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. If the film sometimes feels too small in comparison to its predecessors, it manages to make the most of its quietest moments.
  2. The film largely plays its scenario with a straight and gooey face, coaxing its actors to indulge their worst tendencies.
  3. Director Ty Roberts’s film is unable to realize that its subject matter is that of a horror story.
  4. The documentary shines a piercing light on the sorts of people that our governments would too often rather forget.
  5. That the film adheres, upon close scrutiny, to the rough shape of a classical romantic tragedy—a seemingly intuitively understandable genre—only confirms the extreme degree to which Schanalec’s idiosyncratic manner of storytelling skirts and frustrates expectations.
  6. The film’s repetitive and lifeless dialogue robs otherwise charismatic performers of distinguishing characteristics.
  7. The documentary illuminates how art and artists live together in a symbiotic existence, each giving as well as taking.
  8. As the film becomes increasingly reliant on predictable narrative tropes, it evolves into the very thing it set out to parody.
  9. Happy Death Day 2U pushes further than even matters of life and death into a realm in which stakes don’t even really apply anymore, concerned as it is not with how we live our best lives, but with how we can be the best possible versions of ourselves.
  10. Money corrupts, Cristina Gallego and Ciro Guerra’s would say. Easy money corrupts completely.
  11. The film knots several strands of new-millennium despair into something that very nearly approximates greatness in its first half.
  12. While it pays lip service to the fascinating theatrical norms of pro wrestling, the film ends up expending most of its energy on its search for barriers that Paige can break through.
    • 75 Metascore
    • 50 Critic Score
    The film doesn’t apply the necessary touch and precision to balance its sleek, chromed parts into a revving whole.
  13. The documentary brings to the foreground a fascinating and, moreover, beautiful culture lurking in the background of other stories.
  14. This gender-swapped update of What Women Want doesn’t pass up the opportunity to undercut itself whenever it gets the chance.
  15. The filmmakers fail to realize that the darkest horror here doesn’t lie in the triumph of true evil, but in seeing how far a regular family will go to protect itself before doing the right and necessary thing, however hard or horrible it might be.
  16. Steven Soderbergh’s film considers modern media as a vehicle for revising white patriarchal capitalism.
  17. It’s tough to root for the pair when neither of them experiences genuine hardship. In the end, all dramatic conflict here is sunny and soporific.
  18. Jonas Åkerlund’s breezy approach to this material not only cheapens the music, but also has the effect of downplaying the severity of the scene’s truly unsavory politics.
  19. The documentary is uniquely attuned to the fickle whims of history, politics, and biographical circumstance.
  20. Battle Angel is by some distance the most entertaining of the recent crop of would-be franchise starters, exciting on its own merits while leaving just enough of its world tantalizingly unexplored to actually fuel our interest in wanting to see where its characters go from here.
  21. It’s the way the film’s humor specifically subverts its genre’s expected emotional valences that makes it so effective.
  22. With its silvery sheen and sexy lure of celebrity actors being naughty, the film recalls the decadent, self-consciously chic art it parodies.
  23. The Mexico of this film is merely a place of abject lawlessness, whose hellishness exists only to stoke our fascination for how the protagonist grows as a person by drawing on her inner strength.
  24. The film has a raw immediacy that can only be achieved when most cinematic excesses have been eliminated.
  25. Unlike My Life in Pink, Daughter of Mine sidesteps all ambiguity, as the film reveals everything about its characters straight away, leaving little room for unexpected complexities about their predicaments to develop.
  26. If the film is mildly disappointing, it’s because it doesn’t go far enough. It confidently prepares us for a frenzy that never quite materializes.
  27. The deconstruction of corporatized play culture gets run through the sequelizer machine, with predictably acrid results.
  28. The grim Australian biker drama Outlaws is little more than an endless stream of brooding, yelling, and “badass” posturing broken up by grisly violence and gratuitous sex scenes.
  29. Nuri Bilge Ceylan’s film takes a leisurely approach to narrative that’s both intensely dialogical and transfixingly visual.

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