For 4,534 reviews, this publication has graded:
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56% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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41% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 0.6 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 65
| Highest review score: | The Wolf of Wall Street | |
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| Lowest review score: | Joe Versus the Volcano |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 2,923 out of 4534
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Mixed: 982 out of 4534
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Negative: 629 out of 4534
4534
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
K. Austin Collins
The movie has the makings of a devious erotic game, of a dirty pas-de-deux that spills out of the Van Allens’ marital bed and into a friend’s pool, a nearby quarry, and the woods. But the movie doesn’t quite have the backbone it’d need, or even the sense of fun, to clarify the extent to which this is a game that both players know they’re playing.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 18, 2022
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Reviewed by
David Fear
Come to West’s celebration of the movies’ darker underbelly for the adrenaline rush of sex and violence. Exit it having witnessed something that marks the spot where baser impulses meets artistry, in more ways than one.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 18, 2022
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Reviewed by
David Fear
The Outfit is a crime thriller made to order, and one that takes pride in how it looks, how things fit on it, the shape it cuts when it moves.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 17, 2022
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Watching Sullivan trade licks with Guy is a welcome reminder that music can transcend race and bring people together...But the movie may unsettle purists who feel that torch needs to be passed around to a more diverse crew of musicians.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 16, 2022
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Reviewed by
Jessica Kiang
Turning Red is definitely a persuasive manifesto for “releasing the Red Panda” to be added to that list of menstruation euphemisms, but that’s not all it is. It is also a bright, moving, funny, happy film about adolescent angst, that doesn’t condescend but also doesn’t overload. It is, perhaps most remarkably, a movie about 13-year-olds that 13-year-olds might actually enjoy.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 10, 2022
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Reviewed by
David Fear
The movie starts out desperately wanting to be E.T. It ends by pretending it’s the second coming of Field of Dreams.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 9, 2022
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Reviewed by
David Fear
As you find yourself instinctively reviewing those own seemingly insignificant moments in your own life, the ones that you hold so dear, while following this cyber-compassionate movie to its conclusion, it’s almost impossible not to be moved by the long game that the film’s creator is playing.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Mar 4, 2022
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Reviewed by
David Fear
At its best, The Batman is a helluva tough-guy yarn — an entertaining pulp-fiction epic under the guise of sure-thing blockbuster. At its worst, it’s the cinematic equivalent of a mixtape.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 28, 2022
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David Fear
For some reason — maybe it’s because the seminal, ’74 original holds such a special place in so many die-hards’ hearts (this one included), and still feels like such a potent example of channeling primal fear — this latest ransacking of a landmark title feels less like just another killer-versus-final-girl rerun and more like the final straw.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 21, 2022
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Reviewed by
David Fear
Part intellectual-property barrel-scraping, part pumped-up star vehicle and part fumbling bid for Sony to cross media-revenue streams, Uncharted isn’t the worst attempt to bring a beloved video game to the screen — just the latest bit of evidence that these things are really a zero-sum game.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 17, 2022
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Reviewed by
David Fear
Death on the Nile has its joys and flaws apart from that Armie factor, but it’s almost like trying to assess whether the appetizer course could have been slightly undercooked while an elephant stampedes over the whole dinner table.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 10, 2022
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Reviewed by
David Fear
Recommending that someone actually subject themselves to Roland Emmerich’s sci-fi neo-disaster flick, however, is a little like shoving three-month old milk under an unsuspecting person’s nose and inquiring, Does this smell ok? You already know the answer; you just need to share the pain.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 3, 2022
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Reviewed by
David Fear
Forget the title: Jackass can’t go on forever. Just enjoy one last chance to see these beautiful f*ck-ups do what they do best before they limp and hobble off into the sunset.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Feb 2, 2022
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Reviewed by
K. Austin Collins
The Tragedy of Macbeth is Joel’s first outing on his own but, in this regard, he’s made a movie that suits the broader world of his work. That he’s done so most cogently through a character most other approaches to this play have barely noticed only makes it that much more thrilling.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 18, 2022
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David Fear
For a long stretch, Italian Studies turns this trip down memory-loss lane into a low-wattage livewire, an unpredictable stroll into the unknown. Its hero will slowly, eventually come back around to remembering her life before the reset. The movie itself, however, is unforgettable from the jump.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 13, 2022
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David Fear
Yet you have to applaud how boldly this fifth entry tries to flip the bird to the entire rinse-repeat-regurgitate idea of trapping film series in amber, while also delivering you the thrill of the familiar and those dopamine bumps that come with the pang of recognition.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 12, 2022
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David Fear
There’s so much wasted potential here, so little sense of how to get across a notion of solidarity in the face of catastrophic danger, and sexism, not in that order.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 6, 2022
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Reviewed by
David Fear
For those of us who’ve been enthralled by what Collins has done on the periphery, the chance to see him occupy center stage — and in something so suited to his skill set — is enough to make this worthwhile. But the way in which he keeps both the rest of the cast and the story itself in the pocket without making it feel like a showreel, even down to his final here’s-the-big-payoff sequence, is what makes this special.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 3, 2022
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Reviewed by
David Fear
Cyrano may sometimes feels like its struggling to find a way to say something new about a beloved, centuries-old work of art, one that’s been updated and deconstructed and reconstructed ad infinitum. Once the sex-symbol movie star starts whispering in its ear what to say, however, and how to act, and why it’s the well-spoken sadness of it all that makes it so swoonworthy — those are the moments that make this musical positively sing.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 3, 2022
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Reviewed by
K. Austin Collins
Colman brings Ferrante’s creation to life with all the withering pathos she deserves. Gyllenhaal catches it handsomely, awe-struck, as if even she didn’t know how painfully real this woman Leda could seem or, in Colman’s hands, be.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 3, 2022
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Reviewed by
David Fear
It’s a disaster movie in more ways than one. Should you indeed look up, you may be surprised to find one A-list bomb of a movie, all inchoate rage and flailing limbs, falling right on top of you.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Jan 3, 2022
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Reviewed by
K. Austin Collins
I was moved, impressed — far more than I expected to be. The emotional engineering of The Matrix Resurrections is exacting and rapturous.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 21, 2021
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The visual style, free-flowing and light on talking heads, gives the film a level of authenticity that feels lived-in. The visuals do the explaining for you, allowing you to come up with your own thoughts and conclusions.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 20, 2021
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You can always count on del Toro to put the “grand” in Grand Guignol. Nightmare Alley is no exception, though it’s a little dreamier than it should be.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 16, 2021
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Reviewed by
David Fear
As with his Trial of the Chicago 7 film, Sorkin seems to view history as the fodder for working with A-list stars and scoring ideological zingers. Mission accomplished, we guess. At a certain point, however, you really wish the film would stop ‘splaining its creator’s viewpoints and start actually being about its subjects.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 14, 2021
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Reviewed by
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- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 13, 2021
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Reviewed by
David Fear
This West Side Story proves someone can still leave their mark on the legend without building it from the ground up. It’s a classic Spielberg joint, a classic hat-tip to Hollywood, and a classic, period.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 9, 2021
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Reviewed by
David Fear
The movie may want you to see the best of us in the dingiest of places. But you’re as delusional as Mikey Saber if you think it will avert its eyes from showing us the worst of us as well.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Dec 6, 2021
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Reviewed by
David Fear
Every one of the performances is, to say the least, an example of what talented actors can bring to a piece of character-driven tragedy; there’s not a single weak link in this chain, while the collective chemistry suggests an instant history of affection, conflict, and shared cringing.- Rolling Stone
- Posted Nov 29, 2021
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