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
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Eric Henderson
If it’s possible for a parable to be too simple to even qualify as a parable, the convincingly dim Snow White represents the dopey standard.- Slant Magazine
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Chuck Bowen
The Awful Truth is a perfect farce, devoid of any fat, in which Lucy and Jerry’s fantasies and schemes topple after one another like figurative dominoes.- Slant Magazine
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Jaime N. Christley
William Wellman’s 1937 version of this oft-told tale, of the rising starlet and the plummeting alcoholic has-been she refuses to cast aside, is usually regarded as the second-best of the lot, a few steps behind George Cukor’s 1954 remake, which has the unfair advantage of being one of the unimpeachable masterpieces of American film.- Slant Magazine
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Jake Cole
La Cava’s supple but cutting romantic comedy is one of the finest works of class-conscious comedy in Hollywood history.- Slant Magazine
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Chuck Bowen
Swing Time has some of Astaire and Rogers’s mightiest set pieces, which are intertwined to reflect their characters’ evolving relationship.- Slant Magazine
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Keith Watson
A surprisingly nuanced, if at times woefully dated, attempt to depict the complexities of what W.E.B. Du Bois famously identified as the problem of the 20th century: the color line.- Slant Magazine
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- Critic Score
When Dietrich sings the Friedrich Hollander/Leo Robin song “Awake In A Dream” to Cooper, her purring, off-key voice envelops us in a world of addictive movie fantasy, presided over by two very different masters locked in a tantalizing creative affair.- Slant Magazine
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Reviewed by
Nick Schager
Errol Flynn’s wicked, wicked charm helps keep this high seas adventure afloat.- Slant Magazine
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Chris Cabin
For Lloyd, Thalberg, and the writers, the point of the film was to tell a compelling story and, like the Bounty’s inebriated physician creating various tall tales to explain his wooden leg, facts and meanings ultimately just got in their way of crafting a great entertainment.- Slant Magazine
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Every musical number works, and the mistaken-identity plot is pleasant enough, even if there’s too much emphatic dithering from the supporting players toward the end.- Slant Magazine
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Reviewed by
Chuck Bowen
Like Rear Window later on, this charming, masterfully made British spy adventure from 1935 is a sigh of doubt, perhaps even a cry of anguish, disguised as a slick pop bauble.- Slant Magazine
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Joseph Jon Lanthier
Produced in England in 1934, The Man Who Knew Too Much was perhaps the first of Alfred Hitchcock’s films to openly attempt the autonomously cinematic, aggressively syntactic perfection with which he would later become synonymous.- Slant Magazine
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Chris Cabin
Even now, It Happened One Night carries the unmistakable tenor of a breakout hit, fueled by confidently zippy repartee and manic comic invention that almost none of the innumerable pretenders to the throne of romantic comedy can match.- Slant Magazine
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Ed Gonzalez
Today, hardcore fans have a way of trivializing the film’s moral significance, some calling it a mere “masterpiece of shock cinema.” This is to seriously underplay the film’s blistering humanity and the audacious aesthetic and philosophical lengths to which Browning goes to challenge the way we define beauty and abnormality.- Slant Magazine
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Chris Barsanti
There’s little denying the power of Cagney’s presence, from the first moment he’s on screen, he radiates such a brash Fenian cockiness you can imagine kids at the time flocking out of the theater and cocking their caps just like him. It’s a performance so perfect in its intensity that any other quibbles about the film ultimately recede into insignificance.- Slant Magazine
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- Slant Magazine
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- Critic Score
The first great peak in City Lights, the boxing scene, may be the most brilliant single comedy sequence of his career, not least because of the participation of Hank Mann, who plays the Tramp’s Bluto-like opponent in the ring, and Eddie Baker, who plays the referee.- Slant Magazine
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Reviewed by
Rob Humanick
Anti-war statements of the cinema in the subsequent 80 years have occasionally surpassed Lewis Milestone’s technically and artistically groundbreaking film, but few can match it for relentless despair or elemental fury—both on and off the battlefield.- Slant Magazine
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Chuck Bowen
While the film lacks the feverish, autocritical neuroses of Hitchcock’s mid- and late-period masterpieces, it often superbly plumbs notions of guilt and vulnerability, all the while cheekily satirizing Scotland Yard as a swayable arbiter of justice.- Slant Magazine
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Jake Cole
The blatant staging and rich emotional undercurrent of Vertov’s documentary footage presage Werner Herzog’s ecstatic truth mantra, and was a far cry from the utilitarian social-realist mandate that would soon drain Soviet cinema of this experimental edge.- Slant Magazine
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Eric Henderson
The Passion of Joan of Arc remains the moment that [Dreyer] guided his medium to new heights, and also crafted a work that would endure outside of any specific context.- Slant Magazine
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Jaime N. Christley
Seen today, Wings impresses mostly with its enormous scale—its appearance of having been made with obscene amounts of money.- Slant Magazine
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It is Chaplin’s great elegy to the lost art of music-hall pantomime and, for that matter, the soon-to-be lost art of silent-film comedy.- Slant Magazine
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Reviewed by
Jake Cole
A showcase for director Alfred Hitchcock’s intense study of the German Expressionist movement, The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog boasts artfully animated intertitles, plunging shadows, and oppressive camera angles.- Slant Magazine
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Reviewed by
Bill Weber
A horn of cinematic plenty continuously spills from Sunrise, not only in its production design and Murnau’s dreamlike images (rendered by a pair of American cinematographers in the German émigré’s first Hollywood film), but in an unswerving commitment to the varied tones of screenwriter Carl Mayer’s scenario.- Slant Magazine
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Jesse Cataldo
A persistently political work salvaged by its unforgettable grasp of motion.- Slant Magazine
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- Slant Magazine
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- Critic Score
By concentration exclusively on humanity’s negativism, Haneke proves to be as damagingly reductive of life’s possibilities as the emotional malaise he sets out to expose.- Slant Magazine
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich
A challenge inherent to a parable of this sort is that evil, being so seductive, can make good seem dull or prissy by comparison.- Slant Magazine
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Reviewed by
Ed Gonzalez
When It Melts is a film that lives and dies on the games that it plays with audiences.- Slant Magazine
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