For 7,767 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. | |
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| Lowest review score: | Jojo Rabbit |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 4,344 out of 7767
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Mixed: 1,490 out of 7767
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Negative: 1,933 out of 7767
7767
movie
reviews
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- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Ed Gonzalez
Ghost World is a beautiful evocation of the ghostly nature of love, loss, and ultimately memory itself.- Slant Magazine
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This time capsule of bohemian New York distorts its representation of the city for reasons more loving than lazy.- Slant Magazine
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Reviewed by
Simon Abrams
Bong's debut is not all it could be, but any film that has a line as hilariously warped as "Jesus, that thing's hairy" deserves some recognition.- Slant Magazine
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- Slant Magazine
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Reviewed by
Ed Gonzalez
The film’s brilliance emanates equally from its structure (the story is delicately bookended by two cultural rituals: a wedding and a funeral), the acuteness of its gaze, and Yang’s acknowledgement of life as a series of alternately humdrum and catastrophic occurrences, like a flower that blooms in the summer and wilts in the fall; he hopes you will notice it, because seeing is what validates its unique extraordinariness.- Slant Magazine
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The documentary enables its viewers to confront poverty on a human level by presenting its subjects, for the most part, like anyone else, living lives, despite their socioeconomic difference, relatable to our own.- Slant Magazine
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Ed Gonzalez
Call it what you will (documentary, mockumentary, self-fulfilling prophecy), Close-Up is still the definitive film-on-film commentary.- Slant Magazine
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Jake Cole
Satoshi Kon’s Perfect Blue is a prescient vision of a modern world defined by media oversaturation and social media validation.- Slant Magazine
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It's difficult to discern precisely where this all went wrong, and even more difficult to speculate about possible improvements.- Slant Magazine
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Reviewed by
Carson Lund
Flowers of Shanghai operates on the whole much like Yoshihiro’s music, filling your senses like a thick haze, holding you rapt without petitioning for your attention.- Slant Magazine
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Jaime N. Christley
It’s a weird experience that Kitano is offering to movie audiences: We thrill to the violent, heroic exploits that leave many a pierced eyeball, many a severed limb, many a bullet-riddled corpse, but we find uplift in his celebration of community, music, dance, light, color, and companionship.- Slant Magazine
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Reviewed by
Ed Gonzalez
Haneke's admonishments are disturbing only in the sense that they're never self-critical, and while watching one of his films, there's always a sense that he thinks he's above his characters, his audience, and scrutiny.- Slant Magazine
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There are few films that genuinely get better with each successive viewing. The Big Lebowski is one of them. This is owed not only to its near-infinite quotability, which itself grows with time, given how much of the film’s humor is self-referential, but also because its tangled plot requires a substantial amount of unraveling before it can be fully understood and appreciated.- Slant Magazine
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Reviewed by
Eric Henderson
The title alone of Kirby Dick’s alleged documentary Sick: The Life and Death of Bob Flanagan, Supermasochist practically screams: This is not your standard biopic!- Slant Magazine
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Bill Weber
A sibling drama of unsentimental urban grit and swooning lyricism, Nénette and Boni meditates on the myriad permutations of love and sensuality, from familial longings to food fetishes.- Slant Magazine
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Reviewed by
Ed Gonzalez
Underground is a unique blend of lowbrow slapstick and sophisticated war commentary, earning it well-deserved comparisons to Ernst Lubitsch’s brilliant To Be and Not To Be (possibly the funniest movie ever made) and the films of Abbott and Costello.- Slant Magazine
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The post-modern compulsions on display here may bring movies together, but they also keep people apart. Irma Vep is a picture of missed connections and tenuous relationships, most touchingly in the scenes between Cheung and Zoe (Nathalie Richard), her smitten costume designer.- Slant Magazine
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Reviewed by
Clayton Dillard
It's a film of such multitudinous interests and storytelling pursuits that its unfolding replicates the ecstasy of newfound romance.- Slant Magazine
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Eric Henderson
An extraordinarily imaginative director, Tran fashions Cyclo into a sensualist nightmare.- Slant Magazine
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Chris Cabin
The director, who intermittently shows up on Steven’s television as Stan and Sam Sweet, a hybrid of O.J. Simpson and the Menendez brothers, shoots all of this with verve and fluidity to spare, though he succeeds most commendably in framing and editing his star’s physical antics.- Slant Magazine
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Zach Campbell
Unlike most action films, Mission: Impossible's distinct appeal operates not so much on suspense but on improbability.- Slant Magazine
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- Slant Magazine
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Reviewed by
Eric Henderson
In the theater, whenever Mike, Crow or Tom Servo flub a punchline or resort to a fart joke, you almost want to lean forward and shush them.- Slant Magazine
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Chris Cabin
Though certainly not a travesty of any sort, James and the Giant Peach does strike me as the weakest thus far of Dahl’s to-screen adaptations and this mostly has to do with the problems Selick encounters with mixing the world of imagination with the real world.- Slant Magazine
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Reviewed by
Jake Cole
The biblical root of the [Dekalog] may suggest didacticism on its face, but whatever morals are advanced are decidedly ambivalent.- Slant Magazine
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Reviewed by
Eric Henderson
Fargo, more than any of the Coens’ other work, is a study in contrast, namely in the sense that it’s made by two people who were clearly at one time insiders, but who have now taken the opportunity to see the Midwestern template from the outside. As such, every interaction in the film registers as a direct reflection of incongruous elements and repressed tensions.- Slant Magazine
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To Wong, love isn't something you can talk about; words are inadequate, empty, inevitably reductive. Love is something you see, sense, feel, and Chungking Express is one of Wong's purest evocations of its excitement and heartbreak.- Slant Magazine
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Anderson has a great deal of empathy for his charming band of fuck-ups, but the characters are thinly drawn, and Anderson's attempts to lend the story emotional weight, like giving Anthony a ludicrously one-dimensional love interest in South American housekeeper Inez (Lumi Cavazos), largely fall flat.- Slant Magazine
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Reviewed by
Chris Cabin
Takahata’s wondrous film is itself at constant interplay between the unsentimental realities of human progress (and expansion) and the unbound thoughts and creative perspectives that fantasy can entertain without necessarily being reduced to mere entertainment.- Slant Magazine
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Reviewed by
Ed Gonzalez
I Am Cuba is a cinephile’s wet dream, a collage of Herculean feats of technical wizardry that would be easy to dismiss if it wasn’t so humane.- Slant Magazine
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