The Hollywood Reporter's Scores
- Movies
- TV
For 12,893 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 | |
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| Lowest review score: | Dirty Love |
Score distribution:
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Positive: 6,601 out of 12893
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Mixed: 5,127 out of 12893
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Negative: 1,165 out of 12893
12893
movie
reviews
- By Date
- By Critic Score
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Reviewed by
Daniel Fienberg
Nothing in The Forever Prisoner feels all that revelatory, but the thing that’s essential in the doc is the reminder that for all of the story’s familiarity, it reflects a situation that has been barely ameliorated over more than a decade.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 29, 2021
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Daniel Fienberg
At only 80 minutes, Beanie Mania offers only limited depth and it’s hard to imagine any viewer not being left with serious questions throughout, but as a superficial, hastily glossed nostalgic oddity, it’s a tidy way to wrap your 2021 viewing.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 29, 2021
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Lovia Gyarkye
Despite its subject matter, Playground is not a call to action masked as a film. It’s a gripping work of observation more concerned with identifying patterns, teasing out motivations and laying bare the reality of how we come to relate to one another.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 29, 2021
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Lovia Gyarkye
It’s ultimately a mixed bag, with the final moments acquiring an emotional power that should be felt sooner.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 23, 2021
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David Rooney
Milkwater is a modest film that acquires pleasing depth as it progresses.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 23, 2021
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John DeFore
If you loved The Matrix and hated the sequels (or simply found them unsatisfying), go see this one. Have a blast. (But wear a mask.)- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 21, 2021
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Frank Scheck
Those willing to embrace this entry’s greater thematic and stylistic ambitions will find much to savor, including the stirring lead performance by Ralph Fiennes. The actor not only manages to give a fully committed dramatic portrayal that doesn’t give a hint of the material’s underlying silliness, but also demonstrates that he could have been a terrific James Bond if given the chance.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 14, 2021
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John DeFore
This is the least fun of the Watts/Holland pictures by a wide margin (intentionally so, to some extent), but it’s a hell of a lot better than the last Spidey threequel, Sam Raimi’s overstuffed and ill-conceived Spider-Man 3.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 13, 2021
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David Rooney
The edges are perhaps rougher and the narrative more structured, but the film carries echoes of the work of Asian contemplative cinema maestros Tsai Ming-liang and Apitchatpong Weerasethakul, both of whom Yogi cites as influences.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 9, 2021
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David Rooney
A cynical, insufferably smug satire stuffed to the gills with stars that purports to comment on political and media inattention to the climate crisis but really just trivializes it. Dr. Strangelove it ain’t.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 7, 2021
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David Rooney
Anyone curious about the mechanics of a pioneering sitcom will be entertained by Being the Ricardos, and there’s no denying that the performances offer much to savor. I just wish there was more of a sense of the director serving the subject rather than making the subject serve him.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 7, 2021
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David Rooney
While many wondered about Spielberg’s chutzpah in tackling a movie musical widely regarded as an ageless classic, his richly satisfying remake gives this version a resplendent life of its own.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 2, 2021
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Sheri Linden
With a semi-playful nod to the 1945 film Detour and more than a few rain-drenched streets, Nightmare Alley pays tribute to noir. But it’s also its own dark snow globe, luminous and finely faceted, and one of del Toro’s most fluent features.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 2, 2021
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Daniel Fienberg
It isn’t polished and it isn’t focused, and at times there’s a rawness to its emotional exposure that left me feeling a little uncomfortable. But in those respects, it’s a wholly reasonable expression of the sort of grief that, even 14 years later, defies understanding.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Dec 1, 2021
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David Rooney
A strong cast and tightly focused direction make The Unforgivable an engrossing enough redemption drama, though this Americanized feature adaptation of British TV writer Sally Wainwright’s 2009 miniseries, Unforgiven, doesn’t always benefit from its condensed plotting.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 24, 2021
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Inkoo Kang
Lady Buds is the kind of film whose raison d’être isn’t immediately obvious, but whose storytelling is engaging enough that we’re ready for wherever the journey takes us.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 24, 2021
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David Rooney
Ridley Scott’s film is a trashtacular watch that I wouldn’t have missed for the world. But it fails to settle on a consistent tone — overlong and undisciplined as it careens between high drama and opera buffa.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 22, 2021
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Keith Uhlich
Getting old, as Jackie and Don would have it, is part of their overall project. More than once they talk about the impermanence of the materials they use. One day, their art will cease to be, as will they. That Zen pronouncement doesn’t make the day-in/day-out drudgery of aging any easier.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 19, 2021
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Sheri Linden
For the movie’s young women — brought to gutsy life by a terrific quartet of dancer-actors — soca is a language of sisterhood yet one that’s hardly free from the controlling power of men with money.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 18, 2021
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Angie Han
While approachable even to casual readers, thanks to patient explanations by scholars and biographers who’ve made Vonnegut their life’s work, the film isn’t really geared toward converting skeptics, revealing new information or even telling a really great yarn. It’s an opportunity to bask in Vonnegut’s wit and intelligence — to admire the crackerjack delivery of his jokes, savor the offbeat perfection of his prose, drink in the playfulness of his smile.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 18, 2021
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Reviewed by
Daniel Fienberg
The filmmaking choices all too frequently muddle any potential insight, yet the documentary contains so much good stuff that fans of the subject might be powerless to resist.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 18, 2021
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Sheri Linden
As a portrait of a besieged community carrying on as best it can, the film is keenly observed, its character observations lucid and engrossing.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 16, 2021
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David Rooney
The movie, particularly in its meandering second hour, often leaves you wondering where it’s going, more in frustration than curiosity.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 15, 2021
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David Rooney
Disney’s Encanto is, well, enchanting. It’s tricky to make an animated film so infused with exuberant sweetness without it becoming cloying. But this whimsical dose of magic realism set amid the lush greenery of the Colombian mountains benefits as much from the purity of the storytelling as the stunning vibrancy of the visuals.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 15, 2021
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Justin Lowe
With her considerable musical talent, it falls to Ash to convince Calloway to emerge from self-imposed retirement. It’s in these few scenes between Johansson and Bono that writer-director Jennings’ script achieves a new level of emotionally driven storytelling for the franchise.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 15, 2021
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Deborah Young
It’s a dreamy, unexpectedly rigorous debut that starts frustratingly slowly but ends with an emotional bang.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 14, 2021
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David Rooney
Swan Song becomes increasingly earnest and dull, spending such an inordinate amount of time lingering over tearfully contemplative gazes that it’s too maudlin to exert much of a genuine pull on the heartstrings.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 13, 2021
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Angie Han
Competent enough to be dull and nowhere near bold enough to be interesting, the new crime thriller by John Swab (Body Brokers) evaporates from memory even faster than it can dole out plot twists.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 11, 2021
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Lovia Gyarkye
Through a pointed script and propulsive storytelling, Moratto smartly makes the stakes of living within such a perverse system clear.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 8, 2021
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Stephen Dalton
This may be one of Jude’s minor works, but it delivers a quietly devastating emotional punch.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Nov 8, 2021
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