St. Louis Post-Dispatch's Scores

  • Movies
  • TV
For 1,847 reviews, this publication has graded:
  • 66% higher than the average critic
  • 2% same as the average critic
  • 32% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 3.6 points higher than other critics. (0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 68
Highest review score: 100 Asteroid City
Lowest review score: 0 The Divergent Series: Insurgent
Score distribution:
1847 movie reviews
  1. What the film has going for it is a terrific performance from Weisz, who renders Alice at once sympathetic and enigmatic.
  2. It’s hard to imagine an actor more appropriate to portray Sully than Hanks, who brings to the role a bedrock decency and soulful introspection. And Eckhart is perfect as the droll, easygoing Skiles.
  3. Isn’t a knockout of a film, but it’s light on its feet and throws a lot of good punches.
  4. The year’s most exhilarating film.
  5. Working from a screenplay that he co-wrote with Stephen Chin and Jason Smilovic, Phillips delivers a film that raises provocative questions about the economic imperatives of war while masquerading as a buddy comedy.
  6. If what you seek from a samurai film is the friction between communal duty and personal honor, join the orderly queue to see 13 Assassins. But if what you seek is action, spend the talky first hour at a sushi bar before barging into the theater for the bloody good finale.
  7. It’s not necessary to be a classical-music buff to be charmed by this thoroughly entertaining film that never hits a false note.
    • 66 Metascore
    • 75 Critic Score
    Sausage Party is cute and cheeky and harmless. But it is decidedly not for kids.
  8. Suicide Squad had the potential to be as hilariously irreverent as “Deadpool,” a surprise box-office hit about a similarly sociopathic hero. Instead, it’s just another film that relies on special effects to distract the audience from a story that’s overblown and underwhelming.
  9. As a documentary, “Eat That Question” is kind of raggedy. But a more polished film might not have been in keeping with Zappa’s anarchic spirit.
  10. In his best performance since “The Social Network,” Eisenberg is perfectly cast as the neurotic Bobby. But the film truly belongs to Stewart, who brings to Vonnie a haunting luminousness.
    • 60 Metascore
    • 75 Critic Score
    Bad Moms starts with an edge but eventually turns sentimental. The most entertaining and honest moments zero in on motherhood and friendship — and busting the rules of the PTA.
  11. Working from a screenplay that he co-wrote with Christopher Rouse, director Paul Greengrass has come up with a post-Snowden film that delivers nonstop thrills.
  12. Written and directed by Matt Ross — who is perhaps best known for his role as Alby on the HBO series “Big Love” — the film raises questions not only about what it means to be a responsible parent but also about what constitutes a meaningful life.
  13. Pine brings a measured but engaging heroism to Kirk. Quinto is perfect as the logical but charismatic Spock. Urban lends the proceedings a much appreciated dose of humor. And even with his famously expressive face obscured by makeup, Elba elevates Krall to something more than a cardboard villain.
  14. This reboot starring some of today’s finest comic actors — male or female — is a wonderfully hilarious and boldly imaginative creation in its own right.
  15. Director Brad Furman (“The Lincoln Lawyer”) does a serviceable job of keeping the narrative elements in play but has trouble making us care.
  16. Looking for a feel-good movie? Fortunately, this film doesn’t qualify.
  17. If The BFG is unlikely to become a cultural phenomenon of the magnitude of “E.T.,” it’s a film that casts a unique and often mesmerizing spell. But it’s also a bit too talky, particularly in the early going, and Spielberg lets numerous opportunities for humor slip by.
  18. If you’ve been looking for a film that puts a daringly surreal spin on “Cast Away,” you’ll be in paradise.
  19. Cenedella may never become a household name, but Art Bastard argues persuasively that fame is overrated.
  20. Aspires to greatness but fumbles badly.
  21. Genius, like most films about the literary life, has trouble dramatizing what’s involved and making us care.
  22. One of Pixar’s most charming achievements.
  23. Working from a screenplay by Ed Solomon, director Jon M. Chu is more craftsman than poet, but the charismatic ensemble cast engages in the trickery with style.
  24. A sophisticated comedy about New Yorkers who might easily be mistaken for characters in a Woody Allen movie.
  25. If you’re open to embracing a film that declines to pander to expectations, you should definitely make a date with The Lobster.
  26. It’s an old-fashioned tale of an individual overcoming the odds — only in this case, that individual happens to be a horse.
    • 51 Metascore
    • 75 Critic Score
    Clarke and Claflin both turn in acutely human performances, rounding out their characters and sharing palpable chemistry. At the risk of sounding very British, it’s all lovely.
  27. A scene involving wolves upset by Seal’s singing is worth the price of admission all by itself.

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