The Hollywood Reporter's Scores

  • Movies
  • TV
For 12,897 reviews, this publication has graded:
  • 51% higher than the average critic
  • 4% same as the average critic
  • 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: 100 The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
Lowest review score: 0 Dirty Love
Score distribution:
12897 movie reviews
  1. The film is an initially insightful portrait of modern corporate society that unfortunately lapses into melodrama.
  2. Essentially sleepwalks its way through a strictly by-the-numbers premise.
  3. Does make you laugh even if you hate yourself for doing so. A creation of former "Saturday Night Live" colleagues, the comedy plays like an extended skit with bits of improvisation and several slightly extended sequences.
  4. An engrossing, highly intelligent reimagining of the legend of Arthur.
  5. Eventually gets so bogged down in its own quirkiness that its humanistic message gets lost.
  6. The film would make a better fit on television or at one of Disney's theme parks. In cinemas, Heart & Soul is an odd duck, out of sync with the current generation of documentarians whose films dig deep into stories and issues the media generally overlooks.
  7. The real problem is that Brugge and Haythe fail to satisfactorily pull off either the thriller or the marital deconstruction.
  8. This is one of the most wildly romantic movies in ages.
  9. A sprightly musical revue built around Cole Porter songs and a few biographical tidbits culled from his extraordinary life.
  10. It's refreshing to witness a superhero with doubts. Maguire and Dunst again display the depth of talent they bring to these roles by injecting such everydayness into larger-than-life characters.
  11. Mercilessly plodding pacing, problematic character motivations and a fundamental lack of chemistry between the two star-crossed lovers in question don't do a lot to help its cause.
  12. Contributions of the accomplished cast notwithstanding, this period drama takes a few too many spins around the downward spiral, making it hard to believe as well as unpleasant.
  13. Augurs well for dazzling visual work but struggles mightily on the storytelling front.
  14. This is the kind of film that will leave many audience members groaning with laughter -- and others simply groaning. It's skit/situation comedy that exploits stereotypes with a vengeance and knows no shame in borrowing from much better movies ranging from "Some Like It Hot" to "Tootsie."
  15. Moore stays "on message" here from first shot to last. There is no debate, no analysis of facts or search for historical context. Moore simply wants to blame one man and his family for the situation in Iraq the United States now finds itself in…So the real question is not how good a film is Fahrenheit 9/11 -- it is undoubtedly Moore's weakest -- but will a film help to get a president fired?
  16. A less than satisfying cinematic experience.
  17. Has the feel of a home movie of greater interest to its participants than to an audience.
  18. Swing does have the advantage of boasting a fair amount of genuine onscreen talent.
  19. It uses numerous hoary techniques -- including tabloid-television-style editing and ominous background music -- that tend to detract from the seriousness of the issues being addressed. Morgan Freeman delivers the portentous narration.
  20. This too-sentimental drama does feature a sterling performance by Giovanna Mezzogiorno as a love-struck housewife dissatisfied with her lot, thus providing the only watchable element of an otherwise disappointing movie.
  21. One of those infuriating comedies that practically nudges you in the ribs while you're watching to remind you how cute and funny it is.
  22. The film should please his (Sokurov's) fans even while proving a frustrating, tedious experience for most art house audiences.
  23. The finish, too, is enigmatic, but in the hands of Hodges, with his masterful touch in conveying how deep run the rivers of regret, I'll Sleep When I'm Dead may take its place with "Get Carter" as a classic British gangster film.
  24. In a summer of remakes, sequels and movies swollen with effects, The Terminal stands out as a strikingly original comedy.
  25. Think of it as "The Matrix" for the quantum physics set.
  26. In outline, the story is pretty funny, and the film's outlandish takes on sports-movie conventions deliver some laughs. But Thurber chooses the low road to those laughs so often that he undermines his own satirical design. His actors certainly deliver amusing, spirited performances, but again, they get done in by relentless adolescent humor.
  27. What could have served as a colorful episode in a more expansive film about the famed singer has instead become the premise of a mildly entertaining but overextended road movie that doesn't succeed on either dramatic or comedic terms.
  28. Any resemblance between Jules Verne's marvelous science fiction novel or Mike Todd's enjoyable 1956 movie is pure happenstance. This is simply a Jackie Chan movie pitched to youngsters who enjoy slapstick fights and goofy caricatures.
  29. Lacks the urgency and significance of a great docu but still offers a diverting entertainment.
  30. The film will eventually be a must-own video item for theater buffs.

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