Slant Magazine's Scores

For 7,767 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 6.2 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:
7767 movie reviews
  1. Andrew Becker and Daniel Mehrer get close to their subjects only to retreat when things get truly dangerous.
  2. The director’s apparently frank and intimate relationships with the RBSS’s heroic journalists help sustain City of Ghosts‘s undeniable urgency, which culminates in a final image of appropriate, irresolvable anguish.
  3. The conspicuous means by which Will Raee stacks the deck against Leanne, the real victim of this story, is matched only by a moral grandstanding that seeks to condemn rather than understand the character’s decisions.
  4. An empty exercise in imitative long-take aestheticism, A Ghost Story fills its distractingly round-cornered frame with endless repetitions on a visual gag.
  5. The House's limp comedic pieces are only sporadically enlivened by a game cast.
  6. For all its hip ludicrousness, The Little Hours has a point: to almost earnestly riff on how atheism has taken hold of 21st-century America, by rooting our nation’s moors in a time of great austerity, sexism, classism, and persecution.
  7. If all this wackiness is only occasionally laugh-out-loud funny—the ‘80s references feel particularly played out—it’s nonetheless executed with good-natured breeziness.
  8. The film revels in a hushed and lucid expressionist naturalism that’s reminiscent of Andrei Tarkovsky’s Stalker.
  9. The documentary is an insightful portrait of the former American president and the world that he shaped.
  10. It too quickly opts out of its Scenes from a Marriage-like potential for what amounts to an augmented take on The Straight Story.
  11. Aside from further vilifying the Nazis, the film's ideological endgame remains a bit too slippery.
  12. In Okja, a transporting protest fantasy becomes another shrill dust-up in the waging of the culture wars.
  13. The psychological wars that have made the prequels simmer with tightly wound tensions are given their most cutting treatment yet.
  14. Baby Driver literalizes Edgar Wright’s fascination with people’s emotional overreliance on pop culture as a cover for arrested development.
  15. The Beguiled serves as proof that what goes for naturalism in Sofia Coppola’s dominion still verges on being decorative to the point of self-parody.
  16. The film's thematic organization suggests the cinematic equivalent of a short-story collection, with haunting tangents and stray notes of poetry.
  17. The sensory overload of Michael Bay's hyperkinetic cinema is such that it eradicates any actual sense of place.
  18. The film is always at least gut-rumbling and keeps its humor in situations that are morose and awkward.
  19. Bertrand Tavernier's exquisite documentary consistently avoids mere hagiography by looking to the films themselves.
  20. It's unsettling and disconcerting in its complex examination of the gray area that lies between the morals we conceptually hold and the actions we’re willing to perform to affirm those beliefs in the world.
  21. Ana Lily Amirpour has learned a few lessons from QT about the disreputable joys of blending kitsch and ultraviolence.
  22. The tension between verisimilitude and economy of storytelling dictates everything in All Eyez on Me.
  23. Schmaltzy, manipulative, and tonally schizophrenic, The Book of Henry is such a monumentally misguided venture that it ends up being oddly, if unintentionally, compelling.
  24. Mauro Borrelli's The Recall has the look of a SyFy original movie and the self-seriousness of Ridley Scott's recent Alien films.
  25. To some degree, Rough Night's attention to character detail compensates for its weaknesses as a comedy.
  26. Lost in Paris abounds in whimsy that, for the most part, isn't irritatingly precious—a feat that's harder to pull off than it appears.
  27. Cars 3 doesn't seem to care about defining the contours of its universe or exploring the possibilities of an all-car world.
  28. Throughout Harmonium, writer-director Kôji Fukada works in a rapt and lucid hyper-textural style that suggests a merging of the sensibilities of Alfred Hitchcock and Yasujirô Ozu.
  29. Maud Lewis herself couldn’t paint a hurricane that would blow the film’s overburdened narrative off course.
  30. Frédéric Mermoud's film makes an elaborate pretense of honoring the traditions of the observational procedural.

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