For 6,656 reviews, this publication has graded:
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41% higher than the average critic
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5% same as the average critic
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54% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 2.1 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 63
| Highest review score: | London Road | |
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| Lowest review score: | Melania |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 2,521 out of 6656
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Mixed: 3,814 out of 6656
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Negative: 321 out of 6656
6656
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Jonathan Romney
There's a lot wrong with The Brave, with a pace that may be intended to evoke desert languor, but is often plain leaden. Yet The Brave is oddly haunting, if only for its eccentricity. [13 May 1997, p.2]- The Guardian
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Reviewed by
Luke Buckmaster
It’s a wonderfully spritzy dialogue-driven work, full of oomph and chutzpah.- The Guardian
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
Crash is still creepy, still menacing, still hypnotic, and it is still dedicated, in its freaky way, to the ideal of eroticism, to just drifting from erotic scene to erotic scene without much need for story. But Crash is no longer so contemporary. [4K re-release]- The Guardian
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
It is a sombre and painful drama, enacted with reserve. There are no closeups, and it is fully one hour into the running time before we get even a medium shot of the female lead’s face. Even then there are shadows.- The Guardian
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
Never was a film so candidly designed to sell products, but it has an archival interest.- The Guardian
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
It is shot with fluency and energy; the dreamy chapter-heading inserts are striking, the final image is powerful, and of course Watson herself is a triumph.- The Guardian
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
DiCaprio’s performance is excellent; his Romeo is transformed and astonished by the real thing; he has play-acted at love until now, and he hasn’t realised how vulnerable it would make him. Danes looks more mature than he does (though in fact six years younger) and she is such a smart, stylish player, even at this age. The Luhrmann R+J is a tonic and a delight.- The Guardian
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
Trainspotting is supercharged with sulphurous humour and brutal recklessness.- The Guardian
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
A really absorbing and powerfully acted drama, guided with a distinctive kind of Zen wisdom by Sayles.- The Guardian
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
It is a dizzying, headspinning film, replete with violence, alienation and tech-porn. I confess I find it too opaque to make the kind of investment that would qualify me as a real fan. But it should be seen.- The Guardian
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- The Guardian
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
The “fascist” staging could have been hackneyed, but Loncraine carries it off superbly as the showcase for action-thriller noir.- The Guardian
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
As for Williams himself, his wild-man routine is only in evidence in his opening scenes; otherwise he dials it down, perhaps sensing that the way to upstage the loony creatures is to be relatively rational. There is something touchingly innocent in his performance.- The Guardian
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
It is strident, yes, and naive, too perhaps; but lyrical and passionate and visually dazzling.- The Guardian
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
From the current vantage point, this film, not yet entirely dominated by digital effects, looks like a 1960s-vintage second world war film.- The Guardian
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
Maybe it’s the last great mainstream exploitation picture, a film which owns and flaunts its crassness; a bi-curious catfight version of All About Eve or Pretty Woman.- The Guardian
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
Never was a title more misleading. This is sophisticated pleasure.- The Guardian
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A somewhat double-edged Arthurian romance. There's a sharp side, with Sean Connery the noblest of kings, Julia Ormond an impressive Guinevere, and some genuinely epic imagery; on the blunt side, the tragedy is Camelot-via-Tinseltown: Richard Gere's Lancelot is far from convincing and the armour is just too shiny. [31 Dec 2005, p.49]- The Guardian
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
Perhaps it’s quaint, but it’s also watchable, and it is the kind of sci-fi that is genuinely audacious, trying to envisage what the future will be like – and often succeeding.- The Guardian
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Bill Condon's Candyman II: Farewell To The Flesh is a woefully inadequate sequel with straight-to-video written all over it. [30 Nov 1995, p.T9]- The Guardian
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
Shallow Grave is persistently cynical and uningratiating, a tale of nasty, greedy, stupid people who don’t realise that the finders-keepers rule doesn’t apply to a suitcase full of cash whose criminal owners will not merely want it back but want to create the specific circumstances in which Juliet, David and Alex will be unable to testify against them in a court of law.- The Guardian
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
Not a romcom, not a romantic drama, but just … a romance, a brief encounter on a train without heartache, a strange and wonderful moment-by-moment miracle that never seems cloying or absurd.- The Guardian
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The 1994 film of the play by Alan Bennett is a model of historical accuracy and psychological tact. A triumph.- The Guardian
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It is a film of much humanity and very far from smart European pap. But the external brilliance of its making does at times subvert its inner workings, as if its manufacture and its meaning were not quite in perfect harmony.- The Guardian
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
Interview With the Vampire is still horribly exciting, shocking and funny.- The Guardian
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
In 1994, all the talk was of former video store clerk Tarantino's indifference to traditional culture. That patronised his sophisticated cinephilia, and in fact, twenty years on, the writerly influences of Edward Bunker, Elmore Leonard, and Jim Thompson seem very prominent. Don DeLillo began the '90s by warning that the U.S. is the only country in the world with funny violence. Maybe Pulp Fiction was the kind of thing he had in mind. Unmissable.- The Guardian
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Often, the film-maker seems to be on a journey without a destination, perhaps without a script. Occasionally, brilliantly, he goes entirely off the rails.- The Guardian
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
It’s a tremendous film that was ahead of its time on LGBT issues and, in some ways, is ahead of ours.- The Guardian
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Reviewed by
Peter Bradshaw
Forrest Gump is Hollywood film-making at its most corn-fed, sucrose-enriched and calorific; you’ll need a sweet tooth for it.- The Guardian
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Altogether, this is a dim affair, lacking Hollywood's usual, gooey efforts to convince one of the benefits of family values. [04 Aug 1994, p.T7]- The Guardian