RogerEbert.com's Scores

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For 7,557 reviews, this publication has graded:
  • 55% higher than the average critic
  • 3% same as the average critic
  • 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: 100 Ghost Elephants
Lowest review score: 0 Buddy Games: Spring Awakening
Score distribution:
7557 movie reviews
  1. Rather than presenting something akin to the heady youthful cravings of Leonardo DiCaprio and Claire Danes as contemporary versions of Romeo and Juliet, the equally tragic Marguerite & Julien often feels more like a version of Richie and Margot in Wes Anderson’s “The Royal Tenenbaums” crossed with the pre-teen runaways from “Moonrise Kingdom,” but minus the humor and insight.
  2. This is not my favorite kind of documentary filmmaking. Eugene “Gene” Cernan, the subject of this film, who’s also the older fellow watching the bucking bronco, is a man deserving of a tribute such as this movie aspires to give him. The filmmakers, attempting to jazz up their material, get in the way a lot.
    • 46 Metascore
    • 63 Critic Score
    The central problem with A Country Called Home is neither the performances nor even the characters. It's the transparent ways in which the movie conjures easy resolutions to issues that it otherwise does a fine job convincing us are not so simple.
  3. Petroni, in any case, is a skilled storyteller with a strong visual sense.
  4. The movie also show’s Perrier’s humor, and his talents as a mentor.
  5. A well-made, confident piece of entertainment that lacks the poetry and nuance of the first film and gets less interesting as its narrative thinness is revealed but never feels like something that’s being phoned in to make a quick buck.
  6. There are movies about ugly, vile people, and there are ugly, vile movies. Triple 9 is the latter.
  7. Slapstick mishaps and—ultimately—feel-good triumph of sorts ensue, with plenty of perky training montages in between.
  8. The alternately cornball and self-aware dialogue and the clearly not state-of-the-art CGI would seeming charmingly retro (like something from a TV miniseries two decades ago) if the movie didn't trot out one epic action film cliche after another.
  9. The Mermaid will make you laugh. It doesn't matter if you don't like subtitles. It doesn't matter if you've never heard of the director. It doesn't matter if you've never seen a Chinese movie in your life. It will make you laugh. Guaranteed.
  10. Dickman's film reeks of pot smoke and non-seriousness.
  11. The result is a film that’s packed with stories more than insight.
  12. It has a solid story to tell, and tells it with no winks and few, if any, frills. It’s involving and ultimately exciting.
  13. The Witch, a feminist narrative that focuses on an American colonial family as they undergo what seems to be an otherworldly curse, is more like a sermon.
  14. Race takes a complicated, messy story and shapes it with the bland cookie-cutter mold too often seen in the biopic genre.
  15. An old-fashioned Biblical spectacular with fresh blood in its veins.
  16. It can't quite seem to get out of its own way. It is intelligent and sensitive and assembled with a great care, and worth watching just for its images of the jungle.
  17. This intimate Irish drama travels a road that'll be familiar to anyone who's ever seen a film about addiction, or known an addict, but the fact that all stories of addiction are essentially the same doesn't blunt its impact.
  18. Worst of all, nothing in The Final Project has any personality.
  19. The film lacks the underlying subtext that grounded similar hopeful-yet-doomed-romance stories in the past.
  20. It is all very terribly tiresome.
  21. The film adds up to a lot of bad ideas and very few good ones, wandering around Roth's footsteps in search of purpose.
  22. Nina Forever subverts audience expectations at every turn and develops the kind of genuine emotional power that keeps it from being just another gory goof.
  23. In her latest film Touched With Fire, she (Holmes) delivers a beautifully understated and moving performance.
  24. A War, as tough to watch as it can be, is an extremely rewarding and disquieting experience.
  25. Whatever Jia shows us and wherever he takes us, we’re always aware of being in the hands of one of the contemporary world’s great filmmakers.
  26. Think of How to Be Single as a cinematic Whitman’s Sampler: There are enough pieces that work to offset the pieces that don’t.
  27. It then becomes very funny, funny enough that my wife observed that she thought I was going to have a stroke, as I was laughing so much.
  28. It’s a remarkably straightforward origin flick, lacking in true satire of its genre, carried almost entirely by its lead. Deadpool is a fun character, but he’s still in search of a fun movie to match his larger-than-life personality.
  29. “We tell ourselves stories in order to live,” Joan Didion once said. And yet, watching Misconduct, a twisty but exceptionally bone-headed—one might even say cretinous—legal thriller, sitting through its story hardly felt like “living.”

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