Seattle Post-Intelligencer's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 2,931 reviews, this publication has graded:
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64% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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33% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 1 point higher than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 66
| Highest review score: | Peter Pan | |
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| Lowest review score: | Mindhunters |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,824 out of 2931
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Mixed: 872 out of 2931
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Negative: 235 out of 2931
2931
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Sean Axmaker
The annoying shaky-cam style so common to such indie dramas is toned down to a dreamy sway and the image drifts in and out of focus in scenes of heightened emotions. It's like waking from a daze and getting your bearings; the effect is both unsettling and calming.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Sean Axmaker
Deyfus' haphazard filmmaking dissipates a potentially fascinating mystery into one long diversion.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Bill White
Takes a humorously gentle approach to the culture clash between the primitive and the modern. With wonderfully natural performances by the children, this is a family movie that crosses cultural boundaries in a celebration of the magical possibilities inherent in everyday objects.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Sean Axmaker
Redfield's fans will rejoice, if only to see the beloved novel illustrated on the screen, no matter how tediously. The rest of us probably should stay away.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Sean Axmaker
This a rapid-fire romp through "War of the Worlds," "Saw," "The Grudge" and "The Village," cut up into skits and pieced back together in some mutant jigsaw puzzle with a few pieces missing, delivers a barrage of low-minded gags with high-spirited energy.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Critic Score
Don't let the title trick you. The British comedy Kinky Boots is probably the most kinkless film featuring fetish wear ever to strut its stilettoed heels across the silver screen.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Critic Score
Hard Candy is not perfect, but it is a provocative piece of filmmaking with a dark and daring heart that makes it worth seeing.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Reviewed by
Paula Nechak
Who was Bettie Page? You won't find out in Mary Harron's chirpily cheery chronicle.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Sean Axmaker
It's a tricky tonal dance that Watt, minor missteps aside, glides through with feeling.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Ever wondered what the bastard stepchild of "Rear Window" and "Harry and the Hendersons" would look like? Probably not. Nevertheless, here it is in the form of a Bigfoot horror flick gone horribly awry.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Reviewed by
Sean Axmaker
It's the soulless quality of so many films that value devious plots, smug deception and quirky personality traits over actual story and character.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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William Arnold
It's a very slight and forgettable affair, and a formula job all the way. But it's easy to watch, the dance sequences are sporadically enjoyable (if hardly innovative) and Antonio Banderas is wonderfully magnetic and charming in the lead.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Paula Nechak
While most of the film is well-written and acted, there are some difficulties. Aniston's Olivia is hard to figure.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Paula Nechak
Mullan is a great choice as Frank, playing the silent guy with all kinds of baggage perfectly.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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William Arnold
In a better movie, this grand-dame performance might have been fun, but it's surrounded here by an impossibly dull and unsatisfying whodunit plot, unintentionally funny dialogue and such absurdities as having Catherine stay up late one night and whip out an entire novel.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Sean Axmaker
Robinson makes these characters breathe, and they bring the film to life.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Critic Score
A funny, freaky, fiendishly good flick that might just find a following beyond the standard cadre of horror fanatics.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Reviewed by
Sean Axmaker
The concept is clever and Johnson's brisk editing, dynamic camerawork and snazzy transitions has fun with it all. It makes for an inspired time-warped teenage film noir.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Bill White
For the most part, the film is a chaotic blur of disconnected movement that re-creates the feeling of an unforgettably bad concert experience.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Sean Axmaker
It wobbles between a conventionally quirky lighthearted goof and an oddball farce in which character is sacrificed for sight gags.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Bill White
With more sympathy for Johnston's suffering and less reveling in the fruits of his madness, The Devil and Daniel Johnston could have been a great film instead of a disturbing one.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Bill White
Three movies gasp for life inside the clumsily titled Marilyn Hotchkiss' Ballroom Dancing & Charm School.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Sean Axmaker
Director Mohammad Rasoulof has fashioned the ultimate metaphor for a society adrift from its culture.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Bill White
Captures both the spirituality and humanity of monastic life.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Bill White
While the significance of the imagery, including the slow disintegration of an immense piece of sculpted petroleum, is elusive, the strangeness of Barney's visual sense never fails to stimulate the senses.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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William Arnold
A fairly routine heist drama and a never especially believable puzzle film.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Critic Score
An often touching and always intriguing look at the fall and rebirth of a nation and the resilient spirit of its women.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Reviewed by
Sean Axmaker
It doesn't leave you much to hold on to in a comedy about apathy that can't even muster the energy to care.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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