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. A consummate sampler platter of the bounty of state-of-the-art animation currently available as alternatives established major-studio house styles.
  2. The narrative derives much of its tension from the unsentimental ambivalence Jon Watts displays toward the story's two pre-teen boys.
  3. Bobcat Goldthwait's hand too nervously tempers Crimmins's outré tactics as kooky showmanship bred from unimaginable trauma.
  4. It can't resist winking at how this franchise manages to defy the limits of both human endurance and its superstar's rickety public status.
  5. Father doesn't just know best, he's the only one whose knowledge or lack thereof means anything at all.
  6. Breaking the laws of human nature is an ancient comic convention, but it only works when it leads to a laugh.
  7. A zig-zagging, free-associational genre item that's mostly concerned with stretching the generally narrow tonal rules of what a thriller can be.
  8. Daniel Augusto relies on familiar tropes pertaining to the sexy, rebellious rock-star artist who does things his own way.
  9. Tolerance in the film doesn't so much suggest a recognizably real epiphany as it does a moving Hallmark card.
  10. The poetic pretenses are compounded by a sledgehammer insistence on elusive and irreducible moments as inherently beautiful.
  11. Here's a documentary so insidious, so comprehensively scrubbed clean, that it argues for the therapeutic powers of consumerism.
  12. One senses that all of these kinds of documentaires are finally aggrandizing shrines made by artists trying to erect something out of nothing.
  13. The film's denouement is at once shocking and organic because it echoes a well-paced but nasty children's fable.
  14. It does well in using dialogue to shape its escalating tête-à-tête, but the filmmaking is too fuzzy to expand on those ideas.
  15. Robert Gordon and Morgan Neville reinforce the very circumstances they outwardly condemn.
  16. Among the film's many revelations is the level of self-aware humility Brando exudes while talking about his life and creative process.
  17. To hose down the white elephant in the room right off the bat, yes, it falls into place as a coming-of-age spin on the Manic Pixie Dream Girl archetype.
  18. Like technological innovation itself, the film seems overwhelmed by the reach of all its techo-cultural parts.
  19. This is a Happy Madison production, and as such it's exhaustively lazy, outside of its righteous dedication to the valorization of the man-child.
  20. Each battle scar in the film is a testament to a vaguely but nonetheless forcefully defined notion of masculinity.
  21. Its irritatingly saccharine tone is such that it shuns grappling with certain characters' dubious and perverse behaviors.
  22. Its anodyne tastefulness effectively lumps it into a big vat of likeminded Sundance-or-SXSW-endorsed offerings.
  23. The film may take the notion of implication over illustration a bit too far.
  24. Even as Samba struggles to hold onto his identity, the film becomes entangled in an identity crisis of its own.
  25. One wishes the director had as burning of an interest in significance as he does trickery and quippery.
  26. Christian Petzold never luxuriates in all this film history, but rather channels the artifice and affect it embodies into new insights.
  27. It suggests that Kris Swanberg has taken notes on what a film concerned with pregnancy should include without actually making it.
  28. The film offers a veritable smorgasbord of dated, only-in-the-movies clichés about the debt-ridden working class.
  29. Another effort to explain how difficult it is to be a young, white, smart, non-disfigured, upper-middle-class male.
  30. The script doesn't revel in Amy's quite harmless flaws, or at least examine them in the spirit of benevolence.

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