan Wloszczyna
Is Whiskey Tango Foxtrot a horrible movie about a white outsider plopped in the middle of Afghanistan? No, that would be last year’s “Rock the Kasbah.” But neither does Whiskey Tango Foxtrot fulfill its assigned duty to provide evidence of Fey’s versatility.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 3, 2016
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Reviewed by
Peter Sobczynski
A horrible and wildly unnecessary follow-up that might actually be worse than its predecessor.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 3, 2016
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Reviewed by
Godfrey Cheshire
The story’s ending, complete with lyrical voice-over, conveys the beauty and emotional attraction of the place and its traditions, virtues also relayed by Joshua James Richard’s sumptuous, sometimes breathtaking cinematography.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Mar 2, 2016
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Reviewed by
Nick Allen
Too shallow to project real charisma, the film is instead questionably sincere from start to finish, as if it's trying to head off questions about why the filmmakers wanted to tell this particular story, especially from the grossly underrepresented but often-manipulated perspective of a person with disabilities.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Feb 26, 2016
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