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
Frank Scheck
Heading Home: The Tale of Team Israel emerges as a messy hybrid that has some interesting and amusing moments but ultimately feels as inauthentic as the team it chronicles.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 6, 2019
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Frank Scheck
While The Last Photograph ultimately feels too narratively slight to justify even its brief 85-minute running time, the intriguing film demonstrates that the actor should follow in his legendary father's directorial footsteps more often.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 6, 2019
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Stephen Dalton
An atmospheric thriller with a noir-ish undertow and strong visual style, Strange But True puts a classy spin on familiar ingredients. The twist-heavy, logic-bending plot will test audience patience in places, but the whole package is handsomely crafted and rich in strong performances.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 5, 2019
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Keith Uhlich
The blurring of the lines between fiction and fact still mostly feels like a crutch or an affectation. It's as if Cordero and Croda are trying to goose the drama rather than unearth it, never entirely trusting that Felipe's life is interesting enough as is.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 5, 2019
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Frank Scheck
The picture will naturally hold its biggest appeal for racing buffs but may also prove appealing to nonfans thanks to the moving story at its core.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 4, 2019
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Frank Scheck
Unfortunately, although Becoming Nobody will prove a must-see for Ram Dass' ardent fans, and they are certainly legion, the film proves frustratingly unpolished and unfocused, providing precious little biographical information or narrative context. It ultimately feels like a missed opportunity, a labor of love that would have benefited from a little more objectivity.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 4, 2019
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David Rooney
While not a lot happens in First Cow by the standards of most two-hour narrative films, and some may wish for a less open-ended conclusion, the drama's rough-edged lyricism kept me rapt the entire time.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 4, 2019
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Todd McCarthy
The central character never develops in an interesting way. Well before the wrap-up of this brief tale, her cultivated recessiveness becomes tiresome and, in these particular circumstances, a bit dull.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 4, 2019
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Todd McCarthy
The Aeronauts achieves impressive elevation as a bracing and sympathetic account of two early and very different aviators who together reached literal new heights in a perilous field of endeavor.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 4, 2019
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Stephen Farber
Anchored by two outstanding performances from Anthony Hopkins and Jonathan Pryce, the film is a triumph of writing as well as unostentatious filmmaking.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 3, 2019
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Frank Scheck
Featuring an excellent performance by veteran British actress Sheila Hancock (The Boy in the Striped Pajamas), who is clearly up to both the challenging emotional and physical demands of the title role, Edie earns points for good intentions but never quite succeeds in managing to scale its thematic summit.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 3, 2019
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- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 3, 2019
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Reviewed by
John DeFore
Though Muschietti occasionally finds lovely filmic ways to transition from one to the next, the stories don't get to resonate with each other in a meaningful or emotional way — as they might in a series of well crafted hour-long episodes.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 3, 2019
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Reviewed by
Deborah Young
What The Perfect Candidate lacks in sophistication it makes up for in intuition, entwining the longtime taboos of music (especially the female voice) and women's active participation in political life in a positive storyline.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 2, 2019
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Stephen Dalton
Jenkin's heavily stylized debut is a disorienting experience at first, but it ultimately creates a boldly Expressionistic mood of uncanny beauty and mesmerizing otherness.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 2, 2019
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Keith Uhlich
Schimberg confidently blurs the lines between fantasy and reality (more than once a scene that appears to be real is actually fiction and vice versa), though never to the point that it detracts from the people onscreen.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 2, 2019
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David Rooney
Well-intentioned but heavy-handed ... To be fair, while Parker's film lacks finesse and the writing too readily slides into bullet-point didacticism and self-righteous speechifying, it does go to some lengths to give both sides a voice, even if it inevitably stacks the deck.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 1, 2019
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David Rooney
The heart of this complex material for too long remains elusive to Assayas, and he locates it too late to give the choppy drama cohesion. That's not to say Wasp Network is dull or uninvolving.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 1, 2019
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Todd McCarthy
Despite the filmmaker's obvious smarts and oft-proven skills, there's a kind of off-putting effrontery about Soderbergh's approach here that rather sours the whole experience. The tone is brittle, the attitude arch, the performances by a savvy and diverse cast uneven.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 1, 2019
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Todd McCarthy
The Safdies and the cast go deep enough here to make the film a genuinely human one.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Sep 1, 2019
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David Rooney
This is Phoenix's film, and he inhabits it with an insanity by turns pitiful and fearsome in an out-there performance that's no laughing matter. Not to discredit the imaginative vision of the writer-director, his co-scripter and invaluable tech and design teams, but Phoenix is the prime force that makes Joker such a distinctively edgy entry in the Hollywood comics industrial complex.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 31, 2019
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Stephen Farber
Judy is three-quarters of a good movie that would have been even better if it trusted the urgency of the last act of Garland’s life — and the brilliance of Zellweger’s performance.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 31, 2019
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Reviewed by
Sheri Linden
Technically, it wouldn't be wrong to call Waves a "teen drama," but that generic label doesn't begin to convey the emotional scope of this tender, bruising, exuberant film.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 31, 2019
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Jordan Mintzer
Merely a watchable rehashing of his preferential themes and plot points, set in a present-day Manhattan so nostalgic and unreal it might as well be a period piece.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 30, 2019
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Todd McCarthy
The film’s lively dynamics owe much to the bristly nature of nearly every relationship and interaction in the film.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 30, 2019
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David Rooney
The luminous Kristen Stewart keeps you glued throughout, giving a coolly compelling performance that becomes steadily more poignant as the subject unravels.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 30, 2019
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Deborah Young
One couldn’t wish for a more painstakingly researched or beautifully rendered account of the infamous Dreyfus affair than Roman Polanski’s An Officer and a Spy (J’Accuse).... Yet the result is oddly lacking in heart and soul, almost as though a mask of military discipline held it in check.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 30, 2019
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John DeFore
The gritty pic's aesthetic scratches an itch for lovers of '70s/'80s urban grime. But atmosphere and attitude overwhelm story here, and trotting out old tropes like amnesia doesn't help.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 29, 2019
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Beandrea July
By leaning into the character-driven nature of the story and a remarkably yoked ensemble cast, Before You Know It becomes something much more than a “chick flick”: It's a nuanced treatment of how the dynamics that bond a family together can also tear it apart.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 29, 2019
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Reviewed by
Frank Scheck
Itsy Bitsy works well enough on its own terms, providing some genuine jolts and benefiting from the excellent performances.- The Hollywood Reporter
- Posted Aug 29, 2019
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