The Hollywood Reporter's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 12,897 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: 6,604 out of 12897
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Mixed: 5,128 out of 12897
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Negative: 1,165 out of 12897
12897
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
David Rooney
Even the formidable Dafoe at his most intense ultimately can’t stop Inside from succumbing to its own narrowness, devolving into a self-reflexive portrait of soul-sucking isolation.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 21, 2023
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Reviewed by
David Rooney
Satter shows unfaltering command of the medium for a first-time film director, notably in her penetrating use of the closeup, which makes the steadily exposed raw nerves of Sydney Sweeney’s remarkable performance in the title role all the more disturbing to witness.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 19, 2023
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Reviewed by
David Rooney
What Ralphie goes through over the course of this absorbing enough but bludgeoning portrait of corrosive masculinity makes him both victim and monster.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 18, 2023
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David Rooney
She Came to Me is a movie whose strained eccentricity gets positively goopy, conveying so little genuine feeling that the stakes for any of the characters never feel terribly high.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 18, 2023
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David Rooney
It’s an affectionately told story of Canadian innovation, loss of innocence and of unlikely bedfellows making entrepreneurial magic.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 18, 2023
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Reviewed by
Lovia Gyarkye
Punchy delivery styles, shimmering personalities and kaleidoscopic perspectives make up the soul of D. Smith’s gutsy documentary Kokomo City- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 17, 2023
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Reviewed by
Michael Rechtshaffen
Although Tomlin (for whom Weitz wrote 2015’s Grandma) and Fonda are thoroughly capable of taking their characters in any direction required of them, Moving On ultimately strands the actors — and the audience — at an awkward impasse.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 17, 2023
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Sheri Linden
Through an affecting mix of comedy, romance and drama, A Radiant Girl sounds a warning about the perils of not looking directly at tough realities. And yet it’s so alive from moment to moment, so finely attuned to the emotional lives of its characters, that it never feels like a history lesson dressed up as narrative.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 15, 2023
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Frank Scheck
For all the authentic genre tropes on display, Marlowe never comes to life on its own, lacking the verve or wit to make it feel anything other than a great pop song played by a mediocre cover band.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 14, 2023
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Frank Scheck
For better or worse, Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania is the most overtly sci-fi film in the series, and on that level, it succeeds very well.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 14, 2023
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Lovia Gyarkye
It’s a breezy charmer — the kind of movie these obits have been mourning over the years. The film returns to the genre’s blueprint and sticks with it. There are a couple of instances of subversion, moments when Your Place or Mine winks and pokes fun at itself. But for the most part it doesn’t want to surprise or be more clever than the viewer; it aims to please, and in doing so helps re-energize the romantic comedy.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 9, 2023
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Reviewed by
Lovia Gyarkye
Somebody I Used to Know, written by Brie and her husband Dave Franco (who also directs here), is a sharply conceived and smart romantic comedy — the kind of film that might inspire hasty accusations of trying too hard to be different. It takes the narrative skeleton of the genre and enhances it with its own subversive elements.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 9, 2023
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Reviewed by
Lovia Gyarkye
This is a film best experienced in a group setting, among friends, the kind of project that fosters conspiratorial thinking and could inspire multiple watches — if only it got out of its own way.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 7, 2023
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Reviewed by
Lovia Gyarkye
But the film is so baggy, so preoccupied with its own ambitions — re-establishing its support of women’s desires, addressing a new generation, etc. — that it deflates into flaccid fluff.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 7, 2023
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David Rooney
The new film doesn’t match the tightly wound narrative complexity or power of its predecessor; nor does it escape the occasional feel of actor-y self-indulgence. But the artistic rigor of the undertaking remains striking, as does the invaluable contribution of Danish sound designer Peter Albrechtsen in sculpting the disquieting atmosphere.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 6, 2023
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Reviewed by
Lovia Gyarkye
The film struggles to maintain the verve of this opening sequence (which nails a specific anxiety of liberal middle-class Black people), subsequently becoming a series of set pieces — some more energetic than others — in search of a thesis.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 2, 2023
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Lovia Gyarkye
While Body Parts is a smart film and a useful primer on big questions about filmic representations of sex and desire, one wishes its conclusions were more nuanced.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 2, 2023
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David Rooney
The bigger problem is that the movie leaves itself nowhere to go but deeper into biblical doom and gloom, with an unwavering sense of purpose that highlights Shyamalan’s able craftsmanship but also exposes the pointlessness of this claustrophobic exercise.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Feb 2, 2023
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Reviewed by
Deborah Young
With great delicacy, [Maryam Touzani] shows how Moroccan society censures a woman who gives birth outside marriage — not a terribly original theme, but here it is made heartrending by the superb performances of Lubna Azabal and Nisrin Erradi in the lead roles.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 30, 2023
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Reviewed by
Daniel Fienberg
Maybe it isn’t exactly that Pamela, a love story is unrevelatory. It’s just that what it reveals is that once you get past the tabloid-friendly headlines from the ’90s and ’00s, the actual Pamela Anderson is a fairly smart, fairly funny and fairly boring — not in a critical way at all, just in a way that runs counter to expectations — woman who just wants love. She also — and this actually is a problem — has always been a fairly candid interview subject.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 30, 2023
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Reviewed by
Leslie Felperin
The Disappearance of Shere Hite ponders this paradox, and while somewhat vexingly it doesn’t fully explain why or to what extent Hite “disappeared” from public view in the decades before her death in 2020, it draws a vivid portrait of a complex, fascinating woman.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 30, 2023
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Daniel Fienberg
Even though the doc’s storytelling has an approach to twistiness that I’m finding increasingly irritating every time it’s used, the sheer volume of visceral responses produced by The Deepest Breath is hard to deny.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 28, 2023
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Reviewed by
Jordan Mintzer
Take the plot of one of Richard Linklater’s Before movies, combine it with the eye-popping aesthetic of Wes Anderson, then set it within the ethnically diverse, highly photogenic South London enclave of Peckham, and you’ll wind up with Rye Lane.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 28, 2023
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David Rooney
Writer-director Christopher Zalla adheres to the subgenre’s conventions and doesn’t stint on sentimentality, but Radical more than earns its surging emotional payoff.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 28, 2023
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Leslie Felperin
Scrapper is a sweet bit of fluff that’s trying too hard to be funny and offbeat and ends up being too often simply annoying.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 28, 2023
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Reviewed by
Jordan Mintzer
It’s more like the kind of standard Sundance-bound dramedy we’ve seen lots of times before, albeit with a charming cast and some sharp bits of commentary on race, identity and gender that come courtesy of screenwriter Adrian Tomine, who adapted his 2007 graphic novel of the same title.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 28, 2023
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Reviewed by
Jon Frosch
With the steadfast lack of melodrama we’ve come to expect from him, the writer-director packs more incident, life and unassuming complexity into 90 minutes than most filmmakers muster in twice that run time.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 28, 2023
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Sheri Linden
The emotional impact of A Little Prayer doesn’t so much detonate as unfold, a series of quiet epiphanies, well-observed and elegant in their awkward yearning.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 28, 2023
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Reviewed by
Justin Lowe
Fancy Dance presents a broader narrative that emphasizes the connections that sustain families, communities and tribal nations, even when confronted with a legacy of disenfranchisement. Tremblay’s film validates the varied expressions of that experience with an affirming account of resilience and hope that sparkles with authentic performances, sensitive scripting and a genuine sense of place that resonate well after the final credits roll.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 28, 2023
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David Rooney
Its surge of final-act feeling will speak to any audience that has ever experienced the startling reckoning that comes with grief.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jan 28, 2023
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