The Hollywood Reporter's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 12,932 reviews, this publication has graded:
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51% higher than the average critic
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4% same as the average critic
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45% lower than the average critic
On average, this publication grades 2.7 points lower than other critics.
(0-100 point scale)
Average Movie review score: 62
| Highest review score: | The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers | |
|---|---|---|
| Lowest review score: | Dirty Love |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 6,624 out of 12932
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Mixed: 5,140 out of 12932
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Negative: 1,168 out of 12932
12932
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Caryn James
The film becomes more exhausting than tense. In the end, all that manipulation backfires. Unlike the best of its genre, the rote Five Feet Apart isn’t wrenching enough to jerk a single tear.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 14, 2019
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Reviewed by
Sheri Linden
[Gottsagen's] sensibility infuses the modern-day fable with an engaging forthrightness. But the unequivocal material often sticks close to the surface, and the film built around him, for all its physical sweep, can feel constricted by obviousness.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 13, 2019
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Reviewed by
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 13, 2019
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 12, 2019
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 12, 2019
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Reviewed by
Beandrea July
Despite the film's choppy and tonally dissonant storytelling ... Hawke’s performance quite literally carries the movie.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 12, 2019
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John DeFore
Costner and Harrelson both give fine performances, but when it's time for each to have his one allotted dramatic monologue, you can practically hear the movie clearing its throat: Shut up and listen while the man is speaking, folks.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 11, 2019
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John DeFore
Very funny whatever you think of its more old-fashioned notions, the picture will charm many viewers who can set implausibility aside for a while.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 10, 2019
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Jon Frosch
Bu I, admittedly, had a hard time getting on its woozy wavelength. But The Beach Bum is a work of undeniable commitment and craft — a gonzo picaresque, soaked with booze and filled with gyrating, jiggling flesh, that will play well to the not-negligible segment of the population where cannabis lovers and cinephiles overlap.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 9, 2019
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John DeFore
Enjoyably shaggy ... Both [Maron] and [Shelton] seem happy to play to their fans in this modest outing, worrying little about straying beyond their comfort zones.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 9, 2019
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John DeFore
Clearly the work of an ambitious writer/director who can see himself inheriting the mantle of Rod Serling ... it offers twists and ironies and false endings galore — along with more laughs than the comedian-turned-auteur dared to include in his debut film. ... It packs a punch.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 8, 2019
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Beandrea July
Juanita wants to be so many things: road movie, rom-com, a middle-aged woman’s coming-of-age tale, a verite window into Native American life in the West, a chef’s kitchen drama. But a script that needed a couple more drafts holds the film and its talented ensemble cast back.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 8, 2019
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Reviewed by
Jordan Mintzer
Well-shot and edited, with a script that keeps you guessing for a certain stretch of time, The Wind doesn’t quite sustain the tension through the final reel, resorting to eye-rolling scare tactics that go from serious to way too silly. Nonetheless, it’s refreshing to see such an original stab at this type of indie genre-bender, especially one told from a strictly female point of view.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 8, 2019
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Reviewed by
Frank Scheck
Giacomo Durzi's aptly titled documentary Ferrante Fever delivers a fan-friendly examination of the novelist and her works, and what it lacks in depth it more than makes up for with enthusiasm.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 8, 2019
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Reviewed by
Keith Uhlich
Two Plains & a Fancy is a cosmic joke forged on a Kickstarter budget. To paraphrase Jessica Rabbit, it made me laugh.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 7, 2019
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John DeFore
The result is very pleasing, even for moviegoers who don't pine for the Western's return, and represents a big step forward in the directing career of D'Onofrio.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 7, 2019
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Frank Scheck
Nonetheless, Island of the Hungry Ghosts casts an undeniably hypnotic spell. The documentary also serves as an important reminder that the United States is far from alone in mistreating its would-be immigrants.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 7, 2019
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John DeFore
Following a few years after "3 Geezers," Schumacher's reviled feature directing debut starring Simmons and Tim Allen, I'm Not Here represents a great leap forward, but still doesn't hold out much promise for future efforts that aren't built around performances by Simmons.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 6, 2019
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John DeFore
Whatever its impetus, the film is a warm bath of sensations that suffers little for any thematic haziness.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 6, 2019
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John DeFore
An English cousin to the earlier Jamaica-set films "The Harder They Come" and "Rockers" that is vastly superior in cinematic terms and just as valuable as a cultural document.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 6, 2019
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Reviewed by
Todd McCarthy
Despite the heavy dose of action and numerous tense situations, this Netflix offering has trouble staying in high gear once it gets there and the characterizations remain one dimensional — the men all speak exactly the same way.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 6, 2019
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 5, 2019
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Reviewed by
Todd McCarthy
The picture is not dull, exactly, just mundane, marked by unimaginative plotting, cut-rate villains, a bland visual style and a lack of elan in every department.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 5, 2019
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Reviewed by
Frank Scheck
A potentially taut thriller is marred by frequently laughable dialogue in Matthew Montgomery's debut feature.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 4, 2019
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Reviewed by
Elizabeth Kerr
The visuals prove crucial, as Qi makes for a weak central character.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 1, 2019
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Reviewed by
Boyd van Hoeij
This is a confidently shot and beautifully acted story that manages to transcend quite a few — if clearly not all — of the coming-of-age genre’s cliches by delving into how the Millennial generation experiences sexuality, ostracism and growing up and how they try to relate to their parents and peers.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 1, 2019
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Reviewed by
Frank Scheck
Perry doesn't even try to successfully integrate the story's comedic and dramatic elements, merely toggling back and forth between them as if in need of mood stabilizers.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Mar 1, 2019
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Reviewed by
Stephen Farber
It is Monaghan who keeps the movie on track, capturing Judy’s fire along with her sometimes aggravating tenacity. This honest actress is incapable of idealizing the characters she plays, and her modest, energetic performance makes Saint Judy — which might have been a dry textbook lesson — engaging and moving.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 28, 2019
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Reviewed by
John DeFore
Summarizing the great strides he made for journalism without ignoring his colorful flaws, Oren Rudavsky's Joseph Pulitzer: Voice of the People is an excellent primer, not just on the man but on the birth of the modern newspaper.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 28, 2019
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Reviewed by
Frank Scheck
There's a scattershot quality to the proceedings, presumably caused by the Canadian writer-director not living long enough to complete the doc. But the individual segments register powerfully and the underwater sequences are beautifully shot, providing ample compensation for the narrative choppiness.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 28, 2019
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