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. | |
|---|---|---|
| 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
Pat Brown
Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck’s film prioritizes the sentimental over the true, the tidy moral over the messy reality.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 24, 2019
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Reviewed by
Chuck Bowen
The film’s horniness and amorality, a slap in the face of fanatically cautious contemporary mores, might’ve been more shocking if it weren’t placed so firmly in quotation marks.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 24, 2019
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Reviewed by
Jake Cole
The film’s twist ending exists only to retroactively justify writer-director Steven Knight’s feeble stylistic choices.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 24, 2019
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Reviewed by
Chuck Bowen
The Brazilian animated feature offers relief from the impersonal assault of contemporary pop culture.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 20, 2019
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Reviewed by
Pat Brown
The film doesn’t bring to light otherwise unexplored aspects of the experience or memory of persecution and genocide.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 20, 2019
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Reviewed by
Sam C. Mac
It’s through exercising a certain kind of madness that the film connects even at its most disjointed.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 20, 2019
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Reviewed by
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Reviewed by
Derek Smith
Joe Cornish’s film is vigilant in its positivity and hope for the future at nearly every turn.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 20, 2019
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich
M. Night Ghyamalan’s film is aimed at an audience from whom he cringingly craves fealty.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 17, 2019
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Reviewed by
Derek Smith
Writer-director Joe Chappelle’s An Acceptable Loss is a B movie with a morally urgent message.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 16, 2019
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Reviewed by
Pat Brown
Ana Brun’s performance as Chela anchors our attention where Marcelo Martinessi’s understated visuals might otherwise lose it.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 15, 2019
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Chris Barsanti
Chris Smith’s documentary about the 2017 Fyre Festival implosion resists the urge to revel in cheap social media schadenfreude.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 15, 2019
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Reviewed by
Derek Smith
The film uses the grieving process to lend the proceedings a sense of unearned emotional gravitas.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 15, 2019
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Reviewed by
Chuck Bowen
Manolo Caro's film uses its characters as rigid markers of cowardice, lust, and entitlement.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 10, 2019
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Reviewed by
Jake Cole
The climax’s bizarre left turns culminate in a final image so bewildering that were the film not so relentlessly dour it might have clarified Replicas as an absurdist comedy.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 10, 2019
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Reviewed by
Derek Smith
The film becomes overrun by an increasingly preachy and tiresome series of life lessons about race, class, and love.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 9, 2019
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Reviewed by
Pat Brown
Touch Me Not‘s commingling of narrator and narrative, character and actor, fiction and documentary suggests that cinema itself is capable of being a manner of touch, the site of a nebulous and freeing encounter between people.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 7, 2019
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Reviewed by
Keith Watson
The words of Henry James have never sounded as leaden and preposterous as they do in Julien Landais’s The Aspern Papers.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 7, 2019
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Reviewed by
Keith Watson
The Venerable W. is at times downright dowdy, but there’s an ever-present sense of rage and despair burbling beneath its placid surface.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Jan 1, 2019
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Reviewed by
Henry Stewart
The Vanishing seems truly troubled by its action violence in a way that many similar thrillers aren’t.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Dec 30, 2018
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Reviewed by
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Reviewed by
Derek Smith
A blatantly telegraphed mid-film twist helps turn Second Act into one of the strangest and most misguided rom-coms of any year.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Dec 20, 2018
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Reviewed by
Greg Cwik
The whole endeavor feels like a disservice to Mark Hogancamp’s story, in no small part because no one in the film feels human, even outside doll form.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Dec 19, 2018
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Reviewed by
Pat Brown
Bumblebee exudes some of the tediousness of a reformed sinner who decries hedonism, trying hard to convince us that it now believes in something.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Dec 18, 2018
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Reviewed by
Chuck Bowen
Vice is as noisy as the media landscape that writer-director Adam McKay holds in contempt.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Dec 17, 2018
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Reviewed by
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich
The filmmakers treat their material sternly and humorlessly, as if there's some great moral lesson to be imparted from Erin's inexhaustible blotto jerkiness.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Dec 17, 2018
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Reviewed by
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Reviewed by
Chris Barsanti
Many sections of Bird Box don’t hold up to a second’s scrutiny; the conceit’s silliness and convenient scare tactics make Shyamalan’s take on infectious-suicide horror seem downright subtle by comparison.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Dec 14, 2018
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Reviewed by
Carson Lund
The film finally ends up souring its perspective on responsibility with a hardened take on the limits of the American dream.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Dec 13, 2018
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Reviewed by
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Reviewed by
Chris Barsanti
After a while, it all starts to feel like a showreel for the film’s special-effects team than an honest effort to tell a story.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Dec 12, 2018
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Reviewed by
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Reviewed by
Derek Smith
For all of its slavish devotion to Mary Poppins, the sequel doesn't even seem to recognize its greatest attribute: its star.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Dec 12, 2018
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Reviewed by
Pat Brown
Often divertingly colorful and busy to a fault, the film seems to dare us to mock the world of comics' most risible superhero.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Dec 11, 2018
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Reviewed by
Pat Brown
When the devastating quake finally strikes, it creates a truly suspenseful scenario of vertiginous falls and last-minute saves.- Slant Magazine
- Posted Dec 10, 2018
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Reviewed by