Slant Magazine's Scores

For 7,775 reviews, this publication has graded:
  • 33% higher than the average critic
  • 3% same as the average critic
  • 64% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 6.3 points lower than other critics. (0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 59
Highest review score: 100 Mulholland Dr.
Lowest review score: 0 Jojo Rabbit
Score distribution:
7775 movie reviews
  1. The film is essentially an exercise in forcing a female genius back into her proper place of dependence on both the father figure and the Prince Charming.
  2. Oz Perkins exhibits a committed understanding of the cinematic value of silence and of vastly underpopulated compositions.
  3. Catalan prankster Albert Serra's film ultimately emerges as a compact, improbably riveting viewing experience.
  4. Though the film excels at subjectivity and interiority, it tends to falter in conveying more rudimentary information.
  5. The film imbues a pessimistic view of the seemingly bottomless depths of human cruelty with sorrowful tragic force.
  6. There's plenty of life in this honest, impressionistic portrait of a cohort of 21st-century American girls.
  7. The film barely even scratches the surface of the animating force of Cézanne and Zola's lives: their art.
  8. The faces in Logan Sandler's film, like the landscapes of the paradise setting, only convey an empty sort of ambiguity.
  9. Throughout the documentary, the undisguised regret and longing of David Lynch's reminiscences are often startling.
  10. Petra Epperlein's personal ties to the subject matter provides the documentary with a necessary anchor point.
  11. Power Rangers is so concerned with launching a mature teen-targeted franchise that it often forgets to have some fun.
  12. Alice Lowe evinces a knack for locating society’s most awkward pressure points, and a willingness to punch them.
  13. Wilson lurches jarringly from poignant melancholy to cartoonish slapstick, unable to settle on a consistent tone.
  14. The filmmakers take few measures to engender sympathy for Olga, but their prismatic take on her life, while novel, precludes making any resonant statements about homosexuality, emotional health, or humankind’s capacity for evil.
  15. The film’s depiction of friendship seldom pushes past insights predicated on a fundamental tension between characters.
  16. Director Kasper Collins imbues this documentary with an ambiguous, unsettlingly empathetic emotional force.
  17. The film is about floating along on currents of uncertain desire and excitement, overthinking your own indulgence in these whims, and then sometime later on down the road, through no clear constellation of reasons, recognizing that a real human connection was squandered in the haze of all that self-exploration.
  18. It isn't until its final moments that Lady Macbeth turns into the kind of meaningless, mean-spirited, and proudly irredeemable non-character study that likens it to, say, last year's emptily foreboding Childhood of a Leader.
  19. The heart of T2 lies in the relationship between Renton and Sick Boy, but their rocky reunion is another victim both to the wheel-spinning innate in Hodge’s script and Boyle’s relative lack of fresh ideas.
  20. Anocha Suwichakornpong earnestly and ambitiously attempts to redefine cinema’s conventional grasp of consciousness.
  21. Beach Rats is most compelling when it puts a self-aware focus on Harris Dickinson’s sculpted male figure.
  22. The stock character types that Hirokazu Kore-eda employs across the board are pretty much open books from the start.
  23. Though the film settles into a familiar coming-of-age trajectory, it's always enlivened by John Trengove's intimate, inquiring eye.
  24. The pacing is so humorless and funereal that it squelches the possibility of heat or conflict arising between the characters.
  25. The film's characters are stock types without enough satirical texture to fulfill their function in the narrative.
  26. Striking throughout are the seemingly caught-on-the-wing moments that subtly enrichen the film’s characterizations.
  27. Ritesh Batra's film is a tale of white nostalgia that should have found its footing on dramatic grounds.
  28. Every creature here that's intended to burrow themselves into the audience’s nightmares are less wonders of imagination than of size.
  29. The only element that significantly differentiates this documentary from its peers is Louis Theroux's good-natured cheekiness.
  30. More conspicuous than its rote melodrama is the way the film elides the concurrent genocide of ethnic Armenians by Ottoman forces.

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