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 | |
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| 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
Tasha Robinson
Could almost be a Christopher Guest bridging project--it's essentially Guest's The Big Picture for TV instead of film, though it's structured in the low-key, rambling, observational manner of Guest's later ensemble comedies.- The A.V. Club
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Noel Murray
Develops its story slowly and carefully, nearly always opting for the plausible over the sensational.- The A.V. Club
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Nathan Rabin
The Reaping is Bible camp, pure and simple. And for bad-movie lovers, it's manna from heaven.- The A.V. Club
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- The A.V. Club
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Reviewed by
Scott Tobias
The lesson here is that dogs don't need "attitude." They're loveable enough on their own.- The A.V. Club
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Noel Murray
In the end, Black Book may be one of the most fun movies ever made about how people basically suck.- The A.V. Club
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Scott Tobias
Some of the jokes are about skating, others are about whatever random thing happened to pop into Ferrell's head with the cameras rolling, and just about all of it is funny.- The A.V. Club
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Scott Tobias
The Lookout's thriller elements could stand to be more surprising, but they're ultimately in service of a better understanding of the characters. Usually, it's the other way around.- The A.V. Club
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Scott Tobias
Meet The Robinsons takes a large step toward making 3D a sustainable format, the CinemaScope of tomorrow.- The A.V. Club
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Noel Murray
With its soapy earnestness and use of suffering souls as set dressing, After The Wedding could be the cinematic equivalent of a Coldplay song. And while that isn't necessarily a slam, it isn't a recommendation either.- The A.V. Club
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Noel Murray
A fragile little movie, occasionally ridiculous, but with M. Night Shyamalan's "Lady In The Water," Giamatti proved that he can make even the weirdest material believable.- The A.V. Club
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Scott Tobias
Fuqua keeps the action moving efficiently, but he doesn't know when to stop piling it on, and eventually, Wahlberg's army of one becomes more a comic-book vigilante than a righteously disgruntled patriot.- The A.V. Club
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Scott Tobias
Assembles the most motley group of incompetents this side of a "Police Academy" movie, yet somehow misses the laughs. But humorlessness is probably the least of the film's problems, lagging behind amateur-night performances from the no-name cast, a homogenous visual palette (and from a music-video director, no less!), and lots of pointless sadism.- The A.V. Club
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Nathan Rabin
If Mimzy serves as a gateway drug that gets "Shrek" fans into classic science fiction, then it'll have performed an invaluable cultural service.- The A.V. Club
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Keith Phipps
There are formulaic moments aplenty in Pride, the "inspired by a true story" tale of Philadelphia swimming coach Jim Ellis, but in its first scenes, at least, it deserves some credit for doing the unexpected.- The A.V. Club
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Scott Tobias
At its heart a simple story about friendship and loss, carried over with enough genuine feeling to excuse its uncertain footing.- The A.V. Club
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Tasha Robinson
Only those already predisposed to love a TMNT movie that at least LOOKS edgy are likely to care.- The A.V. Club
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Reviewed by
Tasha Robinson
The film makes funny use of music (particularly Lionel Richie's "Hello") and excellent use of Malkovich, but it literally only has one idea in its head, and when that idea runs dry, it's as lost as Conway is without his plethora of Kubrick masks.- The A.V. Club
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Nathan Rabin
Pearce is usually dependable, but here, he's utterly unconvincing as a slick phony, and the film peddles a bogus bill of goods in kind.- The A.V. Club
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Noel Murray
It's a sports film unlike any other, and a political film that makes the personal profound.- The A.V. Club
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Noel Murray
A little too neat, and self-consciously vague at the end. But it's fascinating to observe and try to interpret François' mysterious smile as she eyes her boss.- The A.V. Club
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Nathan Rabin
By recounting Abbas' ordeal as an endless inarticulate monologue, The Prisoner reduces it to a dull anecdote--timely and relevant, perhaps, but an anecdote all the same.- The A.V. Club
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Scott Tobias
Again coaxing the worst imaginable performances out of his actors (see also: Cary Elwes and Danny Glover in "Saw"), Wan casts charisma-free unknown Ryan Kwanten as a young married man whose small-town past catches up to him.- The A.V. Club
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Scott Tobias
Though hampered at times by Rock's limitations as an actor and a director, I Think I Love My Wife stays faithful to the spirit of Rohmer's original, grappling honestly with the uncertainties of settling down and the temptations that lurk outside even the most stable marriages.- The A.V. Club
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Scott Tobias
Had it been easier to comprehend at the beginning, there's no telling how bad Premonition might have been.- The A.V. Club
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Noel Murray
There's a kind of dry tastefulness about The Wind That Shakes The Barley's historical recreations, even when Loach is staging rapes and executions.- The A.V. Club
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Noel Murray
Still, no matter how Grebin and Nigro are selling it, American Cannibal isn't about the horrors of reality TV. It's about guys like Roberts and Ripley, who convince themselves that ANY job in show business would be preferable to waiting tables.- The A.V. Club
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Tasha Robinson
Part of the fascination of the Thermopylae story is that it really happened, and it helped define real heroism. There's nothing remotely like reality to be had in this film.- The A.V. Club
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Scott Tobias
Most of all, The Host functions as a popcorn movie par excellence, loaded with the most familiar conventions, but shot through with such conviction and visual panache that even its clichés seem invigorating.- The A.V. Club
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Tasha Robinson
Hurt steals scenes with a brilliantly nuanced character, a man bitter enough to make every line delivered to his peers a challenge or an accusation, yet experienced enough to present those challenges with an ingratiating politesse that only cracks in extremis.- The A.V. Club
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