Slate's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 2,130 reviews, this publication has graded:
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44% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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53% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 1 point lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 64
| Highest review score: | One Battle After Another | |
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| Lowest review score: | 15 Minutes |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 1,157 out of 2130
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Mixed: 747 out of 2130
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Negative: 226 out of 2130
2130
movie
reviews
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Reviewed by
Dana Stevens
It’s such a welcome sensation to walk out of a movie feeling properly walloped, reminded of the potential power of the big screen to seduce us, entertain us, and break our hearts.- Slate
- Posted Oct 3, 2018
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David Edelstein
It's like an Ingmar Bergman film with the loss of religious faith replaced with a sort of socioeconomic nebulousness.- Slate
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Dana Stevens
The chance to see the 83-year-old Hopkins in a role that forces him to confront the tragic fact of human mortality, and his own eventual demise, with such rigor, curiosity, and vulnerability would have been reason enough to send audiences to see The Father, even if we weren’t also witnessing the birth of a major film director in Florian Zeller.- Slate
- Posted Feb 25, 2021
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Inkoo Kang
The fissure between father and daughter approaches like a snake. It sneaks up on you, then leaves you in paralyzed shock.- Slate
- Posted Jun 28, 2018
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Dana Stevens
Up is Pixar's most ambitious attempt yet to take animation to higher (and deeper) places than it's been before, and Giacchino's sprightly music keeps the whole thing, impossibly, aloft.- Slate
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Dana Stevens
Poor Things is a feminist recasting of the Frankenstein myth, a gorgeously designed setting for the jewel that is Emma Stone’s lead performance, and not just my favorite Lanthimos movie I’ve seen yet but maybe the only one of his I’ve really liked.- Slate
- Posted Dec 7, 2023
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Black Panther could have been just another Marvel romp—a fun but ultimately disposable entry in the studio’s catalogue. But Ryan Coogler and company had the power, and perhaps the responsibility, to do much more. And they did.- Slate
- Posted Feb 15, 2018
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- Slate
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Reviewed by
Dana Stevens
Stripped to its bones, Faces is the elegantly simple story of two equal and opposite betrayals.- Slate
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David Edelstein
A glorious, visceral mess -- The film is, by most criteria, an ungainly piece of storytelling. Yet it sweeps you up and hurtles you along like water from an exploded dike.- Slate
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Inkoo Kang
In the movies, love is cheap. It’s everywhere and nowhere, too often reduced to a formula or a reward. Beale Street knows better. It restores to love, romantic and familial, its sanctity—an ambition that makes it one of the most distinctive love stories in recent memory.- Slate
- Posted Dec 5, 2018
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Dana Stevens
This is no tale told by an idiot — on the contrary, it’s a funny, fast-moving parable about fame and ambition, laid out for us with care and craft by a gifted filmmaker, a long-missed actor, and a world-class cinematographer. But I’m left with the suspicion the whole thing may signify — well, if not nothing, at least a good deal less than the filmmakers would have us believe.- Slate
- Posted Oct 16, 2014
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Dana Stevens
One of the things I loved about Can You Ever Forgive Me?—aside from the radiantly perfect casting of McCarthy and Grant, a Withnail and I–esque pair of drinking buddies, except this time they’re both asocial, hilarious Withnails—was Heller’s quiet confidence in establishing the milieu where all this typing and lying took place.- Slate
- Posted Oct 25, 2018
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Sam Adams
This isn’t just a hand-drawn animated feature. It’s a movie that wants you to know it was made by hand.- Slate
- Posted Nov 17, 2020
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Even viewed on a small screen at home, I found it rapturous. I can only imagine what it’s like in a theater. All of which makes it exactly the kind of documentary that fulfills Eno’s dictum, the sort that after you encounter it, makes you want to go out and create art yourself.- Slate
- Posted Oct 18, 2021
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Reviewed by
David Edelstein
Mulholland Drive isn't a "puzzle" like "Memento," in which the pieces (sort of) fit together. There are some pieces here that will never fit -- except maybe in Lynch's unconscious. And yet -- and yet -- this distinctly Hollywood nightmare makes a deeper kind of sense.- Slate
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Sam Adams
For a massive summer tentpole, Fallout’s pleasures are gratifyingly straightforward, direct without being dumbed-down. It’s a meat-and-potatoes banquet, one that doesn’t need to be interesting to be satisfying.- Slate
- Posted Jul 12, 2018
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David Edelstein
Makes for quite an emotional roller-coaster ride. You don't know whether to celebrate or mock, to laugh or weep.- Slate
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Dana Stevens
The movie is at its best when Moodysson... lets his three rebellious heroines simply exist and interact as the overgrown children the actresses still are, collapsing in laughter during a cafeteria food fight or negotiating their first stiff flirtations with a like-minded group of punk-rock-loving boys.- Slate
- Posted Dec 15, 2014
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Sam Adams
Despite its promise to find fact in fiction, the movie’s made-up characters offer little in the way of ecstatic truths, but there’s a moment when Stefan van Dorp says he realized that the way to keep Dylan from clamming up was to never ask him a direct question. Rolling Thunder Revue leaves it to us to ask the questions, or just sit back and enjoy the show.- Slate
- Posted Jun 14, 2019
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Dana Stevens
Fern’s need for constant movement, McDormand implies in a performance of extraordinary depth and ambiguity, is both a search for something and an escape from something else, and not even she seems completely sure what either something is.- Slate
- Posted Dec 2, 2020
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David Edelstein
An absolutely magical fusion of deadpan Ealing comedy and Gothic horror.- Slate
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Dana Stevens
Lincoln does sometimes get a little sappy around the edges. Though his project here is clearly one of conscious self-restraint, Spielberg can't resist the occasional opportunity for patriotic tear-jerking, usually signaled by a swell of John Williams' symphonic score. But in between, there are long stretches that are as quiet, contemplative, and austere as anything Spielberg has ever done.- Slate
- Posted Jan 1, 2013
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Dana Stevens
The way that Redford’s character — who for all his namelessness and near-wordlessness emerges as a distinct character, a calm, pragmatic, curious man with a dry sense of humor — struggles with that ultimate question is the beating heart of All is Lost, which somewhere in its second hour goes from being a good movie to being a great one.- Slate
- Posted Oct 20, 2013
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Dana Stevens
As it moves toward an ambiguous and haunting finale, The Banshees of Inisherin has the fanciful yet gruesome quality of a folk tale or fairytale, a mood enhanced by Carter Burwell’s harp-and-flute-heavy score and Ben Davis’ painterly widescreen cinematography.- Slate
- Posted Oct 21, 2022
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Inkoo Kang
Hereditary only begins as a Greek tragedy. After a few too many twists and turns, it gets warped into a horror soap — an unnerving but ultimately numbing pile of calamities.- Slate
- Posted Jun 7, 2018
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David Edelstein
The whole movie, of course, is a setting for its jewel, Catalina Sandino Moreno as Maria: With her clear, round eyes, long dark hair, and radiant transparency, she brings to mind two of the loveliest ingénues of the last quarter-century -- Meg Tilly and Jennifer Connelly.- Slate
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David Edelstein
Brokeback Mountain could use a little more of it--by which I mean more sweat and other bodily fluids. Ang Lee's formalism is so extreme that it's often laughable, and the sex is depicted as a holy union: Gay love has never been so sacred.- Slate
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Sam Adams
After a solid decade of Marvel movies modeled on the same template, it’s a thrill to watch one that’s allowed to find its own rhythms, to play with form and content without contorting the plot to fit in a minor character who might become important five movies from now.- Slate
- Posted Dec 6, 2018
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