The Hollywood Reporter's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 12,919 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: 6,618 out of 12919
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Mixed: 5,135 out of 12919
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Negative: 1,166 out of 12919
12919
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Todd McCarthy
Director Rourke exhibits confidence and enthusiasm in dealing with such juicy material in the company of her two outstanding young actresses.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 15, 2018
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Justin Lowe
More reliant on atmosphere than action to build suspense, Duncan Skiles’ The Clovehitch Killer offers an intriguing perspective on the darker side of American values, but lacks the conviction to entirely expose the cultural contradictions that often enable compulsive murderers- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 15, 2018
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Keith Uhlich
Scene by scene you wish 55 Steps made you angrier than it does. Yet August's docile filmmaking acts as an emotional soporific, removing even the potential camp pleasures of Bonham Carter's histrionics.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 15, 2018
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Jordan Mintzer
Like in A Silent Voice, Yamada has a very keen eye for depicting adolescent malaise in visually evocative terms, and Liz and the Blue Bird could have benefited from even more flights of fancy than she allows for here.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 15, 2018
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John DeFore
Scurfield's directing debut is marred by all manner of clunkiness, from the embarrassing performance of Kellan Lutz (playing Lansky's chip-on-shoulder nephew, who winds up Aronoff's nemesis) to the tissue-thin montages that try to sell us on Aronoff's second career as a racer and maker of speedboats.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 15, 2018
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Frank Scheck
Attempting to be a cautionary tale for the Airbnb era, the pic squanders its potential with ham-fisted execution.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 15, 2018
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John DeFore
Suffice to say there are twists, physical perils and moments of self-sacrifice.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 15, 2018
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Boyd van Hoeij
Though not all the relationships are entirely clear — the thieves' relationship with Brandt, for example, remains somewhat vague — and there might be some minor issues that could become apparent on multiple viewings, this is first and foremost a rollicking and very imaginatively staged ride that’s enjoyable and different.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 15, 2018
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Frank Scheck
Family in Transition stands out both for the particularities inherent in its setting and the deeply sympathetic individuals at its center.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 15, 2018
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Michael Rechtshaffen
A turbo-charged satire that swaps out Gen X video arcade nostalgia for our current, all-consuming social-media-fueled obsession, the endlessly inventive Walt Disney Studios Animation follow-up impressively levels up with laugh-out-loud consistency.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 14, 2018
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Jon Frosch
While the film commits errors of taste and tact, and is generally all over the place from start to finish, those issues come off here as byproducts of a certain generosity — a sense that Anders wants to convey a full range of experience, including the messy stuff in between the usual formulaic notes and beats.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 14, 2018
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Todd McCarthy
This is a wannabe shocker with a clever premise that doesn't really get down and dirty or betray the base instincts of a born horror filmmaker.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 13, 2018
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John DeFore
Amazing Grace will not enter the pantheon of concert films — it's somewhat shapeless as a movie, and gives little sense of emotional insight into the performer. But it does contain moments of bliss: As astonishing as the sound of Franklin's singing in 1972 remains, watching her do it is even better.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 13, 2018
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Boyd van Hoeij
Despite its structural problems and mostly foreseeable storyline, the small, very human moments such as these ensure that Mario feels authentic and is, finally, moving.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 13, 2018
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John DeFore
Molina is captivating as Rothko pontificates, questions and explains, covering everything from Rembrandt and Nietzsche to Jackson Pollock and the convertible car that (as Rothko sees it) represented his descent into the tainted world of celebrity.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 12, 2018
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Stephen Dalton
Cam is a suspenseful mind-bender with plenty of timely feminist subtext. It takes viewers down some unexpected rabbit holes and commendably avoids pandering to male-gaze sex-thriller tropes, even if it ultimately fails to deliver on its grippingly weird early promise.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 12, 2018
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Frank Scheck
Although Postcards From London ultimately doesn't quite live up to its considerable ambitions, it offers plenty of arresting moments along the way.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 12, 2018
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Frank Scheck
River Runs Red is neither substantive nor thrilling enough to prove satisfying.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 12, 2018
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John DeFore
Though some of its insights might sound like common sense from the outside, the doc sees many places where they go against the grain; it's likely to provoke some "aha" moments even for viewers who couldn't care less about Super Bowls and World Cups.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 12, 2018
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John DeFore
It gives the feature doc treatment to a topic TV journalists (and news-comedy hero John Oliver) have looked at over the decades — showing the slimy ways that reforms prompted by public outrage have been neutered by politicians on both sides of the aisle.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 12, 2018
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Sheri Linden
Meditative and dreamlike yet gem-sharp, director Rob Tregenza's fifth feature in 30 years is an elegantly told story that churns with emotion beneath its deceptive stillness.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 11, 2018
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Frank Scheck
While it offers more style than substance, Bullitt County delivers an engrossing tale with enough twists to satisfy thrill-loving audiences. If anything, it offers too many twists, proving unable to live up to its considerable narrative ambitions.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 9, 2018
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Todd McCarthy
The dramatic approach here is clear, efficient and entirely on-the-nose, with little time for anything that might distract from the hagiographic effort in play. Its sole purpose is to ennoble and proclaim a hero, which its subject almost certainly is. But it makes for notably simplified drama.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 9, 2018
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Frank Scheck
Pimp is an engrossing melodrama that could easily have played to enthusiastic grindhouse audiences in the 1970s.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 8, 2018
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John DeFore
Certain niche audiences will find it fascinating and/or emotionally powerful, but — among those who are unfazed by the sight of a masked woman pulling things out of her vagina — most will shrug.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 8, 2018
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John DeFore
Though its tone is amiable and its performances are (mostly) professional, it's hard to care if these four people live happily ever after or never see each other again.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 8, 2018
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John DeFore
Though hardly a failure, the serious-minded work is less affecting than it might've been, relying sometimes on hints that are needlessly ambiguous and on symbols that don't quite click.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 8, 2018
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Caryn James
The sequel has better and at times galvanizing special effects, a darker tone and a high-stakes battle between good and evil. Best of all, its characters are more vibrantly drawn, and tangled in relationships that range from delightful to lethal.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 8, 2018
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Frank Scheck
A solid ensemble, including many acting veterans, manages to make the film, on which Bobby Farrelly served as one of the executive producers, a diverting holiday comedy.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 8, 2018
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Todd McCarthy
Everything the film has to offer is obvious and on the surface, its pleasures simple and sincere under the attentive guidance of director Jon S. Baird.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 7, 2018
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