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
It becomes a dreamy study in stillness broken by suicide fantasies, flashbacks, and the hired killers, but even the violence has a meditative even melancholy quality to it, as if it's all been processed through the eyes of its Zen hero.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Bill White
By no means a good movie. Although based on a true story, the mathematical error that led to Daniel and Susan's predicament is handled with such dramatic slovenliness that the viewer is apt to be confused as to what actually happened.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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William Arnold
Very surprisingly, Meryl Streep is not wonderful as Schreiber's scheming, incestuously possessive mother. She gobbles up all the scenery but, for whatever reason, she's just not half as chilling a portrait of demented mother love as the original's Angela Lansbury.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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William Arnold
Director Jonathan Frakes keeps the tone just this side of tongue-in-cheek.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Paula Nechak
The Village goes up in smoke (and mirrors). It wants to find a profoundness that hints at something deep and dimensional, but it hasn't the courage of conviction to stay on course as an unabashed ode to innocence.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Bill White
With the exception of some minor glitches in the sound synchronization and a nighttime performance of The Band's "The Weight" that is uncharacteristically grainy, the film looks and sounds great.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Sean Axmaker
Gozu is prime evidence in the argument that gonzo gangster movie maverick Takashi Miike is a major director goofing on minor works.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Sean Axmaker
The official R rating is for "strong language, sexual content, drug use and some crude humor," but the MPAA is just being polite. It's all crude.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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William Arnold
At age 37, she's (Bonnaire) developed into a consummate film actress and a unique star whose enigmatic persona has never had a more exhilarating showcase.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Paula Nechak
While most movies would sink under the weight of such eccentricity, pretentiousness and earnestness, Garden State is so full of wit and the genuine heart of characters that you can't help but care about what happens to them.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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William Arnold
The commentary alternates between witty insight and opinionated bunk, but it's always fun -- and a must-see for movie buffs.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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What is this movie about? Is it a morality tale? Is it about the complexity of romantic love? Parenthood? Accepting the often-blurred lines of our sexual orientation? Is it about the role of race in white-collar crime? What?- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Reviewed by
Sean Axmaker
More reinvention than remake, this black-humored, blood-soaked adventure is a colorful if impersonal audience pleaser done up in a showy, fluid style with a tongue-in-cheek flair.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Sean Axmaker
Delivers the expected adrenaline-driven thrills with a fresh eye and a refreshing attitude.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Reviewed by
Paula Nechak
There's something essential and emotional missing in this character-driven piece. It's more an admirably performed and observed study -- of a time, place and three very different people -- than it is the heartbreaking and engrossing story it could have been.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Sean Axmaker
For all of its weakness, Ju-On: The Grudge is creepy and unnerving, qualities in short supply in gore-filled American horror films.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Perhaps worst of all, this film seems to assume its teen viewers are a bunch of drooling half-wits, going to great pains to explain everything in so much after-school-special detail.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Reviewed by
William Arnold
It dares to test the audience in several ways: It may not be Asimov but its plot is truly labyrinthine, it works a specific theme (the very real possibility that robots will evolve on their own) and it's happy to end itself in a shroud of enigma.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Paula Nechak
The film's only misstep is its again-used theme (especially when it comes to a woman's rite of passage) of exacting some punishing loss when our heroine pushes to transcend her limitations by seeking a better life.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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A film that turns a comedic eye on the cultural, sexual and generational gaps that divide families and lovers and just generally make life the tricky mess it so often is.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Bill White
Full of mystery, romance and ambiguity, Zhou Yu's Train is a tight mosaic of a film.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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William Arnold
It works as a fascinating and often very funny character study/satire of a famous author, though it loses interest the harder it tries to be profound and falls apart completely toward the end.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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William Arnold
Ferrell, of course, has his moments. But he doesn't have an engaging "center" as a comedian.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Sean Axmaker
Empowers its 14-year-olds and comes through with a Cinderella story sure to charm every girl who isn't part of the cool clique.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Bill White
Berlinger and Sinofsky, with their knack for penetrating the diabolical pretensions of weak and disaffected human beings, have brought Metallica to its knees.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Bill White
May well be the most thrilling and educational surfing movie ever.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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William Arnold
While Keira Knightley brightens things up as Guinevere, the casting is otherwise lackluster.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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William Arnold
Flies so gallantly in the face of what's supposed to work at the movies these days that you just have to love it.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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Sean Axmaker
Romantic, real and as generous as it is vulnerable, the art of conversation has rarely been so acute, honest and revealing.- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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