San Francisco Chronicle's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 9,306 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 | |
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| Lowest review score: | Speed 2: Cruise Control |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 5,162 out of 9306
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Mixed: 2,658 out of 9306
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Negative: 1,486 out of 9306
9306
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Peter Hartlaub
Comic gold for anyone who is currently stoned, has been stoned in the past or spends a lot of time around stoned people.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Walter Addiego
It's tear-jerker material but ends up being quite touching, and it's a good choice for family viewing.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Mick LaSalle
Somewhere in the translation from stage to screen, The History Boys has become an intelligent misfire. What's left is a literate but listless film.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Ruthe Stein
Don't little ones have enough to worry about without ecological concerns popping up in family entertainment? Happy Feet should have stayed light on its feet.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Ruthe Stein
For all its depiction of a descent into drug addiction, Candy is filled with surprisingly sweet moments and goes down more easily than seems possible given the subject matter.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Ruthe Stein
For all the filmmaker's good intentions, Fast Food Nation isn't a particularly good movie. It doesn't hold together or grip you the way a documentary might have.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Mick LaSalle
Some people may be put off that For Your Consideration lands in a serious place. But I see it as evidence of an expanding vision, of continued artistic growth.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Mick LaSalle
Why such a structurally scattered movie should hang together at all is a mystery. That it does more than that, that it works brilliantly, is a miracle, or at the very least the product of unquantifiable causes.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
David Wiegand
The careful camera work, beautifully dank cinematography and the quietly nuanced performance by Darín keep our attention, but in the end, the film's bigger challenge isn't its length, or its deliberate pace: It's that it's overly freighted with symbolism and meaning.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Mick LaSalle
Curiously, the film seems to have no discernible point, and yet -- this is practically unique -- the absence of a point becomes, in itself, a form of narrative interest.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Peter Hartlaub
It's difficult to ignore the fact that they've created a romantic comedy that has almost no romance and even less comedy.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Ruthe Stein
All along, you know something terrible is going to happen, and when it does, you leave the theater shaken and deeply moved.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Peter Hartlaub
At the heart of The Return is a murder that even the most bumbling homicide investigator could have solved in about 12 seconds.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Mick LaSalle
In a film that easily could have been cold or ironical, Ferrell provides the emotional thrust.- San Francisco Chronicle
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G. Allen Johnson
In this last passage Longley shows a poetic, almost elegiacal artistry. After two years, he might not understand the Iraqi people fully, but they have won his heart and mind.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Ruthe Stein
It's as if a trumped-up biopic of Andy Warhol were to appear titled "Soup.''- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Walter Addiego
This is a timeless, and nearly plotless, look at the day-to-day life of a nomadic Mongolian shepherding family. Yes, it moves deliberately, and impatient viewers will find it intolerably slow. But those who can get in track with its serene rhythm will be rewarded.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Ruthe Stein
Harris' impressive channeling of Ludwig is diluted by the decision of screenwriters Stephen Rivele and Christopher Wilkinson to put the copyist front and center, possibly to distinguish their feature from "Immortal Beloved."- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Mick LaSalle
Often the movie seems like a lot of empty-headed blather, with one side hating the First Amendment and the other side unable to find a better use for it but to say the f-word.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
G. Allen Johnson
Sounds like silly fun -- and Linda Linda Linda is -- but it is also an extremely well-written, emotionally complex coming-of-age tale that has a John Hughesian respect for teenage angst.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Mick LaSalle
It's screamingly, hysterically, laugh-through-the-next-joke, laugh-for-the-next-week funny. It's so inventive…This is a film by an original and significant comic intelligence.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Peter Hartlaub
For a movie that takes place mostly in the bowels of a sewer, Flushed Away has some surprisingly charming moments.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Ruthe Stein
Lower your expectations going into Volver and accept it for what it is: a ridiculously entertaining melodrama with loud echoes of "Mildred Pierce" that provides Penelope Cruz with a vehicle for her multifaceted talents.- San Francisco Chronicle
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
G. Allen Johnson
Black Bear Ranch's legacy of environmentalism (the residents were on the forefront of the anti-deforestation movement), and the endearing long-term relationships it engendered, endure.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
Ruthe Stein
Despite a clever script and top-notch cast, whose commitment to doing service in the indie branch of the industry is commendable, Unknown falls apart just when it should be coming together.- San Francisco Chronicle
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Reviewed by
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- San Francisco Chronicle
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