Slant Magazine's Scores

For 7,776 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:
7776 movie reviews
  1. Donnie Yen's performance is so good that it's a shame Wilson Yip's films have never strived to be more than briskly entertaining hagiography.
  2. Bleakness, Arturo Ripstein's film implies, demands different kinds of labor from a man than from a woman.
  3. It's hardly a desecration of Pascal Laugier's 2008 French horror film of the same name, but that assumes the original is a canonical text.
  4. It's symptomatic of the one-man-show form of polemical exposé that's come to dominate, and deteriorate, documentary practice.
  5. With the film, director William Monahan offers audiences a bundle of fetishes dressed up as an existentialist thriller about the class system.
  6. The film's black humor is inextricably tied to serious questions about moral relativism and personal responsibility.
  7. Like any serving of junk food, it seems engineered to give you that initial rush of satisfaction, but leaves you in a dead zone where the only thing you want is more of the same.
  8. Of course, when the action gets underway, Bay unleashes that flashy id of his, and all of his flaws as a titan of blockbuster filmmaking come to the fore.
  9. The film ultimately boils down to people bludgeoning one another in unimaginative close-ups.
  10. It places more focus on the childish fabulousness of The Adventures of Tom Sawyer than the racial reckoning of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.
  11. The whole isn't greater than the sum of its parts, but the various detours coalesce into an amusing wannabe-cult curio.
  12. Writer-director Andrew Renzi treats unfettered wealth as a hyperbolic playground through which to explore masculine insecurity.
  13. The film finally seems conspicuously at odds with itself, neither funny nor impassioned enough to pass as an accomplished vision of transnational welfare.
  14. The so-called suicide forest's cultural value is trivialized in the bum-rush to liberate the main characters from their agonies.
  15. Tim Blake Nelson's film immerses itself into as many pain-induced (and painful) subplots as it possibly can.
  16. Ross Partridge seems flatly fascinated by Lamb’s pathology without trying to understand its formation from environmental factors.
  17. By refusing to finitely define Natalia, or reduce her life to a series of biographical details, Akerman elides eulogizing of any sort, dignifying Natalia without personifying her as an idea made flesh.
  18. Sweaty Betty is a reminder that poetry comes in all shapes and sizes, and that art ultimately dictates its own terms.
  19. The absence of a central narrator for the most part prevents the film from devolving into gratuitous pedagogy.
  20. It inelegantly attempts to infuse a standard revenge western with the gravitas of a war veteran's coming-home odyssey.
  21. It uses the trappings of the family melodrama to reveal the subtle social constraints that inhibit people, particularly women, from attaining full self-realization.
  22. In its philosophical and criminal investigations (largely imported from Kathryn Bigelow's original), the film moves in dozens of illogical directions, but not without achieving a patina of earnest credibility.
  23. Though Will Ferrell has made a career out of his own debasement, the film quickly becomes too cruel to generate laughter for anyone who would empathize with him.
  24. The film's highpoint is one of the most remarkably moving sex scenes in all of American cinema, and the irony of it involving bland puppets is hardly lost on Kaufman and Johnson.
  25. In the film, Alvin and the Chipmunks proudly align themselves not with Dr. Demento, but with Kidz Bop.
  26. A regurgitation of Apatowian formula, wherein ostensibly edgy humor hides a core of conservative moralizing.
  27. It exists less as a meaningful extension of its world than as a fan-service deployment device.
  28. The premise of the film is simple, but it's a simplicity that can only attract complications, as simple plans are apt to do, in an atmosphere of foreboding and the macabre.
  29. The documentary isn't advancing an argument so much as simply restating a European socialistic breed of fact.
  30. Too much of Noma is composed of gorgeous pillow shots, which grow static and fussy, appearing to exist almost apart from the subject matter.

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