Screen Daily's Scores
- Movies
For 3,744 reviews, this publication has graded:
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53% higher than the average critic
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4% same as the average critic
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43% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 3.8 points higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 69
| Highest review score: | Oppenheimer | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | The Emoji Movie |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 2,455 out of 3744
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Mixed: 1,188 out of 3744
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Negative: 101 out of 3744
3744
movie
reviews
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Reviewed by
David D'Arcy
Spender...has made a rare kind of documentary – muscular and refined, and a splendour for the eyes.- Screen Daily
- Posted Nov 5, 2015
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Sarah Ward
Demonstrating a light touch — underscored by a whimsy-leaning score and overtly comic moments, but never delving into flimsiness or farce — Yan handles her chosen topic, and the tapestry of tales it’s woven through, with care.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 20, 2021
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Sarah Ward
Indeed, the fact that the movie’s youthful lead will have to say goodbye to his childhood might be inevitable, but it never feels as standard as it sounds. Assisting immensely are some naturalistic performances, particularly from Yasan.- Screen Daily
- Posted Feb 26, 2021
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Wendy Ide
Many of these jagged little vignettes are exquisitely realised, others are genuinely chilling. Whether they fully coalesce into a coherent whole is one question; whether they even need to is another. Renoir may leave questions, but it’s an elegant, thoughtful piece of filmmaking that digs into the guilt and confusion that underpins a child’s struggle to process death.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 19, 2025
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Tim Grierson
Bratton’s depth of feeling elevates the material, suggesting that, for the filmmaker, there’s something intensely cathartic and therapeutic in this retelling.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 9, 2022
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Tim Grierson
If the Zootopia series is about looking past our biased assumptions about others, the new film makes the point most effectively as its two leads open up about their own shortcomings, allowing themselves to be vulnerable. Goodwin and Bateman are certainly most appealing when their characters are at their most genuine.- Screen Daily
- Posted Nov 25, 2025
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Jonathan Romney
The Adults is a gift to its actors, allowing them to explore the tensed-up taciturnity of emotional repression but also to go haywire with the voices and the crazily choreographed body language.- Screen Daily
- Posted Feb 21, 2023
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Sarah Ward
This is a beautiful, heart-swelling animated movie, to be certain, but it’s also one that knows that such picturesque sights and pleasant sensations are only part of the equation.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jun 20, 2017
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Fionnuala Halligan
The subtle brilliance of its mise-en-scene, from 1980s Ohio boardrooms and rubber-chicken dinners to all-black wait staff and the casual discrimination against women, beds the story in the awful truth.- Screen Daily
- Posted Nov 13, 2019
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Allan Hunter
Miron’s cinema vérité approach still finds time for contemplation and appealing images of the countryside through the changing seasons. His very promising feature debut remains consistently engrossing through unexpected developments. He even surprises us with the sense of renewal and hope that suddenly blossoms from Kathy’s darkest hours.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 28, 2019
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Fionnuala Halligan
A well-executed, unusual and historically-tinged horror [film] ... drenched in the atmosphere of Second World War colonial dread.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 28, 2023
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David D'Arcy
Like Cai, the doc is a crowd-pleaser which reveals its complexities in a careful viewing.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 29, 2016
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Fionnuala Halligan
Everyone commits to Pirates as if it’s the first time this story has been told, and in a way, that’s true. A joyous feature film centring around British Black and Asian male teenagers whose problems are exactly the same as every other teenager in the country makes it revolutionary within that familiar framework.- Screen Daily
- Posted Dec 6, 2021
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Fionnuala Halligan
Australian director Simon Stone’s (The Daughter) film delivers strong performances – from Ralph Fiennes and Carey Mulligan in particular – and top-level craft, but with an undercurrent of real emotion which sensitively conveys the fragility of lives and time. To use another of those abused words, it’s captivating.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 13, 2021
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Tim Grierson
Wielding an ambitious visual strategy and volatile political commentary, Athena explodes but then fizzles, its often arresting images slowly undone by fuzzy ideas and a self-important air.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 3, 2022
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Wendy Ide
Genre defying and genuinely unexpected, this intriguing urban fairytale takes the mythology of the werewolf story and uses it as a prism through which to view contemporary Brazilian society. Thematically rich, it weaves together fantasy horror elements with commentaries on class, race, sexuality and motherhood.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jul 26, 2018
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- Screen Daily
- Posted May 17, 2016
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Tim Grierson
Often quite touching and funny, writer-director Sian Heder’s second feature sometimes succumbs to contrivances and crowd-pleasing theatrics, but one can hardly fault her obvious affection for these messy, engaging characters.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 30, 2021
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Tim Grierson
Although the film doesn’t always deftly balance sentiment and broad humour, it is fun to spend time with such raucous company.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 23, 2022
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Allan Hunter
Served up with lashings of homoeroticism, Bunuelian satire, a gay love story and an athletic dance number, its uncompromising nature will delight fans of the visionary filmmaker.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jun 7, 2023
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Jonathan Romney
This debut feature by French director Clément Cogitore has a highly suggestive philosophical agenda, but at the same time functions as a gripping, subtly eerie drama which keeps you guessing even while it maintains its supernatural (or theological) undertow simmering beneath the surface.- Screen Daily
- Posted Aug 2, 2016
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Tim Grierson
A winning romantic comedy about two men whose emotional intimacy issues may jeopardise the good thing they’ve got going, Bros is frequently funny but also quite touching, spearheaded by the dynamite chemistry between co-writer Billy Eichner and Luke Macfarlane.- Screen Daily
- Posted Sep 10, 2022
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Nikki Baughan
This …Matilda is not just a big movie about a little girl finding her voice, but about the need to speak up against injustice, wherever its found, and to find people who believe in you enough to lend their support.- Screen Daily
- Posted Oct 5, 2022
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Nikki Baughan
Taking pleasure in subverting romcom tropes and boasting a satisfying attention to detail, Timestalker is a showcase for Lowe’s considerable talents on both sides of the camera.- Screen Daily
- Posted Mar 15, 2024
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Tim Grierson
The Devil’s Candy is a masterful slow burn, the horror and violence alluded to rather than seen.- Screen Daily
- Posted Mar 16, 2017
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Lee Marshall
The film also has plenty to say about male stubbornness and the casual misogyny that lurks behind the apparent equality of Lebanese society.- Screen Daily
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Tim Grierson
A shattering portrait of a luckless woman unable to pull out of the tailspin that is her life, Where Is Kyra? is a powerfully moody character study anchored by a remarkable performance from Michelle Pfeiffer.- Screen Daily
- Posted Feb 21, 2018
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Wendy Ide
This is not the first documentary to deal with thwarted creative ambitions. It may, however, be the one that most effectively and entertainingly cocks a snook at the very fates that conspired in the first place.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jan 28, 2025
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Tim Grierson
Despite a twisty, juicy and compelling story, there remains a staid conventionality that keeps the political and thematic undercurrents from being explored as satisfyingly as one might hope.- Screen Daily
- Posted Jul 31, 2015
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Lee Marshall
Garrone’s new film reminds us that traditional fables don’t need injections of contemporary relevance to grip, stir and disturb us.- Screen Daily
- Posted May 18, 2015
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