The Hollywood Reporter's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 12,922 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: 6,619 out of 12922
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Mixed: 5,136 out of 12922
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Negative: 1,167 out of 12922
12922
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Stephen Dalton
The film’s facile message of cross-cultural unity owes more to fairy tale than reality, but the action is slick and the story gripping.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 20, 2013
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Justin Lowe
Writer-director Shaka King clearly knows this world, perhaps too well, but making pot use, or denial, the focus of nearly every scene becomes tedious.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 20, 2013
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David Rooney
Both the director and writer show such patchy story sense that a lot of the buildup to the final bloodshed and malevolence registers as suspense-free clutter.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 20, 2013
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Reviewed by
John DeFore
Cartoonish hyperbole aside, the investigation does have its high points.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 20, 2013
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Deborah Young
Wong is such a fine, subtle actor that it comes as a surprise to find him a superb martial artist as well, as he convincingly demonstrates the superiority of Ip Man’s technique over competing schools.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 20, 2013
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John DeFore
A technically polished but mostly unmoving example of a genre (the watch-kids-do-something-hard doc) assumed to be inherently charming.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 20, 2013
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John DeFore
With a frost-bitten script whose skeletal plot cuts and pastes bits from innumerable other survival yarns, the biggest surprise the film offers is that four people were required to write it.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 20, 2013
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Stephen Dalton
However mindless and heartless it may be, Through the Never succeeds as pure sense-swamping spectacle. It is a blow-out banquet for Metallica fans, and a blockbuster rock-and-rollercoaster ride for any heavy metal tourists curious to see this music played at major-league level.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 20, 2013
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Sheri Linden
Policy wonk Robert Reich’s analysis of today’s parallels to the Great Depression is both statistics-driven and impassioned.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 20, 2013
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Justin Lowe
Filming a truly immersive and dimensional adaptation of a Kerouac novel remains an ongoing challenge for any filmmaker, but Polish’s film comes closer than most, while adding another layer of complexity to the author’s venerable reputation.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 20, 2013
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David Rooney
The unapologetically derivative sci-fi outing doesn’t have the scripting muscle to deliver on its early promise. But the solid cast keeps it reasonably gripping nonetheless.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 20, 2013
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David Rooney
Vivid characterizations from Ralph Fiennes and Helena Bonham Carter are the highlights of Mike Newell's traditional retelling of the classic Dickens novel.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 20, 2013
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Frank Scheck
Although not wholly successful in its sociological aspirations, the film does provide both considerable laughs and food for thought.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 19, 2013
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Frank Scheck
Jewtopia feels like a failed sitcom pilot that might have been created by Jackie Mason.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 19, 2013
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Neil Young
Berliner crafts a quietly touching and illuminating memento mori from the steady dying of an intellectual light.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 17, 2013
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Todd McCarthy
An unsuccessful attempt to get inside the head, under the skin or through the looking glass of Bush administration Secretary of Defense and Iraq War proponent Donald Rumsfeld.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 17, 2013
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Reviewed by
Boyd van Hoeij
Beautifully played and impeccably lit and composed, this high-quality family drama takes its time to introduce its flawed but human protagonists and then steadily builds toward a payoff that’s at once cathartic and artfully restrained.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 17, 2013
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David Rooney
No less impressive than the narrative mastery here, however, is the technical execution of this bold minimalist experiment.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 17, 2013
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Todd McCarthy
What starts as potentially interesting apocalyptic speculative fiction devolves into dreary sub-Hunger Games survivalism and banal teen romance.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 17, 2013
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David Rooney
Dramatically, Child of God is hit or miss; some scenes are ferociously captivating while others are given clumsy handling, almost to the point of indifference.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 17, 2013
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Boyd van Hoeij
A quite absorbing but never riveting or revelatory overview of Armstrong’s career and testy personality.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 17, 2013
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Boyd van Hoeij
Like in all of the director’s work, psychologically reductive readings of the characters are absent, though intriguing performances give audiences a way into the material.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 17, 2013
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Boyd van Hoeij
What’s most disturbing about the film is indeed its placid, almost non-descript surface -- also echoed in the production design and camerawork -- and the knowledge that unspeakable things are happening offscreen and behind closed doors.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 17, 2013
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Reviewed by
Deborah Young
Gianfranco Rosi (Below Sea Level, El Sicario: Room 164) brings humor and sensitivity to his filming of the strange denizens who live and work around the Grande Raccordo Anulare, Rome’s huge ring road.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 17, 2013
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 17, 2013
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Reviewed by
Deborah Young
It doesn’t really add up to much, beyond a timely reminder that it would be better for everyone to stop uploading and downloading and just unplug and be human.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 16, 2013
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Reviewed by
David Rooney
This tonal mess rarely puts a foot right as comedy and makes only marginal improvements when it turns poignant toward the end.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 16, 2013
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Reviewed by
David Rooney
Funny and frank in its observations, the film is a delightful snapshot of female friendship at that age, from the giddy highs to the melancholy funks, from the sustaining bonds to the jealousies and stinging betrayals.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 16, 2013
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Reviewed by
David Rooney
The director’s austere minimalism has always been suspended between the mesmerizing and the distancing, and in his latest feature, the concentration on elliptical observation, mood and texture signals an almost complete rejection of narrative.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 16, 2013
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Reviewed by
John DeFore
Daniel Schechter's Life of Crime starts promisingly and ends with a smile but underwhelms in between.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 16, 2013
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