For 7,293 reviews, this publication has graded:
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48% higher than the average critic
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3% same as the average critic
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49% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 3 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 62
| Highest review score: | The Red Turtle | |
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| Lowest review score: | The Mod Squad |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 4,350 out of 7293
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Mixed: 1,827 out of 7293
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Negative: 1,116 out of 7293
7293
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Liam Lacey
Mixing Chaplinesque delicacy with the architectural grandeur of a Stanley Kubrick film, director Andrew Stanton recycles film history and makes something fresh and accessible from it without pandering to a young audience.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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Reviewed by
Rick Groen
This is a blockbuster busting out of the block; this is a Hollywood staple served up on a European platter; this is summertime fare with a wintry verve.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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The Last Mistress proves that Breillat has found something in the luscious language of the 19th century that makes sense to us today.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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Reviewed by
Liam Lacey
Mixes broad slapstick and off-hand one-liners in a sometimes surprisingly funny mixture.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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Reviewed by
Rick Groen
Sure, this is marginal, but it's precisely in the margins that the movie excels.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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Liam Lacey
The arc of Nazneen's character, from drudge to feminist heroine, is predictably saintly. Chanu is a far more intriguingly human figure, the redeemed fool.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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Reviewed by
Rick Groen
Being risibly bad, The Happening is at least worth a laugh. Exactly one laugh, by my reckoning, and completely unintended but no less full-throated for that.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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Reviewed by
Liam Lacey
Playing characters familiar to the fans, we have William Hurt as a blustering general, Tim Blake Nelson as a kooky scientist and Tim Roth as an evil soldier who morphs into a monster. All of them seem to be directing themselves.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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Rick Groen
Mock-heroic yet still lyrical, faux-mythic but honest too, uniquely and absurdly and often hilariously Canadian, My Winnipeg is like no documentary you've ever seen.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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Rick Groen
All this is as fascinating as it is humbling, even when Herzog ventures a little too far down eccentricity's back alley.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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Stephen Cole
The film lacks the comic ingenuity of the best in CGI critter movies. It's not fun-for-the-whole-family, like "Shrek." Still, it's a howl and amazement for anyone under 12.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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Rick Groen
This picture is to comedy what carpet bombing is to aerial warfare: The onslaught is so relentless that occasional direct hits on the funny bone are a statistical guarantee.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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Reviewed by
Rick Groen
This is a fairly well-made picture that's just been fairly well-made too many times before, a knock-off of a thousand other knock-offs.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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As an epic action movie, Mongol is satisfying enough. Think "Braveheart." Think "300." Just don't think too much.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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Reviewed by
Liam Lacey
The film walks the fine line between exploitation and empathy to cast a chilly, memorable spell.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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Rick Groen
Bad summer films, full of furious hype and signifying nothing, are hardly exceptional these days, nor is the sound they typically make: the dull scrape of a culture hitting rock bottom. Yet this one seems uniquely bad; this one is a threshold-breaker with a different sound, the crack of rock-bottom giving way to a whole deeper layer of magma.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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Reviewed by
Jennie Punter
Both Speedman and Tyler deliver solid, nuanced performances as a couple caught at the most fragile moment in their relationship.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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Reviewed by
Liam Lacey
History repeats itself, the first time as tragedy, the second time as farce, Karl Marx said. That might explain the possibility of even making a movie such as Stuck.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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Liam Lacey
One of those international co-productions full of good intentions and blandly polished results.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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Reviewed by
Rick Groen
Conducting another symphony in action, Spielberg seems a bit bored – always competent but never inspired – and who can really blame him? He tries to fire his interest by swiping a few tropes from the fifties pop bin, not-so-sly allusions to teen-trash movies and those McCarthy-era horror flicks. After that, there's really nowhere to go but inwards, which is when Spielberg starts looting Spielberg.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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Conclusions and answers are perhaps luxuries that Sharma's film can't afford.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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Reviewed by
Rick Groen
The wee mousie is fun, all right, yet like the occasionally ragged editing, the fun just gets haphazardly wedged in.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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Liam Lacey
At its most interesting when it shows the lives of women and children prisoners, the film has the feel of a movie-of-the-week cliché when it returns to Julia's improbable crime.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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Rick Groen
There's something here for everyone to dislike - the whole clan can have fun making fun of this thing.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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Though frantic from the get-go, A Previous Engagement rarely finds its feet. Devoid of the fine balance of grace and chaos necessary to any screen farce, the proceedings are slapdash, repetitious and badly overextended.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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If Leguizamo imports a hint of pathos into his performance, Waterston adds a dollop of menace to hers, delivering another of Ross's attacks on what separates girls from men. In this world, women are their own worst enemy.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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Reviewed by
Rick Groen
What Happens in Vegas should damn well have stayed in Vegas.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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Reviewed by
Rick Groen
Yes, the Empire may be crumbling, and the natives getting restless, but it's all happening with such lyrical loveliness - even the corpses look good. Consequently, when the rains in Before the Rains finally arrive, there's nothing to cleanse, no real dirt to wash away - not with history already so neatly packaged and polished to a dull shine.- The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
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