For 7,786 reviews, this publication has graded:
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33% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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64% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 6.2 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 59
| Highest review score: | Mulholland Dr. | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | Jojo Rabbit |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 4,357 out of 7786
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Mixed: 1,495 out of 7786
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Negative: 1,934 out of 7786
7786
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Drew Hunt
It takes place entirely at night, and the dingy color palette, washed-out and intentionally drab, presents Russia as an almost alien landscape.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 13, 2015
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Reviewed by
Sean Nam
It's to Britni West's credit that she's yoked the film's experimental sequences with the hard reality of characters trying to figure things out.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 13, 2015
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Reviewed by
Clayton Dillard
North Korean culture is lensed in part through a South Korean perspective, with the final chapter asking: “Is reunification possible?”- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 13, 2015
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Reviewed by
Ed Gonzalez
Denis Villeneuve's film views life in the age of the modern-day drug war as an ever-crescendoing existential nightmare.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 13, 2015
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Reviewed by
Clayton Dillard
It uses convention to its advantage through an intriguing play with casting choices and bizarrely effective allusions to film history.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 12, 2015
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Diego Semerene
Caetano Gotardo's triptych of short tales features a sense of experimentation and poetic license mostly seen in European cinema.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 10, 2015
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Reviewed by
Oleg Ivanov
It becomes difficult to separate the natives from their communist masters in terms of their treatment of their natural surroundings.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 10, 2015
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Reviewed by
Eric Henderson
When the trademark Shyamalan twist finally arrives, it doesn't synthesize anything other than the director's devotion to his signature gimmick.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 9, 2015
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Reviewed by
Clayton Dillard
For all of its evident toil in recreating historically accurate environments and researching the precise conditions in varying regions, it has little force as a work of cinema.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 8, 2015
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Reviewed by
Carson Lund
This is exactly the kind of movie at which David Wain took aim with his sublime rom-com parody They Came Together.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 7, 2015
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Elise Nakhnikian
In this picaresque documentary, the lightly comic musings of a likeable, somewhat nerdy Indian-American actor go surprisingly deep.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 7, 2015
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Reviewed by
Chuck Bowen
Coming Home is a film in which everyone's dreams are irrevocably broken, the pieces too small to grasp, let alone pick up.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 7, 2015
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Reviewed by
Elise Nakhnikian
The film focuses on Nathan's emotions and backstage dramas in ways that generally feel forced or inauthentic.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 7, 2015
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James Lattimer
Aside from the innate understanding of female friendship dynamics, it's hard to see exactly what else Mélanie Laurent brings to this overly familiar story.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 7, 2015
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Kenji Fujishima
The titular Transporter is now but a blank slate serving the characters and mayhem surrounding him, a walking metaphor for a franchise that's run out of gas.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 3, 2015
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Reviewed by
Oleg Ivanov
What the film lacks in narrative unity and aesthetic splendor it makes up in moral grandeur and ethical purpose.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 2, 2015
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Reviewed by
Chuck Bowen
The setup is so familiar that frustration sets in before the title has barely faded from view.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Sep 1, 2015
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Reviewed by
Clayton Dillard
A work of arduous assemblage that values information over affect and zip over conviction in its ramshackle historicizing of Apple CEO Steve Jobs.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 31, 2015
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Reviewed by
Chuck Bowen
Slacker and even less involving than the similarly terrible global kill-fest Last Knights, but easier to watch for the inadvertent camp value of two of the prominent performances.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 31, 2015
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Reviewed by
Clayton Dillard
Even if the title is meant to be ironic, the latest from writer-director Neil LaBute is a frustratingly stilted vision of middle-aged repression unleashed.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 31, 2015
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Reviewed by
Clayton Dillard
A mostly laugh-free, paint-by-numbers approach to a pair of former pros vying for relevance as they enter, kicking and screaming, into their mid 30s.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 31, 2015
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Reviewed by
Chuck Bowen
It evinces a qualified kind of courage in its anonymous convictions, parodying a world that barely ever existed by barely existing itself.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 31, 2015
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Reviewed by
Christopher Gray
Unfortunately, the film's occasionally thrilling visual sleight-of-hand comes at the ultimate service of a boilerplate early-mid-life-crisis drama.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 31, 2015
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Reviewed by
Oleg Ivanov
It both feeds off of and perpetuates nostalgia for a time when the nation seemed more politically conscious and therefore more capable of creating lasting social change.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 31, 2015
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Reviewed by
Christopher Gray
As Zac Efront's Cole tiptoes away from his past, the film keenly observes a character who doesn't know how to secure his future, or his identity.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 26, 2015
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Reviewed by
Jake Cole
The only way that this film could be any more racist is if the Dwyer family holed up with Lillian Gish and waited for the Klan to save them.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 25, 2015
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Reviewed by
Clayton Dillard
It wants for a keener vision of corrupted power, but at least Mora Stephens navigates her main character's sudden slew of infidelities without banalizing them.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 23, 2015
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Reviewed by
Elise Nakhnikian
The film all leads to a melodramatic climax that wraps up the main character's explosive acting out in a too-neat package.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 23, 2015
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Reviewed by
Chuck Bowen
The film is one long funereal slog in which the main character discovers something about herself that's almost immediately apparent.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 23, 2015
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Reviewed by
Ed Gonzalez
The film squanders the promise of its scrutiny into how people recalibrate their sense of morality in times of crisis.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Aug 23, 2015
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Reviewed by