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
There is an element of murder mystery and an edge of conspiracy thriller to Chris Paine's documentary about the rise and fall of General Motors' EV1 (Electric Vehicle 1).- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Bill White
Throughout the film, music is used to define character and place. Two metal bands, Moral Decay and South Central Riot Squad, dominate the soundtrack whenever the gang is on the move.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Reviewed by
William Arnold
It's an unimaginative, mean-spirited affair that makes you hate yourself for laughing at it, and it's so devoid of anything close to wit, subtlety or sophistication that it stands as damning evidence that Hollywood has surrendered wholesale to stupidity and crassness.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Reviewed by
William Arnold
By most of the ways movies are usually judged, pretty much of a mess. The camerawork is jerky and distracting, the dialogue is cliched and the story makes so little sense that the script seems to have been improvised by the actors as they went along.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Sean Axmaker
The restrained drama both punctures the mythic ideal of the samurai culture (trained as fighters, they mostly serve as clan bureaucrats) and spins a romantic portrait of one man who values principle over protocol despite the cost to his reputation.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Paula Nechak
A harrowing, frustrating view of paranoia and ineptitude that may seem a case of being in the wrong place at the wrong time but evolves more into a mystery.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Reviewed by
Sean Axmaker
At least Lin's local color make the idiocy fun to watch.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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William Arnold
Bullock has abandoned all her usual cutesy mannerisms, and Reeves is as low-key and convincing as he's been in a role. Whatever else the film is, it's a competent and enjoyable star vehicle.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Sean Axmaker
It's weird, clean, good-natured fun, and it's far too subdued for its madcap milieu.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Reviewed by
Sean Axmaker
Don't expect a meaningful resolution, just a bouncy comedy with some hilarious moments in the stray ricochets.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Critic Score
In Creadon's most effective and inspired sequence, he gets Reagle to create a puzzle using the film's title as its theme. It's during the sequence that we learn the lofty rules of creating crosswords, including lateral symmetry and a maximum ratio of black to white space.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Critic Score
A beautiful angel of death (Virginia Madsen) meanders through the final broadcast, gracing beatitudes over the backstage romances and egg-salad sandwiches.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Reviewed by
Bill White
With adventurous forays into questionable neighborhoods and stimulating tours through street markets, "Crossing the Bridge" is about the city as much as its music.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Sean Axmaker
The curiously stylized piece, shot in a muted palette with performances to match (the cast is perhaps too restrained given the theatrical framework), is dramatically colorless, but the moods and moments are crafted with kinky grace.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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William Arnold
New director John Moore just doesn't have original director Richard Donner's filmmaking flair, so the same scenes done the same way on phony-looking Prague locations without the benefit of Jerry Goldsmith's Oscar-winning score just seem terminally slow and flat.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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William Arnold
The filmmakers have wildly miscalculated the chemistry these real-life lovers generate on film.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Bill White
An inspirational portrait of an unwanted kid who brought culture to a world that had known only violence.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Sean Axmaker
It's great to see action stars cast for their moves -- their grace in motion is thrilling -- but they also have the charisma to pull off the characters.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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William Arnold
Cult-favorite director Victor Salva ("Jeepers Creepers" I & II) is a competent visual storyteller and the film believes in itself so strongly (and with such a straight face) that it's hard not to halfway enjoy it.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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William Arnold
In the latest of what is getting to be a booming genre of Iraq war documentaries, director Deborah Scranton gives digital video cameras to five members of the New Hampshire Army National Guard so they can intimately record their year of service in the Middle East.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Bill White
Ripe with characters and events reflecting the psychic travails of today's young adults.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Sean Axmaker
The humorless and self-important execution attempts an operatic scale but only succeeds in sinking the remnants of the story's integrity. By the time it makes landfall, this incoherent production has blown itself out.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Reviewed by
Sean Axmaker
The messy emotions and illogic of human nature defines this drama.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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William Arnold
Love it or hate it, X-III packs more action and razzle-dazzle visuals into its 104-minute running time than "Mission: Impossible III," "Poseidon" and "The Da Vinci Code" combined.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Reviewed by
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- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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