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 | |
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| 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
Matt Zoller Seitz
Sembene! is most illuminating when it is simply showing us clips from the director's features and behind-the-scenes or "making of" footage, with very little in the way of verbal setup, and then letting them play out.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Nov 12, 2015
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Brian Tallerico
James White is a masterful examination of how our behavior and the excuses we make about our lives fall away under certain, life-changing conditions.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Nov 12, 2015
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Reviewed by
Godfrey Cheshire
What comes across as genuine in the film, and might also help explain its origins, is its air of melancholy and loneliness.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Nov 12, 2015
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Reviewed by
Godfrey Cheshire
Setting up a political drama in stereotypical black-hat/white-hat fashion results in enjoyably cartoonish villains like flamboyant gossip columnist Hedda Hopper (deliciously played by Helen Mirren) and the usual blacklist martyrs, but it also deprives the story of the nuance and complexity for which it cries out.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Nov 12, 2015
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Reviewed by
Glenn Kenny
By the time you’re meant to learn just what the tie is between John and Louis, you’ve stopped caring. But, thanks to the excellent if a little on the obviously-pictorial-side cinematography by Robert Barocci, you’ve seen some lovely vistas on the way to indifference.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Nov 6, 2015
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Nick Allen
What Our Fathers Did: A Nazi Legacy wields a power that towers above many other small movies. It may not be the large definition of cinematic, but it is still a true film.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Nov 6, 2015
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Susan Wloszczyna
If a well-intentioned, occasionally funny, often moving yet nonetheless flawed "womance."- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Nov 6, 2015
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Simon Abrams
The Hallow also de-emphasizes human drama to the point where it often feels like a Jenga tower of set pieces, a disappointing fact that's most apparent during the film's first 40 minutes.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Nov 6, 2015
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Matt Zoller Seitz
It's hard to write about In Jackson Heights without sounding like you're trying to write poetry.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Nov 5, 2015
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Christy Lemire
It’s disappointing and actually kind of cynical in its unwillingness to try anything even vaguely innovative with these beloved characters.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Nov 5, 2015
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Sheila O'Malley
A great newspaper movie of the old-school model, calling up not only obvious comparisons with "All the President's Men" and "Zodiac," two movies with similar devotion to the sometimes crushingly boring gumshoe part of reportage, but also Cary Grant and Rosalind Russell shouting into adjacent phones in "His Girl Friday."- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Nov 5, 2015
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Glenn Kenny
People have spoken about how understated and old-fashioned Brooklyn is, to the extent that it might come across as a pleasant innocuous entertainment. Don’t be fooled. Brooklyn is not toothless. But it is big-hearted, romantic and beautiful.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Nov 4, 2015
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Matt Zoller Seitz
It's filled with big sets, big stunts, and what ought to be big moments, but few of them land.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Nov 3, 2015
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Godfrey Cheshire
It contains nothing to offend, but nothing to surprise or inspire, either.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Oct 30, 2015
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Matt Zoller Seitz
There's something refreshing, at times remarkable, about the sureness of the acting, and the filmmaker's touch.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Oct 30, 2015
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Matt Zoller Seitz
India's Daughter is a sorrowful and angry movie, yet measured. It seems determined to see a bigger picture without letting one victim's story get lost in the canvas.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Oct 30, 2015
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- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Oct 30, 2015
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Reviewed by
Glenn Kenny
Since John Wells is a director of some conscience and screenwriter Steven Knight is in fact capable of first-rate work, Burnt packs some minor surprises and attractive details along its way.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Oct 29, 2015
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Glenn Kenny
Though not without its entertaining moments—the cast, led by Sandra Bullock, is energetic, sharp and gets a fair number of juicy bits to rock out with. But as a whole, Our Brand is Crisis is a messy affair that sputters along when it should be humming with assured cynical momentum.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Oct 29, 2015
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Peter Sobczynski
Loud, repellent, badly written, indifferently directed and almost completely devoid of any genuine laughs, Scouts Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse is essentially a film for 12-year-old boys who can still derive some kind of basic entertainment for the mere sight of spurting blood or a bare breast, all the better if they can appear at the same time- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Oct 29, 2015
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Reviewed by
Nick Allen
Mehari’s presentation proves far too straightforward. There is little motivating the dramatic urgency aside from covering each development, despite the social issues that make the story itself so immediate.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Oct 23, 2015
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Godfrey Cheshire
For most of its 80-minute length, The Pearl Button meditates lyrically on water and its effects on humankind. Then it makes a sharp turn into evoking the horrors of the Pinochet regime, a transition that feels awkward and rather forced, diluting the film’s ultimate impact.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Oct 23, 2015
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Brian Tallerico
Both the source material and the man reading it are legendary. And that inherent cool factor in Extraordinary Tales carries the final product a very long way, although its shortcomings do sometimes force me to wonder if it could have been a masterpiece instead of a mere curiosity.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Oct 23, 2015
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Christy Lemire
Individual scenes can be tense but the arc as a whole lacks momentum. I Smile Back should have been devastating. Silverman is willing to take you there. What it ends up being is frustrating.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Oct 23, 2015
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Simon Abrams
Tokyo Tribe, an adaptation of a popular Japanese manga, is bound to charm viewers — both the uninitiated and the diehard fans of director Sion Sono ("Why Don't You Play in Hell," "Love Exposure") — with its boundless energy ... for a while, anyway.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Oct 23, 2015
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- Critic Score
Writer/director Sebastián Silva doesn't cheat in terms of storytelling, though. Throughout the film, he sets up these characters, and us, for what happens.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Oct 23, 2015
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Reviewed by
Sheila O'Malley
Suffragette feels like a documentary in its visuals, but at the same time drowns in subjectivity (Maud's face in repeated closeup).- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Oct 23, 2015
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Reviewed by
Matt Zoller Seitz
Jem and the Holograms is one of the weirdest big screen adaptations of a cheap TV cartoon that I've seen. That's praise.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Oct 23, 2015
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Reviewed by
Brian Tallerico
Zahler and his talented cast are willing to take this journey deep into the heart of darkness, and it’s their commitment that makes the entire project more than skin-deep.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Oct 23, 2015
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Reviewed by
Peter Sobczynski
The sixth time is not the charm with this load of hooey that tries to make up for its lack of legitimate scares or basic narrative clarity by adding the alleged miracle of 3-D into the mix.- RogerEbert.com
- Posted Oct 23, 2015
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Reviewed by