San Francisco Chronicle's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 9,315 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 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: 5,170 out of 9315
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Mixed: 2,659 out of 9315
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Negative: 1,486 out of 9315
9315
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Ruthe Stein
An energetic young cast, consisting of a mix of professional dancers and actors who do convincing imitations of Arthur Murray graduates, is positively inspired in numbers combining traditional ballroom steps with hip-hop.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Mick LaSalle
Qualifies as a mild success. It's an easy picture to like, even if it's not exactly satisfying.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Ruthe Stein
It's a first feature film for both screenwriter Alex Rose and director Gaby Dellal, and their inexperience shows in Frank's underdeveloped relationships with family and friends and in the movie's sluggish pacing.- San Francisco Chronicle
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John McMurtrie
Sir! No Sir! is far from a dry rehashing of what may seem for some like ancient history. Driving guitar rock and lively editing add to the film's urgency. The voices of the veterans alone, however, make this an important and poignant film that can speak to any generation.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Mick LaSalle
An ideal introduction to Toback's output as well as a welcome elucidation for longtime fans. Apart from those worthy functions, The Outsider is also shrewdly made, illuminating its subject in a variety of settings and, at times, subtly assuming the style of Toback's films.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Mick LaSalle
There's no other film like it. It's embarrassingly frank and self-revealing, sometimes funny, sometimes creepy, sometimes both.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Ruthe Stein
An emotionally charged coming-of-age saga that will make you laugh and cry, maybe at the same time.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Peter Hartlaub
Less a story than a series of complicated slapstick bits.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Neva Chonin
In a variety of forms, Slither excels in imaginative gore and shows that first-time director James Gunn has learned much about the joys of linking humor and horror.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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Neva Chonin
The result, although a great idea, doesn't translate into a great movie.- San Francisco Chronicle
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A genuinely affecting love story with something to say about such contemporary obstacles to affection as weird families, hot exes, addictions, anonymous hookups, homophobia, irony, gay two-stepping -- and the difficulty of connecting no matter what gender you go for.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Joel Selvin
A one-of-a-kind cinematic experience. This musician may not be a genius along the lines of Brain Wilson, as Feuerzeig claims, but Johnston has a knack for revealing innermost thoughts in an offhand way that is eerie and uncanny.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Mick LaSalle
An attempt at a beautiful film about renewal -- about past love, love lost, longing and rediscovery -- but it has no emotional truth.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
G. Allen Johnson
You might if you have a strong interest in and at least a general familiarity with Buddhism. If not, the film is a crashing bore, and does little to help the novice understand what the religion is all about.- San Francisco Chronicle
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G. Allen Johnson
A proper labor of love profiling many of the principles involved in the making of the films, peppered with a generous helping of wonderful clips.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- Critic Score
Anyone who puts production gloss above performance, plot, dialogue and editing may thrill to Drawing Restraint 9.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Ruthe Stein
The thrills in Spike Lee's singularly savvy thriller are in small unexpected moments.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Mick LaSalle
At its best, Mermin -- who used an all-female crew -- conveys the sense of an entirely feminine world being created under the beauty school roof, and it's refreshing.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Ruthe Stein
For all the squalor and extremely upsetting subject matter, you can't take your eyes off the screen.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Some say all the great movie stars are gone, but I say we've still got Charles Busch. A one-man archive of vanished showbiz glamour and period acting styles, Busch has reincarnated the great ladies of stage and screen in such camp treasures as "Vampire Lesbians of Sodom" and "Psycho Beach Party."- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Ruthe Stein
This so-called comedy is so not funny, it makes "Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo" look like Chaplin.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
John McMurtrie
Three story lines make up this tense movie, and while each has its strengths, they don't quite add up to a satisfying whole.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Ruthe Stein
Richly satisfying entertainment the way movies are at their best, when they prod you to think.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by