For 10,412 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 2.5 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: 5,570 out of 10412
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Mixed: 3,735 out of 10412
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Negative: 1,107 out of 10412
10412
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
A.A. Dowd
The Equalizer 2, which reunites Washington with director Antoine Fuqua and screenwriter Richard Wenk, puts fewer disposable goons in McCall’s crosshairs, trading the original’s rote killing-up-the-ranks revenge campaign for some half-assed approximation of a murder mystery. Call it a lateral move for this unfortunate franchise.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jul 18, 2018
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Mike D'Angelo
The film’s fourth murder involves the slow asphyxiation of the viewer’s patience.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jul 17, 2018
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Jesse Hassenger
Diggs, Casal, and Estrada are all walking on a high wire here, requiring a balance so delicate that it may not be visible to some of the audience until they have to decide for themselves whether Blindspotting’s leap-of-faith climax works.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jul 16, 2018
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Mike D'Angelo
Ultimately, this is a movie to appreciate in isolated bits and pieces.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jul 15, 2018
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Katie Rife
In the end, though, it’s the very concepts that make The Night Eats The World sound insufferably pretentious on paper — namely, its high-minded ideas and emphasis on small moments — that tip the film toward intriguing rather than, well, zombifying.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jul 11, 2018
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Ignatiy Vishnevetsky
It feels like a dumbed-down, poor man’s "Die Hard," despite costing a lot more to make.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jul 11, 2018
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A.A. Dowd
he performances are strong, and the situation itself presumably carries a harrowing veracity, but an ordeal is about all the movie offers. Shaking your head over and over again is the only suitable reaction.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jun 6, 2018
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Jesse Hassenger
It’s pleasantly baffling to discover that not only is Hotel Transylvania 3 easily the best film of the series, but it also feels more at home thematically on a cruise ship than its predecessors did at a haunted Transylvanian castle.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jul 9, 2018
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Ignatiy Vishnevetsky
The characters are stubborn as ever, but in lieu of the characteristic spectacular downfall, The Legacy Of A Whitetail Deer Hunter offers only the pokiest and most rote of plots.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jul 6, 2018
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Ignatiy Vishnevetsky
Whitney herself remains a figure of some mystery, her rise and fall refracting the hopes and anxieties of the people around her, with a tragic echo in the death of her daughter, Bobbi Kristina Brown, in 2015.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jul 4, 2018
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A.A. Dowd
Wringing genre thrills from headline atrocities, The First Purge is at once crass and provocative in its timeliness—in Blumhouse’s toolshed, it’s the sledgehammer to Get Out’s scalpel.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jul 4, 2018
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Jesse Hassenger
Sorry To Bother You is often wildly funny, and if its broad arc is familiar stuff about a down-on-his-luck everyman experiencing success but at what cost, at least the plot specifics are unpredictable by dint of Riley’s imagination.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jul 2, 2018
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Katie Rife
Despite the sensitivity of its storytelling, and Chastain’s career-defining passion for playing headstrong, independent women like Mrs. Weldon, it also never really comes to life.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jun 28, 2018
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A.A. Dowd
Look, for a movie based on a soda campaign, Uncle Drew isn’t that bad. It’s got some solid comic alternates.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jun 27, 2018
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Ignatiy Vishnevetsky
For better and worse, Ant-Man And The Wasp knows it’s small potatoes.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jun 27, 2018
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Mike D'Angelo
Throw in expert use of a picturesque yet oppressive location and Dark River almost manages to overcome narrative inertia via sheer force of will. It’s a beautifully crafted, moodily evocative film that’s missing just one spark of true inspiration.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jun 26, 2018
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Mike D'Angelo
So bizarre is this story that its most mundane aspects take on a certain profundity. Even when Three Identical Strangers falters, it fascinates, and that’s a claim very few documentaries can make.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jun 26, 2018
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Ignatiy Vishnevetsky
The occasionally hackneyed dialogue (one would hardly believe Sheridan also wrote the terrific Hell Or High Water) and anonymously copied direction comes across as a crude approximation of the original Sicario’s sinister narrative, with a similarly stripped-down mise-en-scène, but no sense of purpose.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jun 25, 2018
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Katie Rife
Flavorless and unexciting, thanks to an execution as formulaic as a well-worn copy of "The Joy Of Cooking."- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jun 21, 2018
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Gwen Ihnat
Elvis achieved a skyrocketing success previously unseen in pop culture, and then became his own victim by letting it get away from him. As Jarecki proves with this extended, sometimes bumpy, but still worthy metaphor, it’s the same with the U.S. We’ve been coasting along for so many years, taking democracy for granted, that the entire structure of the nation is now in peril.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jun 20, 2018
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- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jun 19, 2018
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Reviewed by
Jesse Hassenger
It’s supposed to be evocative, but in many scenes the characters just look dim and overly backlit, to the point of obscuring the actors’ expressiveness. There might be another metaphor in there somewhere.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jun 19, 2018
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A.A. Dowd
It’s a small, offbeat movie, punctuated by bursts of terrible violence but also infused with a winning strain of deadpan humor that’s not too far removed from Jim Jarmusch.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jun 18, 2018
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Mike D'Angelo
Scorsese goes to the trouble of making his antiheroes charismatic and exciting. Gotti, by contrast, inadvertently argues that John Gotti and his namesake son are too dull to be evil. It’s DrabFellas.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jun 15, 2018
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A.A. Dowd
Directed by Alexandre Moors, who made the D.C. sniper movie Blue Caprice, The Yellow Birds might have used its nonlinear structure to confront us with how war reshapes these young men, putting who they were and who they become into conversation. But the performances don’t capture that psychological change.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jun 15, 2018
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A.A. Dowd
There’s something mildly depressing about viewing petty gamesmanship as the engine that fuels and sustains male friendship. But funny is funny, and Tag gets by, appropriately enough, on the personalities of its stars.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jun 14, 2018
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Katie Rife
When the new SuperFly does show flashes of street-smart wit...its energy is infectious. Mostly, though, it needs to take its hero’s advice and take things up a notch.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jun 12, 2018
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Reviewed by
A.A. Dowd
Early and often, Incredibles 2 makes the compelling case that animation is the ideal medium for stories based on, or at least inspired by, comic book fantasias, where reality tends to bend and twist as elastically as Elastigirl.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jun 12, 2018
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Katie Rife
In the end, Nancy is a bit too dogmatic in its refusal to provide easy answers, its emotional impact dissipating like dust in a sunbeam with every understated non-revelation.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jun 7, 2018
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Ignatiy Vishnevetsky
We’ve seen it all before in movies and video games, but the packaging is slick and hard to resist; any sci-fi crime movie with moody camerawork by Chung Chung-hoon, a Cliff Martinez score, a cast this strange, and an original end-credits ballad by Father John Misty (also a cast member) is begging to be watched, regardless of actual content or the messiness of the action scenes.- The A.V. Club
- Posted Jun 6, 2018
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