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 suggestion that Ted Hall’s actions were that of simple and pure heroism leaves Steve James’s documentary in tension with the more nuanced view that Hall seemed to have of himself.
  2. The films collected in A New Generation speak for themselves even when they don’t necessarily slot neatly into Mark Cousins’s curlicue thinking.
  3. For all its lush cinematography, capturing regional custom and dramatic panoramas alike, this is a film about repression, an inhibition that no amount of tequila can take away.
  4. Kevin Smith toys with death in Clerks III as a shortcut to bring emotion to a film that otherwise has no meaningful hook.
  5. With expert visual precision, the film flows into each new, wild narrative wrinkle as if it were the most logical thing in the world.
  6. After a while, you want to know what line of inquiry the film is pursuing—what greater paths it’s wandered to.
  7. Perhaps the fairest description of Stallone’s performance is that it’s only as one-note as the material, his stern tough-guy muttering and grimacing just about right for a screenplay that feels like it’s been plucked out of a dustbin left untouched since 1995.
  8. Funny Pages eschews the platitudes and carefully scripted character arcs that often cause coming-of-age tales to feel not only predictable but coated in a sheen of nostalgia.
  9. George Miller’s film is a passionate exploration of how image-making is inextricable from storytelling.
  10. Aly Muritiba’s film is always telling the viewer that death-ness and trans-ness bear the intimacy of Siamese sisters.
  11. Léonor Serraille’s Mother and Son is a lovely film about feminine strength that also refuses to glorify motherhood.
  12. Cleansed of all risk and personality, Spin Me Round subsides, as though with a sigh, into the reheated sauce of mediocrity.
  13. Alex Pritz’s documentary provides an affecting look at indigenous lives at the frontline of deforestation in the Amazon.
  14. William Brent Bell’s film proves that not every horror concept has the potential to be franchised.
  15. Day Shift’s first half is an unexpectedly focused, consistent pleasure, while the second sags under the weight of recycled set pieces.
  16. Scott Mann’s film succeeds by simply committing to and steadily ratcheting up the ludicrous awesomeness of its premise.
  17. Avoiding excessively heightened melodrama, Thirteen Lives doesn’t substitute it with much that one couldn’t already find in the copious amount of available coverage of the real-life incident.
  18. Writer-director Kiro Rosso’s sociological, pseudo-documentary film suggests a mosaic resolving out of innumerable shards.
  19. The film may not suffer from didacticism, but it’s at its most volcanic when it promises to blossom into a study of a generation’s financial difficulties.
  20. The Magician might have worked better if it could have sustained for its first several sequences a sense of genre confusion.
  21. Prey proves to be an apropos title, as the film is cowed by John McTiernan’s original Predator.
  22. David Leitch’s film pulls off the notable feat of making human beings out of cartoonishly violent psychopaths.
  23. The film relies on wide shots of distant mountains to stand in for a fruitful interrogation of what it means to occupy the open terrain of the U.S.
  24. Though its lack of emotional escalation could be read as intentional, Vengeance is ground to a repetitive halt by B.J. Novak’s preaching.
  25. Not Okay doesn’t make any points that, now over a decade into the ubiquity of social media, aren’t painfully obvious.
  26. The film’s fantastical meta-commentaries don’t completely cohere but have a winning go-for-it audaciousness.
  27. The film is a perfectly entertaining retelling of an offbeat tale, but it’s also superficial and borderline exploitative.
  28. The Gray Man is a noisy, flashy spectacle that piles clichés atop ludicrous plotting and sprinkles it all with half-funny quips, all in the hope of bulldozing the audience into submission.
  29. The film spins a soapy yet dramatically inert and often tone-deaf yarn about societal rejection and female empowerment in the wetlands of North Carolina.
  30. She Will can’t decide if its horror or comedy, nor does it strike the balance that would harmoniously hybridize them.

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