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
Sheri Linden
At times disarming, at others plain silly, it takes a few daring leaps without quite avoiding middle-of-the-road sitcom territory.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 10, 2022
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Reviewed by
Frank Scheck
Easter Sunday earns points for its cultural bona fides, its loving portrait of the community it celebrates and its almost entirely Filipino and Asian-American casting. And Koy reveals himself to be a likable screen presence deserving of more starring roles. But it falls hopelessly flat in its comedic aspirations, more closely resembling the sort of bland network sitcom to which its main character aspires.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 4, 2022
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Reviewed by
Frank Scheck
There’s enough carnage and violent action on display to satisfy Predator fans whose cinematic bloodlust knows no bounds, and the dramatic change in milieu provides some much-needed freshness. Featuring a cast composed almost entirely of Native and First Nations actors, Prey has clearly taken pains to be as authentic as possible.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 3, 2022
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Reviewed by
David Rooney
This is compelling storytelling by any standard, its supple rhythms hypnotic, its atmosphere potent and its prevailing hushed tone and intimate camerawork affording us the closest possible access to three characters who in turn are constantly studying one another. The actors playing those three points of a complicated triangle could not be better.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 3, 2022
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Reviewed by
Lovia Gyarkye
Luck’s sweetness comes from the details of Sam’s story and subsequent adventure.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 3, 2022
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Reviewed by
David Rooney
For a movie with so much volatile physicality and bruising punishment, there’s an inertia about the whole thing, a soullessness that makes every contrived smirk grate. We don’t care about who gets pounded to a pulp or shot to pieces because there are no characters to root for — good guys or bad.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 2, 2022
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Reviewed by
Boyd van Hoeij
It’s an ambitious and auspicious debut, even though not all of its frayed edges seem to be intentional.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 31, 2022
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Reviewed by
Lovia Gyarkye
Free Chol Soo Lee vibrates with this broader understanding of incarceration.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 27, 2022
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Daniel Fienberg
A documentary that starts out odd and ends up oddly sweet.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 27, 2022
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Reviewed by
David Rooney
Thankfully, there’s more than enough fascinating material — as well as choice archival footage and photographs — to build a robust narrative.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 26, 2022
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Reviewed by
Frank Scheck
Too often, the film gives off the feeling that it was designed for the inevitable line of toys for the upcoming holiday season, with plenty of cuddly animals of disparate types soon to line the shelves of a store near you.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 26, 2022
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Reviewed by
Caryn James
An eloquent meditation on loss, memory and how film can shape them.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 26, 2022
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Jordan Mintzer
There’s lots on the menu, and León de Aranoa brings it all together in a smooth manner. But the jokes tend to be too broad, and the themes too tritely handled.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 25, 2022
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Reviewed by
Lovia Gyarkye
It’s a restrained rendering of the events, a drama that plays, at times, like a documentary. But if Howard’s decision to spotlight the Thai characters in this harrowing narrative is a sound one, there’s an unfamiliar stiffness and self-consciousness in the director’s approach — an inability to marry the fast-paced, no-nonsense heroics that are his strong suit with more emotionally textured storytelling. The resulting awkwardness prevents the movie, for all the surreal tension and bravery it depicts, from feeling urgent or surprising.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 25, 2022
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Reviewed by
Leslie Felperin
Simply designed animation, modeled on the look of cool cartoons of the time such as Daria, adds an extra comic jauntiness. You could say, to use a popular slang term from the 90s, this puts the “mental” back in experimental, but in a good way.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 22, 2022
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Sheri Linden
Shepard’s reach might exceed her grasp, but there’s no question that she takes risks and is a filmmaker of notable promise.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 20, 2022
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Reviewed by
Lovia Gyarkye
It won’t be to everyone’s taste, but Nope offers up a glutton’s feast for Peele disciples and fans of brainy sci-fi thrillers, ushering the director into an intriguing new phase of cinema that’s as rhapsodic as it is demanding.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 20, 2022
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Lovia Gyarkye
It’s a clear-eyed, but by no means exhaustive, documentary that investigates this underreported crisis without losing sight of the people processing the depths of their loss.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 19, 2022
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Reviewed by
Angie Han
For most of its 110-minute run time, Don’t Make Me Go is a solidly likable drama, anchored by lovely, lived-in chemistry between John Cho and Mia Isaac as a father-daughter duo. But a misguided third-act choice throws off its bittersweet vibe, leaving a distinctly sour aftertaste.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 15, 2022
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Reviewed by
John DeFore
While the movie itself may prove nearly as unmemorable as its hero ostensibly wants to be, it’s anything but inconspicuous.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 14, 2022
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Reviewed by
Frank Scheck
The screenplay, credited to the five original Blazing Saddles writers as well as Ed Stone and Nate Hopper, is relentlessly silly but only intermittently funny.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 13, 2022
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Reviewed by
Lovia Gyarkye
The film, like the novel it’s based on, skirts the issues — of race, gender and class — that would texture its narrative and strengthen its broad thesis, resulting in a story that says more about how whiteness operates in a society allergic to interdependence than it does about how communities fail young people.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 12, 2022
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Reviewed by
David Rooney
This is Manville’s film, a too-rare star vehicle in which one of England’s most invaluable actors carries us effortlessly on the wings of Mrs. Harris’ dream of egalitarian elegance.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 12, 2022
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Reviewed by
David Rooney
Persuasion is sufficiently bold and consistent with its flagrant liberties to get away with them. It also helps that the novel’s long-suffering protagonist, Anne Elliot, has been given irrepressible spirit and an irreverent sense of irony in Dakota Johnson’s incandescent performance.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 8, 2022
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Reviewed by
David Rooney
Dipping less rewardingly from the same well in Thor: Love and Thunder, Waititi pushes the wisecracking to tiresome extremes, snuffing out any excitement, mythic grandeur or sense of danger that the God of Thunder’s latest round of rote challenges might hope to generate. Chris Hemsworth continues to give great musclebound himbo, but the stakes never acquire much urgency in a movie too busy being jokey and juvenile to tell a gripping story.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 5, 2022
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Reviewed by
Frank Scheck
Fourth of July turns out to be something we would have never expected from its director/co-writer — bland.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 1, 2022
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Reviewed by
Lovia Gyarkye
Throwing a woman in front of the camera and a few feminist quips into the script does not make these films any less conventional, or necessarily any more empowering.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jul 1, 2022
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Reviewed by
John DeFore
Happily, the film is more than a greatest-hits rundown (and at nearly three hours, it had better be): In addition to nuts-and-bolts musicology, it offers real engagement with a complicated character, endearingly stubborn and self-effacing, whose inventiveness changed both his chosen field (“absolute” music) and the one, film scoring, he entered only reluctantly.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 30, 2022
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Reviewed by
Frank Scheck
Minions: The Rise of Gru gives fans more of what they’ve come to expect, mainly Gru acting evilly, the Minions acting stupidly, and enough clever gags that will fly over its target audiences’ heads but keep their adult chaperones from dozing off.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 29, 2022
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Reviewed by
Jordan Mintzer
What makes his story particularly compelling is that most of it is true.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Jun 29, 2022
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