Slant Magazine's Scores

For 7,768 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:
7768 movie reviews
  1. If the film is any indication, Jared and Jerusha Hess remain committed to clotting up the screen with ostensibly charming "eccentricity."
  2. One wonders how receptive young audiences should be to a film that puts its storytelling secondary to its message-making.
  3. As in Nathan Silver's previous work, what could have been a rote retread of Pasolini's Teorema blossoms into a study of factional identity and power dynamics.
  4. What pushes the film, at long last, into the icy river, is its very design, as a monument to slick, mercenary grandeur.
  5. At the center of the film is a conservative lesson that asks us to unquestioningly abide by society's capitalistic impulses.
  6. The premise, of a terrible event unleavened by the easy out of someone being at fault, should be prime fodder for Wim Wenders's brand of poetic regret.
  7. A Spike Lee joint in the urgent sociopolitical register of Radio Raheem's boombox—a call to arms that's also a call to disarm.
  8. A brain-dead slog whose bankrupt aesthetics ironically soil the very legacy it purports to aggrandize.
  9. The film's annoying glibness is neatly summarized by the line: "In life, going downhill is an uphill job."
  10. Director Fredrik Gertten's Bikes vs. Cars is passionate but contradictory, a frustrating combination for a documentary that utilizes admittedly interesting data as a pitch to wean our car-crazed world off excessive driving.
  11. The film doesn't quite earn Jones's performance, but it engenders considerable goodwill for allowing him to give it.
  12. The film disappoints in its refusal to allow for deeper articulations of racism beyond, well, visible and verbal displays of racism.
  13. The film is less a revisionist take on the circumstances of John Gotti's 1992 indictment than a tedious love child of Bonnie and Clyde and Goodfellas.
  14. A buoyant tribute, even if the pedigree of the project implies something more paradigm-shifting.
  15. As ever, Paolo Sorrentino ironically cuts the legs out from under his protagonists' wistfulness with grotesquerie.
  16. Throughout, director Justin Kurzel's stagey pretensions clash with each of his aesthetic choices.
  17. Theeb insists on the importance of preserving cultural difference against the totalizing vision of racial and religious hegemony.
  18. Victor Frankenstein is the movie version of a carnival sideshow, all smoke and mirrors, presenting a litany of human freaks and animal monstrosities to distract from the superficiality of its psychological and intellectual concerns.
  19. The main character is a collection of insecurities that have been calculatedly assembled so as to teach children the usual lessons about bravery, loyalty, and self-sufficiency.
  20. One of the Ryan Coogler film's greatest traits is its reticence, its refusal to say 10 words when two will do, or to say one word when silence says it all.
  21. It grounds us so effectively in Joplin's emotional realm as to partially rekindle the social transcendence that her voice must have represented for its owner.
  22. In so clearly viewing Lili through the lens of 21st-century political correctness, the film only blunts the resolve of her struggle.
  23. Billy Ray unfurls the parallel time structure with the same flat, procedural monotony applied by Juan José Campanella to the original film.
  24. Billy Ray unfurls the parallel time structure with the same flat, procedural monotony applied by Juan José Campanella to the original film.
  25. It aims to foster a spirit of giddy anarchy in order to tie a ribbon around its shambolic script and rickety pacing.
  26. Given how Legend's script is so bereft of insight into its characters' psyches, perhaps there's only so much even an actor of Tom Hardy's stature can do.
  27. It careens from carnage to group therapy so wildly that the action never gets to build and the conversations just repeat themselves.
  28. It doesn't seem to aspire to much more than proving that there are nice, talented people behind the New Yorker's walls.
  29. A blunt satire of the dehumanization inherent in social media that also gets off on said detachment.
  30. The visible numbness and empty stares of the doc's three subjects painfully evoke years of being gripped by the war on drugs.

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