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. The film is overrun with characters, but it's less interested in their identity than their plasticity.
  2. Paul Gross situates the film's events somewhere between violent, militaristic fantasy and gentler, anti-war lament.
  3. Its feminist perspective checkmates the frat-boy misogyny and machismo that too often mar films set in combat zones.
  4. The film goes deeper in its allegorizing, tapping into the volatile nature of identity politics.
  5. Like its predecessor, the film is content to dumbly relish in the inanity of Mike's rampage.
  6. The filmmakers' perspective is firmly aligned with the views of liberal Zionism, as the leftist peace activists are given the most screen time.
  7. It has the uncanny quality of an out-of-body experience, not a torn-from-the-heart confessional.
  8. The film is more taken by its own formal composition than enunciating the musical edification promised by its title.
    • 68 Metascore
    • 38 Critic Score
    It sketches an imperiled family worth caring about, but any goodwill is soon weathered by wave after wave of contrivance following the initial town-leveling event.
  9. Jordan Galland confidently perches the film right on the razor’s edge separating absurdist comedy from horror.
  10. Sword of Destiny has an appealingly inventive, unruly genre party streak running down its figurative back.
  11. Its virtues as throwback don't elide the foolhardly decision to imprint an ancient mythology on a contemporary superhero framework.
  12. It arrives prepackaged with suggested comparisons to Michael Mann's Heat that it never earns because of its dreary literal-mindedness.
  13. It finds its filmmaker completely lost between impulses to pay homage, play it safe, or offer something—anything—new.
  14. The film is the cinematic equivalent of watching a Rubik's Cube noisily solve itself for 90 minutes.
  15. It's an episode of Without a Trace: Jerusalem presented with all the panache of a Trinity Broadcasting Network TV special.
  16. This is a complication-smoothing take on Jesse Owens's elegant riposte to Hitler's racism at the 1936 Berlin Olympics.
  17. Erika Frankel’s documentary is finally revealed to be a story of prolonged adjustment to retirement, and a poignant illustration of sublimated redemption.
  18. Ciro Guerra's excesses in arthouse symmetry tend to arrive in the service of a just and angry correctivism.
  19. It remains more committed to printing the uplifting legend of its title character than in actually examining the human beings underneath.
  20. The reworking of a tired horror trope into a transformed feminist symbol stands out as an impressive act of genre revisionism.
  21. Throughout, Pavan Moondi and Brian Robertson purposely indulge Hollywood formula only to subvert it.
  22. It neither glorifies nor castigates pot usage, letting consumers speak for themselves without the intrusion of an omnipresent voice.
  23. The film adheres to the dictionary definition of a classical genre without ever attempting to subvert it.
  24. Travis Zariwny detachedly regards the material as shtick to be waded through with quotation marks.
  25. The film is frequently guilty of the same obsolescence it accuses the characters of embodying.
  26. Standoff isn’t quite inspired, but it coasts on unexpected modesty of professionalism.
  27. The film is a thinly dramatized series of arguments against, then ultimately in favor of the medication of bipolar disorder.
  28. Tobias Lindholm stages his claims through clunky dramaturgical scenarios, with the seams exposed at every turn.
  29. The script labors to give the film a strong sense of place, but strange lapses confirm a sense that the city isn't a character here.

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