For 10,414 reviews, this publication has graded:
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51% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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46% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 2.6 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 62
| Highest review score: | Badlands | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | A Life Less Ordinary |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 5,571 out of 10414
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Mixed: 3,736 out of 10414
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Negative: 1,107 out of 10414
10414
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Ignatiy Vishnevetsky
Despite Wang’s habit of casual stylistic quotation (riffing on Ingmar Bergman’s compressed close-ups here, Wes Anderson’s whip pans there), A Bread Factory remains stubbornly its own thing.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 25, 2018
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Reviewed by
Ignatiy Vishnevetsky
For Wang, the strictly personal is the building block for everything else—whether it’s the well-worn groove of a long-term relationship or a Chekhov pastiche performed by a woman wearing a samovar as a hat.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 25, 2018
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Reviewed by
Ignatiy Vishnevetsky
The problem with this sort of Hungry-Man dinner theater is that it needs a true believer or at least a testosterone junkie behind the camera to rise above the lowest-common-denominator appeal of watching men yell at and rescue each other. Donovan Marsh is neither; his direction is perfunctory, unable to evoke even something as basic as the claustrophobia of a submarine’s interior. Perhaps he’s just following orders.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 25, 2018
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Katie Rife
Just when you think you’ve seen it all, along comes Border. A thematically rich and deeply strange blend of romantic drama, magical-realist fantasy, and crime thriller, Sweden’s official entry to this year’s Academy Awards splits the difference between the highbrow cringe comedy of "Toni Erdmann" and the lowbrow cop fantasy "Bright."- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 24, 2018
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Vikram Murthi
The original "Shirkers" might be a product of a bygone era of pop culture, but its new nonfiction form scans as a second attempt to reach those fellow weirdos who are desperate to make something real, established structures be damned.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 24, 2018
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Jesse Hassenger
In the best scenes, the filmmakers make the case that Queen’s musical decisions grew out of the musicians’ restless inability to fit in with either pop conventional wisdom or, sometimes, each other. The rest of the movie fits in all too well.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 23, 2018
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Mike D'Angelo
Much of what Wiseman captures here is so resolutely ordinary that it threatens to cross the line into outright dull.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 23, 2018
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A.A. Dowd
Certainly, viewers may feel a kind of seasickness, their stomachs doing somersaults during this supremely discomfiting movie.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 22, 2018
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Jesse Hassenger
Johnny English Strikes Again might actually come closer to success than its predecessors, if only by default. At very least, it proceeds unencumbered by excess story machinations.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 22, 2018
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Caroline Siede
Unfortunately, Shannon isn’t the film’s star, and What They Had loses momentum whenever he’s not on screen.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 17, 2018
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Katie Rife
Maintaining an audience’s sympathy for a character through their most fumbling, frustrating lows requires compassion and clarity of purpose, both of which McCarthy amply demonstrates here. It’s a career-best performance, the kind of nuanced turn we all suspected she could deliver, if only someone would give her a chance to do it.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 17, 2018
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Allison Shoemaker
The master stroke of The Price Of Everything is that it asks the viewer, in Cappellazzo’s words, to see the intricacies of the art world and the way those two seemingly oppositional forces — the financial side and the creative side — are inextricably intertwined.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 17, 2018
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Reviewed by
Ignatiy Vishnevetsky
The cast is mostly made up of film and TV comedy pros, all of whom seem to be having a good time overacting Hosking’s Bizarro World dialogue.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 17, 2018
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Lawrence Garcia
From moment to moment, the direction is unimpeachably competent, but its surface elegance masks a core hollowness.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 17, 2018
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Mike D'Angelo
This latest film isn’t entirely successful — Pizzolatto’s book stubbornly resists first-time screenwriter Jim Hammett’s efforts to reshape its narrative for the screen — but it confirms Laurent as a significant talent behind the lens, particularly adept at building queasy tension.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 16, 2018
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Ignatiy Vishnevetsky
It might not be the kind of movie that anyone needs to see twice, but its variations on the classic building blocks of suspense implicate our own guesswork in interesting ways.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 16, 2018
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Jesse Hassenger
What Hill hasn’t yet mastered, despite considerable skill as a first-time filmmaker, is how to impose a narrative more quietly, especially in finding the right ending. He also doesn’t seem to fully trust his sense of humor.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 15, 2018
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A.A. Dowd
For as much as Van Groeningen may have pulled from both of his mirrored source materials, for as deep as Chalamet digs into his character’s skirmish with own urges, Beautiful Boy holds us outside of his struggle.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 11, 2018
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Ignatiy Vishnevetsky
Through a combination of caricature and psychological portrait, subtle touches and howls of impotent, uniformed rage, [Cummings’] film offers a memorable depiction of a man ill-equipped to deal with or direct his feelings—probably not all that different from the rest of us.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 11, 2018
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Vikram Murthi
It’s just a shame that the edge-of-your-seat suspense negates The Kindergarten Teacher’s preceding psychological power.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 10, 2018
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A.A. Dowd
With 22 July, Greengrass pushes up against the boundaries of respectful representation, traipsing queasily close to outright exploitation with his reenactment of the 2011 Norway terrorist attacks, which claimed the lives of 77 people, many of them children.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 10, 2018
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Reviewed by
Ignatiy Vishnevetsky
Though Sandel relies less on exasperating, rubbery digital effects than Rob Letterman, the DreamWorks Animation vet who helmed the original, his direction of the monsters and mayhem is never more than workmanlike, racing joylessly through a shaky plot that barely holds attention.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 10, 2018
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Reviewed by
Mike D'Angelo
Despite its undercurrent of anger at Wilde’s mistreatment by fashionable English society, the film feels like a vanity production—and Everett clearly fears that it may be perceived that way, as he opts to bill himself fifth (non-alphabetically) in the cast, despite appearing in almost every shot. Such false modesty ill suits a flamboyant legend like Oscar Wilde, even in a perverse account of his slow fade to black.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 9, 2018
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Katie Rife
Revelations completes Hellraiser’s transformation from an original and refreshingly adult concept into teens indiscriminately screwing and dying, hollowing out the soul of the franchise while functioning as a loose remake of the original.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 9, 2018
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Jesse Hassenger
In The Oath, his first feature as a writer-director, comic actor Ike Barinholtz zeroes in on an approach somewhere between caustic stage comedy and "The Purge." The movie isn’t always up to the delicacy of that ambitious balancing act, but even the attempt is engaging.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 9, 2018
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A.A. Dowd
They run a gamut of conventions, proving just how much landscape—geographic and narrative—the Western really covers. What they all convey, some more comically than others, is how short and pitiless life could be in this heavily mythologized era.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 4, 2018
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Katie Rife
Sheila’s humanity is a necessary counterbalance to Strickland’s intentionally stiff, formal style, which manifests in the film’s efficient pacing and crisp sound editing as well as its stylized performances and lavish production design.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 4, 2018
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Katie Rife
Burning actually justifies its running time by slowly building paranoid atmosphere before an explosive, hauntingly ambiguous finale.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 4, 2018
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A.A. Dowd
Knife + Heart sometimes feels as rough around the edges and inelegantly plotted as its pornos-within-the-movie, but maybe that’s just conceptual consistency.- The A.V. Club
- Posted May 19, 2018
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Katie Rife
It uses a thin plot touching on the classic Hong Kong action themes of brotherhood and loyalty as an excuse to string together a series of gonzo action set-pieces so ingeniously bloody that one could conceivably classify the film as horror.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Oct 4, 2018
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