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. Tom Harper’s film empathetically probes the growing pains of self-improvement.
  2. Martin Scorsese culls various images together to offer a startlingly intense vision of America as place that, to paraphrase Bob Dylan, essentially believes in nothing, following one demoralizing crisis after another.
  3. Ultimately, the only truly retro thing about this weirdly reactionary potboiler is its politics.
  4. The film seamlessly interweaves fun escapades and earnest emotions, but it lacks the visual power of its predecessor.
  5. The film wastes its charismatic leads in a parade of wacky CG creations whose occasional novelty is drowned out by its incessance.
  6. Sienna Miller lends credibility to a character that in other hands might seem like a caricature of the white underclass.
  7. We never spend enough time with the characters to believe the urgency, and lushness, of their cravings.
  8. The film elides politics in order to earnestly consider whether love is necessarily an act of possession.
  9. The documentary proves that the history and mythology of American jazz is as intoxicating as the music itself.
  10. The film sends the curious message that that any time an abusive parent spends with a child is time well spent.
  11. The film lacks for the more lacerating, freely parodic energy of The Larry Sanders Show and 30 Rock.
  12. A shrill and insipid spectacle of cross-cultural communion, but don’t call it stupid, as that would suggest that it doesn’t know exactly what it’s doing.
  13. The film is an all-too-fitting whimper of a conclusion to a franchise that never remotely fulfilled its potential.
  14. There’s a surprising sense of communal exchange between the male strippers and their fans in Gene Graham’s documentary.
  15. There are hints that the film will scale itself to the broader historical context of this era, but the screenplay never elaborates on the ethnic strife the undergirds the Cambodian genocide.
  16. The film uses Santiago Genovés’s experiment to scrutinize memory and capture the feeling of life under a very curious sort of dictatorship.
  17. The film succeeds as a stingingly personal missive aimed squarely at Brazil’s right-wing president.
  18. The film simultaneously announces itself as an expressive portrait of a city, an endearing ode to male comradery, a leisurely paced hangout flick, an absurdist comedy, and a melancholic reflection on gentrification and urban black experience.
  19. John DeLorean has a biography that could have been reverse engineered from a Hollywood epic about the rise and fall of an auto-industry mogul.
  20. Throughout, the too-brief depictions of Luciano Pavarotti’s flaws are conspicuously shrouded in a veil of hagiography.
  21. The experience of watching Dominga Sotomayor’s film is not unlike entering a stranger’s dream without an anchor.
  22. Despite a few undeniably intense and lurid moments, the film lacks the pulsating fury of a significant genre work.
  23. Ma
    In the end, the filmmakers settle for stigmatizing victimhood, abusing Sue Ann almost as much as her former tormentors.
  24. The film finds Dónal Foreman exploring the suggestive gaps that exist between his own biography and that of his father.
  25. The film is frustrating in the end for reaffirming the traditional blockbuster’s allegiance to human perseverance.
  26. Beautiful loneliness, as the film suggestively reveals, is a texture that Frank knows all too well.
    • 40 Metascore
    • 50 Critic Score
    The film goes through its motions too quickly for its imagery to convey the irrepressible force of provocation.
  27. The only thing that keeps Parasite just slightly below the tier of Bong’s best work, namely The Host and his underrated and similarly themed 2000 debut film, Barking Dogs Never Bite, is the overstuffed pile-up of incident that occurs toward the end.
  28. The film is Quentin Tarantino’s magnum opus—a sweeping statement on an entire generation of American popular culture and an almost expressionistic rendering of the counterculture forming at its margins, gradually growing in influence.
  29. It's an R-rated teen comedy that proves that you can center girls’ experiences without sacrificing grossness, and that you can be gross without being too mean.

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