For 6,554 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 | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | Melania |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 2,481 out of 6554
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Mixed: 3,754 out of 6554
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Negative: 319 out of 6554
6554
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Nigel M Smith
It’s unpredictable and a bit of a mess. And that’s what makes Maggie’s Plan such a delight.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 17, 2015
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Reviewed by
Henry Barnes
[Jay Roach] wants the film to be fun, while the story is serious. It’s a good idea and an admirable intention. But it does suffer the odd wobble.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 16, 2015
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Reviewed by
Catherine Shoard
As high-class cheese goes, Truth slips down fine. It’s a noisy, one-note rally for the converted that gets your pulse racing even if you’re rolling your eyes.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 16, 2015
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Mike McCahill
This tardy rehash of fairytale tropes finds sometime genre innovator M Night Shyamalan clinging in abject desperation to the found-footage movement’s careworn coattails.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 16, 2015
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- Critic Score
Rams is as curiously captivating as the bleak landscape in which the two protagonists site themselves.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 16, 2015
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Reviewed by
Henry Barnes
Wheatley has made High Rise his story, instead of Ballard’s. That’s fine – but, unfortunately, it’s a less interesting take.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 16, 2015
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Reviewed by
Catherine Shoard
Guggenheim largely dodges lodging her story within a greater political context; a choice, but a shame, for when he does, the movie gains tension.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 16, 2015
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Reviewed by
Nigel M Smith
A film that should feel urgent and of its time, but instead is rendered cliched and dull by Sollet’s amateurish handling of the material.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 16, 2015
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Catherine Shoard
It’s a fluid and nippy telling of a tale that still seems strangely urgent.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 15, 2015
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Benjamin Lee
The film is a tonally uneven, genre-shifting hurricane of a thing, wildly careering off the rails and smashing into everything in its view.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 15, 2015
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Catherine Shoard
Saturation point when it comes to quirkily dysfunctional families in over-soundtracked dramedies was reached long ago.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 15, 2015
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Peter Bradshaw
This film is making a wheezing, spluttering sound: the sound of a profitable YA franchise running out of steam.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 15, 2015
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Benjamin Lee
The script is sensitively handled and it’s unarguable that showcasing stories such as this is an important way of educating the masses about a difficult process. But while it’s hard to hate, it’s even harder to like.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 15, 2015
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Reviewed by
Benjamin Lee
Eye in the Sky aims to thrill and covertly manages to inform simultaneously.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 12, 2015
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Andrew Pulver
Equals doesn’t really work as either a plausible attempt at rendering some sort of future society, nor as a really convincing thwarted-love story.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 12, 2015
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Peter Bradshaw
As with I Am Love, Guadagnino has put together something utterly distinctive here, a cocktail of intense emotions, transcendent surroundings and unexpected detours. A real pleasure.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 12, 2015
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Catherine Shoard
Anomalisa is a movie with wit to burn (look out for the Sarah Brightman line and the meeting room pit) and enough incidental touches that the total achievement feels immense.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 12, 2015
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Benjamin Lee
The film is in need of an edge that Peter Straughan’s screenplay fails to deliver.... Yet Sandra Bullock seems blissfully unaware of the film’s faults and delivers a performance that expertly plays on her strengths.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 12, 2015
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Nigel M Smith
Pixels is a casually sexist, awkwardly structured, bro-centric comedy, starring some of Sandler’s buddies. The only difference this time is that state-of-the-art CGI has been added to the mix.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 11, 2015
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Reviewed by
Nigel M Smith
Director Steven Riley’s film is a fascinating collage which profoundly probes its subject’s psyche.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 11, 2015
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Nigel M Smith
Despite the strong performances, it’s Schipper’s single-shot conceit - and the fact that he and his team pulled it off with aplomb - that makes Victoria such a bracing triumph. While the entire enterprise is inarguably a stunt, Victoria manages to overwhelm in ways that few films do.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 11, 2015
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Henry Barnes
A wide-eyed tribute to human ingenuity that packs enough snark to pull itself out of the black hole of earnestness, even if its fuel runs out partway through.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 11, 2015
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Reviewed by
Henry Barnes
Where to Invade Next is a romantic film, equally affecting and annoying in its simplicity.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 11, 2015
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Benjamin Lee
A frustratingly aimless soul-search that veers uncomfortably between quirk and melancholy.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 11, 2015
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Jordan Hoffman
This is a case of good acting saving a movie from its own poor choices.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 11, 2015
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Peter Bradshaw
It is superlatively well performed and well directed with a real narrative grip.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 8, 2015
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Reviewed by
Catherine Shoard
Director Sarah Gavron does well to galvanize her story with a degree of urgency: the result of swift, assured camerawork and a brilliantly understated performance by Carey Mulligan.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 6, 2015
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Reviewed by
Benjamin Lee
Sorkin’s heavily heightened sense of drama works best when the stakes are equally aligned but, despite the film constantly informing you of just how incredibly important everything all is, it’s disappointingly difficult to truly care about what’s taking place.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 6, 2015
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Peter Bradshaw
There are some plausibility issues in Room, but this is a disturbing and absorbing film, shrewdly acted, particularly by Larson. It lets the audience in; it does not just let the nightmare stun them into submission. You make a real emotional engagement.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 5, 2015
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Phil Hoad
Annaud’s film can’t help itself galloping off in allegorical bursts barely under his control, and intriguingly off-course from the kind of bold messages of national conciliation officially sanctioned Chinese films tend to convey.- The Guardian
- Posted Sep 5, 2015
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