San Francisco Chronicle's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 9,307 reviews, this publication has graded:
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52% higher than the average critic
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2% same as the average critic
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46% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 2.1 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 63
| Highest review score: | Mansfield Park | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | Speed 2: Cruise Control |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 5,163 out of 9307
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Mixed: 2,658 out of 9307
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Negative: 1,486 out of 9307
9307
movie
reviews
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Reviewed by
Mick LaSalle
This film never had any business being stretched into a feature, much less one running 106 minutes. At that length, Biosphere is soporific and repetitive and puts viewers in the position of always being two steps ahead of it.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Posted Jul 6, 2023
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Walter Addiego
Aims to make epic drama of Algeria's battle for independence, but there are moments when you would swear you're watching a "Godfather" knockoff.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Posted Feb 10, 2011
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Peter Stack
Better Than Chocolate is smart, funny adult entertainment -- the sex scenes are bold and convincing -- with a love story that is touching and surprisingly cheerful.- San Francisco Chronicle
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G. Allen Johnson
The Bay Area filmmaker’s Sundance Prize-winning film achieves much on a relatively meager budget (it has an impressive futuristic visual design), and the last half hour is so irresistibly creepy that it’s sure to invoke discussion after the screening.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Posted Jun 25, 2015
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Mick LaSalle
The movie’s intelligent respect for that which is unknowable allows it to cover an enormous swath of ground in just 85 minutes. Sarah Silverman is very good in I Smile Back, and the movie is even better.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Posted Nov 5, 2015
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Mick LaSalle
If you went by the coming attractions and the advertisements, you might expect a predictable romance pitched on the level of a TV sitcom. But Untamed Heart is a movie of rare sweetness. [12 Feb 1993, p.D1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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Mick LaSalle
It does provide audiences with the satisfaction of seeing and hearing an important truth expressed, and that's better than making you feel good. That's making you feel something.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Posted Aug 4, 2011
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Mick LaSalle
As Bilbo, Freeman is a pleasure to watch to the extent we get to watch him. His timing is brilliant — he gets the movie’s only laughs. He has tremendous sensitivity and an ability to seem like he’s about to say something — and then convey it without saying it. He could have made a great Bilbo. Instead he’s the one thing that has made this trilogy bearable.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Posted Dec 16, 2014
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G. Allen Johnson
What happens to the twins won’t be revealed here (those with overriding curiosity can find the Wikipedia page about them), but Smoczynska, Wright and Lawrance find the humanity and empathy in their story, if not the complex psychological reasons behind their unique lives.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Posted Sep 13, 2022
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Ruthe Stein
Nobody into lush melodramas dripping in sex should miss this pulsating Italian import.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Mick LaSalle
Army of Darkness has good moments and shows traces of wit right up to the end, though these moments wind up coming fewer and farther between. [19 Feb 1993, Daily Datebook, p.D1]- San Francisco Chronicle
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Mick LaSalle
It's dreadful, but it's a special kind of dreadful -- the kind designed to appeal to intelligent people on principle.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Edward Guthmann
Sarandon and Portman work beautifully -- together, negotiating a range of emotional keys that blend comedy and drama in the same moment.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Edward Guthmann
It's a glamorous revenge romp, a "9 to 5" mixed with "Auntie Mame," and it gives each star the opportunity to do her best work in a long, long time.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Mick LaSalle
Casadesus infuses Margueritte with a lilting quality, underscored by the sadness of someone who knows she is the last person standing and inhabits an alien world.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Posted Sep 22, 2011
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Mick LaSalle
There was an interesting idea at the heart of Judy & Punch, but the execution is disappointing. This feminist visit to the world of the old “Punch and Judy” puppet shows is tonally off, shifting and swerving when it should be precise and then turning earnest and explicit when it needs to be subtle.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Posted Jun 3, 2020
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- San Francisco Chronicle
- Posted Oct 7, 2021
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- Critic Score
It’s a visually pleasing, vibe-rich diversion that is as enjoyable as flipping through a well-laid-out fashion magazine, or perhaps perusing through Coppola’s accompanying coffee table book on Jacobs of the same name.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Posted Mar 24, 2026
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Reviewed by
Peter Hartlaub
A humorous yet unfocused romp, so unwilling to settle on a single theme that hyperactivity medication should be handed out with the 3-D glasses.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Posted Sep 26, 2013
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Mick LaSalle
If you’re looking for scenes of big, awful creatures fighting each other and knocking over skyscrapers — and for the spectacle of people scurrying below, running from the huge stomping feet — you will find little to dislike in Godzilla vs. Kong. It does its job. It’s a monster movie.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Posted Mar 29, 2021
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Critic Score
Indian director Shekhar Kapur, who returns to film after more than a decade, is known for “Bandit Queen” (1994) and “Elizabeth” (1998), so this may be considered among the acclaimed director’s lighter films. But the Academy Award-winner’s skillful steering of characters allows the movie to showcase a diverse milieu rather than become a narrow East versus West portrayal.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Posted May 5, 2023
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Reviewed by
Mick LaSalle
Basically, No Hard Feelings is everything you like about Jennifer Lawrence, brought together in one movie and then magnified: her down-to-earth irreverence, her comic timing, her idiosyncratic naturalness and her unexpected sensitivity.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Posted Jun 22, 2023
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G. Allen Johnson
A soul-killing sequel that gets its kicks torturing and murdering children and offers little hope or redemption. King has long wanted to commit “Redrum” on the reputation of Kubrick’s film, which he openly despises. Nearly 40 years later, this adaptation of King’s 2013 book “Doctor Sleep” doesn’t so much tarnish Kubrick as embarrass itself.- San Francisco Chronicle
- Posted Nov 6, 2019
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Mick LaSalle
A pleasant enough "Crimes of the Heart" rip-off about three young women bumbling, stumbling and fumbling through life, looking for answers, smiling through tears, blah, blah, blah. [21 Oct 1988]- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Mick LaSalle
The biggest sequel of the summer has more dinosaurs, better special effects and more action than the original... But the inspiration is gone, and with it most of the fun.- San Francisco Chronicle
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