San Francisco Chronicle's Scores

  • Movies
  • TV
For 9,316 reviews, this publication has graded:
  • 52% higher than the average critic
  • 2% same as the average critic
  • 46% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 2 points lower than other critics. (0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 63
Highest review score: 100 Mansfield Park
Lowest review score: 0 Speed 2: Cruise Control
Score distribution:
9316 movie reviews
  1. Claude Chabrol has a wonderful way of making audiences nervous.
  2. Glatzer and Westmoreland live in Echo Park, and they have given their film a remarkable sense of place.
  3. The way Boynton Beach residents reach out to one another is enough to make you consider relocating to one of these communities.
  4. It's the supporting players who stand out.
  5. It's really, really funny.
  6. Something to see and occasionally even to laugh at.
  7. Family entertainment at its best.
  8. The film's simplicity and intensity are aided by the crisp black-and-white photography of Tariel Meliava. Director Babluani's greenness shows itself in the ending, which is weak, but the film nevertheless stays with you.
  9. An over-the-top, rollicking, candy-colored raunchfest.
  10. So cleverly constructed that it's easy to be taken in and believe these twins really rocked.
  11. Sly, near-perfect comedy.
  12. A loving if fawning documentary.
  13. There's no satisfaction and no pleasure to be gained by sitting through it. The characters are ludicrous and, worse than that, boring. And this is despite all the lead actors doing the best they can.
  14. Dawson turns out to be a necessary ingredient, propelling the emotional core of the film forward, while somehow convincing the audience that a smart, attractive woman could find a schlub like Dante desirable.
  15. Has the strengths and weaknesses of a one-man show.
  16. Monster House was designed as a family movie and a scary movie. It may scare children, but it won't terrify them. So it's no scarier than it should be.
  17. The movie is unable to achieve lift-off and transcend the formulaic stuff coming out of Hollywood, despite the perfect casting of Uma Thurman.
  18. It is probably Kitamura's best film.
  19. A bunch of gags, most of which you've seen in the trailer, strung together by any means necessary.
  20. It's just off, odd and joyless.
  21. Techine doesn't have much of a story to tell, so instead of moving the narrative forward, he expands it laterally.
  22. The star's amusingly inventive performance keeps your attention through predictable early scenes when "Ohio" repeats familiar material on women's sexuality. It's like a continuation of "The Vagina Monologues" to see Liza Minnelli, as a New Age orgasm coach.
  23. Not up to Ozon's standards.
  24. The film's impact has a lot to do with Fabio Vacchi's original score, which is both plaintive and coldly modernist, with echoes of Charles Ives.
  25. Overlord is an ambitious, important experiment that has come to light after three decades of neglect.
  26. This is like any other Edward Burns film, except for one thing. It's unmistakably better. This is the movie I believe Burns has been trying to make since "The Brothers McMullen," 11 years ago.
  27. More than the usual bad or even numbingly horrible movie. It's an amalgam of many of the modern cinema's worst tendencies and modern filmmaking's most unfortunate misconceptions.
  28. The visual style and lethargic pace can be frustrating -- at least if you're sober -- but the animated tragedy is still a success.
  29. Imagine the worst "Deadwood" episode ever, and you'll get an idea of the general tone of Beowulf & Grendel, which is full of anachronistic cursing, tortured syntax, dark humor and lots of hairy, homely, filthy-looking people.
  30. What fun this documentary is.

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